Sunday, February 25, 2018

China proposes to let Xi Jinping extend presidency beyond 2023 - BBC News

25/2/2018
China proposes to let Xi Jinping extend presidency beyond 2023
Xi Jinping became Chinese president in 2013 and is currently due to step down in 2023
China's governing Communist Party has proposed removing a clause in the constitution which limits presidencies to two five-year terms.
The move would allow the current President Xi Jinping to remain as leader after he is due to step down.
There had been widespread speculation that Mr Xi would seek to extend his presidency beyond 2023.
Party congress last year saw him cement his status as the most powerful leader since the late Mao Zedong.
His ideology was also enshrined in the party's constitution at the congress, and in a break with convention, no obvious successor was unveiled.
Born in 1953, Mr Xi is the son of one of the Communist Party's founding fathers. He joined the party in 1974, climbing its ranks before becoming president in 2013.
His presidency has seen economic reform, a fierce campaign against corruption, as well as a resurgence in nationalism and a crackdown on human rights.
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What do we know about the move?
The announcement was carried on state news agency Xinhua on Sunday.
"The Communist Party of China Central Committee proposed to remove the expression that the President and Vice-President of the People's Republic of China 'shall serve no more than two consecutive terms' from the country's Constitution," it reported.
It gave no other details, but the full proposal was due to be released later.
The announcement appears carefully timed, with many Chinese people due to return to work on Monday after celebrating the Chinese New Year. China was also centre stage at the closing ceremony of the Winter Olympics, as South Korea prepared to hand the Games over to Beijing for 2022.
The top officials who make up the party's Central Committee are due to meet on Monday in Beijing.
The proposal will go before legislators at the annual full session of the National People's Congress which starts on 5 March.
How significant is this?
Under the current system, Mr Xi was due to step down in 2023.
The tradition of limiting presidencies to 10 years emerged in the 1990s, when veteran leader Deng Xiaoping sought to avoid a repeat of the chaos that had marked the Mao era and its immediate aftermath.
Mr Xi's two predecessors have followed the orderly pattern of succession. But since he came to power in 2012 he has shown a readiness to write his own rules.
It is not clear how long Mr Xi might stay in power, but an editorial in China's state-run Global Times said the change did not mean "that the Chinese president will have a lifelong tenure".
The paper quoted Su Wei, a Communist Party academic and party member, as saying it was a significant decision as China needed a "stable, strong and consistent leadership" from 2020-2035.
'Papa Xi' tightens his grip
By Celia Hatton, BBC World Service Asia Pacific Regional Editor
This is an announcement many have been expecting.
For decades, the Communist Party has dominated life in China. Now, Xi Jinping has stepped into that spotlight, outshining the party that promoted him to the top spot.
His photo is plastered on billboards across the country and his authorised nickname, "Papa Xi", appears in official songs.
In the past the Communist Party stayed firmly in control, while the man at the top was in command for a limited amount of time. One leader would dutifully hand power to another after serving a decade in power.
Xi Jinping disrupted that system from the early days of his time in office. He instituted an anti-corruption campaign, the same campaign that conveniently eliminated Mr Xi's political rivals.
Mr Xi has also shown a clear political vision, promoting huge national projects like the One Belt One Road initiative to build new global trade routes and announcing grand plans for China to erase poverty by 2020.

