Category: Asia and Pacific

  • Phool raises funds for Turkey quake victims

    Phool raises funds for Turkey quake victims

    OUR STAFF REPORTER

    LAHORE – Monthly “Phool”, a famous children magazine of Nawa-i-Waqt Group, on Saturday organised a ceremony to show solidarity and to generate donations for the victims of Turkey earthquake.

    LAHORE Participants of a 38027

    The ceremony was addressed by Pak-Turk Foundation Director Saadi Yaldarer, Akkas Harmain Sharifain Azmat Sheikh, Editor Monthly “Phool” Mohammad Shoaib Mirza and the other speakers. Mehral Qamar, Shanza Shoaib, Mehak Sabir, Malaika Sabir, Minahil Naeem, Rehan Ahmad, Sufian Ahmad and others donated money and gifts for the earthquake victims.

    Speaking on the ceremony, Pak-Turk Foundation Director Saadi Yaldarer said “Both Pakistan and Turkey help each other in every need of hour. We are two countries but one nation”. He also applauded the spirit of “Phool” children team who donated their pocket money for the good cause that, he said, was a good omen.

    The children of Pakistan, he applauded, are eager to make a contribution to help alleviate the sufferings of the earthquake victims.

    Akkas Harmain Sharifain Azmat Sheikh said that the Muslims around the world are united. He also appreciated the efforts of “Phool” team, adding the ceremony had delivered a message of goodwill to the world.

    Editor “Phool” Mohammad Shoaib Mirza said on the proposal of Anisa Fatima Qadri, a student speaker of first rank, this ceremony was planned.

    He showed pleasure on the donations worth Rs 50,000 and hoped that these children would not borrow money in future. The Muslim world should rely on its own resources instead of looking for others’ assistance, he stressed. Anisa Fatima Qadri in her speech said that ties between the two countries would be made stronger.

    A letter from a student of DG Khan was also delivered on the occasion that read “I feel pleasure to send my entire saving of Rs 1,000 to the earthquake victims of Turkey”.

    The students of New Crescent School Samanabad sang National anthem on the occasion. The ceremony was concluded with the national anthems of both the countries.

    via Phool raises funds for Turkey quake victims | Pakistan | News | Newspaper | Daily | English | Online.

  • US goes off students’ radar as rupee slides against dollar

    US goes off students’ radar as rupee slides against dollar

    CHANDIGARH: Amandeep Singh, who has just completed his engineering from a private college in Landran, was all set to seek admission in US for his masters. Following the slide in rupee value vis-a-vis the dollar, his destination has changed to China. Though China and Turkey are the new destinations which have caught the attention of students, Canada, New Zealand and Australia are still the favourites.

    Aman Manchanda, an overseas education consultant based in the city said, “The dollar rate has increased in these countries too. But students have lost their craze for the US with slump in market there and difficulty in obtaining permanent residency (PR). In Canada, Australia and New Zealand PR comes after a year.” Thus instead of looking for greener pastures in the US, those interested in an offshore education tag are either looking for domestic market or countries which are offering incentives like tuition fee waiver and an early PR. Dr Vishal, orthopedic surgeon in PGI, said, “For practicing medicine in the US one needs to clear an entrance exam which used to cost some Rs 3.5 lakh. But with the rupee sliding down, the cost would now rise to Rs 5 -6 lakh. Thus it’s not feasible anymore and it seems that there are better options back home after completion of MD/MS.”

    For those coming from north India, including Chandigarh and Punjab, Canada has not lost its sheen. Akriti Sharma, a pass out from MCM College, said, “The best part about Canada is that the PR comes within a year. Plus work permit can be attained and I have relatives there for support too, unlike in Singapore where foreign students cannot get employment at all.” Turkey is offering a wide range of scholarships to woo students. “Europe and US are almost out of reach for students. Whereas Turkey taking advantage of the rupee fall has started offering 75% waiver in tuition fees for Indian students. This is an emerging destination and we are giving this as an option to those who want a foreign tag,” said Manoj Kalra, a Panchkula-based immigration consultant.

    Changing Tack

    With the sliding rupee value, my chances of studying abroad seem bleak now. I hope by the time I graduate, this crisis ends

    Nakshita Arora | BA-II, MCM-DAV College

    Initially, I had planned on getting a loan to fund my education abroad and pay it off myself without putting pressure on my parents. But now this too seems like a tough call

    Kalika Mehra | Ist year NIFD Mohali

    My plans of studying abroad may not work out now but it has made me more committed to getting into the best university in India

    Melvin Thomas | IIIrd year PEC

    I have already started working on finding government-sponsored scholarships for my further studies abroad as it has become unthinkable to pay all of the fee without taking help

    Debsourab Ghosh | Ist year DAV-10

    via US goes off students’ radar as rupee slides against dollar – The Times of India.

