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Sunday, February 28, 2010

Thanh Ha Pottery Village Festival 2010


VIET NAM NET: "A festival to worship the ancestor of Thanh Ha Pottery Village in Hoi An City, Quang Nam Province was held at Nam Dieu Temple in Thanh Ha Ward Wednesday morning on the tenth day of the lunar calendar.

Young men prepare for the ceremony of the Thanh Ha Pottery Village Festival.
Young men prepare for the ceremony of the Thanh Ha Pottery Village Festival.
From early morning, the villagers prepared for the feast to worship the ancestor at home to take part in the procession from Thanh Chiem Communal House to Nam Dieu Temple.

The worship ceremony was celebrated in a boisterous sound of gongs and drums surrounded by fragrant smells of aloe wood. Elders and villagers presented offerings to worship the ancestor of the pottery profession for his great contribution to build the village and to teach and preserve the traditional profession. People also prayed for good weather, peace and development for their career.

The festival includes traditional boat racing and many contests such as polishing pottery, shaping 12 animal designations, rice cooking in an earthen pot, breaking earthenware pots and singing folk songs.

The 500 hundred year old village is three kilometers from Hoi An City. The ancestors of this pottery village were the Thanh Hoa people coming to settle down.

Some famous and sophisticated products of the village are earthen pots, basins, teapots, jars, mortar and candlesticks. Artisans of Thanh Ha Village also made bricks and tiles to build many architectural constructions in ancient urban Hoi An. These artisans were invited by kings of the Nguyen dynasty to Hue to manipulate special products for the imperial palace’s daily activities. Since the 16th century, Thanh Ha Village has confirmed its prosperity and fame in pottery products.

Thanks to the development of Hoi An’s tourism, this traditional craft village has recovered with the great desire of artisans to revive it. Many designs and products are created to answer the demand of customers and the tourism sector such as to he in shapes of 12 animals, red-pottery lanterns, flower pottery bricks, bas-reliefs and masks to decorate walls and fences, in which some are exported to foreign countries.

Since 2001, Thanh Ha Pottery Village has been a tour for people visiting Hoi An City. Tourists not only contemplate the landscape but also shape and polish pottery products. About 10,000 domestic and international tourists visit the village each year."

Ho Chi Minh City-100 Excitements program


"The announcement ceremony of the “Ho Chi Minh City--100 Excitements” program, launched three months ago by the HCMC Department of Culture, Sport and Tourism, was held at the municipal Opera House on February 25.
Ben Thanh Market at the heart of Ho Chi Minh City.
The organizing committee had received more than 24,000 votes from local and foreign visitors. Among them, HCMC's iconic Ben Thanh Market got the most votes and is on Top 10 destinations, Top 10 interesting city tours and Top 10 shopping sites.

The 100 have been placed in 12 categories: Top 10 hotels, restaurants, specialty foods, destinations, shopping sites, tours, entertainment venues, outstanding tourism, sport and cultural events, favourite gifts, health services, coffee shops and nigh streets.

The program aiming to introduce to domestic and international visitors most interesting, prestigious and attractive tourism services will be aired on TV and posters, pamphlets, websites, books, DVDs.

VietNamNet/SGGP"

Saturday, February 27, 2010

Estimated Tsunami arrival time/Chile 8.8 earthquake

Estimated tsunami arrival times

At selected locations within the warning and watch areas (not including west coast of United States and Alaska). All times EST. Projected energy model map by NOAA. Warm red colors indicate higher predicted intensity.

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This Story
Earthquake in Chile
Photos | A powerful 8.8-magnitude earthquake rocked Chile early Saturday and triggered a tsunami that is threatening every nation around the Pacific Ocean.

Friday, February 26, 2010

Have you got the wanderlust?

ED Comments: Yes Yes Yes

A beat-up old car, a few dollars in the pocket and a sense of adventure. That’s all Tony and Maureen Wheeler needed for the trip of a lifetime.

They met on a park bench in Regent’s Park, London and married a year later. For their honeymoon, they decided to attempt what few people thought possible — crossing Europe and Asia overland, all the way to Australia.

It took them several months and all the money they could earn, beg or borrow, but they made it. And at the end of it all, they were flat broke . . . and couldn’t have been happier.

Urged on by their friends, they stayed up nights at their kitchen table writing, typing and stapling together their very first travel guide, Across Asia on the Cheap. Within a week they’d sold 1,500 copies, and Lonely Planet was born.

Fast-forward 30 years later, Lonely Planet has become a globally loved brand. Lonely Planet guides are written by experts who get to the heart of every destination they visit.

Constantly updated, each travel guide is packed with accurate, practical and honest advice, designed to give you the information you need to make the most out of your trip.

According to Lonely Planet’s Best in Travel 2010, Malaysia was voted as one of the top 10 countries to visit this year apart from Germany, Morocco and New Zealand, to name a few.

A 2010 edition of Malaysia, Singapore & Brunei guidebook was recently released, offering travelers updated travel tips to our country. Do visit your nearest bookstore for the latest Lonely Planet products. Lonely Planet is exclusively distributed by MPH Distribu

Vietnamese Man Having the World̢۪s Longest Hair Dies

With hair estimated at 6.8 meters (over 22 feet) in length, Tran Van Hay, a 79-year old Vietnamese man, is believed to have the world’s longest hair in history. This record beats the measured 5.6-meter hair of Xie Qiuping from China as documented in the Guinness World Records during 2004.

Quite strange, but Hay often ends up feeling ill every after getting a haircut, leading him to decide to grow his hair instead. Nguyen Thi Hoa, his wife, claimed that for the next 50 years since then, the Vietnamese herbal healer never had a haircut and kept his hair unwashed. Over time, the length and lack of wash made his hair clump and look like a huge snake resembling a boa constrictor.

Apart from the mixed attention he is getting from curious crowds, Tran Van Hay pretty much went through a great deal of odds just to keep his hair that way. As he keeps them wrapped up in a scarf and worn on his head like a giant turban, balancing the load on his head is a hard task in itself, in which, he has to deal with every single day. Getting from one place to another is twice as difficult. Since no helmet would fit his head, owed to such extraordinary hairdo, motorcycle taxis would have to refuse giving him a ride fearing they’d get into trouble for carrying a passenger without a helmet on. But no difficulty ever convinced him to cut his hair off. In fact, Hay became more determined to grow his hair even more.

With claims of having the world’s longest hair not clearly validated and confirmed, Hay died in his home in the southern province of Kien Giang early this week. Contrary to what many might be expecting to hear, he didn’t die of anything connected to his hair. His death is said to be of natural cause.

India asked Western countries to Stop Eating Beef

London, Nov 21 : India has urged Western countries to stop eating beef in order to cut greenhouse emissions.

According to a report by the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organisation, 18 per cent of the Earth''s greenhouse gas emissions are due to livestock.

Environment minister Jairam Ramesh insists giving up beef can drastically reduce emissions and slow down global warming.

"The solution to cut emissions is to stop eating beef. It leads to emission of methane which is 23 times more potent than carbon dioxide," the Telegraph quoted him as saying.

"The best thing for us, India, is we are not a beef-eating nation,” he added. (ANI)

Thailand has seized two tons of elephant tusks

February 25, 2010 | 5:35 pm

Ivory

BANGKOK — Thailand has seized two tons of elephant tusks from Africa hidden in pallets labeled as mobile phone parts in the country's largest ivory seizure.

Thai customs officials valued Wednesday night's haul at Bangkok's Suvarnabhumi Airport at 120 million baht ($3.6 million). It is a further sign that Thailand is emerging as a hub for the illicit trade.

Poaching of elephants in central and eastern Africa has intensified in recent years, with much of the illegal ivory exported to Asia.

Seree Thaijongrak, director of the investigation and suppression bureau for the Customs Department, said that acting on a tip, officials seized two pallets containing 239 tusks of African elephants.

The consignment, which originated in South Africa, was labeled as mobile phone parts destined for Laos -- apparently to confuse customs officials because Laos has an agreement with neighboring Thailand not to check cargo in transit.

A Thai national, however, attempted to pick up the cargo and was detained, Seree said. Customs officials suspect the tusks would have been crafted into trinkets and jewelry in Thailand.