North Korea willing to talk to US, South Korea says - CNN Breaking News

North Korea willing to talk to US, South Korea says
By Hilary Whiteman, CNN
Updated 1250 GMT (2050 HKT) February 25, 2018
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Vice President Mike Pence, second from bottom right, sits between second lady Karen Pence, third from from bottom left, and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe at the opening ceremony, behind Pence are Kim Yong Nam, third from top right, president of the Presidium of North Korean Parliament, and Kim Yo Jong, second from top right, sister of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un at the PyeongChang 2018 Winter Olympic Games at PyeongChang Olympic Stadium.
Pence raises prospect of US-North Korea talks
Footage of Moon's meeting with NK officials, including Kim Yo Jong (Kim Jong Un's sister).
Kim Jong Un invites President Moon to N. Korea
In this April 13, 2017, photo, Kim Yo Jong, right, sister of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, is pictured during the official opening of the Ryomyong residential area, a collection of more than a dozen apartment buildings, in Pyongyang, North Korea. South Korea's Unification Ministry said North Korea informed Wednesday, Feb. 7, 2018, that Kim Yo Jong would be part of the high-level delegation coming to the South for the Pyeongchang Winter Olympics. (AP Photo/Wong Maye-E)
Kim Jong Un's sister going to the Olympics
INCHEON, SOUTH KOREA - FEBRUARY 04: South Korean peace activists carry the Flag of Korean Peninsula before the Women's Ice Hockey friendly match at Seonhak International Ice Rink on February 4, 2018 in Incheon, South Korea. The friendly match is held ahead of the Olympic Games where South and North Korea competes for the first time as a unified team in a sport at the Olympic Games. (Photo by Woohae Cho/Getty Images)
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Vice President Mike Pence, second from bottom right, sits between second lady Karen Pence, third from from bottom left, and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe at the opening ceremony, behind Pence are Kim Yong Nam, third from top right, president of the Presidium of North Korean Parliament, and Kim Yo Jong, second from top right, sister of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un at the PyeongChang 2018 Winter Olympic Games at PyeongChang Olympic Stadium.
Pence raises prospect of US-North Korea talks
Footage of Moon's meeting with NK officials, including Kim Yo Jong (Kim Jong Un's sister).
Kim Jong Un invites President Moon to N. Korea
In this April 13, 2017, photo, Kim Yo Jong, right, sister of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, is pictured during the official opening of the Ryomyong residential area, a collection of more than a dozen apartment buildings, in Pyongyang, North Korea. South Korea's Unification Ministry said North Korea informed Wednesday, Feb. 7, 2018, that Kim Yo Jong would be part of the high-level delegation coming to the South for the Pyeongchang Winter Olympics. (AP Photo/Wong Maye-E)
The Koreas: Divided by war, united by a flag?
protests
Protests erupt over NK presence at Olympics
North Korea releases video of military parade
(CNN)North Korea is willing to hold talks with the United States, South Korean President Moon Jae-In said in a statement Sunday.
The South Korean leader said he'd met with the North Korean delegation that's in Pyeongchang for the closing ceremony of the Winter Olympic Games, and told them that North Korea-US talks should happen "as soon as possible."
Moon said the North Koreans indicated they were willing to talk with the US, and agreed that "the inter-Korean relationship and North Korea-US relationship should develop together."
Moon met for an hour with the North Korean delegation at an undisclosed location in Pyeongchang at 5 p.m. local time Sunday, three hours before South Korea prepared to host the carefully-choreographed closing ceremony.
Ivanka Trump, daughter of President Donald Trump,at the closing ceremony of the Olympics
Ivanka Trump, daughter of President Donald Trump,at the closing ceremony of the Olympics
As the lights dimmed on the stadium, delegates from North Korea and the US took their seats in the VIP box.
President Donald Trump's daughter, Ivanka Trump, who is attending the Olympics as a US Presidential Adviser, was seated just feet away from North Korean delegation leader Kim Yong Chol, vice chairman of the Party Central Committee and former head of North Korea's intelligence agency.
The inclusion of Kim, who's on the list of individuals sanctioned by the US and South Korea, was considered controversial, given his ties to a fatal torpedo attack on a South Korean warship in 2010.
Speculation of potential North Korea-US talks rose earlier Sunday when South Korea released the full list of North Korean delegates, which includes Choi Kang Il, the deputy director of North American affairs.
Kim Yong Chol (C), leads the North Korean delegation to Pyeongchang for the end of the Winter Games.
Kim Yong Chol (C), leads the North Korean delegation to Pyeongchang for the end of the Winter Games.
In his statement, Moon said he met all eight delegation members before speaking with leader Kim and Ri Son Kwon, chairman of the Committee for the Peaceful Reunification of the Fatherland.
CNN's Sophie Jeong contributed to this report

North Korea says US and Japan 'bringing the raging wind of war' - Independent

25/2/2018
North Korea says US and Japan 'bringing the raging wind of war'
Samuel Osborne @SamuelOsborne93
North Korea has accused the US and Japan of bringing "the raging wind of war" to the peninsula, while warning the Trump administration over any maritime blockade of the country.
North Korean state media said Pyongyang would regard any maritime blockade as an act of war, as it condemned new US sanctions and said nuclear weapons would prevent threats.
On Friday, the US said it was imposing its largest package of sanctions, aimed at pressuring North Korea into giving up its nuclear and missile programmes.
Donald Trump announces some of the 'largest sanctions' on North Korea
Donald Trump warned of a "phase two" which could be "very, very unfortunate for the world" if the steps did not work.

