MITRA MANDAL GLOBAL NEWS

Yahoo secretly scanned customer emails for U.S. intelligence - sources

2016. REUTERS/Mike Blake1/2

By Joseph Menn | SAN FRANCISCO
Yahoo Inc last year secretly built a custom software program to search all of its customers' incoming emails for specific information provided by U.S. intelligence officials, according to people familiar with the matter.
The company complied with a classified U.S. government directive, scanning hundreds of millions of Yahoo Mail accounts at the behest of the National Security Agency or FBI, said two former employees and a third person apprised of the events.
Some surveillance experts said this represents the first case to surface of a U.S. Internet company agreeing to a spy agency's demand by searching all arriving messages, as opposed to examining stored messages or scanning a small number of accounts in real time.
It is not known what information intelligence officials were looking for, only that they wanted Yahoo to search for a set of characters. That could mean a phrase in an email or an attachment, said the sources, who did not want to be identified.
Reuters was unable to determine what data Yahoo may have handed over, if any, and if intelligence officials had approached other email providers besides Yahoo with this kind of request.
According to the two former employees, Yahoo Chief Executive Marissa Mayer's decision to obey the directive roiled some senior executives and led to the June 2015 departure of Chief Information Security Officer Alex Stamos, who now holds the top security job at Facebook Inc."Yahoo is a law abiding company, and complies with the laws of the United States," the company said in a brief statement in response to Reuters questions about the demand. Yahoo declined any further comment.
Through a Facebook spokesman, Stamos declined a request for an interview.
The NSA referred questions to the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, which declined to comment.
The demand to search Yahoo Mail accounts came in the form of a classified directive sent to the company's legal team, according to the three people familiar with the matter.
U.S. phone and Internet companies are known to have handed over bulk customer data to intelligence agencies. But some former government officials and private surveillance experts said they had not previously seen either such a broad directive for real-time Web collection or one that required the creation of a new computer program.
"I've never seen that, a wiretap in real time on a 'selector,'" said Albert Gidari, a lawyer who represented phone and Internet companies on surveillance issues for 20 years before moving to Stanford University this year. A selector refers to a type of search term used to zero in on specific information.
"It would be really difficult for a provider to do that," he added.
Experts said it was likely that the NSA or FBI had approached other Internet companies with the same demand, since they evidently did not know what email accounts were being used by the target. The NSA usually makes requests for domestic surveillance through the FBI, so it is hard to know which agency is seeking the information.
Reuters was unable to confirm whether the 2015 demand went to other companies, or if any complied.
Alphabet Inc's Google and Microsoft Corp, two major U.S. email service providers, did not respond to requests for comment.
CHALLENGING THE NSA
Under laws including the 2008 amendments to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, intelligence agencies can ask U.S. phone and Internet companies to provide customer data to aid foreign intelligence-gathering efforts for a variety of reasons, including prevention of terrorist attacks.
Disclosures by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden and others have exposed the extent of electronic surveillance and led U.S. authorities to modestly scale back some of the programs, in part to protect privacy rights.
Companies including Yahoo have challenged some classified surveillance before the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, a secret tribunal.
Some FISA experts said Yahoo could have tried to fight last year's directive on at least two grounds: the breadth of the demand and the necessity of writing a special program to search all customers' emails in transit.
Apple Inc made a similar argument earlier this year when it refused to create a special program to break into an encrypted iPhone used in the 2015 San Bernardino massacre. The FBI dropped the case after it unlocked the phone with the help of a third party, so no precedent was set.
Other FISA experts defended Yahoo's decision to comply, saying nothing prohibited the surveillance court from ordering a search for a specific term instead of a specific account. So-called "upstream" bulk collection from phone carriers based on content was found to be legal, they said, and the same logic could apply to Web companies' mail.
As tech companies become better at encrypting data, they are likely to face more such requests from spy agencies.
Former NSA General Counsel Stewart Baker said email providers "have the power to encrypt it all, and with that comes added responsibility to do some of the work that had been done by the intelligence agencies."
SECRET SIPHONING PROGRAM
Mayer and other executives ultimately decided to comply with the directive last year rather than fight it, in part because they thought they would lose, said the people familiar with the matter.
Yahoo in 2007 had fought a FISA demand that it conduct searches on specific email accounts without a court-approved warrant. Details of the case remain sealed, but a partially redacted published opinion showed Yahoo's challenge was unsuccessful.
Some Yahoo employees were upset about the decision not to contest the more recent directive and thought the company could have prevailed, the sources said.
They were also upset that Mayer and Yahoo General Counsel Ron Bell did not involve the company's security team in the process, instead asking Yahoo's email engineers to write a program to siphon off messages containing the character string the spies sought and store them for remote retrieval, according to the sources.
The sources said the program was discovered by Yahoo's security team in May 2015, within weeks of its installation. The security team initially thought hackers had broken in.
When Stamos found out that Mayer had authorized the program, he resigned as chief information security officer and told his subordinates that he had been left out of a decision that hurt users' security, the sources said. Due to a programming flaw, he told them hackers could have accessed the stored emails.
Stamos's announcement in June 2015 that he had joined Facebook did not mention any problems with Yahoo. (bit.ly/2dL003k)
In a separate incident, Yahoo last month said "state-sponsored" hackers had gained access to 500 million customer accounts in 2014. The revelations have brought new scrutiny to Yahoo's security practices as the company tries to complete a deal to sell its core business to Verizon Communications Inc for $4.8 billion.
(Reporting by Joseph Menn; Editing by Jonathan Weber and Tiffany Wu)

