delhi struggles to control dengue - arab times · recently demanded the introduction of a new law...

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World News Roundup ARAB TIMES, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 20, 2015 16 INTERNATIONAL Subcontinent Kashmiri villagers shout pro-freedom slogans as they carry the body of truck conductor killed in a petrol bomb attack in Anantnag on Oct 19. (AFP) Protests in Indian Kashmir after trucker’s death Authorities imposed a curfew in Indian- administered Kashmir on Monday after protests over the death of a driver attacked by far-right extremists angered by rumours of cow slaughter, a flashpoint issue for religious tensions in the Hindu-majority country. Schools and businesses shut and universities cancelled exams as hun- dreds of police and paramilitary forces patrolled the streets of the mainly Muslim region a day after 19-year-old Zahid Rasool Bhat died of injuries sustained in the October 9 attack. News of Bhat’s death on Sunday ignited anger in Indian Kashmir, where protesters threw rocks and clashed with government forces who fired tear gas canisters to disperse them. “We have imposed restrictions on public movement in many areas to avoid loss of life,” a senior police officer told AFP on condition of anonymity. Bhat had been in hospital since his truck was firebombed by Hindu activists angered by reports that a ban on slaughtering cows was being flouted in the Muslim-majority region. Two dead cows had been discov- ered in a stream near the area where his truck was attacked, although there was no evidence he was involved and forensic tests later revealed that the cows had died of poisoning. His death comes at a time of heightened tensions over the con- sumption of beef in India after the lynching of a Muslim man wrongly accused of eating beef. (AFP) In this Oct 13, 2015 photo, Pushplata Sharma (left), mother of Tejaswi Sharma, a 34-year-old software engi- neer, talks to her son who is recover- ing from a very fatal stage of dengue at Holy Family hospital in New Delhi, India. (AP) Janjua Sharif Aussie threatened over tattoo: Right-wing activists threatened to “skin” an Australian visitor who had a tattoo of a Hindu goddess on his leg, police said Monday, adding they were looking for the culprits. Matthew Gordon was at a restaurant in the southern city of Bangalore with his girlfriend on Saturday when around a dozen activists from the ruling Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party began harassing the couple. They said a tattoo of the fertility god- dess Yellama on his shin offended their religious sentiments, and ordered him to remove it. Bangalore deputy police commissioner Sandeep Patil said Gordon told officers at the station that the men had threatened to skin his leg if he did not. (AFP) Teen’s death sets off protests: A general strike and curfew shut Indian-con- trolled Kashmir on Monday following the death of a Muslim teenager attacked by a Hindu mob over rumors of cows being slaughtered. Hindus consider cows to be sacred, and slaughtering the animals is banned in most Indian states. Businesses, schools and shops remained shut due to the strike called by anti-India separatists and traders to denounce the killing. State authorities canceled all university and college exami- nations on Monday fearing protests. Thousands of people who attended Zahid Rasool’s funeral in Botengo village in southern Kashmir shouted anti-Indian slo- gans demanding freedom from Indian rule. Rasool and another truck driver were set ablaze by a mob after their vehicle stopped in the Hindu-dominated Udhampur neighborhood. A third person in the truck escaped unhurt. The injured were flown to New Delhi for treatment, but Rasool died from his burns on Sunday. (AP) BJP officials rebuked: The head of India’s ruling Hindu nationalists has repri- manded some of the party’s senior figures for their controversial reaction to the lynching of a Muslim accused of eating beef, reports said Monday. Amit Shah, president of the Bharatiya Janata Party, imposed a “gag order” on the officials following accusations that Prime Minister Narendra Modi had failed to distance himself from their comments, the reports said. The group included the chief minister of the northern state of Haryana, Manohar Lal Khattar, who was quoted last week as say- ing that India’s minority Muslims should stop eating beef out of respect to Hindus. Another of those