  • 12,000-Year-Old Rock Paintings Found in Xinjiang, China

    Look at this… ancient colored rock paintings dating back 12,000 years have been found in a cave in the Altai area of China’s Xinjiang region.

    The paintings found are mainly handprints, spot images and figures. All of them are colored, mostly painted with red ocher.

    The cave belongs to the Duogate rock-painting area. The paintings have been designated as a cultural relic site under county-level protection.

    Seven large-scale rock painting groups have been found in the area.

    Most of these rock paintings feature cows, horse, sheep, camels and male and female dancers, which are closely related to nomads’ life in ancient times.

  • Genocide, Karabakh issues cause fresh round of ‘diplomatic boxing’ between Yerevana and Ankara

    Genocide, Karabakh issues cause fresh round of ‘diplomatic boxing’ between Yerevana and Ankara

    By Naira Hayrumyan
    ArmeniaNow correspondent

    armenia turkeyA real “diplomatic boxing” match has started between Armenia and Turkey, and while formally the reason was the latest statement by Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan, it seems that Turkey is simply nervous because of growing international pressure.

    Meeting with some senior representatives of the Armenian community in the French city of Marseilles on December 7, President Sargsyan said: “One day the Turkish leadership will find the strength to reconsider its approaches towards the Armenian Genocide… Sooner or later Turkey, which considers itself a European country, will have leadership which will bow at Tsitsernakaberd.”

    The statement caused a stormy reaction from Turkey.

    Chairman of the Turkish Grand National Assembly Cemal Cicek said that “the normalization of Turkish-Armenian relations entirely depends on the solution of the Nagorno-Karabakh problem.” Speaking at an event in Ankara commemorating Azerbaijan’s late leader Heydar Aliyev on December 12, Cicek accused the president of Armenia of organizing the “Khojalu tragedy” in Karabakh in 1992 in which Azerbaijan claims the Armenian military killed Azeri civilians – an accusation strongly denied by Armenians. “We all know who Serzh Sargsyan is. He is one of the authors of the Khojalu genocide,” Turkish media quoted Cicek as saying.

    For his part, Turkish State Minister for EU Affairs Egemen Bagis said that Sargsyan went beyond the limits by making that statement. He stressed that the Armenian people cannot be strong “due to poverty and hunger”. As quoted by the Turkish Anadolu news agency, Bagis said that some Armenians were working in Turkey which showed “the sincerity of Turks.”

    An official response came from Armenia. Commenting on Turkey’s EU affairs minister, Armenia’s Deputy Foreign Minister Shavarsh Kocharyan said: “Such a response from the mouth of an official responsible for the integration of Turkey into the European Union proves that today’s Turkey does not yet have the leadership befitting a European country, and some Turkish officials are not bearers of European values and espouse the mentality in the spirit of the worst traditions of the Ottoman Empire.”

    For his part, Deputy Speaker of Parliament Eduard Sharmazanov said that Cicek “repeated the legends of Azerbaijani propaganda about a million refugees and occupied territories.” “What a cynic one has to be to talk about occupation when your country has for decades occupied the territory of an EU member state (Cyprus)? To talk about genocide when your country has turned the denial of crimes against humanity into a state policy?!” said Sharmazanov.

    But international pressure on Turkey and at the same time on Azerbaijan seems to be gradually building up. The U.S. Senate is voting on Resolution 306, which calls on Turkey to return the confiscated Armenian, Greek and Assyrian church property.

    France’s position on Turkey’s membership in the EU has not changed, with French President Nicolas Sarkozy confirming that he would not approve Turkey’s entry bid.

    Also, in France a draft law criminalizing the denial of the Armenian Genocide seems to have reached the homestretch. MPs from the French president’s Union for a Popular Movement (UMP) party that has a parliamentary majority on December 8 submitted a bill to the legislative committee of the National Assembly aiming to criminalize the denial of the Armenian Genocide.

    And in her December 9 statement in connection with International Human Rights Day U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton mentioned Azerbaijan, along with Zimbabwe, as one of the negative examples in the field of human rights and countries where there are political prisoners.

    via Armenia-Turkey: Genocide, Karabakh issues cause fresh round of ‘diplomatic boxing’ between Yerevana and Ankara – Genocide | ArmeniaNow.com.