Bagel illustrates Nobel-prize winning work in physics

By Niklas Pollard and Ben Hirschler | STOCKHOLM/LONDON
Three British-born scientists won the 2016 Nobel Prize in Physics on Tuesday for revealing unusual states of matter, leading to advances in electronics and potentially helping work on future quantum computers.
David Thouless, Duncan Haldane and Michael Kosterlitz, who all work at U.S. universities, share the prize for their discoveries on abrupt changes in the properties, or phases, of ultra-thin materials.
Their research centers on topology, a branch of mathematics involving step-wise changes like making a series of holes in an object. The difficult-to-grasp concept was illustrated by Nobel Committee member Thors Hans Hansson at a news conference using a cinnamon bun, a bagel and a pretzel.
Phases are obvious when matter goes from solid to liquid to gas, but materials can also undergo topological step changes that affect their electrical properties. One example is a superconductor, which at low temperatures conducts electricity without resistance.
"Thanks to their pioneering work, the hunt is now on for new and exotic phases of matter," the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences said in awarding the 8 million Swedish crown ($937,000) prize.
"Many people are hopeful of future applications in both materials science and electronics."
Thouless, of the University of Washington in Seattle, was awarded half the prize, with the other half divided between Haldane, of Princeton University, and Kosterlitz, of Brown University.
"We really haven't understood ... the full amount of marvelous things that quantum mechanics can do," Haldane told Reuters in an interview at his home in Princeton, New Jersey. "It does things which we never dreamed of and could actually be tremendously useful for all kinds of new technologies."
'LONG OVERDUE'
Kosterlitz's colleague at Brown, Professor See Chen Ying, said he considered the award long overdue.
"You never know, because there are exciting discoveries everywhere, so every year we start thinking is this the year," Ying said in an interview on Brown's campus in Providence, Rhode Island. "Personally, I think it's long overdue."
Andy Schofield, a professor of theoretical physics at the University of Birmingham, where Kosterlitz and Thouless carried out their early work in the 1970s, said the new understanding of phase states was particularly promising in computing.
"One of the most exciting technological implications is in insulators that don't carry electricity normally but can be forced to carry electrical current at the surface," he told Reuters. "That's a very robust state, which gives a stability that is essential to quantum computing."
Superfast quantum computers, one of the holy grails of science, should be able to test multiple solutions to a problem at once and could in theory solve in seconds problems that take today's fastest machines years to crack.
Traditional computers use binary bits of information to store data while quantum computers use "qubits" that can simultaneously be 0 and 1, making them ultra-fast but unstable.
Physics is the second of this year's crop of Nobels and comes after Japan's Yoshinori Ohsumi was awarded the prize for medicine on Monday.
There had been speculation this year's prize might be awarded for the first detection of gravitational waves, the ripples in the fabric of space-time first predicted a century ago by Albert Einstein. The breakthrough, announced by international researchers in February, may have come too late for the Nobel Committee.
The three researchers join the ranks of some of the greatest names in science, including Einstein, Niels Bohr and Marie Curie.
The prizes were first awarded in 1901 to honor achievements in science, literature and peace in accordance with the will of the Swedish dynamite inventor and business tycoon Alfred Nobel, who left much of his wealth to establish the award.
For a graphic on Nobel laureates, click on: tmsnrt.rs/1jLPeM7
($1 = 8.5364 Swedish crowns)

