Monday, January 12, 2015
Paris shooting suspect's wife 'arrived in Syria from Turkey'
Sentencing for Australian in Java delayed
ANDREW Roger, 52, has been in Indonesian custody for eight months after marijuana, crystal meth and various pills were seized in the raid in Surabaya, East Java.
Prosecutors argued the former Darwin resident should serve 16 years from a maximum 20 years, because of the quantity and variety of drugs involved.
Roger's lawyers argued he needed rehabilitation for proven marijuana dependance that had spanned 35 years of his life.
He was due to be sentenced on Monday but Roger told the court he felt so unwell, he couldn't focus on the proceedings.
He said medications he needed were out of stock at the prison where he's remanded.
The sentencing was delayed to Wednesday.
In court last week, the waste management contractor pleaded to be spared from prison.
He said a 16-year term amounted to a life sentence because of his age and poor health.
When Roger was arrested, he was being treated for injuries from a motorbike crash that almost claimed his leg.
He has told the court he also suffers anxiety, panic and insomnia if he doesn't smoke pot.
A father of adult children and grandfather, Roger said his months in jail had been hell.
"The mental effect and terror of this has been incredible," he said.
Source: http://www.news.com.au/
Saturday, January 10, 2015
Taxi strike has widened to Nanjing
High franchise fees, competition from private cars top grievance list
Taxi drivers in Nanjing, Jiangsu province, joined a strike that has swept the country since Thursday afternoon demanding a reduction of the monthly franchise fees paid to taxi companies, which eat up a large share of their revenues.
On Thursday, hundreds of taxis were parked near Nanjing's two railway stations, the long-distance bus station and the airport. Many taxis on the road refused to carry passengers.
On Friday, the city's transportation system was affected at peak times, with many striking taxi drivers suggesting through ride-hailing Internet apps that their colleagues participate.
Workers at the railway stations and the airport asked passengers to switch to buses or subway trains.
Liu Xingyou, a taxi driver, said that he has to pay 7,000 yuan ($1,130) to his company every month, and he only earns about 12,000 yuan.
"But I also need to pay for the natural gas, which is more than 3,000 yuan a month," the 56-year-old said. "I get up before 6 am every morning and sit for about 14 hours a day, only to get 2,000 yuan a month. That's unbearable."
According to Nanjing's transport department, the city now has about 11,700 taxis. Drivers of some new models of vehicles are required to pay a franchise fee of 9,000 yuan a month. Drivers in Beijing and Guangzhou pay about 4,000 or 5,000 yuan.
Licenses for taxi companies have been largely frozen since the early 1990s. Big taxi companies operating today generally got their licenses earlier. They collect fixed fees from individual taxi drivers across the country.
Some drivers also complained that a city's charging standards, low fuel surcharge allowances, five-hour double-billing during peak hours and the new ride-hailing apps have greatly hurt their incomes.
"We hope that the fuel surcharges can be raised, the double-billing hours extended to 24 hours and the ride-hailing apps that allow private cars to enter the market banned," Liu said.
On Sunday, taxi drivers in Shenyang, Liaoning province, went on strike, demanding that all private cars be prohibited from acting as taxis.
On Thursday, China's Ministry of Transport issued a regulation allowing only licensed taxis to offer services through the apps.
The ministry said that while innovations are welcomed, the ride-hailing apps should be covered by the country's transport regulations and do not provide a platform for private car owners to enter the taxi business.
Some local governments have put forward similar rules.
This week, Beijing and Shanghai decided to fine drivers 30,000 yuan to 100,000 yuan if they use a private car as a taxi. In December, the Shanghai government detained and fined 12 private car drivers
The transportation department in Zibo, Shandong province, banned the use of the Didi Zhuanche service, which enables the use of private cars.
In October, the transportation departments of Shenyang and Nanjing began fining car owners for acting as taxis.
Zhu Pingdou, vice-president of app maker Didi Dache, said the company "felt sorry" that the Zhuanche service had been banned.
"The service has provided a solution to many cities' traffic problem," Zhu said. "Maybe it should not be simply banned; it provides convenience to passengers."
Source: http://m.chinadaily.com.cn
France Gripped By Fear After Paris Terror Attacks
PARIS (AP) — What started as a hunt for two terror suspects grew into something worse — fears of a nest of terrorists that could strike again in the heart of Paris. The suspects in three attacks knew each other, had been linked to previous terrorist activities, and one had fought or trained with al-Qaida in Yemen, which claimed ownership Friday of this week's newspaper massacre.
Investigators are now trying to determine to what extent the attacks were coordinated.
The Kouachi brothers had been the subject of a vast manhunt following the armed attack on the Charlie Hebdo weekly that claimed 12 lives on Wednesday. The brothers died Friday when police attacked the building near Charles de Gaulle airport outside Paris where they had barricaded themselves.
