Raleted

Thứ Tư, 29 tháng 2, 2012

Syrian activists: Snowfall spared us further copter assaults

(CNN) -- Activists credited snowfall over Homs with causing helicopter gunships to stop firing Wednesday on civilians in the city's Baba Amr neighborhood.
The snow began falling in the evening, after the opposition stronghold of Baba Amr had endured an intense, daylong campaign of shelling and gunfire that triggered fears among the approximately 20,000 residents that a full-fledged ground invasion could be imminent, opposition activists said.
They said Baba Amr was under its heaviest shelling yet and that ground troops had advanced in al Hakura, an old part of that neighborhood. Free Syrian Army fighters repelled the incursion, the activists said. The clashes lasted for hours, opposition activists said.
While helicopters had flown over the area in previous days, Wednesday marked the first time they fired at people on the ground, opposition activists in Baba Amr said.
At least 29 people were killed Wednesday, including 16 in Homs, according to the opposition Local Coordination Committees of Syria. The toll included three people in Damascus suburbs, three in Daraa, two in Deir Ezzor, two in Idlib, one in Hama and one in Latakia.
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The deaths in Homs included a family of five, the group said.
The intense shelling made it difficult for the citizen journalists among Syria's opposition to take videos and post them on YouTube documenting the day's events, they said. With electricity cut to the city, activists said they were using generators to power the computers they were using to upload the few videos they were able to shoot.
The opposition Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the family was killed at a roundabout in the neighborhood of Karm al Zaytoun.
A man was killed by a rocket-propelled grenade in the Homs neighborhood of Bab Aldreeb, and another civilian was shot dead in the Inshaat neighborhood, the observatory said.
Numerous neighborhoods in Homs were under attack. Explosions shook al Khalidiya, al Bayada, Karm al Zaytoun, Bab Sbaa and others, an opposition activist said.
Homs' water supplies and communications were also cut, the activist said.
France said it was trying to evacuate two nationals stranded in Homs, in coordination with Syrian authorities and the Red Crescent.
"We expect the government of Damascus to meet all the conditions for a safe and rapid evacuation, including an immediate cease-fire on Baba Amr," French Foreign Ministry spokesman Bernard Valero told CNN.
Syrian state-run news agency SANA, which consistently blames the violence on "armed terrorist groups" reported on violence in Homs, as well. One such "terrorist group" killed a nurse at a hospital, while another attacked a water plant in the Homs countryside, SANA said.
But opposition activists said the violence was perpetrated by the Syrian regime.
A 13-year-old boy was killed by sniper fire in the eastern neighborhood of Deir Ezzor, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.
An undisclosed number of casualties resulted when rockets fell on the western city of Rastan, the group said.
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In Hama, regime forces carried out a raid and arrest campaign amid sporadic gunfire in several neighborhoods, the LCC said.
Reinforcements for security forces, including tanks, arrived at the Syrian-Turkish border, the LCC said. There were also reports of helicopters flying over some villages in the area, the group said.
In the Damascus suburb of Zabadani, Syrian forces stormed residential buildings detaining males older than 13, an opposition activist named Mostapha said.
CNN cannot independently verify opposition or government reports because Syria has severely limited journalists' access to the country. But the vast majority of reports by activists inside the country indicate that government forces are killing citizens in an attempt to eliminate those seeking President Bashar al-Assad's ouster.
Spanish journalist Javier Espinosa managed to get out of Syria and into Lebanon, his newspaper, El Mundo, and an opposition activist said.
A United Nations official said indiscriminate bombardment by government tanks and rocket fire has contributed to "well over 7,500 deaths."
The United Nations has credible reports that "the death toll now often exceeds 100 civilians a day, including women and children," Lynn Pascoe told the U.N. Security Council. Pascoe is the U.N.'s undersecretary general for political affairs.
Opposition activists say more than 9,000 people have died in the nearly yearlong government attempt to quell the opposition. At least 104 people were killed Tuesday across Syria, the LCC said.
In Damascus on Wednesday, students from the Zain Abideen school in the Midan neighborhood began demonstrating, chanting for freedom and demanding the regime's ouster, according to the LCC.
SANA, meanwhile, said a terrorist group stole a cement truck in Hama, while another clashed with customs personnel in Idlib.
Twelve "army and law enforcement martyrs" were buried Wednesday, SANA reported.
"The martyrs' relatives hailed the role of the Syrian army in maintaining the security and stability of the homeland, expressing confidence of the ability of the Syrian people to overcome the crisis through their unity and rallying around their leadership, asserting that Syria will foil all the conspiracies hatched against it," the report said.
About 25,000 people have registered as refugees in neighboring countries and 100,000 to 200,000 are displaced within Syria, Pascoe said.
Tunisia, which last year became the first country in the region to oust a longtime ruler, has offered asylum to Syria's president.
Tunisian President Moncef Marzouki said "closing all exits in front of the Syrian regime" would "worsen its brutality against the revolution of the brotherly Syrian people and, consequently, the likelihood of causing thousands more victims," the Tunisian state TAP news agency reported.
"If the Syrian president's departure to another country, including Tunisia, helps bring about a settlement to the political crisis in Syria, Tunisia will be ready to lend its assistance," Marzouki said, according to TAP.
U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton told the Senate Appropriations Committee that al-Assad could be tried for war crimes.
"I think people have been putting forth the argument, but I also think from long experience that could complicate a resolution of a difficult, complex situation because it limits options to persuade leaders, perhaps, to step down from power," Clinton said Tuesday.
The pressure on the Syrian regime mounted Tuesday, when the U.N. Human Rights Council met to discuss a report saying Syrian government officials were responsible for "crimes against humanity" against opposition members.