(Additional reporting by Bart Noonan, Andrew Hofstetter, Elly Park, Anna Ringstrom, Bjorn Rundstrom, Simon Johnson, Johan Ahlander and Scott Malone; Editing by Mark Trevelyan and David Gregorio)

Syria peace efforts must continue despite break with Russia: Kerry



By David Brunnstrom and Robin Emmott | BRUSSELS
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said on Tuesday efforts to end Syria's war must continue despite Washington's decision to break off talks with Moscow over what he called its "irresponsible" support for President Bashar al-Assad.
The United States on Monday suspended talks with Russia on implementing a ceasefire deal in Syria, accusing Moscow of not living up to its commitments to halt fighting and ensure aid reached besieged communities.
"We are not giving up on the Syrian people and we are not abandoning the pursuit of peace," Kerry said in a speech in Brussels.
"We will continue to pursue a meaningful, sustainable, enforceable cessation of hostilities throughout the country – and that includes the grounding of Syrian and Russian combat aircraft in designated areas."
Kerry accused Russia of turning a blind eye to Assad's use of chlorine gas and barrel bombs and suggested it was pursuing a scorched earth policy in place of diplomacy.
"As we know, this tragic war has been made worse by the utter depravity of the regime, that doesn't hesitate to still use gas, chlorine, mixed with other ingredients to kill its citizens, that drops barrel bombs on hospitals and children and women," he said.
"You also have the irresponsible and profoundly ill-advised decision by Russia to associate its interests and reputation with that of Assad, a man who has been responsible for torturing more than ten thousand people."
He said that if Russia was serious about peace, it would have to behave differently than it was now in Syria. "Russia knows exactly what it needs to do in order to get that cessation implemented and in a fair and reasonable way," he said.
Kerry said all parties had a duty to enable delivery of humanitarian assistance.
European foreign ministers will meet on Oct. 17 to discuss what they can do to help bring peace, after the European Union proposed a new humanitarian plan at the weekend in coordination with the United Nations for the besieged Syrian city of Aleppo.
But a senior European diplomat said there was little chance that Russia would change strategy, asserting that Moscow was resorting to the same tactics it used on the Chechen capital Grozny, which was devastated in 1994-96 and 1999-2000 wars by Russian forces intent on keeping Chechnya in Russia.
"Their objective is the total destruction of the opposition. They have a Chechen vision of the conflict. Their method is submission by force," the senior diplomat said.
MILITARY OPTIONS
Russian news agencies, citing Kerry's Syria interlocutor, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, said Moscow would continue to make efforts to resolve the Syria crisis despite the U.S. suspension of the talks.
A spokeswoman for U.N. Special Envoy for Syria Staffan de Mistura said he was in "intensive consultations" on the way forward.
The end of the talks could trigger deeper U.S. consideration of military options such as providing more sophisticated arms, logistical support, and training to rebel groups.
But the speed with which the ceasefire collapsed - after a U.N. aid convoy was bombed in Syria - appeared to surprise some U.S. officials, leaving them without a clear plan on the immediate way forward.
U.S. President Barack Obama has been loath to get more deeply involved and U.S. officials have said he is unlikely to do so with less than four months left in office.
Russia said on Tuesday it had deployed an S-300 missile system to its Tartus naval base in Syria.
"The missile battery is intended to ensure the safety of the
naval base...It is unclear why the deployment of the S-300
caused such alarm among our Western partners," the Defence Ministry said.
(Additional reporting by John Irish in Paris; Editing by Angus MacSwan)

UB International Film Festival to launch next week

UB International Film Festival to launch next week

Ulaanbaatar /MONTSAME/ The Ulaanbaatar International Film Festival is opening on October 11 at the Tengis cinema. The four-day festival will launch by premiering the Zud Film directed by Marta Mironovich. 
The eight annual UB International Film Festival is being organized by the Arts Council of Mongolia, the Embassy of the French Republic, and supported by the S.Korean Embassy, the Goethe Institute, and the Taiwanese Trade and Economy Representative Office, with a purpose to deliver the masterpieces of global motion picture to the Mongolian audience.
Top 10 works, awarded at Cannes and Berlin film festivals, from UK, Afghanistan, Germany, France, Poland, South Korea and Taiwan will be screened. 
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Mangolia news-Face of Beauty International 2016 calls for Mazaalai