"This is the biggest seizure we have ever had," Seree said. "This is a real accomplishment for Thailand. Normally, this would have gone right through but we got the tip-off."

Seree said smuggling of ivory from Africa is on the rise in Thailand as in much of Southeast Asia.

Ivory shipped to Thailand typically goes to carvers who fashion it into Buddhist statues, bangles and jewelry for sale to tourists or sale in other countries. Thailand is also a transit point for ivory forwarded to other markets like China.

Last month, Thailand arrested two Thai women accused of dealing in illegal African ivory, a day after an American and a Thai national were indicted in California on charges of smuggling ivory into the United States. Police believe the women supplied ivory to the Thai national, who prosecutors say sold several pieces of ivory on EBay, disguising shipments as gifts and toys.

The U.N. Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species banned all international ivory trade in 1989. Traders in Thailand have thrived in part because the 1989 ban did not address domestic trade. That loophole allows them to deceive authorities by claiming that their African ivory came from domestic sources -- a tactic that is effective because it can be difficult without DNA testing to tell the difference between African and Asian ivory.

Authorities say 10 tons of African ivory were seized in Southeast Asia last year, including three seizures in Thailand.

Egypt’s traffic up 35% in three years; local start-ups attacking Egyptair monopoly

Egypt’s traffic up 35% in three years; local start-ups attacking Egyptair monopoly

Coping with the growth: Cairo International Airport, which is operated by Fraport, saw the commercial opening of its state of the art third terminal in April last year. The shiny terminal, which alone has a capacity for 11 million annual passengers – or 75% of the airport’s total traffic – houses the national carrier Egyptair and its Star Alliance partners, and still leaves room for growth.

Data has been released showing that passenger numbers increased by an entire 39% in the two years from 2006 to 2008. The growth has been somewhat higher at Egypt’s other airports than Cairo during this period. In 2009, the global financial turmoil showed in a total decline of nearly 3% against the previous year, in spite of Cairo traffic growing slightly. Still, the market has grown considerably during the latter half of the last decade and the 2009 total is 35% higher than that of 2006.

Chart: Top 3 Egyptian airports 2009

Source: EHCAAN

A total of 12 Egyptian airports (with more than 5,000 annual passengers) offer international services. Only half of them – Cairo, Sharm El-Sheikh, Hurghada, Luxor, Alexandria (El Nouzha) and Marsa Alam – do, however, offer more than ten daily international flights.

The Mediterranean city of Alexandria is currently served by two airports, the old El Nouzha Airport (ALY) and Borg El Arab Airport (HBE), previously a military airport that is undergoing major renovations. Later this year, El Nouzha will be closed for commercial traffic and all airlines serving Alexandria will be concentrated to the new Borg El Arab.

Chart: Egypt's top nine airports 2009

Source: EHCAAN

The top three airports in Egypt dominate the country market, with 82% of traffic. Domestic services make up 19% of the airports’ traffic, leaving the majority for international services.

Chart: Top 3 Egyptian airports 2009

Source: EHCAAN

The seasonality profiles for airports in Sharm El-Sheikh and Hurghada closely follow each other, with multiple peaks in April, August and October/November caused by the two resorts’ ability to attract tourists to its year-round warm climate.

Both airports are still dominated by charter traffic. The shares of passengers arriving on scheduled services only amounted to 7% and 18% respectively in 2009. These numbers are, however, four times as high as they were three years ago. Examples of new scheduled carriers are the two European LCCs easyJet and Norwegian, which both began serving Egypt in 2008.

Saudi biggest country market; 747s bring Russian tourists to Egypt’s resorts

Chart: Top 12 international country markets

Source: OAG Schedules iNET for w/c 22 February 2010

The largest international market for scheduled traffic to Egypt is from Saudi Arabia. As shown in anna.aero’s recent analysis of the Saudi market, Egypt is also the largest market for the neighbour country on the Arabian Peninsula. The market to the former colonial power, the United Kingdom, ranks second from the Egyptian side. anna.aero recently reported this country pair as one of Britain’s fastest growing.

Notably, Egypt is served from Russia with larger aircraft than other country markets, resulting in a gap between the frequency and capacity shares. The average aircraft size is 320 seats for this week’s traffic, in part caused by 747s being operated on 23 flights into Hurghada and Sharm El Sheikh.

Egyptair still dominates, but local rivals slowly emerging

Chart: Egyptian market's top 10 airlines

Source: OAG Schedules iNET for w/c 22 February 2010

At 52% of the Egyptian market, the state-owned airline Egyptair, which anna.aero analysed in July 2008, still dominates. It has long been the only Egyptian airline to operate scheduled flights. Liberalisation is, however, slowly being introduced to the market.

Last year saw the launch of AlMasria Airlines, which now operates domestic flights as well as to Kuwait and Libya with its two A320s. This year, the establishment of Egyptian scheduled airlines continues with two announced start-ups. Nile Air will commence operations to regional, Middle Eastern destinations with two A320s. From 2012, its nine ordered A321s will start being delivered, allowing for a rapid expansion.

Sharjah-based LCC Air Arabia is also in the process of setting up a low-cost airline in Egypt, a local joint-venture similar to its Moroccan enterprise Air Arabia Maroc. The airline Air Arabia Egypt is expected to launch in April this year, establishing a base in Alexandria, from where it will serve domestic and international destinations.

Thursday, February 25, 2010

6,000 New Ways to Redeem Your Delta Frequent Flyer Miles

Earning frequent flyer miles is easy. The challenge is to redeem them, conveniently and for good value.

The airlines have been slow to address that need, preferring to limit frequent flyer awards to free flights. That way, they're limiting the cost of most awards to the real cost of flying one more passenger in a seat that would have been empty anyway.

The upside to that approach is that the airlines can give away a ticket with a perceived value of $400 that only costs them an extra bag of pretzels, a can of Coke, and marginally more jet fuel.

That makes the programs financially viable for the airlines, and potentially highly rewarding for travelers. It's a win-win. Or can be.

But there's a downside to the reliance on unsold seats as rewards: Award seats are limited at best, and not available at all on some flights.

Nevertheless, the airlines continue promoting the programs as though 25,000 miles practically guaranteed a free ticket. Members of the airlines' programs are confronted with a very different reality when they go to cash in their miles.

That disconnect—between program members' expectations and actual award flight availability—has gone a long way toward eroding consumers' trust and engagement in airline loyalty programs.

Airline executives are aware of the problem, and the toll it can take on their programs' health and vitality. In connection with United's recent introduction of one-way awards and "Miles and Money"—both initiatives designed to make redemption easier—Robert Sahadevan, Vice President of United's Mileage Plus program, acknowledged that award availability was a pressing issue, and vowed that "currency has to be rewarding." "We get it," he promised.

Proving, perhaps, that the world's largest airline gets it too, Delta has rolled out the SkyMiles Marketplace—an online portal where SkyMiles members can redeem their miles, or a combination of miles and cash, for more than 6,000 items, including hotel rooms, car rentals, consumer electronics, clothing, jewelry, and so on.

(For the record, the SkyMiles Marketplace is a Delta-branded version of the American Express LoyaltyEdge award portal. So the look and content will be familiar to members of the American Express Membership Rewards program.)

With the new awards marketplace, Delta has made it simple and convenient for SkyMiles members to use their miles for a wide range of travel and non-travel goods and services. The question, though, is whether the SkyMiles Marketplace delivers good value. To find out, I priced a random sampling of awards, comparing the price in miles with the dollar price charged by mainstream Internet retailers.

A Tumi Alpha FXT Hanging Travel Kit, for example, can be had for 24,300 Delta miles through the SkyMiles Marketplace, or purchased from eBags for $95. That means you're getting 0.4 cents (four-tenths of a cent) for every mile redeemed.

A TomTom XL 340S GPS receiver costs 48,800 Delta miles, or $149.99 at RadioShack, for a value of 0.3 cents each.

A Nike Golf I.C. Series 20-15 Putter is priced at 30,000 Delta miles, or $89.95 on Golfballs.com, again yielding a 0.3 cent per-mile value.

And a Saturday night stay, March 13, at the San Francisco Hilton costs 15,632 miles through the Marketplace, or $127.20 if booked on Hilton.com. That's the best value of the bunch, at 0.8 cents per mile.