UNICEF launches flagship report focusing on urban children

UNICEF launches flagship report focusing on urban children

'The State of the World's Children 2012: Children in an Urban World'

UNICEF’s flagship report, ‘The State of the World’s Children 2012: Children in an Urban World’, launches today, 28 February, in Mexico City. One billion children live in urban areas, a number that is growing rapidly. Yet disparities within cities reveal that many lack access to schools, health care and sanitation, despite living alongside these services. This story is part of a series highlighting the needs of these children.
NEW YORK, 28 February 2012 – The world is undergoing the largest wave of urban growth in history.

VIDEO: 31 January 2012 - UNICEF correspondent Chris Niles reports on this year's 'State of the World's Children' report. This year's report focuses attention on the needs of children in urban areas. Watch in RealPlayer
UNICEF’s annual flagship publication, 'The State of the World’s Children 2012' (SOWC), says that almost half the world’s children now live in urban areas, and it’s calling for greater emphasis on identifying and meeting their needs.
“We’re approaching some sort of tipping point. Already more than half the world’s people live in cities and towns and so do more than a billion children. The day is rapidly approaching when the majority of the world’s children will be growing up in urban environments,” said SOWC editor Abid Aslam.
Harsh environments
Traditionally, families and children moved to cities in search of better opportunities, but most urban growth now seems to be the result of children being born to parents who already live in a city. And services aren’t keeping up with this growth.

VIDEO: 26 January 2012 - UNICEF Research Officer Sue Le Ba discusses the lack of information about children living in poverty in urban areas. Watch in RealPlayer
“Increasingly people are being born into existing urban environments, and what is alarming to us is that, for far too many children, those environments are extremely harsh,” said Mr. Aslam.
Children growing up in slums such as Kibera in Nairobi, Kenya, and the favelas of Brazil are forced to endure violence, exploitation and lack of basics such as clean water and education. They are likely not to have been registered at birth and their families may lack a formal rental agreement or other such protection from arbitrary eviction. This makes their lives extremely precarious.
“They don’t know often from one week to the next, or one month to the next, or one year to the next where they’re going to live, much less whether they’re going to be able to go to school, or whether they’re going to have clean, piped water,” said Mr. Aslam.