Face of Beauty International 2016 calls for Mazaalai conservation

Ulaanbaatar /MONTSAME/ Beauties from 60 countries have challenged their talents in anticipation of the finale of Face of Beauty International (FOBI) 2016. The finale will take place on October 8 at Buyant-Ukhaa Sports Complex.
Contestants from Mongolia, Kazakhstan, China, Spain and Portugal became the top five in the Miss Talent category. Their performances will be staged once again at the finale.
This year’s FOBI has chosen “Let’s Save Mazaalai” as its motto, which is, as described by the organizers, raising awareness of the endangered bear species and making more tangible contributions to their conservation.
Ten questions will be given to the finalists about the Mongolian Gobi bear, and the answers to which will be taken into consideration of the judging.
As the special guest, the Human Barbie of Ukraine is honoring the audience with her presence. 

Stampede at Ethiopia protest leaves 52 dead


 (AKIpress) - ethiopiaFifty-two people were killed and many more injured in Ethiopia's Oromia region during a protest at a religious festival, BBC reported citing the government.
Some died in a stampede after police employed tear gas, rubber bullets and baton charges, witnesses said.
Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn said rioters had caused "pre-planned mayhem" that led people to fall to their deaths in ravines.


He denied reports that the security forces had opened fire.
In a national address on state TV, he praised their "great efforts" to protect the public and blamed "evil forces" for the deaths, vowing to bring to justice those responsible..
Thousands had gathered for the religious festival in Bishoftu, 40km (25 miles) from the capital Addis Ababa.
Some reports said police responded after anti-government protesters threw stones and bottles, but others said demonstrators were entirely peaceful.
An Oromo activist, Jawar Mohamed, was quoted as saying that nearly 300 people had been killed and many more injured. He said troops and a helicopter gunship had opened fire, driving people off a cliff and into a lake.

Estonian Parliament votes for first female president









Bishkek (AKIpress) - Kersti KaljulaidEstonia’s parliament has selected a new president who will be the country’s first female leader,The Guardian said.
Kersti Kaljulaid, a European Union accountant, won Monday’s vote 81-0, with 20 members absent or abstaining. Her selection follows two failed votes and weeks of heated debate.Kaljulaid, 46, will succeed the current president, Toomas Hendrik Ilves, who is stepping down next week after two five-year terms in the ceremonial post.
The choice of Kaljulaid, who works at the European court of auditors, became possible after the six parliamentary parties agreed to propose a political outsider as a single candidate.

KOICA to provide $4 million for promotion of food security, reduction of poverty in Kyrgyzstan

KOICA to provide $4 million for promotion of food security, reduction of poverty in Kyrgyzstan
Bishkek (AKIpress) - KOICA-WFPThe Korea International Cooperation Agency (KOICA) and the United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) today signed a three-year agreement to improve food security, nutrition and resilience to climate-related and economic shocks for more than 80,000 vulnerable people in four regions of Kyrgyzstan.
Under the agreement, KOICA will provide WFP with US$4 million to design and implement, in partnership with the Ministry of Labour and Social Development, projects that focus on creating or restoring community assets to improve food security and resilience to climate risks and agricultural productivity.
The grant will also fund vocational training for people to learn skills to help increase their incomes as well as training on nutrition and hygiene practices to improve families’ nutrition.