As a point of comparison, redeeming 25,000 miles for a Delta ticket with a market value of $400 yields a per-mile value of 1.6 cents each, twice the value of the hotel night, four times the value of miles redeemed for the Tumi bag, and more than five times the value of miles redeemed for the navigation unit or golf club.

Or, looked at from another angle, does it make sense to cash in 24,300 miles for a toiletry bag when a cross-country ticket can be had for just 700 more miles?

To me, personally, the answer is a resounding No. But I'm inclined to do the math, and to place a higher priority on value than on convenience and flexibility.

Your mileage may vary.

Leprosy | India Health | Lepers

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A leper shows a voter identity card outside a polling station in Mahanadi Vihar, about 26 miles south of the eastern Indian city of Bhubaneswar, April 23, 2009. (Jayanta Shaw/Reuters)

The lepers of India: Still untouchable


A new generation of lepers has never been infected with leprosy.

By Jason Overdorf - GlobalPost
Published: February 21, 2010 09:18 ET

NEW DELHI, India — When 20-year-old Arjun Nair's father discovered that he had contracted leprosy, he was so afraid of transmitting the disease to his sons that he immediately sent Arjun and his brother away to a hostel school run by missionaries.

Some 10 years later, Arjun is back in Delhi, his education still incomplete, and his job prospects dim. “Originally, the school offered classes up to 12th standard,” said Arjun. “But they had a lot of problems with fights breaking out between the older kids, so they sent the older kids back home.”

A resident of a modern-day leper colony in East Delhi comprising the neighborhoods of Tahirpur and New Seemapuri, Arjun is part of a curious group of second-generation Indian lepers. These youths have never been infected with leprosy, but remain trapped in an ostracized welfare community because of the dreaded disease's assault on their parents.

Subsidized by the government and often educated by Christian missionaries, they suffer from all the social problems that affect the marginalized around the world, from India's transgender hijras to Europe's Roma, said Vineeta Shanker, executive director of the New Delhi-based Sasakawa India Leprosy Foundation (SILF).

“They have internalized the societal rejection,” said Shanker. “They say, 'Even when we go to government schools, the teacher puts us in a corner. She doesn't put us in the first row. We have no friends except girls from our own colony.'”

Leprosy is today curable and it is far less infectious than once believed — 95 percent of people are immune and it cannot be transmitted by casual contact, as many people fear. Though its complete eradication is considered to be medically impossible, India officially “eliminated” the disease in 2005, after a targeted program reduced the level of incidence to fewer than one case per 10,000 people. So the only real reason for isolation colonies like Tahirpur and New Seemapuri is ignorance. Sadly, India has that in abundance, which is perhaps why the country still has more than a thousand leper colonies.

For second-generation “lepers” isolation cuts deeply. Feelings of alienation strain the relationships between parents and children, who depend on their parents' government stipends and income from begging for survival, but also resent the social stigma that comes along with that money. And at the same time, their understanding of the working world is perhaps even more limited than their opportunities.

“The kids want to do well. They have high aspirations. Everybody we talk to says, 'We don't want an ordinary, low-paying job. We want at least 10,000 rupees a month; otherwise we aren't interested,'” said Shanker. “But they have very little to enable them to achieve their goals.”



page 2-->> More info Leprosy | India Health | Lepers

Phuket tourism not affected by Thailand's political tensions

PHUKET, Feb 21 (TNA) -- Despite warnings by three major tourist-providing countries warning their nationals from traveling to Thailand due to the risk of civil unrest, tourism businesses in the southern resort of Phuket is booming with no hotel room cancellations, Somboon Jirayus, president of Phuket Tourist Association, said on Sunday.

Mr. Somboon said hotel occupancy in Phuket is about 80 per cent on average and is expected to drop to 70 per cent in March.

Warnings by the United States, Britain and Australia issued Friday saying that the political situation in Thailand is tense and their citizens should exercise great caution and avoid demonstrations or large gatherings that might turn violent while in Thailand have not impacted tourism businesses here, Mr. Somboon said.

Foreign tourists can now fly directly to Phuket and those who have visited the island earlier understand that it is far way from protesters against the government, he said.

Political tensions are growing in Thailand, especially in capital Bangkok, as a court is scheduled to deliver its verdict this Friday on whether or not to seize ousted premier Thaksin Shinawatra’s Bt76 billion in frozen assets.

Representatives of the Phuket Tourist Association will set up a booth at Germany’s leading travel trade show in mid-March, aimed at attracting more German tourists to visit the island, Mr. Somboon said. (TNA)

Mekong River runs dry; cargo ships grounded for 10 days

CHIANG RAI, Feb 25 (TNA) – Thailand's exports via Chiang Sean district in this northernmost province have been affected by a severe drought affecting the Mekong River, the 12th-longest river in the world and the 7th-longest in Asia.

According to Winai Chintongprasert, head of the Chiang Saen customhouse, the river, which forms the border of Thailand with Laos and Cambodia, and Laos with China, has run completely dry, with a very long line of sand dune islands in the middle of the river, forcing freighters from Thailand’s Chiang Saen Port to China’s Guanlei Port in Yunnan province and vice versa to have halted their runs for over 10 days.

Thai cargoes valued at more than Bt150 million are stranded aboard ships. The cargoes included palm oil, energy drinks and dehydrated longan.

The water level in Mekong River has fallen since the end of December and continued to decrease dramatically during February. (TNA)

Exhibition showcases female art talent in Thailand

Coinciding with the forthcoming International Women's Day on March 8, "Art from the Hands of Mothers" is an all-female exhibition starting next week at the Sombat Permpoon Gallery that will feature works in various forms by 15 leading women artists of Thailand, including Sriwan Janehuttakarn, Chomsai Meesomsueb, Boonying Emcharoen and Chiranan Pitpreecha, among others. Panada Lerthattasin, director of the Sombat Permpoon Gallery, talked to 'Outlook' about the remarkable exhibition.

Is this event the biggest of its kind ever held in Thailand? Have any of the female artists worked with the gallery before?

We don't know if it's the biggest gathering as that is actually not our purpose. Let's say it is one of the most meaningful exhibitions that draws a group of strong women who play outstanding roles in taking care of their families as well as contributing to their communities.

"Art from the Hands of Mothers" features paintings, sculptures, music and literature by 15 outstanding women who are at the forefront of art development in Thailand. Some are artists, while others are mothers of leading artists and writers, daughters of great talents, or wives of renowned artists.

In particular, Sombat Permpoon Gallery has collected works by Sriwan Janehuttakarn, a leading female artist in Thailand. Her unique talent lies in the use of line, colour, form and texture to communicate and convey meaning. Besides her leading role in art, she is also a generous daughter who takes good care of her mother and is a beloved teacher to her students.

Why has the gallery focused on this theme?

The theme was initiated by Hongjorn Sa-Ngamjaoren, who is a curator of the show. He is concerned with a number of problems facing Thai society, including social conflict, economics, political turmoil and youth problems. Yet he has a strong belief that women, with their huge capacity for love and care, can do a great deal to alleviate such problems. Behind every artist's success is at least one woman who gives him support. That is a great contribution to society.

Each of the 15 artists in the show has distinctive characteristics and a unique lifestyle. Chomsai Meesomsueb, for example, mother of SEA Write laureate Saksiri Meesomsueb, is a self-taught artist who started painting at the age of 70 using her son's leftover oil colours. Now 81, she still continues her artistic endeavours. Also, Boonying Emjaroen has worked side by side with Pratuang Emjaroen in promoting art while raising three children.

Besides, Sombat Permpoon Gallery is run by female owner Sombat Wattanathai, who has been the backbone of Thai art for over 30 years, and our staff are women who have served as the foundation of the gallery for over 20 years.

How do you see the role of women in the Thai art circle?

This is an area where women can make great contributions, too. The number of women in this area - female artists, administrators, curators, gallery owners and critics - is increasing steadily.

India/ Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency Partnership

In January, the Central Electricity Regulatory Commission (CERC) of India announced renewable energy certificate (REC) norms in an attempt to encourage investments in the renewable energy sector. A REEEP-funded project together with IREDA is currently working to outline the specifics of the implementation.

According to the new norms, the regulator will designate a central agency to issue RECs to generators who can sell them to green energy-deficient states utilities, so they can meet their renewable purchase obligations at lower cost. There will be two categories of certificates, solar certificates and non-solar certificates.