VIDEO: 26 January 2012 - UNICEF Research Officer Nikola Balvin discusses some of the issues facing vulnerable children in urban areas.  Watch in RealPlayer
Lack of data
The report turns on its head the notion that all children who live in cities are necessarily better off than those in rural communities. It shows that, although disadvantaged children may live minutes away from schools and clinics, for example, they are cut off from them by poverty and discrimination.
It also calls attention to the lack of data on conditions in slums, particularly as it relates to children, and it calls for a deeper understanding of the issues surrounding poverty and inequality in cities and increased political will to improve the lives of the most marginalized.
UNICEF Image
© UNICEF India/2011/Crouch
Children put their sprawling slum on the map – literally. The data they have gathered about Rishi Aurobindo Colony, Kolkata, India, will be uploaded to Google Earth.
“One of the things that struck us all is the paucity of child-specific urban data,” Mr. Aslam said. “There are many technical reasons, but at the end of the day it’s a political decision and it serves certain interests to keep the problem under wraps, to keep these children invisible, and that’s something that needs to change.”
'The State of the World’s Children 2012: Children in an Urban World' notes that the very children and families who are excluded from the opportunities of urban life can come up with improvements that benefit everyone. Examples in cities from Latin America across the globe to Asia show the benefits of greater representation and participation in municipal affairs. Where the excluded have been included in urban planning and decision-making, advancements have followed – in literacy, infrastructure and safety, for example.
“The report contains evidence that when you include the poor and marginalized and the voiceless in decision-making processes, which is their right, then everyone benefits,” Mr. Aslam said.

Thứ Năm, 2 tháng 2, 2012

"Journalists" fool "who sell lottery tickets fairy"


But she and ticket buyers were "forced" to pay 18 million for the post.

From before the New Year 2012 Thin Ren far, we repeatedly contacted Ms. Pham Thi Christian (born in Hong Ngu district, Dong Thap province), but she adamantly refused to see. She explained: "I was scared too and journalists."

"Du" ... the papers

Go to her house twice and with the encouragement of local authorities, new Lanh said the reason she agreed to journalists. Ms. Christian said: "Before Tet when selling lottery tickets, there are three people came to see me say that writing good deeds. I know the names of two people is Lu Ngoc Dat Nguyen and Bui-proclaimed reporters Labor and HCMC Television (HTV). These people came from Mr. Do Ngoc Tuan (who bought her winning ticket Protestant) introduced ".
HTV magazine article about her Gospel, Tuan worth 18 million

"Met at the bar. One who brought me the paper saying that I will be photographed, published a front page like the woman in the newspaper. One person told me the price list if the newspapers. I said Tuan literacy should help me much choice. They cite as many people have signed it, then told me to get written in the blank with the swipe money from 6 million to frame 40 million. I chose 15 million. Three reporters say I choose 15 million is not a cover. I select the item and Tuan 18 million but no sign contracts. "

Then many of her relatives oppose the Protestant writing to pay to call reporters Lanh Bui Ngoc Dat cancel the contract proposal. Said newspaper has reached up and can not take back. She called him Tuan Protestant, he said: "I promise I will miss compensation unless I sign a contract should be subject".

Pursued as bandits

A few days later Lanh Hong Ngu home food festival. These reporters find Tuan. "Anh Tuan told two reporters chased him in this group as bandits. Tuan odd to see two people put this 9 million. Receiving money they would finish my home address to find but not for Tuan "- Lanh said.
"Nhà báo" lừa "người bán vé số cổ tích", Tin tức trong ngày, lanh ve so, trung ve so, ban ve so, nha bao, trung so doc dac, bao, tin tuc, tin hot, tin hayHTV magazine article about her Gospel, Tuan worth 18 million

"Met at the bar. One who brought me the paper saying that I will be photographed, published a front page like the woman in the newspaper. One person told me the price list if the newspapers. I said Tuan literacy should help me much choice. They cite as many people have signed it, then told me to get written in the blank with the swipe money from 6 million to frame 40 million. I chose 15 million. Three reporters say I choose 15 million is not a cover. I select the item and Tuan 18 million but no sign contracts. "

Then many of her relatives oppose the Protestant writing to pay to call reporters Lanh Bui Ngoc Dat cancel the contract proposal. Said newspaper has reached up and can not take back. She called him Tuan Protestant, he said: "I promise I will miss compensation unless I sign a contract should be subject".