to be slapped down was the lawmaker Sakshi Maharaj who recently demanded the introduction of a new law with a provision for death penal- ty against anyone who slaughters cows — considered sacred by Hindus. The Hindu newspaper said that the “motormouths” had been ordered “to stop making controversial remarks” while The Indian Express said Modi himself had been annoyed that the backlash over their com- ments was proving a distraction in the ongo- ing elections in the state of Bihar. (AFP) Chowdhury makes death appeal: A top Bangladesh politician facing execu- tion for war crimes made a last-ditch plea for freedom Monday, filing a petition for deposition from several high-profile wit- nesses including a former Pakistani pre- mier. Salauddin Quader Chowdhury, a lead- ing figure in the main opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP), was sentenced to death in 2013 for crimes committed during Bangladesh’s 1971 war New Pak security chief Pakistan is considering appointing a former general from the powerful mil- itary as the country’s new security chief, an official said Monday, a move critics said demonstrated the army’s rising grip on civilian power. A senior security official told AFP there was a “strong likelihood” that recently retired General Naseer Janjua would be appointed to the post, presently held by the Prime Minister’s advisor on foreign affairs Sartaj Aziz. The official, speaking on condition of anonymity because he is not authorised to speak to media, said the final decision rests with Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, but gave no other details. Sharif was Monday travelling to the US for talks with President Barack Obama from October 20-23. The official said the issue has been under discussion at a “very high level” for some time, and local media has also reported Janjua was being considered for the job. Some analysts hailed the propos- al, saying it would go a long way towards increasing coordination between the civil and military leader- ship of the country. “The government and military have realised need for enhanced coordi- nation between civil and security agencies to effectively deal with the security issues,” said security analyst Talat Masood. (AFP) India Health officials blamed for slow response Delhi struggles to control dengue NEW DELHI, Oct 19, (AP): At dusk, the foggers come out to spray their sticky-sweet clouds of diesel smoke and insecticide across the Indian cap- ital. Mothers scold their children for wearing short sleeves. Posters glued to signposts warn about the perils of neighborhood puddles. Such efforts to stop mosquitoes from spreading dengue fever in New Delhi have failed to keep the city from its biggest outbreak in almost two decades: more than 10,190 regis- tered cases, including 32 deaths. Experts say it didn’t need to be this way, and blame health officials for being slow on both prevention work and medical response. They say, for example, that the Delhi municipal government should have started much sooner and anticipated a longer-than-usual mosquito-breeding season months ago, when weather fore- casters predicted this year’s monsoon would extend beyond September. “If they clean up in time, if they have those anti-mosquito, anti-larval measures on time, they can contain dengue,” general physician Devendra Jain said in the small single room, crammed with patients, where he operates his private practice in south Delhi. Some officials reject the idea that the high numbers are a result of neg- lect, and instead say they prove the city is simply conducting more tests. Some infections go unreported every year because some people with dengue fever don’t seek medical treatment, and others visit doctors who don’t report cases. Surpassed Health officials also note that while the number of cases this year has almost surpassed the 1996 high of 10,252, the death toll is far lower than the 423 who died from dengue 19 years ago. There are no statistics on dengue for years before 1996. Three weeks into October, new cases were still being reported. The Holy Family Hospital alone said it was still detecting about 27 cases a day on average, down from a September peak of 75 cases a day. Dengue leaves its victims exhaust- ed and in great pain, though it is rarely fatal, claiming less than 1 per- cent of those infected. There is no cure; patients need rest and to be monitored and treated for symptoms, including high fever, dehydration, skin