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Japan plane lands safely after engine flame seen at takeoff – Story

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A Japan Airlines plane bound for New York returned safely to a Tokyo airport Tuesday after the pilot reported a bird strike to an engine during takeoff.
Posted: Sep 05 2017 05: 25AM EDT
Updated: Sep 05 2017 11: 12AM EDT
TOKYO (AP) – A Japan Airlines plane bound for New York returned safely to a Tokyo airport Tuesday after the pilot reported a bird strike to an engine during takeoff. Television footage showed red flame flickering from the left engine as the plane ascended from the runway.
JAL said the Boeing 777 carrying 233 passengers and 15 crewmembers requested an emergency landing minutes after takeoff from Haneda International Airport on Tuesday.
The plane returned to the airport about an hour after takeoff and no injuries were reported. JAL said it will inspect the engine. Haneda has the worst record for bird strikes in Japan last year at 182 cases, followed by Osaka, with 73 case and Narita’s 57, though not all of them affected flight operations, according to the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism.

© Source: http://www.fox5ny.com/news/278660324-story
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China’s second most powerful man ‘reappears’ on state TV amid speculation over his future

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At 69, Wang Qishan is past the unofficial retirement age, but it remains to be seen if he will stay on or step down at upcoming party congress
After about a month’s silence in state media, China’s second most powerful official Wang Qishan has finally made an officially reported public appearance in Hunan province, calling for the tightening of Communist Party discipline at grass-roots party organisations.
Wang, the party’s formidable discipline tsar, paid a three-day visit to the central province and held a symposium on discipline inspection work on Tuesday, according to the website of the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection, the top anti-graft agency which he heads.
Reading between the lines: what to watch for at China’s most important political event
He was accompanied by Zhao Leji, head of the party’s personnel arm which oversees the promotion of officials. Zhao is also Wang’s deputy at the central leading group on inspection work.
On Tuesday evening’s CCTV news broadcast, China’s most watched news programme, a smiling Wang was seen shaking hands with local officials and speaking with villagers in Hunan.
This was the first time Wang appeared in official media since party leaders returned from their annual retreat at the seaside resort of Beidaihe in mid-August.
Xi Jinping’s biggest ally returns to the limelight to support Chinese leader’s war against poverty
Wang, who has largely maintained a relatively low profile in the past five years, was thrust into the spotlight in the lead-up to a key leadership shake-up scheduled for next month.
Widely known as a long-time ally of President Xi Jinping, whether the 69-year-old will stay on the Politburo Standing Committee – the pinnacle of power in China – for another term despite exceeding the unofficial retirement age has been one of the biggest questions surrounding the 19th party congress.
As the meeting approaches, Wang’s every move and word are being closely watched by observers and overseas media. But in contrast to the intense attention, his whereabouts have become even more elusive, fuelling all sorts of speculation.
What to expect from Xi Jinping’s Communist Party congress power play
His last public appearance was on August 1, alongside Xi and other Politburo Standing Committee members at the ceremony to mark the 90th anniversary of the founding of the People’s Liberation Army in Beijing.
He was reportedly seen on August 24 at the funeral of An Zhiwen, a party elder and reformist, according to news outlet Caixin, citing staff at the funeral parlour. But the event was not reported by state media.
The last time Wang’s name was mentioned – albeit only in passing – in state media was on August 6, when Xinhua ran a report to commemorate the 70th anniversary of the founding of the Inner Mongolia autonomous region.
It is not the first time the top graft buster has disappeared from the public view for a long period of time. His previous long absence ended with the CCDI’s sudden announcement of its investigation into Sun Zhengcai, former Chongqing party boss and a member of the Politburo, the party’s second-highest decision making body.

© Source: http://www.scmp.com/news/china/policies-politics/article/2109911/does-reappearance-chinas-no-2-state-media-suggest-hes
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The US, Canada, and Mexico are renegotiating NAFTA — here’s what each country wants