RE generators will have two options – either to sell the renewable energy at a preferential tariff fixed by the concerned Electricity Regulatory Commission or to sell the electricity generation and environmental attributes associated with RE generation separately.

The Electricity Act 2003 requires each state commission to specify a renewable purchase obligation (RPO) - a quota of RET – for the State. However, the uneven distribution of renewable energy potential discouraged States (like New Delhi) with lesser renewable energy generation sources from setting higher RPOs; whereas states such as Rajasthan and Tamil Nadu where there is high potential were not encouraged to harness that potential beyond their quota.

The new norms create incentives which should go part-way to solving this problem. By creating a market for green certificates at a national level, States with low RE potential will be enabled to reach their quota at less expense by buying certificates from States where RET can be generated at a low cost. Renewable Energy generators in the States with high potential are simultaneously encouraged to overproduce against their own State quota.

This will help India to meet its national RES target. As at 31st July, 2009, renewable energy sources constituted only about 8.5% of the total generation capacity of India. In terms of actual generation, the share of renewable is estimated to be in the range of 3.5% of the total. The National Action Plan of Climate Change (NAPCC) has set the target of 5% renewable energy purchase for FY 2009-10, which will increase by 1% per year for the next 10 years.

The REEEP project supporting the design of the Indian Renewable Energy Certificates has the support of the Sustainable Energy Regulation Network (SERN), a sub-network of REEEP, and is being implemented by IREDA.

Wednesday, February 24, 2010

Vietnam implements project to save one of the world's rarest mammals, the shy soala



Vietnam's central province of Thua Thien-Hue has approved a project to save the enigmatic saola. Listed as Critically Endangered, the saola (Pseudoryx nghetinhensis) —a type of forest antelope—is so rare and secretive that it was only discovered in 1992. It is considered by many to be one of the world's rarest mammals.

The project, funded by the Darwin Initiative, Cambridge University, and WWF, will be largely carried out by forest rangers during the next 33 months in Bach Ma National Park and a saola preservation zone. The project includes research, raising public awareness, and managing the protected areas to help the saola's survival.

"The animal's prominent white facial markings and long tapering horns lend it a singular beauty, and its reclusive habits in the wet forests of the Annamites an air of mystery," said Barney Long, of the IUCN Asian Wild Cattle Specialist Group, last September at an emergency meeting to save the species. "Saola have rarely been seen or photographed, and have proved difficult to keep alive in captivity…Its wild population may number only in the dozens, certainly not more than a few hundred."

The saola's range extends along the Annamite Mountains in both Vietnam and Loas. The saola is threatened by poaching, dog-hunting, and loss of habitat largely exacerbated by road construction.




Captive female soala. No captive saola has survived longer than a few months. Copyright 1996 by W. Robichaud/WCS.




Wild Saola caught on film by an automatic camera-trap in central Laos in 1999. Photo by Ban Vangban village/WCS/IUCN.







Related articles

Last chance to save a 'singular beauty' of Asia: the shy soala

(09/03/2009) Only discovered in 1992, the reclusive and beautiful saola Pseudoryx nghetinhensis may soon vanish from the Earth, if rapid action isn't taken to save one of Asia's most enigmatic and rare mammals. Listed as Critically Endangered, the species has experienced a sharp decline since its discovery due largely to poaching. "The animal's prominent white facial markings and long tapering horns lend it a singular beauty, and its reclusive habits in the wet forests of the Annamites an air of mystery," says Barney Long, of the IUCN Asian Wild Cattle Specialist Group.


Two of the world's most endangered (and strangest) primates receive protection from new reserves in China and Vietnam

(09/24/2009) There are 200 Tonkin snub-nosed monkeys left in the world. The cao vit gibbon, however, is even worse off with only 110 individuals remaining, giving it the dubious honor of being the second most endangered primate in the world (the closely-related Hainan gibbon with only 17 individuals is likely number one). Both of these species—the cao vit gibbon and Tonkin snub nosed monkey—have received good news recently as new reserves in China and Vietnam have been created in part to aid their survival.


Photos of new species discovered in the Greater Mekong

(12/15/2008) More than 1,000 previously unknown species have been discovered in the Greater Mekong, a region comprising Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar (Burma), Thailand, Vietnam and the Yunnan Province of China, in the past decade, according to a new report from WWF.



Tuesday, February 23, 2010

Special Dogs Assist in Wild Tiger Conservation Efforts in Cambodia |

In the Asian zodiac, this is the year of the tiger but conservationists say wild tiger populations are quickly disappearing. In Cambodia, there is hope that a pair of special dogs from the United States can help save the tiger.
A female tiger, Neang Sros, gapes while her taking a rest at the Tuek Chhou Zoo in Kampot province, some 150 kilometers south of the  Phnom Penh, Cambodia
Photo: AP

A female tiger, Neang Sros, gapes while her taking a rest at the Tuek Chhou Zoo in Kampot province, some 150 kilometers south of the Phnom Penh, Cambodia

In Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia conservationists estimate hunting and poaching have reduced tiger numbers to fewer than 30 in each country.

In eastern Cambodia's Mondulkiri Protected Forest, conservationists have brought in unique specialists to track down the few remaining tigers.

Sadie May and Scooby Doo are black Labrador retrievers. They are part of Conservation Canines, a project at the University of Washington in the U.S. that trains dogs to sniff for wild animal feces - also called scat.

Scooby's handler, Jennifer Hartman, says the dogs are much faster than human researchers at finding tiger scat.

"And we train them to sit at them, which shows us that they have something," she said. "And, we come and check it out. And, all of our dogs are extremely ball driven - they love to play. So, their reward for finding a scat is they get to play ball for two to three minutes and that keeps them good all day long."

The handlers note where the scat is found and take a sample for analysis to determine if it is from a tiger and to check the animal's health.

Sadie's handler, Elizabeth Seely, says they can learn a lot from animal droppings.

"We can get hormone levels, physiological data, disease status," she said. "And, all of it combined will give us an overall population health."

Cambodia's Mondulkiri Forest was once rich in wildlife, including tigers, but hunting and poaching largely emptied the region and killed off almost all the tigers.

Lean Kha was a soldier with the communist Khmer Rouge in the early 1980s and admits he killed wildlife for food and trade, including 14 tigers.

He says he became a forest ranger to make up for what he calls his past sins.

"There were a lot of animals when I was with the Khmer Rouge and less afterwards," he said. "But, since I became an animal protector it seems like wildlife numbers are increasing."

Conservation Canines has teamed up with Cambodian rangers and the conservation group WWF to protect wild tigers. The big cats once roamed throughout Asia, into Siberia, but conservationists say only a few thousand tigers remain in the wild; far more live in captivity. Without immediate action, the WWF says, by 2022, there may no longer be any wild tigers.

Nick Cox, the WWF's Dry Forest and Tiger Program coordinator for the countries along Southeast Asia's Mekong River, says the forests of Cambodia's eastern plains offer an intact habitat for reviving wild tigers.

"These are some of the largest protected areas in this part of Asia and particularly important for conservation because they hold huge potential for recovering wildlife populations including tiger," he said.

The WWF has set up cameras in parts of the forest to capture images of elusive wildlife.

But the last photo they got of a tiger was in 2007.

Conservationists hope that Sadie May and Scooby Doo will find some fresher evidence of wild tigers - and help efforts to save them.

Thousands give last rites to dead whale in Vietnam


HANOI, Vietnam -- Thousands of Vietnamese fishermen are giving a royal send-off to a 15-ton dead whale, gathering at a southern Vietnamese village to pay homage at a funeral for the creature they call "Your Excellency."

Nearly 10,000 people have converged in Bac Lieu province to bid farewell to the 52 foot (16-meter) whale since he was dragged ashore Monday, said coast guard official Do Tien Ha.

They burned incense in his honor and planned to build a temple at the site of his burial, which was scheduled for Tuesday. Nearly 3,000 people will attend the whale's last rites, to be held at the mouth of the Cai Cung River.

In Vietnam's fishing culture, whales are considered sacred. They are referred to by the title "ngai," the same honorific used for kings, emperors and other esteemed leaders.

"Whenever whales arrive, dead or alive, local fishermen believe they bring luck and safety," Ha said by phone from Bac Lieu.