rash, exhaustion and a low blood platelet count. “It is not rocket science,” said Manish Kakkar, a researcher at the Public Health Foundation of India, a research and consulting group. “We know what we have to do, but what happens in India is that the public health measures are not adequate both in terms of quantity and quality.” The dengue outbreak has highlight- ed India’s striking health-care inequal- ities. It is home to a $4 billion medical tourism industry - offering everything from bargain tummy tucks to experi- mental stem-cell treatments - and to hundreds of millions of impoverished Indians who still have no access to trained doctors or basic medicine. When two young boys died last month after their parents said they were denied treatment at private hos- pitals, India’s Health Minister warned the government would yank licenses from any hospitals who turned patients away. Canceled State-run hospitals canceled doc- tors’ vacations, ordering them back to work. Delhi capped the cost of lab tests at 600 rupees ($10) and set up 55 “fever and dengue clinics” to handle the throngs of patients crowding into hospital foyers. Just one of those clin- ics, near Jamia Millia Islamia univer- sity on the southern outskirts of New Delhi, reported screening 800 patients a day. Some doctors complain that many people seeking medical attention don’t need it, and blame the media for hyping the outbreak. “Basically there is a panic and patients are very scared,” said Dr. Sonika Bali, the medical officer in charge at one government clinic, whose own 12-year-old daughter was among those infected. “We can’t have every patient come in and ask for a blood test. It is becoming very diffi- cult to convince patients that their symptoms are not that of dengue.” Some who truly have dengue, meanwhile, wait before seeking treat- ment, worsening their symptoms. of independence. The BNP claims the former lawmaker’s original conviction was influenced by the government and was politically motivated. Lawyers for Chowdhury said Monday they had asked the Supreme Court to allow the written testimony from eight witnesses who claim he was living in Pakistan when the alleged crimes occurred. (AFP) A Nepalese Hindu devotee waits to dress up as a deity as he prepares to par- ticipate in festivities at the Shikali Temple during celebrations for the Shikali Jatra festival in the village of Khokana, on the outskirts of Kathmandu on Oct 19. Local villagers, who normally do not celebrate the country’s most famous festival of Dashain, celebrate the Shikali Jatra each year. (AFP) Lat/Am Fed up with refugees complaints: When Uruguay announced last year that it would be taking in five families fleeing Syria’s devastating civil war, residents of this small town pulled together and lob- bied to host one. Then in November, locals welcomed a newly arrived Merhi Al-Shebli, his wife and their 15 children with food and seeds to plant vegetables. People in Juan Lacaze, a coastal city of fishermen and paper factory work- ers in southwestern Uruguay, wanted to do their part to help a country where more than 200,000 have been killed in the fighting. But after months of the Syrians’ complaints about their liv- ing conditions and demands to be sent to another country, many Uruguayans in this town and elsewhere have come to see the refugees more as rude, ungrateful guests. This month the 51-year-old Al-Shebli shocked locals by dousing himself in gasoline in protest, furthering Uruguayans’ indignation and sense that this South American nation’s humanitari- an gesture has gone off the rails. “I’m outraged”, said Monica Benitez, who works at a shoe store in Juan Lacaze’s tiny downtown. “What they are doing is offensive”. The Syrians’ discontent is playing out as hundreds of thousands of their compa- triots are risking their lives to migrate to Europe and world leaders from German Chancellor Angela Merkel to Pope Francis have urged nations to open their doors to the flood. The administration of US President Barack Obama has pledged to take in 10,000 Syrians over the next year. (AP) ‘Brazil FM to keep job’: Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff sprang to the defense of her embattled finance minister on Sunday, saying she would not be pres- sured into sacking him. Rousseff, fighting to save her second term presidency from threatened impeach- ment proceedings, said she was ignoring suggestions by the head of her own Workers’ Party (PT) that Joaquim Levy should be dismissed. “I think the president of the PT (Rui Falcao) can have whatever opinion he wishes, but that is not the opinion of the government”, Rousseff was quoted as say- ing by Brazil’s Folha newspaper during a visit to Sweden. “If I tell you that is not the opinion of the government, then Levy stays”. Further backing Levy, Rousseff said “if he stays, it’s because we agree with his policies”. Levy is under pressure over Brazil’s recession, mounting inflation and unem- ployment and the government’s inability to pass new austerity measures in a hostile Congress. Some in the leftist PT oppose policies that they say will worsen the eco- nomic situation for Brazil’s poor. (AFP) Scioli leads in poll: The Argentinian ruling party’s candidate Daniel Scioli is primed to win the presidential election outright on Oct 25, with a commanding lead over his nearest rivals, two polls pub- lished in local papers on Sunday showed. To win outright in the first round, and avoid a runoff election, a candidate requires 45 percent of valid votes or 40 percent and a 10-point lead over their nearest rival. Scioli, a moderate Peronist from left- wing President Cristina Fernandez’s Front for Victory Party, is set to garner 42 per- cent of votes, according to a poll by con- sultancy Ipsos-Mora y Araujo that was published in daily Perfil. His closest rival, Mauricio Macri, the center-right mayor of Buenos Aires city, is seen getting 28 percent of the vote in the Oct 25 election, according to the poll. Similarly, Scioli is seen obtaining around 41 percent and Macri a little over 28 percent, in a Ceop poll released in newspaper Pagina 12. (RTRS) Colombia, rebels reach deal: The Colombian government and leftist FARC rebels have agreed to two measures they say will help find tens of thousands of people who have disappeared during 50 years of war, as the two sides take the final steps toward a peace deal. The agreement, reached late Saturday, addresses a key issue at the negotiations, which reached a major breakthrough in September when then two sides vowed to sign a deal by March. Colombia’s attorney general estimates 52,000 people have disappeared during Latin America’s longest war, which has killed some 220,000 people and displaced millions. Victim groups say between 70,000 and 100,000 people may have gone missing. The two sides agreed to create a “spe- cialized unit to search for people who are considered disappeared”, according to a joint statement. The unit, separate from judicial investigations, will provide fami- lies with official reports on information obtained about their missing family mem- bers. (RTRS) Maduro calls for prosecution: Venezuela’s president on Sunday urged legal action against billionaire businessman Lorenzo Mendoza over a phone call which airs the possibility of an international bailout for the OPEC nation’s ailing economy. The 50-year-old Mendoza runs Venezuela’s largest private company, Empresas Polar, and has often been cast as a symbol of unscrupulous capitalism by socialist President Nicolas Maduro and his predecessor Hugo Chavez. This week, state media broadcast a phone call between Mendoza and US- based Venezuelan economist Ricardo Hausmann in which the latter says a $40 billion to $50 billion International Monetary Fund package and “adjustment” plan is needed. The Maduro government - which blames an “economic war” by political foes for Venezuela’s recession, product shortages, currency collapse and the high- est inflation in the world - has hailed the conversation as evidence Mendoza is con- spiring. (RTRS) Pope Francis Woman wins reprieve from death by stoning COLOMBO, Oct 19, (AFP): The Maldives’ highest court has over- turned an unprecedented sentence of death by stoning for a woman convict- ed of adultery, a crime in the Muslim island nation, media said Monday. The woman, identified by local media as a mother of five, was con- victed by a local judge on a remote island in the Maldives, a popular tourist destination that has seen a rise in Islamic extremism. The Haveeru news site said the woman had confessed to the crime after giving birth on the remote equa- torial islet of Gemanafushi, about 400 kilometres south of the capital Male. The Supreme Court annulled the case on Sunday night, ruling that the judge had failed to consider the legal as well as Islamic procedures of the nation of 340,000 Sunni Muslims, the Maldives Independent website said.