  • Turkey does not have administration specific to European state

    Turkey does not have administration specific to European state

    85652YEREVAN. – Armenian Deputy FM Shavars Kocharyan commented on Turkish Minister for EU Affairs Egemen Bagis’ words that no one can make the Turks to knee in response to Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan’s statement that Turkey, which considers it a European state, will have an administration sooner or later to knee before the Tsitsernakaberd Memorial Complex of the Armenian Genocide.

    “The response by an official, who is responsible for the European integration for Turkey, proves the painful reality that Turkish current administration does not meet characteristics of a European state. Moreover, some Turkish officials are not the carriers of the modern European value system but are the inheritors of the hatred mentality of the Ottoman Empire,” Armenian Deputy FM said.

    via Turkey does not have administration specific to European state – Armenian official | Armenia News – NEWS.am.

  • Armenian supporters skeptical of ties between Turkey, Indian tribes

    Armenian supporters skeptical of ties between Turkey, Indian tribes

    Armenian supporters skeptical of ties between Turkey, Indian tribes

    By MICHAEL DOYLE

    McClatchy Newspapers

    The perennial political fighting between Armenian-Americans and Turkey has migrated to Indian country.

    In a diplomatically creative but controversial move, Turkey wants preferential access to start commercial ventures on selected U.S. tribal lands. In theory, tribes would get business and Turkey would gain friends.

    “We’re trying to build bridges with other communities,” G. Lincoln McCurdy, the president of the Turkish Coalition of America, said in an interview. “If this works, it would be good for everybody.”

    But not everybody thinks so. Lawmakers in states with large Armenian-American populations, such as California and New Jersey, think a legislative proposal that’s now before the House of Representatives extends an undeserved favor to a country still associated with a long-ago slaughter.

    “We could not let that pass … without some acknowledgment of the Armenian genocide,” Rep. Jim Costa, D-Calif., said.

    The bill in question would allow six Indian tribes to lease land to Turkish companies without securing the usual, often time-consuming Bureau of Indian Affairs approvals. The tribes would be selected competitively by the Interior Department, and would develop their own guidelines for leasing land him.

    In this Capitol Hill fight, regional loyalties and ethnic politics could matter more than party lines.

    When the House Natural Resources Committee approved the legislation Nov. 17 on a 27-15 vote, Costa and Rep. Jeff Denham, R-Calif., united in opposition. The Democrat and the Republican represent portions of California’s Central Valley, which is heavily populated by Armenian-Americans.

    On the other side, bill supporter Republican Rep. Don Young is a longtime champion of his home state’s Alaska Natives. The bill’s author, conservative Rep. Tom Cole, R-Okla., is a member of the Chickasaw. Another supporter, liberal Democratic Rep. Jay Inslee of Washington state, is running for governor in that state, which is home to 103,000 American Indians.

    Like much that happens on Capitol Hill, the bill dubbed the Indian Tribal Trade and Investment Demonstration Project Act of 2011 rides atop multiple motives. It now goes to the full House for a vote.

    “It definitely broadens (Turkey’s) political base,” McCurdy said, “and it increases the opportunity for Turkish companies to establish operations in this country.”

    A broader political base, in turn, could aid Turkey in recurring Capitol Hill conflicts with Armenian-Americans. In raw population, Armenian-Americans widely outnumber Turkish-Americans. Turkey, though, enjoys considerable high-level clout as an important NATO country.

    Nearly every year, these competing forces are on display as lawmakers press for an Armenian genocide resolution that takes note of the massacres that took place during the Ottoman Empire’s dying days. The resolution routinely fails but keeps coming back; this year’s version has 84 House co-sponsors.

    It’s in this context that the Native American investment bill reflects Turkey’s cultivation of tribes.

    Over the past two years, Turkey has sponsored a number of visits by Indian leaders. In November 2010, for instance, it hosted some 20 Native Americans for a week, including representatives of Idaho’s Coeur d’Alene Tribe and Washington state’s Confederated Tribes of the Colville Reservation.

    “This is the first foreign country that has shown interest in investing with – cooperation with – a tribe to improve their economic lot,” Young said at the House committee hearing Nov. 17.

    In a similar vein, Turkish universities sponsor scholarships for Native American students, and Turkish officials have met with Indian leaders in Los Angeles and Seattle. Last March, a top Turkish Trade Ministry official became the first foreign representative to speak at an annual Las Vegas conference on Native American economic development.

    “I have no idea why they’re being so nice to Native Americans,” Rep. Frank Pallone, D-N.J., said during the House hearing. “I’m sure there’s some bad underlying reason or something that they’re trying to gain.”

    via Armenian supporters skeptical of ties between Turkey, Indian tribes – KansasCity.com.