An acquaintance of at least one of the Kouachis, Amedy Coulibaly, 32, was identified as the suspected killer of a policewoman in suburban Paris the previous day —and as the man armed with a semi-automatic rifle who opened fire Friday in a kosher market near Paris' Porte de Vincennes and holed up with hostages there.
He threatened to kill his captives if the Kouachis weren't freed. Like the brothers, he was killed when police moved in.
According to French judicial documents obtained by The Associated Press, the connections among the terrorist suspects date back to 2010, when Coulibaly was sentenced to five years in prison for an abortive attempt to free another terrorist from prison. Smain Ait Ali Belkacem was serving a life sentence for a bombing attack on the Paris rapid transit system in 1995.
Cherif Kouachi, 32, the younger of the brothers, was detained in that investigation, but freed later without being tried. A former pizza deliveryman, he appeared in a 2005 French TV documentary on Islamic extremism and was sentenced to 18 months in prison in 2008 for trying to join up with fighters battling in Iraq.
The French judicial documents said Coulibaly and the younger Kouachi knew each another, and traveled with their wives in 2010 to central France to visit a radical Islamist, Djamel Beghal, who had been sentenced to 10 years in prison on a terrorism-related charge.
Police issued a bulletin Friday asking anyone with information about Coulibaly's wife, 26-year-old Hayat Boumeddiene, to contact them, saying she was potentially "armed and dangerous."
According to the judicial documents, a police search of Coulibaly's residence in 2010 turned up a crossbow, 240 rounds of 7.62mm ammunition, films and photos of him during a trip to Malaysia, and letters seeking false official documents.
In a police interview that same year, Coulibaly identified Cherif Kouachi as a friend he had met in prison and said they saw each other frequently, according to a transcript of the interview obtained by the Journal du Dimanche newspaper and posted on the newspaper's website.
According to the newspaper, he told the police that people he met in prison used the nickname "Dolly" for him. He said he was employed as a temp worker at a Coca-Cola factory.
"I know a lot of criminals because I met heaps of them in detention," he is quoted as telling the police.
Michel Thooris, secretary-general of France's police labor union, told AP he didn't believe these were "three people isolated in their little world."
"This could very well be a little cell," he said. "There are probably more than three people," he added, given that Cherif Kouachi and Coulibaly had had contacts with other jihadist groups in the past.
French Prime Minister Manuel Valls, speaking in a TV interview late Friday, also indicated authorities are bracing for the possibility of new attacks.
"We are facing a major challenge" and "very determined individuals," Valls said.
Francois Molins, the Paris prosecutor, said authorities increasingly grew to see links between the attackers after they discovered that Boumeddiene and the companion of one of the Kouachi brothers had exchanged about 500 phone calls.
Speaking to reporters late Friday, he said that 16 people had been detained in the investigation. Officials were continuing to look for "possible accomplices, the financing of these criminal actions, the source of these weapons and all the help that (the terror suspects) might have benefited from, in France as well as overseas, in Yemen," Molins said.
The latest U.S. assessments described to the AP show that the brothers led a normal life for long enough in recent years that the French began to view them as less of a threat and reduced the surveillance. They are continuing to investigate whether the brothers' steps away from radical Islam were part of a plan of misdirection, or whether it was real — and that they simply had another change of heart and decided to turn to violence.
On Friday, a French TV news network said it spoke directly to Coulibaly before his death, and he said he and the brothers were coordinating and that he was with the Islamic State extremist group. BFM, the network, said it also talked to the younger Kouachi brother, who claimed to be financed and dispatched by al-Qaida in Yemen, normally a rival organization.
Al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula said Friday it had planned the assault on the Charlie Hebdo newspaper staff — but did not mention the other terrorist acts.
Separately, officials in Yemen and the U.S. said Said Kouachi, 34, the older of the brothers, had trained with al-Qaida in Yemen. Yemeni authorities suspect he fought with the Islamic extremist group at the height of its offensive in the country's south, a Yemini security official said Friday.
Another senior security official said Said Kouachi was in Yemen until 2012. Both officials spoke on condition of anonymity because of an ongoing investigation into the older Kouachi brother's stay.
A U.S. law enforcement official said Friday that investigators believe Said Kouachi traveled to Yemen to receive weapons training from al-Qaida. The official, who was not authorized to discuss an ongoing investigation by name, said the brothers had raised enough concern to be placed on the U.S. no-fly list because one had traveled to Yemen and the other had been convicted of terrorism charges.
Though the brothers claimed affiliation to al-Qaida, the U.S. official said, investigators were still trying to determine whether al-Qaida had ordered the attack on the Charlie Hebdo offices or if the brothers had done it on their own.
The official said investigators have been searching for any contacts that the brothers maintained with individuals in the United States, but had not yet found any.
French authorities knew Kouachi traveled to Yemen, but it's not clear whether they knew what he did there, U.S. officials believe. Still, French authorities placed both Kouachi brothers under close surveillance when he returned.
Source: http://m.huffpost.com
Friday, January 9, 2015
Ex-security chief closer to trial date
The transfers were announced by the Communist Party of China Central Commission for Discipline Inspection on Wednesday.