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World News Roundup

ARAB TIMES, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 20, 2015

16INTERNATIONAL

Subcontinent

Kashmiri villagers shout pro-freedom slogans as they carry the body of truck conductor killed in a petrol bomb attack in Anantnag on Oct 19. (AFP)

Protests in Indian Kashmir after trucker’s deathAuthorities imposed a curfew in Indian-administered Kashmir on Monday afterprotests over the death of a driverattacked by far-right extremistsangered by rumours of cow slaughter,a flashpoint issue for religious tensionsin the Hindu-majority country.

Schools and businesses shut and

universities cancelled exams as hun-dreds of police and paramilitary forcespatrolled the streets of the mainlyMuslim region a day after 19-year-oldZahid Rasool Bhat died of injuriessustained in the October 9 attack.

News of Bhat’s death on Sundayignited anger in Indian Kashmir, where

protesters threw rocks and clashedwith government forces who fired teargas canisters to disperse them.

“We have imposed restrictions onpublic movement in many areas toavoid loss of life,” a senior police officertold AFP on condition of anonymity.

Bhat had been in hospital since his

truck was firebombed by Hinduactivists angered by reports that aban on slaughtering cows was beingflouted in the Muslim-majority region.

Two dead cows had been discov-ered in a stream near the area wherehis truck was attacked, althoughthere was no evidence he was

involved and forensic tests laterrevealed that the cows had died ofpoisoning.

His death comes at a time ofheightened tensions over the con-sumption of beef in India after thelynching of a Muslim man wronglyaccused of eating beef. (AFP)

In this Oct 13, 2015 photo, PushplataSharma (left), mother of TejaswiSharma, a 34-year-old software engi-neer, talks to her son who is recover-ing from a very fatal stage of dengueat Holy Family hospital in New Delhi,

India. (AP)

Janjua Sharif

Aussie threatened over tattoo:Right-wing activists threatened to “skin”an Australian visitor who had a tattoo of aHindu goddess on his leg, police saidMonday, adding they were looking for theculprits.

Matthew Gordon was at a restaurant inthe southern city of Bangalore with hisgirlfriend on Saturday when around adozen activists from the ruling Hindunationalist Bharatiya Janata Party beganharassing the couple.

They said a tattoo of the fertility god-dess Yellama on his shin offended theirreligious sentiments, and ordered him toremove it.

Bangalore deputy police commissionerSandeep Patil said Gordon told officers atthe station that the men had threatened toskin his leg if he did not. (AFP)

❑ ❑ ❑

Teen’s death sets off protests: Ageneral strike and curfew shut Indian-con-trolled Kashmir on Monday following thedeath of a Muslim teenager attacked by aHindu mob over rumors of cows beingslaughtered.

Hindus consider cows to be sacred, andslaughtering the animals is banned inmost Indian states.

Businesses, schools and shopsremained shut due to the strike called byanti-India separatists and traders todenounce the killing. State authoritiescanceled all university and college exami-nations on Monday fearing protests.

Thousands of people who attended ZahidRasool’s funeral in Botengo village insouthern Kashmir shouted anti-Indian slo-gans demanding freedom from Indian rule.

Rasool and another truck driver wereset ablaze by a mob after their vehiclestopped in the Hindu-dominatedUdhampur neighborhood. A third personin the truck escaped unhurt. The injuredwere flown to New Delhi for treatment,but Rasool died from his burns onSunday. (AP)

❑ ❑ ❑

BJP officials rebuked: The head ofIndia’s ruling Hindu nationalists has repri-manded some of the party’s senior figuresfor their controversial reaction to thelynching of a Muslim accused of eatingbeef, reports said Monday.

Amit Shah, president of the BharatiyaJanata Party, imposed a “gag order” onthe officials following accusations thatPrime Minister Narendra Modi had failedto distance himself from their comments,the reports said.

The group included the chief minister ofthe northern state of Haryana, Manohar LalKhattar, who was quoted last week as say-ing that India’s minority Muslims shouldstop eating beef out of respect to Hindus.

Another of those to be slapped downwas the lawmaker Sakshi Maharaj whorecently demanded the introduction of anew law with a provision for death penal-ty against anyone who slaughters cows —considered sacred by Hindus.

