Posts tagged as:

world

Talks with terrorists

by Cat on August 6, 2007

From the Chosun Ilbo:

“Korean hostage negotiators have agreed to direct talks with Taliban kidnappers in Afghanistan, a purported spokesman for the Islamists militants told DPA Thursday. The news agency quoted Qari Yousuf Ahmadi as saying Korean Ambassador to Afghanistan Kang Sung-ju spoke directly by phone with his Taliban counterpart.”

I have to say I really hope this is not true, but given some of the statements from the country’s leadership over the past several days, I have a bad feeling.

Talk about completely legitimizing kidnapping as a political tool. So, the next time the Taliban wants something accomplished with a certain country (definitely Korea) they’ll just grab and threaten to kill a few unarmed civilians as a means of opening “negotiations.”

I haven’t commented before about the kidnappings because I didn’t (and don’t) think I have the background to add anything substantive to the discussion. But it gets to the point that you feel like you’re ignoring the elephant in the room by not talking about it.

I have been linking to stories on the link blog at the upper right. If you’re interested in what’s being said in South Korea, I recommend reading posts (and the comments)  here, here and here for starters.

Better buying, not boycotts

by Cat on June 12, 2006

New York Times‘ columnist Nicholas Kristof also writes a blog, On the Ground, where he often responds to reader feedback and posts additional material that doesn’t make it into print. I often learn more from these items than the published essays.

Like Saturday’s note on this column about misguided efforts to close down sweatshops in Africa. (Since a subscription is now required to read it, I’ll post the gist of it here:)

Well-meaning American university students regularly campaign against sweatshops. But instead, anyone who cares about fighting poverty should campaign in favor of sweatshops, demanding that companies set up factories in Africa. If Africa could establish a clothing export industry, that would fight poverty far more effectively than any foreign aid program.

[snip]

We in the West mostly despise sweatshops as exploiters of the poor, while the poor themselves tend to see sweatshops as opportunities.

On a street here in the capital of Namibia, in the southwestern corner of Africa, I spoke to a group of young men who were trying to get hired as day laborers on construction sites.

“I come here every day,” said Naftal Shaanika, a 20-year-old. “I actually find work only about once a week.”

Mr. Shaanika and the other young men noted that the construction jobs were dangerous and arduous, and that they would vastly prefer steady jobs in, yes, sweatshops. Sure, sweatshop work is tedious, grueling and sometimes dangerous. But over all, sewing clothes is considerably less dangerous or arduous — or sweaty — than most alternatives in poor countries.

[click to continue...]

The Dalai Lama

by Cat on May 21, 2006

is trying to arrange a visit.

The Tibetan leader has been invited to participate in the 2006 Gwangju Summit for Nobel Peace Prize Laureates.

The Gwangju Summit will feature an opening session with keynote speeches by co-chairs, Kim Dae-Jung, former president of the Republic of Korea and Mikhail Sergeyevich Gorbachev, former president of the former Soviet Union, four sessions to discuss topics, and a closing cession including the Gwangju Declaration of Nobel Peace. Individual or group winners of Nobel Peace Prize will attend the Gwangju Summit as presenters.

But don’t hold your breath. It’s still doubtful South Korea will grant the Lama’s request, made at a Korean embassy in India, for a visa to attend the conference. He has sought permission before but pressure from the Chinese government prevented the Korean government from agreeing.

A government official said that in determining whether or not to issue the Dalai Lama a visa, officials are considering “the whole of Korea-China relations” and that a final decision has yet to be made. Another government official said that “because of China,” it will be “difficult” to allow the Dalai Lama to visit Korea for the upcoming events.

From the Hankyoreh.

There aren’t many things that would make me wish I were still in college, but this is one of them.

New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof is offering to take a university student with him on a reporting trip to Africa.

We’ll visit schools, clinics and villages, perhaps chatting with presidents in their villas and Pygmies in the rain forest. The winner will write a Weblog for nytimes.com and prepare a video blog that will be shown on mtvU.

He’s doing this to make the point that students in the United States need a more international education. We grow up so ignorant about the world outside our borders. In an increasingly globalized economy, workers of the future need information about the customs, culture and attitudes of societies other than our own.

In many other countries, students take a “gap year” after graduating from high school to get this kind of unofficial education. It’s a year, I wish I’d taken when I had the time.

Traditionally, many young Britons, Irish, Australians and New Zealanders take a year to travel around the world on a shoestring, getting menial jobs when they run out of money. We should try to inculcate the custom of such a “gap year” in this country by offering university credit for such experiences. So here’s my proposal. Universities should grant a semester’s credit to any incoming freshman who has taken a gap year to travel around the world. In the longer term, universities should move to a three-year academic program, and require all students to live abroad for a fourth year. In that year, each student would ideally live for three months in each of four continents: Latin America, Asia, Africa and Europe. A student might, for example, start off teaching English and studying Latin American history in Ecuador, then learn Chinese intensively in Chengdu, then work at an AIDS clinic in Botswana while reading African literature on the side, and finish up by studying Islamic history in Istanbul. In each place, the students would live with local families.

Since I was a teenager I have wanted to live abroad — to experience a culture and life radically different than the one I was familiar with. In college, I considered studying in Spain, but different circumstances intervened and I never took the opportunity. I also toyed with joining the Peace Corps, but compelled by the need to earn a living, different choices seemed to make more sense, to be “safer.”

As a fledgling reporter, I remember interviewing a university professor who regaled me with tales of bargaining with rug merchants in Ankara and buying beautiful saris in India. I remember thinking wistfully that I’d never have the opportunity to drink tea in Thailand, the way that she had.

As time went on, I consoled myself with the idea that one day, maybe after I retired, I could join the Peace Corps or take an extended trip to live abroad. I’m really grateful that fate has intervened and pulled me out of the path I thought I was on, sending me packing to Asia while I am young enough to appreciate it.

It’s not that I think there’s so much wrong with my own culture that I have to get away from it. I just think that you learn more about your own history and beliefs when you can look at them from the outside. I also expect to learn more about the world and about people, than what I can experience from my own small part of it.

Recently, Jodi over at The Asia Pages has written about her experiences as a Peace Corps volunteer in Krygyzstan and how it opened her eyes to how narrowly people view cultures other than their own.

Sometimes I’d find myself shocked at what the Kyrgyz didn’t know about the United States and the life I lived there.

What? You know who Mike Tyson is but not Michael Jordan? You’ve never heard of nachos, tacos or enchiladas? You’ve never seen an escalator before? You’ve never been in an airplane?

Eventually I learned. The world may seem to revolve around the United States yet at the same time, it does not. And things that were obvious to me were completely foreign and abstract to some. It came as a shock at first but over time, I got the message: There is a world beyond the US of A.

It’s a lesson that I think too few people ever learn.

*Title of the famous book by Maya Angelou.