Zhou is the highest-ranking figure to become ensnared in the country's campaign against corruption in recent years.
Authorities announced in July that they were investigating Zhou, who retired from the Politburo Standing Committee in 2012.
He was arrested in December, expelled from the Party and placed under a judicial investigation into a series of allegations including taking bribes and "leaking state secrets". Meanwhile, Chinese judicial authorities have secured the return of more than 500 economic fugitives, including many alleged corrupt officials, from abroad.
They have also retrieved more than 3 billion yuan ($480 million) sent overseas illegally, Huang Shuxian, deputy secretary of the commission, told a media briefing on Wednesday.
Huang said they are also investigating other high-profile cases, including those of Ling Jihua, former minister of the United Front Work Department, and Su Rong, former deputy chairman of the National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference.
"After the investigation is complete, and if we discover some criminal clues such as abuse of power or accepting bribes, suspects will be transferred to the judicial bodies to face trial," he said.
The 29 other alleged corrupt officials transferred to prosecutors include Jiang Jiemin, former minister of the State-owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission; Li Dongsheng, former deputy minister at the Ministry of Public Security; Li Chongxi, former chairman of the Sichuan Provincial Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference; and Shen Weichen, former Party chief and executive vice-president of the China Association for Science and Technology.
Since November 2012, when the new leadership was elected, the anti-graft campaign has become a top priority for the CPC Central Committee.
President Xi Jinping has vowed to take a series of strong and effective measures to combat corrupt officials, both the "tigers" (senior officials) and "flies" (low-level officials).
The central government has tightened supervision of "naked officials" - those who have sent their spouses and children abroad to invest in businesses.
Huang said that since November 2012, five rounds of inspections have been conducted in the country's 31 provinces and regions, 39 central government ministries and authorities, large State-owned companies and leading universities to collect tipoffs about alleged corruption.
A number of suspected graft cases involving senior officials and directors of State-owned enterprises have been uncovered based on tipoffs.
The cases include those of Bai Enpei, former Party chief of Yunnan province; Wan Qingliang, former Party chief of Guangzhou, Guangdong province; and Xue Wandong, former manager of a petroleum engineering technology subsidiary of Sinopec, according to the Commission for Discipline Inspection.
Huang said supervisory offices will cover all 140 central Party and State bodies, including the CPC Central Committee's General Office, the General Office of the State Council and the Organization Department, to prevent corruption.
Cheng Gang, a law professor at Renmin University of China said: "The anti-graft fight will be more standardized. After completing the investigation within the Party, disciplinary officers will transfer suspected corrupt officials to prosecuting authorities to stand trial."
According to the commission, more than 70,000 government officials were punished by disciplinary authorities last year for violating Party rules to build a clean government.
The number of cases involved was more than 50,000.
Source: http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/
The games people play
A wave of loneliness among young middle-class men saw the emergence of 'pickup artists' who teach lovelorn bachelors a variety of techniques to attract women. Now, the phenomenon may be on the wane, as Xu Wei reports.
Ze Xin (not his real name) felt as though he'd been brainwashed after attending a five-day workshop held by a number of "pickup artists". At the time, Ze was trying to heal the wounds left by a failed relationship during which he "did virtually everything I could to make the girl happy", but was still ditched.
"It was about a total overhaul of your values, your understanding of love. I felt as though I had been utterly stupid in the past," Ze said, adding that the thing he disliked most about the course was the requirement to post selfies of himself with pretty girls on social media.
"It's a message to the ladies you're targeting; to show that you have no shortage of female admirers. There has to be competition," he said. "If there are no women in your life, the chances are that there are no women who like you. That's human nature."
Ze recalled being stunned as he watched his tutor trying to pick up a young woman during a shopping trip for clothes. "He seemed to approach girls simply because they looked good at a first glance. It was such a casual thing," he said.
The 7,000 yuan ($1,126) workshop opened up a new world: "I thought there would be no future without my ex-girlfriend, but I was wrong. It was really about a shortage of choices."
"Pickup artists", men who specialize in tricks and techniques to attract women, originated in the United States in the middle of the last century. Their emergence prompted a number of books, the most influential being The Game: Penetrating the Secret Society of Pickup Artists by Neil Strauss.
In a famous essay, The dating mind: Evolutionary psychology and the emerging science of human courtship, Nathan Oesch of the Department of Experimental Psychology at Oxford University, defined the PUA community as "consisting broadly of heterosexual men who market various tactics, techniques, and methods to meet, date, and ultimately seduce women".
In China the practice is generally regarded as light-hearted fun, but it's become a focus of disquiet in Western countries where PUAs, as they are known, have been accused of promoting and legitimizing violence against women.
In November, Julien Blanc, a PUA from the US, made global headlines when he was banned from entering the United Kingdom to deliver a series of seminars after more than 150,000 people signed an online petition urging the UK government to declare him persona non grata, and follow Australia in refusing to grant him a visa.