The Hindu newspaper said that the“motormouths” had been ordered “to stopmaking controversial remarks” while TheIndian Express said Modi himself had beenannoyed that the backlash over their com-ments was proving a distraction in the ongo-ing elections in the state of Bihar. (AFP)

❑ ❑ ❑

Chowdhury makes death appeal:A top Bangladesh politician facing execu-tion for war crimes made a last-ditch pleafor freedom Monday, filing a petition for

deposition from several high-profile wit-nesses including a former Pakistani pre-mier.

Salauddin Quader Chowdhury, a lead-ing figure in the main oppositionBangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP), wassentenced to death in 2013 for crimescommitted during Bangladesh’s 1971 war

New Pak security chiefPakistan is considering appointing aformer general from the powerful mil-itary as the country’s new securitychief, an official said Monday, a movecritics said demonstrated the army’srising grip on civilian power.

A senior security official told AFPthere was a “strong likelihood” thatrecently retired General NaseerJanjua would be appointed to thepost, presently held by the PrimeMinister’s advisor on foreign affairsSartaj Aziz.

The official, speaking on conditionof anonymity because he is notauthorised to speak to media, saidthe final decision rests with PrimeMinister Nawaz Sharif, but gave noother details.

Sharif was Monday travelling tothe US for talks with PresidentBarack Obama from October 20-23.

The official said the issue hasbeen under discussion at a “veryhigh level” for some time, and localmedia has also reported Janjua wasbeing considered for the job.

Some analysts hailed the propos-al, saying it would go a long waytowards increasing coordinationbetween the civil and military leader-ship of the country.

“The government and military haverealised need for enhanced coordi-nation between civil and securityagencies to effectively deal with thesecurity issues,” said security analystTalat Masood. (AFP)

India

Health officials blamed for slow response

Delhi struggles to control dengueNEW DELHI, Oct 19, (AP): At dusk,the foggers come out to spray theirsticky-sweet clouds of diesel smokeand insecticide across the Indian cap-ital. Mothers scold their children forwearing short sleeves. Posters gluedto signposts warn about the perils ofneighborhood puddles.

Such efforts to stop mosquitoesfrom spreading dengue fever in NewDelhi have failed to keep the cityfrom its biggest outbreak in almosttwo decades: more than 10,190 regis-tered cases, including 32 deaths.Experts say it didn’t need to be thisway, and blame health officials forbeing slow on both prevention workand medical response.

They say, for example, that the Delhimunicipal government should havestarted much sooner and anticipated alonger-than-usual mosquito-breedingseason months ago, when weather fore-casters predicted this year’s monsoonwould extend beyond September.

“If they clean up in time, if theyhave those anti-mosquito, anti-larvalmeasures on time, they can containdengue,” general physician DevendraJain said in the small single room,crammed with patients, where heoperates his private practice in southDelhi.

Some officials reject the idea thatthe high numbers are a result of neg-lect, and instead say they prove thecity is simply conducting more tests.Some infections go unreported everyyear because some people withdengue fever don’t seek medical

treatment, and others visit doctorswho don’t report cases.

SurpassedHealth officials also note that while

the number of cases this year hasalmost surpassed the 1996 high of10,252, the death toll is far lower thanthe 423 who died from dengue 19years ago. There are no statistics ondengue for years before 1996.

Three weeks into October, newcases were still being reported. TheHoly Family Hospital alone said itwas still detecting about 27 cases aday on average, down from aSeptember peak of 75 cases a day.

Dengue leaves its victims exhaust-ed and in great pain, though it israrely fatal, claiming less than 1 per-cent of those infected. There is nocure; patients need rest and to bemonitored and treated for symptoms,including high fever, dehydration,skin rash, exhaustion and a low bloodplatelet count.

“It is not rocket science,” saidManish Kakkar, a researcher at thePublic Health Foundation of India, aresearch and consulting group. “Weknow what we have to do, but whathappens in India is that the publichealth measures are not adequate bothin terms of quantity and quality.”

The dengue outbreak has highlight-ed India’s striking health-care inequal-ities. It is home to a $4 billion medicaltourism industry - offering everythingfrom bargain tummy tucks to experi-mental stem-cell treatments - and to

hundreds of millions of impoverishedIndians who still have no access totrained doctors or basic medicine.