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And where they have the most leverage to get it.
At a hotel in Mexico City, trade representatives from Canada, Mexico, and the United States are working on the arduous task of redefining their economic relationship.
The outcome could reshape the entire US economy, which has grown increasingly dependent on trade with Mexico and Canada since NAFTA went into effect in 1994.
On Friday, trade negotiators began the second round of efforts to rewrite the North American Free Trade Agreement. They will be wrapping up on Tuesday, and a third round is scheduled for late September in Canada. It’s not an easy process. It could take months — even years — to come up with a deal that all sides agree upon (the original negotiations in the 1990s took more than two years) . There’s also the remote chance that one party will just walk away and NAFTA will fall apart.
After taking office, Trump threatened to pull out of the pact, which he considers the “worst trade deal” in history. Alarmed business leaders — who depend on free trade with both US neighbors — persuaded Trump to try to renegotiate the deal instead. So here we are.
The law essentially allows all three countries to sell goods to each other with no tariffs. An American car, for example, is now built with parts made in all three countries. While the deal allowed US manufacturers to lower costs and compete with Asian factories, it also led companies to move thousands of factory jobs to Mexico, where labor is cheaper.
On the campaign trail, Trump promised to scrap the deal or come up with a better one. With few legislative victories under his belt, the administration is under intense pressure to deliver a win on NAFTA.
But the schedule is tight. Not only do all countries need to agree on a deal, but the US trade representative, Robert Lighthizer, needs to give Congress 90 days’ notice before the president signs it. After the negotiations end, the International Trade Commission will start analyzing the impact of the new deal on the US economy, which often takes about six months. Then Congress needs to approve it — another major hurdle. After all, the Republican party has many die-hard free-trade advocates who like NAFTA.
“This is a very challenging timeline, ” says Philip Levy, an international economist for the Chicago Council on Global Affairs and a former trade economist for the George H. W. Bush administration. “As you’ ve seen, getting Congress to agree on a controversial issue has not been the forte of this administration.”
But it’s not just the US government. All three countries have a lot at stake in the negotiations. This is what trade experts believe is most important to each, and what their biggest bargaining chips are:
Main goal: The Trump administration wants to reduce the trade deficit — making sure that the US isn’ t importing much more than it exports. Right now, the United States has a small trade surplus with Canada ($12.5 billion) , so the administration isn’ t worried about that. Its beef is really with Mexico. The US had a $59 billion trade deficit with Mexico in 2016.
Some of Trump’s economic advisers think that cheap imports — in this case, from Mexico — are responsible for hurting US manufacturers and therefore US factory workers. Mainstream economists don’ t think a trade deficit is bad for the US economy, and they doubt that slapping tariffs on imports will do much to reduce it.
Leverage: Trump has threatened to leave NAFTA altogether, and that possibility could make Mexico and Canada more willing to make concessions. And while millions of jobs in all three countries depend on NAFTA, Mexico stands to lose the most jobs if it becomes too expensive for US companies to operate there. Hundreds of thousands of manufacturing jobs in Mexico depend directly on the free-trade deal.
“Canada and Mexico are more dependent on the US than the US is on them, so that’s the biggest thing the US has going right now, ” said Caroline Freund, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics.
Main goal: Mexico wants to make sure the United States doesn’ t try to slap tariffs on its products, or make it easier to do so in the future. The whole point of NAFTA was to create a tariff-free zone where businesses in all three countries could import and export products without extra costs. The United States purchases about 80 percent of all Mexican exports, so the Mexican economy is highly dependent on trade with the United States.
Leverage: Mexico has more than a dozen bilateral free-trade deals, which would make it easier for the country to shift trade to Europe and Latin America. It would take time, but Mexico could strengthen those relationships if it decides trade with the United States becomes too costly. For example, Mexico’s trade minister is trying to work out a trade deal with China.
Another thing Mexico has going for it: It’s the second-largest international market for American goods, with about 16 percent of US exports headed south of the border. In particular, the US auto and agriculture industries have a major stake in free trade with Mexico. For instance, Mexico buys a lot of American corn products — about three-quarters of all high-fructose corn syrup exported from the United States is sold to Mexico. The US auto industry also relies heavily on car parts from Mexico for its factories in Detroit.
Both of these industries have powerful lobbyists in Washington, and they will put a lot of pressure on Republicans in Congress to reject any deal that would restrict their access to the Mexican market.
Main goal: Like Mexico, Canada’s main goal is to stop the United States from slapping tariffs on the goods they’ ve been trading freely for decades. The Canadian softwood lumber industry and Canadian energy companies depend a lot on free trade with the United States.
Canada is particularly concerned about the administration’s goal to do away with what is known as NAFTA’s Chapter 19 provision. This section of the deal created a special settlement process that allows all three countries to challenge any duties one country might add on certain imports. Under international trade rules, a country can slap duties on imports that are intentionally sold at below-market prices or that are unfairly subsidized by the exporter’s government.
The Trump administration has been using these laws to go after what it considers unfair trade practices, and doing away with Chapter 19 would make it a lot easier to do so.
Leverage: Canada is the largest export market for American-made goods, so the United States doesn’ t want to make its northern neighbor too mad. About 19 percent of US exports end up there. Canada also imports more from the United States (mostly auto parts and heavy machinery) than it exports to the United States, which is exactly the kind of trade balance the Trump administration likes. If the US goes too far with its protectionist measures, Canada could retaliate by restricting US imports, which would seriously hurt US manufacturers.
This illustrates the biggest challenge for the Trump administration in rewriting the trade deal. Because all three economies have become so interdependent, any move to restrict imports could do serious damage to US manufacturers and businesses that depend on those two markets.
“This is not a one-way weapon, ” said Freund. “If the US blows up NAFTA, it will blow up the US economy.”