These projects will be implemented in the poorest areas of the Batken, Jalal-Abad, Osh, and Naryn provinces.
“This valuable partnership with KOICA enables WFP and the Ministry of Labour and Social Development to extend their existing productive safety nets project to new areas,” said WFP Kyrgyz Republic Country Director Ram Saravanamuttu. “This ensures that our activities, which are widely recognized for enhancing social development, have a broader impact on rural communities and economic growth across the country.”
The grant highlights KOICA’s strategic vision “to address global development by pursuing global harmony and facilitating the socio-economic development of partner countries” and underscores the need to enhance food security and nutrition as a foundation for sustainable development.
“The Government of Korea and KOICA support our partner countries in achieving sustainable, indigenous development of rural areas by enhancing food security, income levels and quality of life,” said Ambassador of the Republic of Korea Jung Byeong-hoo. “We look forward to our partnership with WFP and the Ministry of Labour and Social Development contributing to the socio-economic empowerment of the poorest.”
KOICA's Country Director Park Sun Jin and WFP’s Saravanamuttu signed the agreement at a ceremony today at the Ministry of Labour and Social Development.
“Our key objective is to create a conducive environment to empower the poorest households in the country,’ said Minister of Labour and Social Development of the Kyrgyz Republic Kudaibergen Bazarbaev. “I can see this agreement opening up new opportunities to expand social support to the most vulnerable while contributing to food security, poverty alleviation and local economic development.”
In 2016, WFP plans to assist about 200,000 people through school meals and productive safety nets programmes across the Kyrgyz Republic.
KOICA’s bilateral assistance in the Kyrgyz Republic cover fields such as governance, public administration, agriculture and rural development, health and education. In 2016, it is assisting the "Election Management Capacity Building in the Kyrgyz Republic", the "Establishment of Land Information System in the Kyrgyz Republic" and the "Establishing an e-NID System in the Kyrgyz Republic". KOICA also operates civil society-based cooperation, overseas volunteer programs as well as training programs for the capacity building of government officials.

European Baptist leaders protest escalation in Syrian conflict

Leaders of the European Baptist Federation strongly condemned the recent increase in violence in Syria, as government forces and their allies push to reclaim rebel-held neighborhoods in Aleppo, once the nation’s largest city and a key battleground since fighting broke out in the Mideast country in 2012.
Aleppo (Photo/Wikipedia)
Aleppo (Photo/Wikipedia)
Hundreds of civilians have been killed or injured in Russian and Syrian government air strikes affecting an estimated 270,000 people, including 100,000 children,besieged in Aleppo’s eastern districts. ABC News reported Oct. 3 that a major hospital in Aleppo was bombed for the third time in less than a week.
resolution passed in EBF council meeting Sept. 29-Oct. 1 in Tallinn, Estonia, said the recent increase in violence in Aleppo “fails to differentiate between civilians and those fighting.”
“As followers of Christ, we affirm the sacred nature of all human life, regardless of religion, culture or country,” the EBF council said. “We see every attack on human life as striking at the very reflection of who our Creator God is.”
Another resolution brought attention to the profound effect of the Syrian crisis in Turkey, which borders Syria to the north and has been accepting refugees since April 2011.
The resolution on Turkey “recognizes the huge task facing our brothers and sisters in the Baptist Alliance of Turkey” as they seek to offer hospitality and care to hundreds of thousands of refugees and urges “sustained prayer for protection for the witness of Christian believers in Turkey.”
The resolution challenges member bodies and mission partners to “financially and practically support the relief of the humanitarian crisis in Turkey” and “continue to pray for an end to conflicts in the region which have created this humanitarian crisis.”
A third EBF council resolution celebrated recently planted churches in member Baptist unions and prayed “for further opportunities for Baptists in Europe, Central Asia and the Middle East to bless the communities around them.”
The EBF, representing about 826,000 Baptists in 54 unions and conventions in Europe, Central Asia and the Middle East, is one of six regional fellowships within the Baptist World Alliance.