The dead whale was spotted 26 miles (42 kilometers) off the coast Sunday, and several dozen fishermen on 10 boats spent a day hauling it ashore, he said.

Construction begins Road Vietnam- Cambodia-Thailand

Construction will begin next month on a 220-km long coastal road in the Mekong Delta as part of an international highway linking the country with Cambodia and Thailand, according to the project’s management board.

Running through the provinces of Kien Giang and Ca Mau, the US$440 million road will be built in cooperation with the governments of South Korea and Australia, as well as the Asian Development Bank.

Once it is completed, the road will be part of a nearly 1,000 kilometer link known as the Thailand-Cambodia-Vietnam Southern Coastal Road Corridor, starting at Bangkok and ending at Ca Mau Province’s Nam Can District.

The road would create more opportunities for Kien Giang and Ca Mau to develop their economies and promote tourism, according to Duong Tien Dung, vice chairman of the Ca Mau’s People’s Committee.

ADB experts, meanwhile, said that as the road mainly ran through the three countries’ poor provinces, it would provide greater access to basic social services for local people and encourage development of local economies.

Source: Tuoi Tre

Street sounds of HCM city-Vietnam

VietNamNet Bridge – In modern life, silence might be golden, but some of the sounds of the city are diamonds. Many Vietnamese and foreigners in Ho Chi Minh City claim that one of the things they miss the most when they leave this city is the sound of street life.

And nothing typifies that sound more than the cries of street vendors, who are an integral part of life in Vietnam and HCM City in particular. Most city residents would be sorry to say goodbye to their sticky rice, custard and noodle soup stalls.

"[When I am back in Australia] I miss the cries of my favourite soya-cake stall vendor, who uses her sweet voice to draw in the customers," said Nguyen Thi My Hao, a Vietnamese woman from Sydney, Australia. She said she loves the vendor’s singing as much as her tofu.

Hao, 46, moved from HCM City to live with her husband in Sydney when she was 26. "During my holidays in my native city, I often buy from street vendors just to listen to their voices."

"I want to remember the days when I was young and still went to school in Binh Chanh District. My mother earned money to support us by selling pudding on the streets."

Most street vendors in HCM City come from the central provinces, having made the journey with hopes of earning a better income to support their family at home.

At central markets such as Ben Thanh and Ba Chieu, hundreds of vendors gather early every morning to put fresh fruit, sweet soups, pudding and bread in their baskets or three-wheel carts before going to all corners of the city.

"Shouting is an important part of our business. We have sing song cries and we wouldn’t attract the same number of customers if we just stood there quietly," said Le Van Chau, 24, who sells hot bread around Binh Thanh District.

Another peddler, Phan Ut Thi, 27, a native of Quang Nam province, came to the city three years ago to sell noodle soup. He said that you can see vendors everywhere in the city, but each of them has a special song.

To attract the attention of customers, two of Thi’s younger brothers walk around streets and alleys making noise by hitting two bamboo sticks together.

Late at night, vendors return to their low price lodging houses, mostly located in rural districts. To economise, they share single rooms with up to ten others. Being far from their native villages, they’re happy to live together and support one another.

Sunday, February 21, 2010

India Worries as China Builds Ports in South Asia

India Worries as China Builds Ports in South Asia
Gemunu Amarasinghe/Associated Press
A Chinese construction crew at work in Hambantota, Sri Lanka, in 2008. China has invested millions to develop the port.

Published: February 15, 2010
HAMBANTOTA, Sri Lanka — For years, ships from other countries, laden with oil, machinery, clothes and cargo, sped past this small town near India as part of the world’s brisk trade with China.

Ships will dock along this long wall and other similar structures nearby once the port in Hambantota is complete.

Enlarge This Image

Nadeem Khawer/European Pressphoto Agency
As trade in South Asia grows, China has been developing port facilities like this one in Gwadar in the southwest of Pakistan.
Now, China is investing millions to turn this fishing hamlet into a booming new port, furthering an ambitious trading strategy in South Asia that is reshaping the region and forcing India to rethink relations with its neighbors.

As trade in the region grows more lucrative, China has been developing port facilities in Pakistan, Bangladesh and Myanmar, and it is planning to build railroad lines in Nepal. These projects, analysts say, are part of a concerted effort by Chinese leaders and companies to open and expand markets for their goods and services in a part of Asia that has lagged behind the rest of the continent in trade and economic development.

But these initiatives are irking India, whose government worries that China is expanding its sphere of regional influence by surrounding India with a “string of pearls” that could eventually undermine India’s pre-eminence and potentially rise to an economic and security threat.

“There is a method in the madness in terms of where they are locating their ports and staging points,” Kanwal Sibal, a former Indian foreign secretary who is now a member of the government’s National Security Advisory Board, said of China. “This kind of effort is aimed at counterbalancing and undermining India’s natural influence in these areas.”

India and China, the world’s two fastest-growing economies, have a history of tense relations. They share a contested Himalayan border over which they fought a war in 1962. India has given shelter to the Dalai Lama, who fled Tibet as China exerted control over it. And China has close military ties with Pakistan, with which India has fought three wars.

But the two countries also do an increasingly booming business with each other. China recently became India’s largest trading partner, and both have worked together to advance similar positions in global trade and climate change negotiations.

Chinese officials deny ulterior motives for their projects in South Asia. And top Indian leaders have tried to play down talk of a rivalry with China, saying there is enough room in the world for both economies to rise simultaneously.

As recently as the 1990s, China’s and India’s trade with four South Asian nations — Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, Nepal and Pakistan — was roughly equal. But over the last decade, China has outpaced India in deepening ties.

For China, these countries provide both new markets and alternative routes to the Indian Ocean, which its ships now reach through a narrow channel between Indonesia and Malaysia known as the Strait of Malacca. India, for its part, needs to improve economic ties with its neighbors to broaden its growth and to help foster peace in the region. Some of the shift in trade toward China comes from heightened tensions between India and Pakistan, which has hampered trade between the two countries. But China has also made inroads in nations that have been more friendly with India, including Sri Lanka, Bangladesh and Nepal.

Moreover, protectionist sentiments have marred India’s relationships with its neighbors. South Asia has a free-trade agreement, but countries that are part of the pact get few benefits, economists say, because India and its neighbors refuse to lower tariffs on many goods and services to protect their own businesses. By contrast, the countries of Southeast Asia have minimal or no duties on most goods and services that they import from one another.

India has had some success in establishing closer ties with Sri Lanka, with which it has a strong bilateral trade agreement. But China has become a partner of choice for big projects here like the Hambantota port. China’s Export-Import Bank is financing 85 percent of the cost of the $1 billion project, and China Harbour Engineering, which is part of a state-owned company, is building it. Similar arrangements have been struck for an international airport being built nearby.

Sri Lankan officials want to turn Hambantota, which was devastated by the 2004 tsunami and is the home constituency for President Mahinda Rajapaksa, into the second-largest urban area in the country after the capital, Colombo. (It is the ninth-biggest today.) The government is also building a convention center, a government complex and a cricket stadium.

Sri Lanka needs foreign assistance to make those dreams a reality, because the government’s finances are stretched by a large debt it accumulated in paying for a 25-year civil war that ended in May. In 2009, the country borrowed $2.6 billion from the International Monetary Fund.

Mr. Rajapaksa has said he offered the Hambantota port project first to India, but officials there turned it down. In an interview, Jaliya Wickramasuriya, Sri Lanka’s ambassador to the United States, said the country looked for investors in America and around the world, but China offered the best terms. “We don’t have favorites,” he said.

Still, Sri Lankan officials have refused to disclose information that would allow analysts to compare China’s proposals with those submitted by other bidders. The country has also kept private details about other projects that are being financed and built by China, including a power plant, an arts center and a special economic zone.

The Sunday Times, a Sri Lankan newspaper, recently estimated that China was involved in projects totaling $6 billion — more than any other country, including India and Japan, which have historically been big donors and investors in Sri Lanka.

Harsha de Silva, a prominent economist in Colombo and an adviser to the country’s main opposition party, said the Sri Lankan government appeared to prefer awarding projects to China because it did not impose “conditions for reform, transparency and competitive bidding” that would be part of contracts with countries like India and the United States or organizations like the World Bank.