© Source: https://www.vox.com/policy-and-politics/2017/9/5/16156924/nafta-negotiations
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Defying Early Promises, Trump Announces an End to DACA

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The program affects about 800,000 people.
President Donald Trump announced Tuesday that the Department of Homeland Security will terminate the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, after assuring the immigrant community for months that ending the program was not a priority of his.
Trump called on Congress to replace DACA with legislation before it fully expires on March 5th, 2018. The Obama-era immigration measure allows for foreign minors who came to the United States as children to apply for a two-year deportation deferral and work visa, subject to renewal. It affects about 800,000 people; officials say “current beneficiaries of the program will not be immediately affected by what they called an ‘orderly wind down'” of the policy, according to the New York Times.
Trump hinted at the announcement Tuesday morning with a tweet, before Attorney General Jeff Sessions made the formal announcement.
Trump’s remarks on Tuesday represented a marked shift in rhetoric. Speaking of DACA beneficiaries in February, Trump said, “To me, it’s one of the most difficult subjects I have because you have these incredible kids… you have some absolutely incredible kids, I would say mostly.”
The Department of Homeland Security has faced mounting pressure from anti-immigrant officials on the state and federal level to end the program. In June, the attorneys general of 10 states sent a joint letter to Sessions, threatening to expand existing legal challenges to the program if the government didn’t do so of its own accord.
DACA beneficiaries—also known as DREAMers—are poised to contribute immeasurably to the American economy in coming years. A Center for American Progress report estimates that, by 2030,1.5 million DREAMers will have received a high school degree or GED, and 223,000 more will have received an associate’s or bachelor’s degree thanks to the Development, Relief, and Education for Alien Minors (DREAM) Act . “The percentage of eligible DREAMers with a college degree would be 4 percent higher with the passage of the DREAM Act, ” the report states.
Importantly, that means with a better education and more disposable income, hundreds of thousands of additional graduates will regularly purchase goods. The cumulative gain in earnings as a result? A whopping $148 billion by 2030, the report concludes.
“Put simply, higher earnings for DREAMers translate into more money flowing into our economy through greater consumption of goods and services, ” it says.

© Source: https://psmag.com/news/trump-ends-daca
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Gigabyte unleashes the smallest GTX 1080 ever to battle Radeon Vega Nano

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Gigabyte reveals the world’s smallest GeForce GTX 1080 for mini-ITX PCs.
Bigger is usually better in the world of graphics cards, but these days, plenty of people want plus-sized power in fun-sized packages. Enter Gigabyte’s GeForce GTX 1080 Mini ITX 8G, the smallest GTX 1080 yet—and an advanced strike against AMD’s incoming Radeon RX Vega Nano.
At 169mm in length, Gigabyte’s graphics card is the perfect fit for mini-ITX motherboards, which measure 170mm. The GeForce GTX 1080 Mini ITX 8G offers the same 1607MHz base clock and 1733MHz boost speeds as a GTX 1080 Founders Edition and manages to do so in a package that’s nearly 100mm shorter. That makes you wonder how hot and loud the card will run under load, but Gigabyte augmented the single semi-passive 90mm fan with a densely stacked heat sink and three copper heat pipes in direct contact with the GPU. The GTX 1080 Mini ITX 8G also packs a 5+2 power phase design, a step up over the 5+1 design in the Founders Edition.
Beyond the size and cooling design, Gigabyte’s card carries the same specs as any other GTX 1080—8GB of GDDR5X memory, 180-watt TDP over an 8-pin power connector, et cetera.
A mini-ITX GTX 1080 sounds exciting indeed, but the timing of the announcement is just as interesting. During the Radeon RX Vega launch at Siggraph on July 31, AMD teased the Radeon RX Vega Nano, a mini-ITX graphics card bearing its own high-end graphics processor.
Vega Nano follows in the footsteps of 2015’s Radeon Nano, which blended AMD’s most potent GPU at the time with high-bandwidth memory’s smaller on-board footprint to create the first mini-ITX graphics card capable of high-end 1440p gaming or even entry-level 4K gaming when paired with a FreeSync monitor. At the time, Nvidia could only field a mini-ITX GTX 970 against it, and AMD’s hardware dominated. The Radeon RX Vega 64 and GeForce GTX 1080 are pretty evenly matched performance-wise, so the new Vega Nano will have much more of a fight on its hands with Gigabyte’s itty-bitty gaming card.
We don’ t know when the all-out brawl for mini-ITX supremacy will occur, though. Neither Gigabyte nor AMD have revealed pricing or release date details for their high-powered yet small-sized graphics cards.
This story, “Gigabyte unleashes the smallest GTX 1080 ever to battle Radeon Vega Nano” was originally published by PCWorld.

