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Thursday, August 27, 2009

Khamenei changes sides

In the aftermath of Iran’s Presidential Elections, Khamenei positioned himself in line with the hardliners. He probably linked his fate to that of Ahmadinejad and flamed on the protests.

Now he just turned his back on the hardliners and denied any foreign hand behind the leaders of the opposition and left them just as involuntary puppets of a long orchestrated charade of the West.

So, what now? The main accusation against the dozens of detained that are now under trails is of being agents from foreign powers -specially Britain and the USA- acting in Iranian soil to destabilize the country. If the Supreme leader diminishes those charges, what about those detainees that recognised under detention they were acting for foreign agencies? What made them say that?

Torture, anyone?



Photo: Reuters TV/REUTERS


All posts on the Iran Presidential Elections 2009 published in Worldwide, here.


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Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Friendly fire 26/08/09

- How Poles struggle in Afghanistan.

- China cuts the supply of rare metals.

- One of the kidnapped French spies captured in Somalia, free. How? Well...

- Maybe the Russian freighter kidnapped in the Atlantic wasn't carrying just timber

- The third man in Afghanistan's presidential elections (the ona Obama should listen to)





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To the space and beyond

When last April North Korea launched a rocket/long-range missile into space, several voices started to shout out for sanctions against Kim’s regime. In the end, the test was, according to American military sources, a failure; although the North Koreans claim that their satellite is rounding the Earth chanting echoes of admiration for his present leader.

But looking forward the test itself, the point is that North Korea is under sanctions and is not allowed to test that kind of rockets or missiles. As we pointed out here, having a space platform doesn’t automatically qualifies for having a long-range missile system, but it helps. A lot. And that’s why the International community imposed the sanctions against North Korea.

This week, again, a rocket rocketed into the space from the Korean peninsula. Only that this time was from the South. After a few delays due to technical malfunctions and bad weather, the first South Korean satellite launched from its own soil was… Another failure. Exactly for the same reasons as the north neighbors. Both Koreas’ rockets weren’t able to reach a stable orbit, so the satellites were burned into the atmosphere.

But looking again forward beyond the launching, there is still the issue of the sanctions. If the North is banned for launching rockets into space or long-range missiles from its soil, it should rule the same standards for the South. Indeed, the North warned the international community they will be closely watching for the reaction to this launching.

Of course, the reaction has been nothing. It’s quite difficult, taking into account that the current General Secretary of the United Nations is a South Korean himself. Try again, Kim. But the truth has to be said, and it is that for once, the US hasn’t been so hypocrite as usual.

Sure, they haven’t condemned the South Koreans like they did with the northern neighbors. They couldn’t do it, in the end, the south is their ally. But at least they didn’t contributed either to the effort. When the South Koreans turned to the Americans for help with the rockets, they said “nay”. So the South government called on the Russians’ door (who finally helped them).

In this upside-down world, this rocket-incident and the recent behavior of the northsiders have exchanged the characters of the good and the bad guy between the two Koreas.

While the South claims that any critical commentary from the North about their space program is just "propaganda", the North has been giving sweets to the West for the past two months. First was the release of the two American journalists detained in March, after the visit of Bill Clinton.

Then, last week, Kim’s regime decided to resume conversations with the South, sent a delegation and condolences to the funeral of an ex-president of the South and is thinking about reopening the borders to tourists and familiar reunions.

With guys like these (specially Kim, who likes to be the good cop and the bad cop himself), who says politics are boring?



Photo: Park Ji-Hwan/AFP/Getty Images

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Monday, August 24, 2009

Afghan elections aftermath

First provisional results on the Afghan elections will be published tomorrow (if we are lucky enough), but some polls are already showing an impressive win for the current president Hamid Karzai. A comfortable difference of 50 points (Karzai, 72% of the votes; Abdullah Abdullah, the closest competitor, 23%) that would make unnecessary a second round. Still, two million votes have to be counted, but are from zones supposed to be Karzai strongholds.

The election day, by the way, was relaxed and calmed. Few reports leaked about problems caused by road devices, the Talibans or bombs. Indeed, Karzai’s government was trying to minimize the impact of Western media, but truth seemed to be that news were that there weren’t any news.

So, the Afghan elections are over, you’d think... Well, not yet. Now is when the party starts and truth comes out.

Despite the fact that Karzai's government lacks of the control of half of Afghanistan (here the map that illustrates it), apparently the votes casted in the other half under their control may not have been as clean as they should.

Abdullah Abdullah has already alleged fraud in millions of votes. Maybe he’s right. Like with Ahmadinejad in the neighbour Iran, Karzai was the winning horse. But the difference in votes between the first one and the runner up is, at best, suspicious.

Millions of votes appear to be casted magically. Everyone has voted in Afghanistan. Even Britney Spears.

Tom Coughlan, from The Times, reports from the town of Pul-e-Charki, near Kabul. At 8am, an hour after the polls opened, several polling stations across the country (including the one where Coughlan was) were empty of voters. According to the officials there, it was because an hour before everyone came to cast their votes.

The result of a frenetic hour of enthusiastic voting by Afghan nomads was a total of 5,530 votes casted. Surprisingly, each box had uniformly between 500 and 510 votes. Even more surprisingly, 3,025 (54%) of those votes were from women. Coughlan makes the maths:

“Assuming that the last voter disappeared at least two minutes before the Times arrived at 7.55am, the staff working on the 12 separate ballot boxes at the site must have been processing at least 100 voters per minute since polling began”.


Quite impressive. Specially taking into account that only a few hours later, after the arrival of another truck loaded with voters…

“As the thirty voters each made their way to the ballot box it became evident that the staff were able to process a maximum four voters every three minutes, or at best 80 voters per ballot box per hour, or 960 for the entire polling centre per hour. How was it possible then to process 5,530 in an hour, The Times wondered. Did the election officials suspect any sort of fraud?”


Fraud? Sure not.

Coughlan is not the only one reporting this kind of incidents. Jason Reich, from War is Boring, reports from Nerkh, a remote American outpost in Afghanistan, over the phone that all the success claimed by the EU, the Americans, Afghan officials and the UN is just bullshit, a "joke":

“My sources tell me that two people voted and there is very, very heavy fighting”.


In fact, the fights didn’t stop at all during all the previous week to the election’s day. It actually increased ahead of the elections. And now we know even more after the Taliban released a video in YouTube that shows how voters were indeed prosecuted.

Maybe I have to revise my notes, but this doesn’t look at all like democracy and freedom.



Photo: picture-alliance/dpa

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Tuesday, August 18, 2009

I'm back!

I’m back. Well, sort of. My body is back, but my brain is still on holidays. And after two weeks disconnected, the updating on the news from the last 15 days is being really painful. So expect less writing this week. Coming soon the usual length of the posts, though. I'm getting there, I promise.

Slowly.



PS. This is why I hate holidays...

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Are you afraid? Well, this works in that way. First you do what scares you and it's later when you get the courage
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