Other analysts say China is winning big projects here and elsewhere in the region because its companies offer lower costs. Chinese companies are also competitive because they have acquired a lot of expertise in building large infrastructure projects in China, said Jerry Lou, Morgan Stanley’s China strategist.

In 10 years, Chinese companies have become the biggest suppliers to ports of cranes used to move shipping containers, displacing South Korean and Japanese companies, he said. “They are running at very high efficiency and at the lowest costs,” Mr. Lou said. “China is a game-changer, rather than a new player in the world’s construction industry.”

India is starting to respond to China’s growing influence by becoming more aggressive in courting trade partners. India recently signed a free-trade deal with the Association of Southeast Asian Nations and South Korea. Officials have even begun talking about signing a trade deal with China to bolster exports.

India’s chief trade negotiator, D. K. Mittal, acknowledged that the country’s economic ties with its neighbors were not as strong as they should be and blamed political distrust between the countries. But he said leaders were now determined to improve economic relations, something he said was highlighted in a recent agreement with Bangladesh.

In that deal, India agreed to sell electricity to Bangladesh, provide it with a $1 billion line of credit for infrastructure projects and reduce tariffs on imports. Bangladesh agreed to allow Indian ships to use a port that is being redeveloped by China. “The political leaders have to rise above and say, ‘I want this to happen,’ ” Mr. Mittal said in an interview. “That’s what the leaders are realizing.”

Saturday, February 20, 2010

Flowers greet TET vistors Vietnam 1000th anniversary

The city’s biggest floral show that converts Nguyen Hue Boulevard into Flower Street closed on Wednesday after having enthralled more than one million visitors over a week.




Thousands of small yellow chrysanthemums form an entourage for two giant tigers made of lacquer on the Flower Street in HCM City. (Photo: Tuoi Tre Newspaper)

This year, the street was inspired the glow of sunset in the spring. Organizers said, it symbolized both best wishes for a lucky year for city residents as well as for further development of the city during the Year of the Tiger.



Accordingly, visitors were greeted by several tigers formed by many flower varieties. Some of the flower arrangement designs also commemorated a historic event that takes place this year – the 1000th anniversary of the nation’s capital, Thang Long - Ha Noi.



Another highlight of the first day of the Lunar New Year this year was mammoth floral hearts that celebrated Valentine’s Day, which fell on the same day.



Unfortunately, due to the unexpectedly hot weather, many flowers withered and there was a huge demand for replacements. Besides continuously providing the replacements, organizers also had around 100 florists taking care of the flowers on the street at all times.



The Flower Street is a great way to welcome the Lunar New Year and to greet both local residents and foreign visitors. It has not failed to make a big impression on both.



The Flower Street was hosted by Saigontourist, a leading tourism company in the country. The street was designed by the Center for Architectural Research and Application and a group of designers from the HCMC University of Architecture. The designs were executed by the Binh Quoi Tourism Village, Green Tree Park Company, and the HCMC Public Lighting Company.



VietNamNet/SGGP

Vietnam Ancient War exhibit in New York

The expansive exhibition of artifacts from the land's historical cultures is on view at the Asia Society in New York.

Garuda with Naga Champa period, late 12th-13th century. Thap Mam site, Binh Dinh Province Stone. (National Museum of Vietnamese History)


Reporting from New York - "Arts of Ancient Viet Nam," the most ambitious exhibition of Vietnamese art yet to appear in the United States, is a show about meetings.

In room after room, magnificent objects on display tell a story about people -- how we encounter one another and change in the process.

That such meetings are sometimes bloody was an inescapable issue for the organizers of the show, on view at the Asia Society in New York.

For decades, Vietnam existed in the American mind not so much as a geographical place with its own history but rather, singularly, as a synonym for conflict.

And it was this association -- as Asia Society Director Vishakha Desai put it: "that Vietnam means war" -- that organizers wanted to challenge. "We wanted to create a new story," Desai said. Given the interwoven history of America and Vietnam, it is a point delicately made.

For one thing, Nancy Tingley, the show's heroically stubborn curator who worked more than 20 years to realize "Arts of Ancient Viet Nam," has mounted an exhibition that looks at a time well before the Battle of Hue, the massacre at My Lai and the fall of Saigon. This is a historical show that examines another kind of meeting between people: one built on trade and commerce.

One reason it took so long for the exhibition to be realized was that before 2003 Vietnam didn't have a law that would allow for the lending of museum objects. But the Vietnamese government eventually threw its support behind the exhibition and 10 museums in Vietnam have contributed objects, including the Museum of Vietnamese History in Ho Chi Minh City.

Another obstacle was the lack of diplomatic relations between Vietnam and the United States until 1995. "Politics got in the way for some years, but we've gotten beyond that," said Tingley, based in Northern California.

Although she acknowledges the initial difficulty of realizing the project, Tingley is less interested in making overt political statements and more engaged with the question of what these beautifully crafted objects can tell us about the various peoples who lived between the first millennium BC and the 18th century in what is now Vietnam.

"Trade is a lens through which to look at the cultures," Tingley said, adding that as art and objects spread through trade so do ideas.

Or as the general director of the Department of Cultural Heritage in Vietnam, Dang Van Bai, puts it in a foreword to the catalog: "Arts and culture have always provided a bridge to mutual understanding among the peoples of the world."

With economic assistance from other countries, notably France, which has its own history in the region, Vietnam continues to improve the state of its museums, Tingley said.

The show, which runs through May 2, is remarkable for its scale, scope and beauty. The more than 100 objects, which have never appeared together before in an exhibit (not even in Vietnam), span almost 2,000 years. Because the exhibit spans such a wide period and includes different cultures, it is hard to point to a defining Vietnamese aesthetic. Rather, each of the four cultures on display have borrowed iconography and expressions from different parts of the world.

Organized chronologically, the show begins with two contemporary early cultures, the Dong Son and the Sa Huynh, who lived, respectively, in the north and the central-south part of the country until the 2nd century AD.

Like many cultures that appear to us centuries after their demise, the Sa Huynh are best viewed through their burial objects -- in this case, large, upright clay jars that held the dead along with offerings such as weapons and pottery -- and objects such as Chinese mirrors found at Sa Huynh sites suggest that the culture was a center for trade and exchange.

The most impressive remnants from the Dong Son culture are the large bronze drums on display, intricately patterned with abstract bands and images of people, which, along with chicken-headed ceramics, reveal a strong Chinese influence.

The next room reveals a different people -- the Fu Nan, a civilization of city-states that existed in the Mekong Delta from the 1st to the 5th century AD.; to provide historical context, Fu Nan gold jewelry is presented alongside contemporaneous imported objects from Rome, China and India.

The Fu Nan and their trading partners had rich opportunities to exchange ideas and expressions because the monsoon winds kept the traders in foreign ports for four to six months at a time. But little is known about the Fu Nan people except that they were impressive seafarers who built 200-foot-long ships that had an ability to carry up to 700 people and could be used to export not just goods but also live rhinos and elephants.

Moving on, a visitor encounters an almost life-size wooden Buddha -- an incredible artifact, not just for its slender, Giacometti-like beauty but for the simple fact that this wooden statue dates from the 6th century, having survived almost intact -- and half-smiling -- in the bog of the Mekong Delta.

The Buddha's right hand is raised in abhaya mudra, symbolizing peace, and the belly shows a slight bulge, indicating the intake of breath, prana -- gestures that suggest the creator of the Buddha had been exposed to Indian Gupta sculpture.

A wide-eyed demon in a stone frieze on display in another room shows how the people who lived between the 5th and the 15th century in the coastal kingdoms of Champa, near Hoi An, were also influenced by Indian aesthetics. Early Cham inscriptions were done in Sanskrit, and awe-inspiring stone sculptures of the Hindu god Shiva also reveal the Indian influence. (During another encounter between cultures much later, U.S. bombers destroyed a significant Cham site at My Son.)

The final part of the show looks at trade and exchange in the period between the 16th and the 18th century in the port city of Hoi An, about 20 miles from Danang. Chinese porcelain, Japanese silver, cinnamon and gold were among the wares that were traded at Hoi An, and luxury goods that have later been found attest to the continued connection to China and India as well as the Middle East.

