Kamis, 30 November 2023

Malaysia brings home 121 suspected victims of job scams trapped in Myanmar conflict - CNA

KUALA LUMPUR: A total of 121 people, mostly Malaysians suspected of being victims of job scams, were evacuated from Myanmar on Friday (Dec 1) after being stranded by fighting between the military and rebel groups in the country's north, Malaysia's foreign ministry said.

The group, which included an Indonesian national, arrived at Kuala Lumpur International Airport at 3.24am local time through a specially arranged flight from Kunming, China, the ministry said in a statement.

The evacuation mission was carried out through the Myanmar-China border starting on Thursday morning with the cooperation and approval of the countries involved, the ministry said.

The mission came amid continuous fighting in northern Myanmar after an alliance of armed ethnic groups launched an offensive in late October. The groups have seized control of several towns and military outposts near the country's border with China, disrupting trade.

Malaysia's deputy foreign minister Mohamad Alamin said the rescued group were among 128 people stranded in Laukkaing, a town in Myanmar's northern Shan state, state news agency Bernama reported on Friday.

Malaysia's government will monitor developments and is ready to evacuate the remaining seven people who were unable to be rescued, Bernama quoted Mohamad as saying.

Hundreds of Malaysians have been rescued from cybercrime and job scam networks across Southeast Asia in recent years. Victims of the rackets say they are lured by promises of high-paying jobs and accommodation benefits, but are often instead forced to live in compounds and defraud online users.

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2023-12-01 04:55:24Z
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Hamas frees eight hostages to Israel as talks seek to extend Gaza truce - CNA

GAZA: Hamas on Thursday (Nov 30) released eight Israeli hostages in Gaza under a last-minute truce deal and and Israel freed 30 Palestinian prisoners as negotiators sought to renew the pause in fighting again.

Israel identified two women who were released first on Thursday as 21-year-old Mia Schem, among those seized at a dance party that Hamas militants attacked on Oct 7, and 40-year-old Amit Soussana.

Photos released by the Israeli prime minister's office showed Schem, who also holds French nationality, embracing her mother and brother after they were reunited at Hatzerim military base in Israel.

The Palestinian militant group Hamas then freed a group of six more hostages, transferring them to the Red Cross, the Israeli military said. Four were women aged 29 to 41, including one Mexican-Israeli dual national, according to official information.

Television images showed some of the women walking past ambulances once they reached Israeli territory.

The other two newly released hostages were a brother and sister, Belal and Aisha al-Ziadna, aged 18 and 17 respectively, according to the Israeli prime minister's office. They are Bedouin Arab citizens of Israel and among four members of their family taken hostage while they were milking cows on a farm.

Wahid Alhuzail, who chairs a group for Bedouins kidnapped on Oct 7, said he was happy they were freed.

"But it's not completely fulfilling. We want everyone to come home and for nobody to be stuck in the hands of the terror organisation Hamas," he told Reuters.

As part of the agreement, 30 Palestinians were released from jails, the Israeli prison service said.

Israel has sworn to annihilate Hamas, which rules Gaza, in response to the Oct 7 rampage by the militant group, when Israel says gunmen killed 1,200 people and took 240 hostages.

Until the truce, Israel bombarded the territory for seven weeks. Palestinian health authorities deemed reliable by the United Nations say more than 15,000 Gazans have been confirmed killed.

While Israel required Hamas to release 10 hostages daily to continue the Qatari-mediated truce, a Qatari foreign ministry spokesperson said there would be no more hostages freed on Thursday beyond the eight.

Israeli officials accepted eight rather than 10 hostages because Hamas on Wednesday released two extra hostages, the Qatari spokesperson said. They were Israeli-Russian women whose liberty the Palestinian faction described as a goodwill gesture to Moscow.

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2023-11-30 21:10:00Z
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'Climate doesn't wait': At COP28, Singapore wants to get more nations back on track with reducing emissions - CNA

The minister pointed out that by 2050 – the deadline crucial to meet the 1.5-degree limit – these youths will be the generation leading the country.

“They will be in their late 40s and 50s – prime of their lives. They will probably be business leaders, industry leaders, or even policymakers. And if they're going to be in the stewardship position, they should really get involved right now and to help steer this mothership of ours,” she said.

“We want to make sure that when they are making certain decisions, the trade-offs they are proposing, that they have a full picture of the constraints, of the needs of the people, industry and government.”

The summit also allows the youths to meet like-minded peers from across the globe and share opinions and aspirations.

“Climate is a global problem. For us to have a global solution, we need to be inclusive,” said Ms Fu. “Our youths need to take into consideration the views of other youth activists from other countries.”

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2023-11-30 11:12:07Z
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China too 'overwhelmed' to consider invasion: Taiwan President Tsai - CNA

TAIPEI: China's leadership is too "overwhelmed" with its internal problems to consider an invasion of Taiwan, President Tsai Ing-wen said in an interview with the New York Times.