Ancient Tibetan astronomy keeps shining in modern times


LHASA, Oct. 3 (PNA/Xinhua) -- Tibetan Buddhism conjures up images of prayer wheels, mandalas and prostration, but there is one little-known, indispensable item: a calendar.
Aside from some textbooks, the Tibetan Annual Almanac is the most widely circulated book in Tibet. The information it carries is critical in everyday life, especially for farmers, herders, doctors and Buddhists.
The Astronomy Calendar Research Institute of the Tibetan Hospital in Lhasa leads routine astronomy based on the tantric Kalachakra: the wheel of time.
Dating back more than 2,000 years, the Kalachakra describes eclipses as an alignment of the sun, moon and appropriate Lunar nodes, exactly the same as modern astronomy.
On these calendars, one can find the specific dates and times of eclipses, auspicious days for farming and other activities, as well as the timing of Buddhist festivals.
Manual calculation vs. digitalization
For thousands of years, these calculations have been done manually, according to Yinba, director of the institute.
All the calendarists in Yinba's teams have gone through strict training in either monasteries or research institutes. They must memorize sophisticated formulas and be adept at mental arithmetic, as no scratch paper is ever available.
Instead, they calculate with a stick on specialized sand-boards, about one-meter long and less than 20-cm wide, and results must be quickly memorized as numbers are ceaselessly erased from the sand for the next calculation.
To make the figures easier to handle, ancient astronomy masters devised a set of "calculation verses". Calendar makers always chant while calculating.
In an attempt to speed up the time-consuming work, the institute brought in calculators in the 1990s, but the astronomical data were too much for ordinary calculators.
When computers entered China, Yinba and his team began to use them and have since developed a set of algorithms on astronomical changes and changes of days.
Key in a few numbers into the system, and with a click of the mouse, all astronomical data for the year of the fire monkey (2016) will pop up onto the screen in two or three seconds, all fifty-two pages of it.
With the algorithms, the institute has published the first Tibetan calendar book covering the years 1 to 2100 AD.
In the past, it took an astronomical master and his apprentices more than 30 years to produce a new calendar, combining the four schools of traditional Tibetan calendar making, and working with both Gregorian calendar and Chinese lunar calendars.
Yinba said manual calculation was still used as a double check, but with computers as an alternative, more time is spent on training students and on research.
Strong vitality
In traditional monastic education, astronomy was viewed as one of the toughest courses. The subject has very little to do with stargazing but is closely tied in with Buddhist religious practices and people's everyday lives.
In the Kalachakra Tantra, Buddha presented not only an external system dealing with the motion of planets and the ways to measure time, but also an internal system witnessing the cycles of energy and breath through the human body that is closely related to the external system.
That is why when eclipses appear, Buddhists are inspired to chant mantras, meditate or other engage practices that they believe will take them closer to enlightenment.
It also explains why all medical students must study astronomy to a certain level in traditional monasteries. Astronomical knowledge is particularly useful, for instance, when doctors use external therapies such as blood-letting or when herbs are collected from the mountains.
Calendar makers agreed that it is the utility of their product that has ensured the knowledge is passed intact from generation to generation. The calendar is used by meteorologists. Farmers use it as a reference for planting and pasturing.
Looking back to his youth studying with senior monks in Gansu Province and Tibet, Yinba said he was very grateful to the astronomy masters of the past.
"Tibetan astronomy a unique part of our culture. To keep it alive, we must not stand still, but make progress," he said.
While the algorithms are yet to be perfected, Yinba spelled out another dream: building an observatory in Lhasa.

"I wish more people could look to the stars through astronomical telescopes and know more about the universe," he said. (PNA/Xinhua)

Dutch research traces Suriname rice to its African origin



THE HAGUE, Oct. 4 (PNA/Xinhua) -- The black rice grown by the Maroons, or descendants of escaped African slaves who live in the interior of Suriname today, is similar to a specific type of black rice that was derived from western Cote d'Ivoire, scientists said Monday.
Several Suriname black rice grains were cultivated into fully grown plants in the Hortus Botanicus in Amsterdam. An international team of scientists led by Wageningen University compared the DNA of these plants grown in Amsterdam with over 100 varieties of black grains from across West Africa, from Senegal to Chad.
The Suriname black rice was shown to be similar to a specific type of black rice that derived from the fields of Mande-speaking farmers in western Cote d'Ivoire, said Wageningen in its press release.
Maroons in Surinam cultivate a species of rice with black grains but they rarely eat them but instead offer them to ancestors and used them in spiritual herb baths.
Historical documents suggest that the black grains originate from African rice, once bought by slave traders along the coast of West Africa to feed their slaves. For centuries, the liberated Maroons cherished the African crop as a tangible reminder of their past. But it was not known from which African country the rice originated.
Although Dutch slave traders bought most of their African slaves from Ghana, Benin and Central Africa, the recently digitized log of the Zeeland vessel D'Eenigheid indicates that rice and slaves were also occasionally purchased along the coast of Liberia, the country west of Cote d'Ivoire. At the time, Mande speakers were known as good rice farmers and highly sought after by slave traders.
Wageningen hailed this "combination of ethno botanic, historic and genetic research" that established the link between Suriname black rice and the fields in western Ivory Coast because "this can help trace the unwritten migration history of people and crops."