© Source: http://www.itnews.com/article/3221439/components-graphics/gigabyte-mini-itx-geforce-gtx-1080-specs-features.html
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Israel evicts Arab family from Jerusalem home Jews claimed

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Israeli police have evicted a Palestinian family from their home in east Jerusalem to make way for new Jewish tenants.
Israeli police evicted a Palestinian family from their home in east Jerusalem on Tuesday to make way for new Jewish tenants who claimed ownership.
Municipality officials backed by police enforced a court order to remove the six-member Shamasneh family from a home claimed by heirs of a Jewish family forced to abandon it in 1948, when it came under Jordanian control following an Arab-Israeli war.
Israel took control of the area after the 1967 war and continued existing rental arrangements with Arab tenants. But a law allowing Jews to reclaim former homes or repurchase them has set up such conflicts.
Police were seen escorting the Shamasnehs out of the home, with the elderly Ayoub Shamasneh carried out by his relatives.
Shamasneh, 79, said his legal case was still pending. “How can they do this to us?” he said.
His wife Fahima, 75, called it “pure injustice” that after more than 50 years in the house they “throw us out in the street.”
Palestinians claim the evictions aim to increase east Jerusalem’s Jewish population and change the area’s demography, making it harder to divide the city in any eventual peace deal. Israel says it is merely enforcing the law.
Shortly after the eviction, Jewish settlers entered the house accompanied by a private security guard. An Israeli flag hung in the entranceway to the kitchen.
Yonatan Yosef, a spokesman for the Jewish residents of the Sheikh Jarrah neighborhood in east Jerusalem, said he was pleased to see another home “redeemed.”
“Another house in the Land of Israel, another house in Jerusalem, close to the Western Wall, close to the Old City, close to the Temple Mount, which is the heart of the people of Israel, ” he said. “We hope that all the houses in this neighborhood … will return to Jewish hands.”
Israel captured east Jerusalem, along with the Gaza Strip and the West Bank, in the 1967 Mideast war. The Palestinians claim those territories for their hoped-for state.
Also on Tuesday, Israel’s Shin Bet security service said it arrested a senior Palestinian security official for inciting to violence on his Facebook page. It said Muhammad al-Sawiti had posted a picture of Nazi leader Adolf Hitler and Holocaust mastermind Adolf Eichmann, called for attacks against Jews and praised those who had carried them out.
Israel blames a two-year-old wave of violence on Palestinian incitement, and has recently sought to crack down on it. The Palestinians say the attacks, which have lessened of late, are a result of 50 years of occupation.
Overnight, Israeli troops shut down a printing shop in Ramallah that they accused of producing “inciting and terror-related material.” Ali Obedat, the shop’s owner, denied the charge.
An Israeli human rights group meanwhile warned the country’s leaders Tuesday that reported plans to demolish two Palestinian communities in the Israeli-controlled West Bank would constitute a war crime for which they would bear personal liability.
B’Tselem said it was trying to “stop the commission of such a crime” with its written warning to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman and others.
Lieberman told Israeli reporters last week that his ministry hopes to complete plans for evacuating the hamlets of Susiya and Khan al-Ahmar within a few months, arguing they were built “without authorization.” Lieberman’s office confirmed that he had made the remarks.
B’Tselem said this constitutes forcible transfer that is prohibited under international humanitarian law, which requires an occupier to protect those under its rule.
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© Source: http://www.sacbee.com/news/nation-world/article171268177.html
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Coast Guard, police search Lake Ontario for 3 kayakers