Most of the pieces in this part of the show come from the Cu Lao Cham shipwreck, discovered during the 1990s. Tingley speculates that at least part of the ship's cargo was destined for a Vietnamese man living in an Islamic country somewhere in Southeast Asia, so that he might have not only the kinds of ceramic that reminded him of his home but also something that fit his new culture.

Carbon dating suggests that the ship went down in the 15th century, and the remains of fruit found aboard suggest that it had set sail in late fall. The lateness of the expedition meant that the sailors likely encountered rough weather, possibly causing the ship to go down.

calendar@latimes.com
Copyright © 2010, The Los Angeles Times

Bad news for carnivorous expatriates living in Siem Reap

Bad news for carnivorous expatriates living in Siem Reap who like their food natural and unprocessed: First Modern Butcher Shop, the only retail outlet in town supplying organic meat to consumers, has shut down due to lack of patronage.

“There were actually a lot of Koreans coming, but we just didn’t have enough customers to sustain it,” owner Rasy Sim said of the shop, which had opened on January 3, 2008.

But the good news is Rasy Sim has vowed to open another retail outlet in the future, so Eurocentric Siem Reap residents will be able to get their paté and sausage fix.

And he’s still supplying wholesale organic fruit, vegetables, meat and poultry from his farms in Pouk commune to hotels, restaurants and markets around Siem Reap. His buyers include such big names as Le Meridien Angkor and Raffles Grand Hotel d’Angkor.

Expatriates can still get some of their organic fix from Lucky Market at Lucky Mall, where a few of Rasy Sim’s organic lines are also sold. But his deal with Lucky Market precludes him from stocking his produce at Angkor Market, long the favoured supermarket among Siem Reap’s expat set.

Rasy Sim also operates the Fresh from Farm Farmers Association, or Triple F, which he founded in 2004. Triple F comprises a group of 13 farmers who are being trained to improve production quality so they can sell produce to the kitchens of the big hotels, which mostly import from neighbouring countries.

Triple F’s farmers are provided room and board and three square meals a day. They raise various organic crops in symbiotic relationships to maximise growth.

“We grow tomato with radish, and lettuce with eggplant. We mix leaf, fruit and root in the same bed. They help each other grow,” Rasy Sim said.

Triple F’s aim is to promote local products, thereby improving the lives of Siem Reap farmers and reducing the Kingdom’s reliance on produce from Vietnam and Thailand. Ironically, Rasy Sim’s organisation also imports produce from Vietnam and Thailand for distribution.

“The demand is there, but we just don’t grow enough local products to supply it,” said Rasy Sim, who studied business in Paris and lived in France for 20 years. “Our intention in the future is to be able to supply it all from Cambodia.”

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Half of world's primate species endangered, report says - CNN.com

Half of world's primate species endangered, report says - CNN.com
February 18, 2010 -- Updated 0203 GMT (1003 HKT)
STORY HIGHLIGHTS

* Scientists say primates are humankind's closest animal relatives
* Primates include apes, monkeys, and lemurs
* Main threats are tropical forest destruction, wildlife trade, hunting

RELATED TOPICS

* Endangered Species

(CNN) -- Nearly half the world's primate species are in danger of extinction, according to a report released Wednesday by a major conservation group.

The main threat facing primates -- including apes, monkeys, and lemurs -- is tropical forest destruction, with the illegal wildlife trade and commercial bush meat hunting also playing roles.

Scientists say primates are humankind's closest animal relatives.

Of the world's 634 primate species, 48 percent are threatened with extinction, according to the report, issued by the International Union for Conservation of Nature. The Switzerland-based group calls itself the world's oldest global environmental organization.

"This report makes for very alarming reading," said Christoph Schwitzer, an adviser to the group, in a statement. "Support and action to help save these species is vital if we are to avoid losing these wonderful animals forever."

A handful of primate species count populations in the dozens. For example, there are just 60 to 70 Asian monkeys known as golden headed langurs, found only on an island in Vietnam's Gulf of Tonkin.

There are fewer than 100 remaining northern sportive lemurs, which live in Madagascar, and around 110 eastern black crested gibbons, found in northeastern Vietnam.

The report, which details the 25 most endangered primates, has been issued biannually by the International Union for Conservation of Nature since 2000. It will be formally released Thursday at Britain's Bristol Zoo Gardens.

Over 45,000 garment jobs lost | Business

Factory closures far outstripped openings last year, Ministry of Labour reports

AT Least 106 garment and shoe factories were closed last year, mostly because of a slump in Cambodia’s key export industry, forcing more than 45,000 workers out of employment, Ministry of Labour figures showed late Monday.

Oum Mean, secretary of state at the ministry, said that 66 additional factories had suspended operations over the same period, temporarily affecting an additional 38,124 workers.

“At the same time, we also saw 48 new established factories that employed 16,886 workers,” he said, adding that the government trained 40,000 unemployed garment workers in agriculture up to October.

It was unclear what percentage of closures were factories that had been hit by the global economic crisis – which prompted a 15.8 percent slide in Cambodian garment and apparel exports last year – and how many had closed and immediately reopened to benefit from tax breaks, reportedly a practice that happens frequently in the Kingdom.

The Ministry of Labour said at the end of September that 130 garment factories closed or suspended operations in Cambodia in the first three quarters, meaning an additional 42 factories had shut down from October to the end of December.

Just over 30,000 garment workers were made redundant last year up to the end of September.

Figures from the government showed a smaller closure rate than those by the Free Trade Union of Workers of the Kingdom of Cambodia, a body that represents workers’ rights across different sectors.

President Chea Mony said late Monday that according to union data 135 garment and shoe factories had closed since the start of the global economic crisis in Cambodia, around August 2008, causing 78,000 workers to lose their jobs. Most redundancies had been in the garment industry, he added.

“I am concerned that workers have increasingly been losing their jobs … it is the government’s duty to address this,” said Chea Mony.

Oum Mean said the government inspects every factory in the Kingdom to calculate its employment data.

“We have not finalised the figures [for closures and job losses in January and February] yet,” said Oum Mean.

“But we have hope for 2010 because ... we see that the garment sector is stable.”

Evidence so far has suggested that openings and closures were about the same, he added.

A representative of the Garment Manufacturers Association of Cambodia (GMAC) told the Post last week, however, that the sector is far from recovery.

Speaking after the release of Ministry of Commerce figures that showed an annualised 0.2 percent drop in garment and apparel exports in December, GMAC Secretary General Ken Loo pointed out that shipments were still down after dismal figures for the last quarter of 2008.

He added that anecdotal evidence for January and this month suggested the situation has yet to improve.

The Ministry of Labour’s report of extensive job losses in the garment sector comes as unions have threatened strikes and put pressure on GMAC to consider a rise in the industry minimum wage of US$50 per month, a move factory owners say is unfeasible given the continued slump.

GMAC said last week that it would look into the issue of wages, which unions said last year should be raised to more than $90 per month based on living costs in the capital.

Monday, February 15, 2010

Ha Long Bay 3000 tourists on First Day of Lunar New Year

More than 3,000 tourists, mostly foreigners, visited the UNESCO-recognised Ha Long Bay in Quang Ninh Province on February 14 – the first day of the Lunar New Year.
Local ferry companies and travel agencies deployed all hydrofoils and motorised boats to work at full capacity to serve the tourists who wanted to make a tour of the Bay.
On February 13, cruise ship Legend of the Seas also docked at the bay, bringing nearly 2,000 tourists to the hot spot. This was the second international cruise ship arriving in the bay in the last week.
The visitors attended a gala night to welcome the Lunar New Year Festival (Tet) at the Bai Chay Tourist Resort’s Hoang Gia (Royal) International Park. They not only saw with their own eyes Vietnam’s distinctive traditional customs during the Tet holiday but also wrapped Tet cakes themselves. They also took part in art performances and folk games.
This year Quang Ninh Province aims to receive 5.2 million tourists, of whom 2.4 million are foreigners.

According to the Vietnam National Administration of Tourism, Ha Long Bay, which has been twice recognised by UNESCO as the World Cultural and Natural Heritage Site, and Hanoi capital will take centre stage in the 2010 National Tourism Year.

VietNamNet/VOV

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Video as Vietnam prepares for TET

Live video TET=Raw video of Hanoi. Best viewed in small format. Not the best video, but gives you and idea, the streets of Hanoi as they prepare for TET. Brings back fond memories & feelings for me, as Vietnam is in my Heart. I will return this year for at least 30 days.