These Are the Best Times to Use the Airplane Restroom, According to a Flight Attendant - TIME

These Are the Best Times to Use the Airplane Restroom, According to a Flight Attendant
By CAILEY RIZZO / TRAVEL + LEISURE May 4, 2017
When nature calls, there are few worse places to be than 30,000 feet in the sky. But for passengers on a long-haul flight, it’s impossible to avoid the airplane bathroom.
But, according to one expert, travelers looking for a more private trip to the toilet should take advantage of two golden windows of opportunity.
Erika Roth, a former flight attendant, told Mel Magazine that passengers looking for a little more privacy while they’re on the plane can visit the toilet without worrying about anyone waiting outside the door as soon as the pilot turns off the seatbelt sign and just before drink service begins.
During those times, passengers can realistically expect about 10 minutes of peace inside of the restroom to take care of any pressing issues. But after 20 minutes she warned that a flight attendant may come and knock on the door.
For those who know in advance that they will be taking care of foul business in the airport bathroom, Roth had one veteran tip: “Ask an attendant for packets of coffee grounds, then hang them up in the lavatory,” she said. “The grounds will soak up the odor.”
Although flight attendants will know exactly what you’re about to do, those who use the bathroom afterwards will be none the wiser.
And, more than just being a courtesy to fellow passengers, the coffee grounds trick could save a flight from emergency diversion. Earlier this month, a SpiceJet flight was forced to make an emergency landing due to an “unbearable” smell coming out of the bathroom and into the cockpit.
This article originally appeared on TravelandLeisure.com