When two young boys died lastmonth after their parents said theywere denied treatment at private hos-pitals, India’s Health Minister warnedthe government would yank licensesfrom any hospitals who turnedpatients away.

CanceledState-run hospitals canceled doc-

tors’ vacations, ordering them back towork. Delhi capped the cost of labtests at 600 rupees ($10) and set up 55“fever and dengue clinics” to handlethe throngs of patients crowding intohospital foyers. Just one of those clin-ics, near Jamia Millia Islamia univer-sity on the southern outskirts of NewDelhi, reported screening 800 patientsa day.

Some doctors complain that manypeople seeking medical attentiondon’t need it, and blame the media forhyping the outbreak.

“Basically there is a panic andpatients are very scared,” said Dr.Sonika Bali, the medical officer incharge at one government clinic,whose own 12-year-old daughter wasamong those infected. “We can’t haveevery patient come in and ask for ablood test. It is becoming very diffi-cult to convince patients that theirsymptoms are not that of dengue.”

Some who truly have dengue,meanwhile, wait before seeking treat-ment, worsening their symptoms.

of independence.The BNP claims the former lawmaker’s

original conviction was influenced by the

government and was politically motivated.Lawyers for Chowdhury said Monday

they had asked the Supreme Court to allow

the written testimony from eight witnesseswho claim he was living in Pakistan whenthe alleged crimes occurred. (AFP)

A Nepalese Hindu devotee waits to dress up as a deity as he prepares to par-ticipate in festivities at the Shikali Temple during celebrations for the ShikaliJatra festival in the village of Khokana, on the outskirts of Kathmandu on Oct19. Local villagers, who normally do not celebrate the country’s most famous

festival of Dashain, celebrate the Shikali Jatra each year. (AFP)

Lat/Am

Fed up with refugees complaints:When Uruguay announced last year that itwould be taking in five families fleeingSyria’s devastating civil war, residents ofthis small town pulled together and lob-bied to host one.

Then in November, locals welcomed anewly arrived Merhi Al-Shebli, his wifeand their 15 children with food and seedsto plant vegetables.People in JuanLacaze, a coastalcity of fishermen andpaper factory work-ers in southwesternUruguay, wanted todo their part to helpa country wheremore than 200,000have been killed inthe fighting.

But after monthsof the Syrians’ complaints about their liv-ing conditions and demands to be sent toanother country, many Uruguayans in thistown and elsewhere have come to see therefugees more as rude, ungrateful guests.This month the 51-year-old Al-Sheblishocked locals by dousing himself ingasoline in protest, furtheringUruguayans’ indignation and sense thatthis South American nation’s humanitari-an gesture has gone off the rails.

“I’m outraged”, said Monica Benitez,who works at a shoe store in JuanLacaze’s tiny downtown. “What they aredoing is offensive”.

The Syrians’ discontent is playing outas hundreds of thousands of their compa-triots are risking their lives to migrate toEurope and world leaders from GermanChancellor Angela Merkel to PopeFrancis have urged nations to open theirdoors to the flood. The administration ofUS President Barack Obama has pledgedto take in 10,000 Syrians over the nextyear. (AP)

❑ ❑ ❑

‘Brazil FM to keep job’: BrazilianPresident Dilma Rousseff sprang to thedefense of her embattled finance ministeron Sunday, saying she would not be pres-sured into sacking him.

Rousseff, fighting to save her secondterm presidency from threatened impeach-ment proceedings, said she was ignoringsuggestions by the head of her ownWorkers’ Party (PT) that Joaquim Levyshould be dismissed.

“I think the president of the PT (RuiFalcao) can have whatever opinion hewishes, but that is not the opinion of thegovernment”, Rousseff was quoted as say-ing by Brazil’s Folha newspaper during avisit to Sweden.