China, which views democratically governed Taiwan as its own territory, has ramped up military pressure against the island over the past four years, leading to concerns of a conflict that would have global repercussions.

But Tsai, in a transcript of the New York Times DealBook Summit interview her office published on Thursday (Nov 30), said China had too many issues at the moment.

"Well, I think the Chinese leadership at this juncture is overwhelmed by its internal challenges. And my thought is that perhaps this is not a time for them to consider a major invasion of Taiwan," she said.

"Largely because the internal economic and financial as well as political challenges, but also, the international community has made it loud and clear that war is not an option, and peace and stability serves everybody's interests."

Asked about Tsai's comments, China's defence ministry said: "China will eventually and surely be reunified".

"The People's Liberation Army will take all necessary measures to firmly safeguard China's sovereignty and territorial integrity," ministry spokesperson Wu Qian told a monthly news briefing in Beijing.

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2023-11-30 08:43:00Z
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Great statesman, modern Machiavelli: Henry Kissinger's complex and conflicted legacy - The Straits Times

WASHINGTON - Dr Henry Kissinger, the much-feted practitioner of unsentimental realpolitik who died in his home in Connecticut on Nov 29 at age 100, was different things to different people. To some, he was one of the great statesmen of the 20th century; to others, a modern Machiavelli; to admirers, an unsentimental realist; but to detractors, a war criminal.

Though his influence was greatest during the Cold War years of the 1970s, we live today in a world he helped to create, and to which he left a complex, deeply contradictory and conflicted legacy.

Henry Alfred Kissinger was born in 1923 in Furth, Germany, to middle-class parents. In 1938, the family fled their native country’s discrimination and anti-Semitism to settle in New York City.

He would rise in his adopted country to become National Security Adviser, Secretary of State, and thereafter eminence grise to a series of American presidents.

Shortly after the young Kissinger became a naturalised citizen, he was drafted into the United States Army and served as an intelligence officer in Europe in the war. On his return, he embarked on a distinguished academic career, receiving a bachelor’s degree from Harvard University in 1950, then his master’s degree in 1952 and PhD in 1954 from the same university.

Dr Kissinger was appointed by President Richard Nixon to be his National Security Adviser in 1968, a post he held until 1975. In addition, he was also the 56th Secretary of State of the US from 1973 to 1977. After he left the government, he founded Kissinger Associates, an international consulting firm.

To say Dr Kissinger loomed large over the world through the 1970s in particular would be an understatement.

Impact on Asia

In 1971, Dr Kissinger and President Nixon sent the nuclear-powered aircraft carrier USS Enterprise to the Bay of Bengal, ostensibly to help evacuate Western nationals from the war zone in the third Indo-Pakistan war. But really, it was a show of force to dissuade India’s Prime Minister Indira Gandhi from moving against West Pakistan.

The Indian army was already deep inside East Pakistan, liberating it from the genocide of the Pakistani army, which was crushing a Bengali nationalist movement in the eastern half of the country. Deaths in the conflict are estimated to have been upwards of 1.5 million; up to 10 million refugees fled to neighbouring India, with the city of Calcutta – now Kolkata – awash with emaciated refugees. The events were increasing pressure on Mrs Gandhi to act.

The US, however, backed West Pakistan. Mrs Gandhi turned to the Soviet Union to checkmate President Nixon with her August 1971 Friendship Treaty with Moscow, infuriating the duo in the White House.

But the US had its own reasons for its actions. Pakistan’s military dictator Yahya Khan was orchestrating Dr Kissinger’s historic 1971 trip to China – a trip that was to lay the ground for President Nixon’s visit to China in 1972. The US had had no diplomatic relations with China for more than two decades.

The US support for then West Pakistan during the war located in what became Bangladesh today is too often forgotten, except of course in Bangladesh.

“Nixon and Kissinger largely failed at sanitising their record on... Vietnam and Cambodia – but on Bangladesh, they proved to be remarkably deft at ducking public judgment,” wrote professor of politics and international affairs Gary J. Bass at Princeton University, in his 2013 book, The Blood Telegram.

Just two years later, when Dr Kissinger became Secretary of State, a Gallup poll found him to be the most admired man in America.

“Far from ending up a pariah, he remains a superstar, glistening as the single most famous and revered American foreign policy practitioner,” Prof Bass wrote.

Dr Kissinger is still held as the guru of Washington’s foreign policy and national security establishment for the way he engineered a Sino-Soviet split, bringing China, under its pragmatic leaders Zhou Enlai and Deng Xiaoping, into the international community. It paved the way for the US’ eventual recognition on Jan 1, 1979, of the People’s Republic as the sole legitimate government of China.