Pursued as bandits

A few days later Lanh Hong Ngu home food festival. These reporters find Tuan. "Anh Tuan told two reporters chased him in this group as bandits. Tuan odd to see two people put this 9 million. Receiving money they would finish my home address to find but not for Tuan "- Lanh said.
"Nhà báo" lừa "người bán vé số cổ tích", Tin tức trong ngày, lanh ve so, trung ve so, ban ve so, nha bao, trung so doc dac, bao, tin tuc, tin hot, tin hay
 Chị Lành và con trai (Ảnh: Phụ nữ TP.HCM)

On 2-2, we met Jade Title, vice Police A Long Khanh, Hong Ngu district (Dong Thap). He Toai 14-1 after two reporters on Bui Ngoc Dat (HTV magazine) and Lu Nguyen (Labor Newspaper) holding his papers, including the Protestant and said to her local police to the report presented. He Toai and a police reporter who brought two sisters to the Protestants. After a time to meet, greet, speak normally, he Toai found out about because nothing special.
After the commune police left, the two reporters who still sit back and put the problem into 9 million for the remainder of the "contract newspapers." "They said to get the money to Vietnam for charity. I find that I must keep my promise to the house should get 9 million offer for Nguyen and Dat. The people in the house that I suspect should call police report. I say it should not only give the message "- she said Protestant.
Impersonating reporter
Toai He said a few days after Labor representatives report to Long Khanh A commune People's Committee inquiring into the case. Workers' representatives report provides a list of reporters, both of his collaborators to her Protestant reconciliation but no reporter named Lu Nguyen. The representative apologized and said that report was the impersonation of newspaper reporters do not talk or so. And then she decided not to Protestant journalist anymore.
2-2 days, we have contacted the board of directors HCMC Television (HTV) to verify the work of "reporters" Bui Ngoc Dat and received written replies. HTV said in direct communication content and content of special issues of journals HTV Year Ren Thin, HTV magazine not assigned and assign reporters made on posts. He is director Bui Ngoc Dat Media Company Success (382/2 Tan Ky - Tan Quy, Tan Phu, Vietnam) is not a reporter, employees or partners of HTV Magazine.
However, this company has registered a magazine ad pages Ren Thin HTV spring period. The implementation of this article is due to Bui Ngoc Dat personal contact with her own gospel and Tuan signed an agreement to write self-introduction and collection. Through working with HTV, Bui Ngoc Dat admitted voluntarily letterhead impersonating the issue of HTV to trade with partners on.
To verify the answer to that HTV, we repeatedly contacted Bui Ngoc Dat via mobile number and landline number at the company but no for answer. Particularly in the case of "reporters" Lu Nguyen himself the father of Labor report, we received reports from him Lu Nguyen (whose real name is Bui Ngoc Diep) said he is not related to the amount of 18 million . Reaching the house he and his sister Christian, he is to get information Tuan writes for the newspaper Lao Dong. Nguyen Anh Lu admits not of newspaper reporters in Labor and the Labor Newspaper address on business cards as well as arbitrarily without permission. Currently he is working for Nguyen Travel Magazine Vietnam Urban Environment.
ty truyền thông Thành Đạt (382/2 Tân Kỳ - Tân Quý, Q.Tân Phú, TP.HCM) không phải là phóng viên, nhân viên hay cộng tác viên của tạp chí HTV.

Tuy nhiên, công ty này có đăng ký một trang quảng cáo trên tạp chí HTV kỳ xuân Nhâm Thìn. Việc thực hiện bài viết này là do cá nhân ông Bùi Ngọc Đạt tự liên hệ với chị Lành và anh Tuấn để ký hợp đồng thỏa thuận viết bài tự giới thiệu và thu tiền. Qua làm việc với HTV, ông Bùi Ngọc Đạt thừa nhận tự ý in danh thiếp mạo danh là người của tạp chí HTV để giao dịch với các đối tác trên.

Để xác minh sự việc mà HTV trả lời, chúng tôi nhiều lần liên hệ với ông Bùi Ngọc Đạt qua số di động và số điện thoại bàn ở công ty nhưng không có tín hiệu trả lời. Riêng về trường hợp “phóng viên” Lữ Nguyễn tự xưng là người của báo Lao Động, chúng tôi nhận được tường trình từ anh Lữ Nguyễn (tên thật là Bùi Ngọc Điệp) cho biết anh không liên quan gì đến số tiền 18 triệu đồng. Việc anh cùng ông Đạt đến nhà chị Lành, anh Tuấn là để lấy thông tin viết bài cho báo Lao Động. Anh Lữ Nguyễn cũng thừa nhận không phải là phóng viên của báo Lao Động và việc in địa chỉ của báo Lao Động trên danh thiếp cũng là tự ý làm mà không xin phép. Hiện anh Lữ Nguyễn đang cộng tác cho tạp chí Môi Trường Đô Thị Việt Nam.