The scientists believe that the white rice, bananas, beans and tubers grown on these farmlands today still have many more stories to tell. (PNA/Xinhua)

DNA study confirms Asian origins of Pacific island peoples



WELLINGTON, Oct. 4 (PNA/Xinhua) -- New DNA evidence showing Pacific peoples originally came from Asia could lead to better health treatments in the Pacific, said a New Zealand researcher Tuesday.
The new study was the first to sequence DNA from 3,000-year-old skeletons and identify who were the first people to reach the Pacific islands, said Massey University Professor Murray Cox, a co-author of the international project.
By examining skeletal remains from the first people to settle in Vanuatu and Tonga, the research was able to put a 40-year debate to rest, Cox said.
Researchers had shown that ancient settlers had little to no Papuan ancestry, which proved that the first people to reach remote Oceania were from Asian farming groups, with later movements bringing Papuan genes into the region.
Before this work, no ancient genomic DNA had ever been obtained from any tropical region, including the Pacific.
This had resulted in two opposing scenarios to explain why New Zealand's indigenous Maori and Pacific island peoples (Pasifika) had Papuan and Asian ancestry.
The other theory had stated that farming groups moving out of Asia mixed with Papuans near New Guinea and created a mixed group with both ancestries and the mixed group settling in the Pacific.
"This paper gives us the first basic picture of the genomic makeup of Pacific islanders," said Cox.
"Knowing this is important because some of the genetic variations caused by this population mixing will likely be linked to health outcomes, perhaps explaining why health issues like obesity and diabetes are such challenges for Pacific peoples today. Ultimately, understanding this DNA may give us new ideas for health treatments."
The study examined ancient DNA from three individuals who were among the earliest to settle in Vanuatu up to 3,100 years ago and one who was among the earliest to settle in Tonga up to 2,700 years ago.
The data was then compared to DNA samples from 356 present-day humans from 38 Southeast Asian and Oceanian populations.
The study also reported the most accurate estimates of sex-biased admixture - the difference in the proportion of males and females contributing to a person's genes - in diverse Southeast Asian and Pacific peoples to date.
"During the later stages of the settlement process, when the two groups were mixing, marriages between Asian women and Papuan men occurred very frequently, leading to unusual 'sex-biased' patterns of diversity in the genomes of their descendants," said Cox.

"It is likely that this later mixing of people with Papuan ancestry was largely driven by Papuan men who came to Oceania and married resident Asian women." (PNA/Xinhua)
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Venezuela- fall of its economy 10%

 After experiencing a decline of 6.2% in its GDP , Venezuela , immersed in a serious economic and political crisis, will close 2016 with a fall of its economy 10%, inflation of almost 500% and unemployment close to 20%, predicts the International Monetary Fund (IMF). The institution pointed out in the report "Global Economic Prospects" that the economic contraction expected for Latin America in 2016 was extended by two tenths to 0.6%. The IMF expects Brazil to close the year with a drop in GDP of 3.3%, the same percentage advance in July, but lowers the expected growth of other economies of the subcontinent, including Mexico. Mexico, the second Latin American economy, reduce slightly its growth at the end of this year, with an increase of 2.1% of gross domestic product (GDP), down from 2.5% in 2015. Most Latin American economies that base their activity on the export of raw materials suffer in their balance sheets by low prices of natural resources, resulting in slowdown. The IMF expects Colombia to grow 2.2% this year, down from 3.1% in 2015, while Chile will create wealth at a rate of 1.7%, down from 2.3% last time. Falling commodity prices also plunged into negative data to Argentina and Ecuador, while in Venezuela the deep economic crisis will worsen. Only Peru (where mining has increased) and Paraguay get an economic improvement in 2016 over the previous year, closing the year with an expansion in the vicinity of 3.5%. Argentina is another of the economies recede, with a contraction of 1.8% at the end of the year, compared to growth of 2.5% last year, despite which a rise of 2.7% growth is expected in 2017. The Central American economies, low - income, will grow 3.9% in 2016, slightly below the 2015 data, while keeping in 2017 the height of 4% growth with contained inflation and improvements in the deficit. Source: EFE

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US refuses to be drawn into Kashmir issue; says it's bilateral matter between India, Pak


iUS refuses to be drawn into Kashmir issue; says it's bilateral matter between India, Pak
Washington, Oct 4 (UNI) Refusing to get involved into Pakistan’s move to internationalise the Kashmir issue, the US has once again emphatically stated that the issue was a bilateral one between the two countries.
"Our position on Kashmir has not changed.
We are having conversations with both India and Pakistan on the importance of reducing tension in the region,’’ US State Department spokesperson Elizabeth Trudeau said.