Former top Singapore diplomat Kishore Mahbubani, currently a Distinguished Fellow at the Asia Research Institute of the National University of Singapore, has argued that the trip planted seeds which, with the help of personal relationships, ensured that the relationship between China and the US endured crises. The development was good for the region because as long as the US and China sustained a relatively harmonious relationship, Asean was not divided by their rivalry.

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2023-11-30 02:30:00Z
CBMigwFodHRwczovL3d3dy5zdHJhaXRzdGltZXMuY29tL3dvcmxkL3VuaXRlZC1zdGF0ZXMvZ3JlYXQtc3RhdGVzbWFuLW1vZGVybi1tYWNoaWF2ZWxsaS1oZW5yeS1raXNzaW5nZXItcy1jb21wbGV4LWFuZC1jb25mbGljdGVkLWxlZ2FjedIBAA

Rabu, 29 November 2023

Henry Kissinger, American diplomat and Nobel winner, dies at 100 - The Straits Times

CONNECTICUT - Dr Henry Kissinger, a controversial Nobel Peace Prize winner and diplomatic powerhouse whose service under two presidents left an indelible mark on US foreign policy, died on Nov 29 at age 100, according to his geopolitical consulting firm Kissinger Associates Inc.

Dr Kissinger died at his home in Connecticut, the firm said in a statement. No mention was made of the circumstances. It said he would be interred at a private family service, to be followed at a later date by a public memorial service in New York City.

Dr Kissinger had been active past his centenary, attending meetings in the White House, publishing a book on leadership styles, and testifying before a Senate committee about the nuclear threat posed by North Korea.

In July 2023 he made a surprise visit to Beijing to meet Chinese President Xi Jinping.

In the 1970s, he had a hand in many of the epoch-changing global events of the decade while serving as secretary of state under Republican President Richard Nixon.

The German-born Jewish refugee’s efforts led to the diplomatic opening of China, landmark US-Soviet arms control talks, expanded ties between Israel and its Arab neighbours, and the Paris Peace Accords with North Vietnam.

Dr Kissinger’s reign as the prime architect of US foreign policy waned with Mr Nixon’s resignation in 1974. Still, he continued to be a diplomatic force under President Gerald Ford and to offer strong opinions throughout the rest of his life.

While many hailed Dr Kissinger for his brilliance and broad experience, others branded him a war criminal for his support for anti-communist dictatorships, especially in Latin America.

In his latter years, his travels were circumscribed by efforts by other nations to arrest or question him about past US foreign policy.

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2023-11-30 02:03:45Z
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8 years after the Paris Agreement, see how climate change has shaped the planet - CNA

BANGKOK: It is just a short document 16 paragraphs and 29 articles. But over the past eight years, the Paris Agreement has set the framework and aspirations for global action on climate change.

The year 2015, when 196 countries negotiated the agreement, was far from the start of efforts to slow global warming, but it set a clear universal target to keep the rise in mean temperature to well below 2 degrees Celsius.

Since then, countries have continued to negotiate and improve their approach to lower emissions, adapt to adverse impacts and usher in green economies powered by clean energy. The objectives of the Paris Agreement still hold strong today, despite initially being criticised for being insufficiently binding.

“Things would have been worse if we didn't have the Paris Agreement. Even though I think it was generally understood at the time that it wasn't perfect, it was the best we could do and much better than nothing,” said Professor Mark Howden, director of the Institute for Climate, Energy & Disaster Solutions at the Australian National University.

At United Nations-led climate change talks at the 28th Conference of the Parties (COP28), which start today, data will be presented for the first time to show the collective progress made since 2015.

The Global Stocktake is a form of inventory-taking, driven by two years of data collection and technical assessments. It comes at a crucial halfway point between that historic treaty and 2030, the year by which climate science has determined much needs to be achieved. 

The preliminary findings ahead of COP28 show progress to reduce carbon emissions has been painfully slow.

“On average, it is a sobering read. It's effectively a dark cloud,” Prof Howard said.

But there are a few silver linings, such as the continued reduction in costs of renewables, the massive escalation in rate of adoption of renewable energy, and the development and rollout of technologies such as electric vehicles, he said.

Ms Melissa Low, a research fellow at the National University of Singapore's Centre for Nature-based Climate Solutions, was in Paris as an observer at COP21. She recalls feeling the significance of the breakthrough.

“This treaty has driven near-universal climate action by setting goals and sending signals to the world on the urgency of the climate crisis,” she said. 

But more action is needed now on all fronts.

“These next years are important because we have very little time to meet the temperature limit, and the complex interactions among the earth, ocean, cryosphere, atmosphere and biosphere can affect the time it will take us to get to that emissions and temperature limit,” she said.

Here are four important measurements of how climate change and the world’s response to it has transformed the planet, especially since the advent of the Paris Agreement. See how closely you can track the changes.

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2023-11-29 22:00:47Z
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