Rohingya refugees find uneasy solace in Malaysia - CNN

Rohingya refugees find uneasy solace in Malaysia
By Kok Xing Hui, CNN
Updated 0507 GMT (1307 HKT) February 25, 2018
(CNN)Every weekday morning, about 70 students stream into a house in a quiet neighborhood on Malaysia's Penang Island.
The children are Rohingya refugees and the house is a private school where they learn Malay, English, math and science.
This life is light years away from the one the children left behind in Myanmar.
"People were getting hit and killed and the police were arresting people. My whole village was burned down," 13-year-old Anwar Sadek Shah Ahmad says softly, cowering into his teacher's shoulder.
Anwar and his family fled their fishing village in Myanmar's Rakhine State in 2013 after violence broke out.
His grandmother, he said, only fled Myanmar last year and is now in a refugee camp in Bangladesh, where more than 680,000 Rohingya have fled to since August 2017.
There are thousands of children like Anwar in Malaysia — he's among the Rohingya refugees who escaped from Rakhine State by boat largely before 2015, when Kuala Lumpur began turning back Rohingya arrivals.
Even though they consider themselves the lucky ones, those who made it to Malaysia still lead lives fraught with risk and hardship.
"They have no legal rights — no right to work, no opportunity for mainstream education, and are obliged to eke out a very difficult living in the grey market economy of the country," said Richard Towle, the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) Representative for Malaysia.
This is the case for all refugees in Malaysia. Most of the 150,000 refugees there are from Myanmar, but there are also Pakistanis, Syrians, Yemenis and Palestinians.
Younger students doing colouring work.
Younger students doing colouring work.
Anwar's father has been working illegally in Penang since 2006 and paid smugglers to bring over his son, daughter and wife by boat. Anwar also has an infant brother who was born in Malaysia. The family are now registered with the UNHCR.
The UN body has registered 62,000 Rohingya refugees in Malaysia, but the organization estimates there could be another 30,000 to 40,000 who are there illegally and don't have official refugee status -- obtaining it is a lengthy process that can only happen in the Malaysian capital, Kuala Lumpur.
"UNHCR Malaysia prioritises refugees in immigration detention, vulnerable refugees who have come to UNHCR from referral partners including government agencies, and others who have been interviewed and found to need UNHCR's protection and support," said Towle.
It's not clear whether Malaysia will accept any of those who have fled since August, an exodus that has lead to the world's fastest growing refugee crisis in Bangladesh.
The Muslim Rohingya have been denied citizenship in mostly Buddhist Myanmar since 1982, and while the group has long been discriminated against, the situation has deteriorated significantly in the past few years. Between 2012 and 2015, more than 112,000 Rohingya fled, largely by boat, to Malaysia.
In September 2017, Zulkifli Abu Bakar, the director-general of the Malaysian Maritime Enforcement Agency said those fleeing violence in Myanmar would not be turned away, and that they would be provided temporary shelter.
But in 2015, Wan Junaidi Jaafar, the Malaysian Deputy Home Minister, said the Rohingya arriving in the country illegally would be turned back.
"We cannot welcome them here," Wan Junaidi said, adding that if the country continued to welcome them "hundreds of thousands" would come from Myanmar and Bangladesh.
CNN reached out to Zulkifli as well as the country's Ministry of Home Affairs for this article but did not get a response.
The latest exodus was sparked in last August, after an attack on government border posts by a Rohingya militant group resulted in a brutal crackdown by Myanmar's military. Refugees poured into Bangladesh with horrific stories of systematic rape, mass killings and arson -- although Myanmar's military denies killing any civilians or committing atrocities.
Madam Jubairah Bashir, 34, in her rented room with her son Mohammed Arafat Bashir 13, and her five-month-old infant Mohammed Fahet Bashir. She says she's happy her family is together but would like to return to Myanmar.
Madam Jubairah Bashir, 34, in her rented room with her son Mohammed Arafat Bashir 13, and her five-month-old infant Mohammed Fahet Bashir. She says she's happy her family is together but would like to return to Myanmar.
Challenges
In Malaysia, schools such as the one Anwar goes to, have sprouted up because while the country tolerates Rohingya presence and the UNHCR has issued them refugee status, they are still officially considered illegal migrants and therefore can't go to regular schools.
This limits their options to schools run by non-government organisations, or religious schools known as madrassas where they learn Arabic and study Islam.
According to the UNHCR, there are about 50 schools in Malaysia run by non-governmental organisations educating Rohingya children.
Anwar studies at the Penang Peace Learning Centre, also known as the School of Peace. On the morning CNN visited, Anwar and the older students were being taught math while the younger students, aged three to six, did coloring. Their classroom was also home to two pet rabbits.
All classes are held in Malay, or Bahasa Melayu, the country's national tongue. The kids have picked up the language despite arriving with no knowledge of Malay just a few years ago.
"Malay is easy, we hear it everywhere, but English is hard," says Rosmin Kayas, 12, who arrived in 2014.
Mohammed Arafat Bashir Ahmed, 13, holds out his UNHCR refugee card. This record of their status is supposed to help protect refugees against forced return, arbitrary arrest and detention.
Mohammed Arafat Bashir Ahmed, 13, holds out his UNHCR refugee card. This record of their status is supposed to help protect refugees against forced return, arbitrary arrest and detention.
The School of Peace was founded by Kamarulzaman Askandar, a political science lecturer at the Universiti Sains Malaysia, who learned about the Rohingya's plight while doing research.
He said: "I was sad about how bad their lives in Malaysia have been, that they can't work and that their children do not have access to free education."
The school started as weekend classes using space in the local religious school. As the student population grew, Kamarulzaman rented a terrace house and hired three teachers so the school could run five days a week.
But there are huge challenges. They struggle to find the RM6,000 (US$1,471) needed to run the school each month and neighbors complain about the school being in their neighborhood, because of the noise.
The school is mainly funded by individual donations. "Other organizations like the UNHCR also helps from time to time with school materials and training support for the teachers," he said.
Abdul Syukui, 40, sitting with his wife Hamidah Gonumia, 30, and younger sons Sabarek Khan Abdul, 8, and Nojumullah Abdul.
Abdul Syukui, 40, sitting with his wife Hamidah Gonumia, 30, and younger sons Sabarek Khan Abdul, 8, and Nojumullah Abdul.
Most frustratingly, he says, he has difficulty keeping the children in school.
"Older boys would be asked by the families to look for jobs, while older girls would be asked by the parents to help the families at home, and to be married off when they come of age," Kamarulzaman says.
Rosmin's sister, for example, is only 13, but was pulled out of school early this year to help out at home when their mother got pregnant.
Kamarulzaman says there is also little incentive for older kids to stay in school since the school only teaches the elementary school syllabus, which is typically for children aged seven to 12.
He said he wants to start teaching the secondary school syllabus — if he can secure funding that will provide the teachers and the necessary space.
Students sit in class at the Penang Peace Learning Center.
Students sit in class at the Penang Peace Learning Center.
What next?
Experts say Malaysia should look at improving the Rohingya's access to employment, healthcare and education.
"It is really about livelihood — being able to work and to feed their families and to have enough money to use services from the market. If they cannot access government services, they need money for healthcare services and to send their children to school," Oh Su-Ann, a visiting fellow at Singapore's ISEAS - Yusof Ishak Institute.
Towle from the UNCHR says he can understand why Malaysia is afraid committing towards formal arrangements for the refugees might cause more to arrive.
"We believe that a carefully managed registration scheme, where UNHCR and the Government, working closely together, can mitigate the risks of this but could also deliver the positive dividends to Malaysia and to refugees," he said.
But despite the difficulties with work and education, the Rohingya students and parents at the Penang school say they are happy.
Malaysia is peaceful compared to what he left behind, says Anwar. Now, he spends his free time playing football with new friends from the neighborhood.
Likewise, Jubairah Bashir, 34, who brought three children to her illegal migrant husband in Penang in 2013, says she has picked up basic Bahasa Melayu and can buy her groceries. She has also made Malaysian friends.
"If I can, I want to go home to Myanmar. But otherwise Malaysia is good and the children have school here," she says.
"At least the family is together now."