THE IDB POINTS OUT TO COLOMBIA THE CONTENT OF THE NEW PENSION REFORM SHOULD DEAL

The Inter-American Development Bank says it is necessary to end inequality and ensure the sustainability of the system and urges Colombia to advance a new reform of the general pension system.
It turns out that the pension system in Colombia is inequitable, not because there are many people with miserable pensions and a few with high pensions, but because the average premium rate offers advantages not found in private funds. And to correct this "inequity" the need to match the half premium to RAIS noted. So they face the dilemma of "O all in bed or on the floor all" the solution proposed is not "all in bed," but: "Everyone in the ground."
Within this purpose, the IDB Colombia tells the following changes:
Increasing the retirement age to 62 or 65 years for both men and women.
Create a board with an amount below the minimum wage.
It also asks the international body for settlement of the pension is taken into account as IBL average wages based on which quoted the member for the past 20 years and not that of the past 10 years as at present.
It also proposes that the counter 13 is removed, that is, the additional allowance December dismounting so that pensioners receive annually only 12 regular allowances.
On the other hand, it raises the IDB to increase coverage "with programs such as subsidies Greater Colombia, newspapers economic benefits, conventional pensions and average premium schemes and individual savings should be unified." (El Espectador, Oct / 2015)
Interviewed by the Noticiero CM &., Juan Carlos Cortes, director of the Latin American Organization of Social Security said "They should think about a comprehensive reform that not only takes into account the pension issue, but also the health issue and touch the topic labor".
According to Mauricio Olivera, president of Colpensiones, "the IDB proposal can be viable if the three fundamental aspects mentioned are contemplated." He added: "Colombia must give way to a pension reform to remedy the problems we have discussed, low coverage, inequality and sustainability"
We must not forget that in the hands of President Santos is to define the moment from which will begin its next pension reform process. Anyway, the expectations of stakeholders in this amendment are encrypted in it in 2016. However, it is very likely that this reform the issue of retirement age is not touch but elects to increase the contribution period taking it to 1600 weeks (a little over 31 years). Another aspect that is considered to be mandatory inclusion in the reform is the adjustment of pensions subsidies different amount, because as we know, all pensions currently receive the same official aid. With this adjustment would seek to "make the regime more progressive", as recently told the newspaper El Espectador Luis Ernesto Gomez Londoño, Deputy Minister of Employment and Pensions.
Some scholars believe, meanwhile, that an increase in age would be quite inconvenient since it is still very recent increase in the retirement age, since just a year ago and ten months rose from 55 to 57 years age of women, and 60 to 62 years old men. Consider these observers that a measure in this regard would be rejected by the Colombians, it would be preferable to increase the density of listed weeks 1600 (This was stated by the newspaper El Espectador Ivan Daniel Jaramillo, researcher at the Labour Market Observatory of the University of Rosary).
And finally, as if that were not enough, voices that have their own audience, they are proposing that the annuity is removed widow heard.
Could it be that this time, as happened with the legislative act 01 of 2005, the people will not give alluded to these clearly retrogressive measures?

Cambodia Seeks China’s Support in Inspection Sector

Cambodia Seeks China’s Support in Inspection Sector

AKP Phnom Penh, October 04, 2016 –
Cambodian Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of National Assembly-Senate Relations and Inspection H.E. Ms. Mem Sam An has requested China to help Cambodia in the inspection sector.
The request was made during her meeting with newly appointed Ambassador of China to Cambodia H.E. Xiong Bo, in Phnom Penh on Oct. 3.
H.E. Ms. Mem Sam An suggested the signing of a cooperation MoU between the Cambodian Ministry of National Assembly-Senate Relations and Inspection and the Chinese Ministry of Supervision as soon as possible so that the Chinese side can dispatch its experts to assist Cambodia in capacity building.
According to the Cambodian DPM, the Chinese side planned to provide to Cambodia not only technical, but also material support, and to fund the study visit of Cambodian expert officials to get experience in China.
H.E. Ms. Men Sam An also informed the new Chinese diplomat of the drafting process of the inspection law which, she said, requires experience sharing and technical assistance from foreign countries so as to get a comprehensive and acceptable draft law.
For his part, H.E. Xiong Bo pledged to push for the signing of the above-said MoU while both sides have already completed the MoU drafting.
Article in Khmer by Un Rithy
Article in English by So Sophavy

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