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Three kayakers missing, apparently on Lake Ontario
SOMERSET, N.Y. — The U. S. Coast Guard and police agencies are searching for three kayakers from Pennsylvania who are missing after setting out on Lake Ontario in upstate New York.
Each had his own kayak, reports CBS Buffalo, N.Y. affiliate WIVB-TV .
The Somerset Police Department says the three men were last seen leaving a boat launch at Golden Hills State Park on Monday afternoon. Police say the men were reported missing around 6 p.m.
They believe the three headed straight out from the park but are unsure if they drifted because of high winds, WIVB says.
Authorities say the Coast Guard is involved in the air and water search and is coordinating with a Canadian rescue team. The Niagara County Sheriff’s Office is assisting in the search along the shoreline about 35 miles northeast of Buffalo.
Somerset Police Chief John Yotter told The Associated Press Tuesday morning the 19-year-old and two 22-year-olds are from Pennsylvania. He says the men have relatives in the Somerset area.

© Source: https://www.cbsnews.com/news/coast-guard-police-search-lake-ontario-for-3-missing-kayakers/
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North Korea Crisis Strengthens Alliances, U. S. Naval Commander Says

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A top U. S. naval commander said that Pyongyang’s recent string of missile and nuclear tests has brought the U. S. closer to its allies in Tokyo and Seoul, despite signs of friction.
SEOUL—Pyongyang’s recent string of missile and nuclear tests has brought the U. S. closer to its allies in Tokyo and Seoul, rather than dividing them as North Korean leader Kim Jong Un had hoped, a top U. S. naval commander said.
The remarks from Adm. Scott Swift, commander of the U. S. Pacific Fleet, come amid signs of friction between the U. S. and South Korea, and warnings that North Korea appears to be planning to test-launch another…

© Source: https://www.wsj.com/articles/north-korea-crisis-strengthens-alliances-u-s-naval-commander-says-1504605651?mod=fox_australian
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NAACP Leader Speaks With Union Workers On The Possible End To DACA Program

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Speakers at Chicago’s Labor Day rally downtown condemned Monday what they believe President Trump will do: end the DACA program.
CHICAGO (CBS) — Speakers at Chicago’s Labor Day rally downtown condemned Monday what they believe President Trump will do: end the DACA program.
“We used to say back in my day, the freaks come out at night.”
Reverend William Barber of North Carolina, a leader with the NAACP, spoke to the union workers in the Loop. WBBM’s Steve Miller reports.
“A freaky decision came out at night. Said Trump’s going to end DACA for young Latino Dreamers. Students who were brought here. And he’s trying to pit you against them. Because the rationale is, he’s claiming that he’s making the decision based on his love for the American worker, ” Barber said.
“And we’ ve got to resist that kind of demonation. Resist that kind of otherization. And we need to tell him and tell all those supporting him, we’ re coming for you – black, white, Latino, gay, straight, young, old, North, South, East, West. And we will not be divided.”
President Donald Trump announced Tuesday that Congress should “get ready” to take on immigration legislation. He tweeted, “Congress, get ready to do your job – DACA!”
Attorney General Jeff Sessions is expected to announce Tuesday it will end in six months a program that shields from deportation young immigrants brought to the U. S. illegally as children.
The decision to delay the end of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or DACA program, would give Congress time to act. But Congress has struggled to act on immigration because of divisions within the Republican party.

© Source: http://chicago.cbslocal.com/2017/09/05/naacp-leader-union-workers-end-daca-program/
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Verfolgte Rohingya: Mehr als Hunderttausend auf der Flucht