Friday, February 12, 2010

Adventurous Silicon Valley software guru killed in Brazil

Adventurous Silicon Valley software guru killed in Brazil
Michael Kanaley, 41, was a principal architect at TIBCO Software in... ( Courtesy of Ken Manning )

Michael Kanaley rode his motorcycle in thunderstorms, backpacked through Pakistan and told his Palo Alto software company that he was moving to Brazil. He persuaded his boss to let him keep his job and jet to Silicon Valley for monthly meetings.

It was the perfect lifestyle for an adventurous spirit — until somebody shot the 41-year-old father of two in the face, killing him in a resort town near his adopted home of Rio de Janeiro.

Now, friends here are mourning the tragic death of Kanaley, a principal architect at Palo Alto's Tibco Software.

"Every one of us wants to live their life that way, but we often let fear overtake us," said longtime friend Larry Neumann, a marketing executive at Solace Systems in Mountain View. "Not Mike."

His brother, Jim Kanaley, of Salt Lake City, told the Mercury News that his younger brother was driving on the morning of Jan. 5 from a hotel in the town of Buzios to see an attorney; he was looking to buy a new place in the wake of a breakup with his longtime girlfriend.

According to news reports from Brazil, Kanaley was headed back Rio de Janeiro when he was shot in the face. His rental car was discovered torched down the road. His wallet and computer were stolen.

Jim Kanaley said he's since been communicating with local police and FBI agents in Brazil to figure out who would have killed such a "talented Internet geek." He added his brother, who moved to Rio in 2004, was worth "millions,"
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including the properties he owned, earning power and stock.

Michael Kanaley leaves behind two daughters, ages 9 and 4, whom he had with Mara Moreira, who was from Brazil and had once worked at Tibco in Palo Alto, too. Jim Kanaley said his brother had never married Moreira; after 10 years together, they had decided to separate. They were in the process of splitting assets and figuring out child custody issues at the time of his death.

"His girls were his world," Jim Kanaley said.

At least three separate memorials have been held for Kanaley. The first was with about 100 friends in San Francisco, where he lived since 1991 after graduating from Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh and being hired by Oracle. Friends remembered him as a track star who loved annual Burning Man trips, dyed his hair crazy colors and frequently changed styles from bearded hippie to closely shaved, played pickup soccer games at Stanford University on lunch breaks, and stood out in a crowd with his trademark baggy red pants and bright Indian shirts.

"There was a rumor that he once skateboarded from San Francisco to work at Tibco," said friend Ken Manning. "I never knew if it was true, but you could believe it."

The next service was held in Rochester, N.Y., where Kanaley was born — the youngest of four children — and where his parents had lived for many years.

The final service was held in Palo Alto at Tibco, where Kanaley was considered a "guru" who had a hand in the design of most of the company's real-time business integration software.

Bill Hughes, Tibco's executive vice president of human resources, said Kanaley's death was a "terrible tragedy. He was not only an invaluable co-worker, but a friend to all of us at Tibco. People here will remember how he livened up the office with his unique style of dreadlocks and brightly colored clothes. Mike was one of Tibco's brightest minds, and he had a gentle soul who made those around him better. He will be greatly missed."

Kanaley went to work for Tibco more than 10 years ago after the company bought a startup he cofounded, inCommon. Neumann said he had a tough time keeping up with his world-traveling friend, someone who wanted to party at off-the-beaten-track-nightclubs in Brazil just because they were located in the most dangerous spots in the country.

"But he wasn't trying hard to be cool," Neumann said. "He had this authenticity about him. He'd spend a half an hour talking to someone's parents at a party. People trying to be cool don't do that."

Friends marveled that Kanaley could be an engineer by day, and a photographer, artist, athlete, outdoorsman and father after work.

"He was a lot in one person," Neumann said. "People tend to gloss this stuff up when people pass on and not remember the bad parts. But I can't think of any bad parts."

Thursday, February 11, 2010

Travel on the Nam River Vietnam

VIET NAM NET: "Young Generation Travel Company in HCMC has launched a tour linking Dong Van Highlands in Ha Giang Province and Ba Be Lake in Bac Kan Province.

Travelers on the Nam River.
The tour operator says this journey is unique because it links the two attractions by waterway instead of the long-distance overland route.

“Tourists normally feel tired with one day by overland from Dong Van to Ba Be. We can shorten the time by the new waterway through the Gam and Nang rivers,” said Tran The Dung, deputy director of the tour operator.

The tour departs HCMC by plane for Hanoi and then immediately heads to Ha Giang Province, around 290 kilometers away, by car.

Dong Van Highlands comprise four mountainous districts in the north of Ha Giang Province, Quan Ba, Yen Minh, Meo Vac and Dong Van, and covers more than 574 square kilometers with limestone on the surface of more than 80 percent of the park.

Visits to Lung Cu Flag Tower, H’Mong and Lo Lo ethnic villages, Ma Pi Leng Mountain Pass and Quan Ba Heaven Gate in Quan Ba District are included.

The trip to Ba Be Lake on the fourth day will mostly be spent floating on the river. From Quan Ba District, tourists will go to Bac Me District by car and across the Nam River to Tuyen Quang Province for some attractions there and then cruise along the Nang River to Ba Be Lake. The next two days are to explore Ba Be National Park and other attractions in Hanoi.

“I wanted to arrange the overland river combination tour early this year. I made two fact-finding trips, by myself and with the national tourism authority,” says Dung.

Dung says the six day tour will save one and a half days compared to the normal tour and give the best feeling for visitors when traveling on the new route that links the two impressive attractions.

The tour costs from over VND8.7 million to VND9.6 million per tourist depending on the type of hotel.

For more information contact Chuck Kuhn

VietNamNet/SGT"

New Year, new prices: A Vietnam tradition

(c)Chuck Kuhn Photo

HANOI, Feb 11 (AFP) - Prices of groceries and other essentials have risen ahead of the Lunar New Year in Vietnam but consumers say that is a small price to pay to please their ancestors.

Shoppers say they have come to accept inflation during the New Year period, known locally as Tet, the most important festival of the year in Vietnam.

"Prices of all products have always gone higher prior to Tet," said Nguyen Thi Hien, 61, a Hanoi housewife who had just bought leaves to make "banh chung", a sticky rice cake filled with bean paste and meat. It is traditionally offered to ancestors during Tet, which begins on Sunday.

Family feasting is also part of the annual tradition.

"It's the time for us to spend money. We have to buy the best things for the ancestors, and for family members," Hien said.

A butcher, who gave her name only as Mai, said the price of meat had gone up by about 10 percent and business had been pretty good.

"It's Tet, so prices of everything increase," she said.

Hoang Mai Hoa, 27, an office worker and mother of a four-year-old daughter, said all essential goods are about 10 percent more costly.

"Many people go shopping and goods are always sold out," she said, adding that although prices are higher, people seem ready to spend.

"For me, Tet is the most important event of the year. Within my financial capacity, I am ready to buy the best food for my family."

State media said prices have jumped even though there seems to be an adequate supply of essential goods.

While there has been no official evidence of massive shortages, "shops and vendors continually take advantage of the high demand", the state Vietnam News wrote in an editorial on Wednesday.

Companies had stockpiled enough goods to meet demand, the newspaper quoted Deputy Minister of Industry and Trade, Nguyen Cam Tu, as saying.

Overall demand for goods had risen by 10 percent against a year ago, Tu said in the report.

Vietnam's economy rebounded from the global financial crisis and grew 5.32 percent last year but observers have expressed concern about a return to high inflation, which reached an annual 23 percent in 2008.

Consumer prices rose 6.88 percent in 2009, and were up 7.62 percent year-on-year in January, official figures showed.

While meat and other goods have become more expensive before Tet, clothes-seller Nguyen Van Anh said she has had to discount her stock because of unseasonably warm weather.

"The business this year is pretty bad. We have prepared, as usual, all the warm clothes for a cold Tet," Anh said.

But with recent summer-like temperatures, which residents say have been about 10 degrees Celsius (50 Fahrenheit) above normal, no one has been buying.

"I could not sell anything over the past two weeks," she said. (By Tran Thi Minh Ha/ AFP)