“If I tell you that is not the opinion ofthe government, then Levy stays”.

Further backing Levy, Rousseff said “ifhe stays, it’s because we agree with hispolicies”.

Levy is under pressure over Brazil’srecession, mounting inflation and unem-ployment and the government’s inabilityto pass new austerity measures in a hostileCongress. Some in the leftist PT opposepolicies that they say will worsen the eco-nomic situation for Brazil’s poor. (AFP)

❑ ❑ ❑

Scioli leads in poll: The Argentinianruling party’s candidate Daniel Scioli isprimed to win the presidential electionoutright on Oct 25, with a commandinglead over his nearest rivals, two polls pub-lished in local papers on Sunday showed.

To win outright in the first round, andavoid a runoff election, a candidate requires45 percent of valid votes or 40 percent anda 10-point lead over their nearest rival.

Scioli, a moderate Peronist from left-wing President Cristina Fernandez’s Frontfor Victory Party, is set to garner 42 per-cent of votes, according to a poll by con-sultancy Ipsos-Mora y Araujo that waspublished in daily Perfil.

His closest rival, Mauricio Macri, thecenter-right mayor of Buenos Aires city, isseen getting 28 percent of the vote in theOct 25 election, according to the poll.

Similarly, Scioli is seen obtainingaround 41 percent and Macri a little over28 percent, in a Ceop poll released innewspaper Pagina 12. (RTRS)

❑ ❑ ❑

Colombia, rebels reach deal: TheColombian government and leftist FARCrebels have agreed to two measures theysay will help find tens of thousands ofpeople who have disappeared during 50years of war, as the two sides take thefinal steps toward a peace deal.

The agreement, reached late Saturday,addresses a key issue at the negotiations,which reached a major breakthrough inSeptember when then two sides vowed tosign a deal by March.

Colombia’s attorney general estimates52,000 people have disappeared duringLatin America’s longest war, which haskilled some 220,000 people and displacedmillions. Victim groups say between 70,000and 100,000 people may have gone missing.

The two sides agreed to create a “spe-cialized unit to search for people who areconsidered disappeared”, according to ajoint statement. The unit, separate fromjudicial investigations, will provide fami-lies with official reports on informationobtained about their missing family mem-bers. (RTRS)

❑ ❑ ❑

Maduro calls for prosecution:Venezuela’s president on Sunday urged legalaction against billionaire businessmanLorenzo Mendoza over a phone call whichairs the possibility of an international bailoutfor the OPEC nation’s ailing economy.

The 50-year-old Mendoza runsVenezuela’s largest private company,Empresas Polar, and has often been castas a symbol of unscrupulous capitalism bysocialist President Nicolas Maduro andhis predecessor Hugo Chavez.

This week, state media broadcast aphone call between Mendoza and US-based Venezuelan economist RicardoHausmann in which the latter says a $40billion to $50 billion InternationalMonetary Fund package and “adjustment”plan is needed.

The Maduro government - whichblames an “economic war” by politicalfoes for Venezuela’s recession, productshortages, currency collapse and the high-est inflation in the world - has hailed theconversation as evidence Mendoza is con-spiring. (RTRS)

Pope Francis

Woman wins reprievefrom death by stoningCOLOMBO, Oct 19, (AFP): TheMaldives’ highest court has over-turned an unprecedented sentence ofdeath by stoning for a woman convict-ed of adultery, a crime in the Muslimisland nation, media said Monday.

The woman, identified by localmedia as a mother of five, was con-victed by a local judge on a remoteisland in the Maldives, a populartourist destination that has seen arise in Islamic extremism.

The Haveeru news site said thewoman had confessed to the crimeafter giving birth on the remote equa-torial islet of Gemanafushi, about 400kilometres south of the capital Male.

The Supreme Court annulled thecase on Sunday night, ruling that thejudge had failed to consider the legalas well as Islamic procedures of thenation of 340,000 Sunni Muslims, theMaldives Independent website said.