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123.000 Angehörige der Minderheit Rohingya in Myanmar sind laut UN in den vergangenen zehn Tagen nach Bangladesch geflohen. Sie berichten von Erschießungen und niedergebrannten Dörfern. An der Grenze sollen Minen explodiert sein. Von Lena Bodewein.
123.000 Angehörige der Minderheit Rohingya in Myanmar sind laut UN in den vergangenen zehn Tagen nach Bangladesch geflohen. Sie berichten von Erschießungen und niedergebrannten Dörfern. An der Grenze sollen Minen explodiert sein.
Sie wandern mit kleinen Kindern auf der Hüfte, mit Alten am Arm, Kinder schleppen die wenigen Habseligkeiten der Familie durch Matsch, Berge und Dschungel. Tagelang sind sie unterwegs, und sie berichten von schrecklichen Ereignissen, abgefackelten Dörfern, getöteten Familien. “Mein Bruder wurde erschossen”, erzählt eine flüchtende Frau. “Sie haben ihn einfach in die Brust geschossen. Ich konnte ihn noch nicht mal richtig begraben, dann musste ich weg.”
Fast 125.000 Rohingya sind seit Beginn der Ausschreitungen vor anderthalb Wochen nach Bangladesch geflohen, allein 35.000 in den vergangenen 24 Stunden, melden die Vereinten Nationen. Dort gibt es aber kaum Platz für sie. Wer es dorthin schafft, lebt in provisorischen Lagern oder Unterständen.
Aber viele schaffen es auch nicht: Am Wochenende ertranken mehrere Dutzend Menschen beim Versuch, den Grenzfluss zu überqueren. Tausende warten noch an der Grenze, um nach Bangladesch hinein gelassen zu werden. Dort waren am Montag Explosionen zu hören.
Phil Robertson, Vize-Chef von Human Rights Watch in Asien, berichtet: “Eine Frau, ich glaube 19 Jahre alt, ist auf eine Mine getreten, die hat ihr rechtes Bein zerfetzt. Die Frage ist jetzt, wer diese Mine dort platziert hat.”
Dort, wo die junge Rohingya-Frau ihr Bein verlor, sollen vorher Soldaten der burmesischen Armee gesehen worden sein. Ein Sprecher der de-Facto-Regierungschefin Aung San Suu Kyi bestreitet das, er könne sich gut vorstellen, dass das militante Rohingya selbst gewesen seien.
Es steht, wie immer in diesem Konflikt, Aussage gegen Aussage. Dass in den vergangenen Tagen 2600 Häuser in Rohingya-Dörfern und 136 Häuser in nicht-muslimischen Ortschaften zerstört worden seien, sei allein die Schuld der militanten Rohingya, sagt Suu Kyis Seite. Angehörige der muslimischen Minderheit sagen dagegen, dass ihre Dörfer von angestachelten Buddhisten und von burmesischen Sicherheitskräften zerstört und ihre Familien niedergemetzelt würden.
Eine Überprüfung ist schwierig: Regierungsanordnungen verbieten unabhängigen Journalisten, Menschenrechtsexperten und Entwicklungshelfern seit fast neun Monaten den freien Zugang zum nördlichen Teil von Rakhine, dem Gebiet, in dem die Rohingya vor allem leben.
Lange schon haben Beobachter vor einer Eskalation der Krise gewarnt, wie zum Beispiel der ehemalige UN-Generalsekretär Kofi Annan: Diskriminierung führt zur Radikalisierung. Rakhine ist der ärmste Bundestaat Myanmars, die Rohingya werden dort nicht akzeptiert sondern ausgeschlossen, obwohl sie seit Generation dort leben – das ist ein Brutherd für militante Aufrührer. Wie die, die vor anderthalb Wochen Polizeistationen angriffen. Seitdem schlägt die Armee Myanmars mit aller Härte zurück – und davor fliehen die Rohingya.
Der Papst, die Vereinten Nationen, die junge Friedensnobelpreisträgerin Malala, sie alle fordern von Suu Kyi, ihr Schweigen zu brechen und die Krise zu beenden. Aber Kyaw Win, Leiter der Hilfsorganisation Burma Human Rights Network, sagt, sie sei die falsche Adressatin: “Nicht an Aung San Suu Kyi müssen wir uns wenden, sondern an General Min Aung Hlaing, den Armeechef. Ein Befehl von ihm genügt, um all das zu beenden – und das wird er nicht tun. Darum muss sich die internationale Gemeinschaft auf ihn konzentrieren.”
Unterdessen protestieren Menschen in Indonesien, Malaysia und Australien für eine Rettung der Rohingya. Im mehrheitlich muslimischen Indonesien fordern sie die Ausweisung des burmesischen Botschafters. Vor der Botschaft Myanmars in Jakarta stehen Polizisten Wache, denn am Wochenende flog ein Brandsatz auf das Botschaftsgebäude.
Das ist nicht im Sinne einer Demonstrantin, die sagt: “Wir sind hier, um unsere Solidarität mit unseren muslimischen Brüdern und Schwestern zu zeigen, um gegen die Gewalt zu protestieren. Denn die Opfer sind hauptsächlich Frauen und Kinder.” Und das kann keine Seite bestreiten.

© Source: http://www.tagesschau.de/ausland/rohingyamyanmar-101.html
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