Riots in Suriname boarder town

About hundreds of Brazilian and Chinese in Suriname have got military protection in the barracks of Albina, a boarder town about 140 kilometers from the Suriname capital: Paramaribo. The foreigners are not safe in this area due to a quarrel between inland locals, the Marron, and a Brazilian which got out of hand.

A local residence died yesterday morning from a knife wound injury inflicted by the Brazilian. Hundreds of villagers took revenge and injured 13 Brazilians, who are currently being cared for in hospitals in French-Guyana and Paramaribo.

A marauding mob of between 100 till 500 people were vandalizing the entire area. Seven people, amongst them women, are severely injured. Twenty Brazilian women have reported rape. A shopping complex, a hotel, a fireworks depot and a gasstation were set on fire, and Chinese shops were plundered and set on fire.

Minister of Justice, Chandrikapersad Santokhi, and his colleague minister of Defense, Ivan Fernald, held a pres conference announcing that: ”Military personnel, police, firefighters and paramedics have been sent to the boarder area. French expertise has been called in to track down the culprits.” Firefighters from the neighboring French town, Saint-Laurent-du-Maroni, are also offering their assistance. The police have arrested 4 people till thus far.

Bron: www.anp.nl, www.nos.nl

Man rapes teenager who raped his son

An Azeri man has been arrested after footage of him allegedly raping a teenager who abused his son was discovered.

Police in Azerbaijan’s capital Baku were investigating the distribution of child pornography when they were alerted to what appears to be a strange case of vigilantism.

According to news website aysor.am a 17-year-old teenager is accused of luring the man’s 8-year-old boy into a van, before assaulting and raping him. It is reported that a passerby witnessed the incident then also attacked the boy – threatening to tell everyone about the “shameful acts”.

The child’s father, along with a group of relatives, allegedly tracked down the first rapist and ‘revenge-raped’ him – while filming the attack on a mobile phone.

The camera phone footage was then distributed in Baku before being found by police.

Both men are now in custody.

A nation’s history of discrimination

The now infamous May 1998 riots in which Indonesian Chinese were the target of attacks and killings and their shops and houses looted, while their wives and daughters were subjected to gangrape, were not an isolated incident of ethnic conflict in Indonesian history.

The stories of a small Chinese community in West Kalimantan (also known as West Borneo) show that violence and discrimination against ethnic Chinese Indonesians have evolved throughout the history of modern Indonesia.

This historical evolution is the focus of a book titled Penambang Emas, Petani dan Pedagang di Distrik Tionghoa Kalimantan Barat (Gold Miners, Farmers and Traders in the “Chinese Districts” of West Kalimantan) by Mary Somers Heidhues, a lecturer in the Southeast Asia Department of Cornell University in the United States.

The book records the history of the Chinese community in West Kalimantan since the Dutch colonial era, through the Japanese occupation, into post-Independence Indonesia, the New Order and finally the present day Reform era.

The first Chinese settlers came to West Kalimantan at the request of Panembahan Mempawah and the Sultan of Sambas in early 1740. Malayan nobles invited the Chinese because they had more advanced mining technology than local people. At that time, the local people, the Dayaks and Malayan tribes, were mostly farmers.

In West Kalimantan, the Chinese people organized their workers in groups called kongsi. The members of each kongsi elected their own head and shared the profits from mining activities. Some kongsi united into federations.

There were three principal kongsi: Fosjoen/Thaikong in Monterado (1776-1854), Lanfang in Mandor (1777-1884) and Samtiaokioe, which separated from Fosjoen in either 1819 or 1822 and then fled in 1850 into Sarawak territory with disastrous results for the Brooke regime seven years later.

The office of kongsi had several roles, including as a center of public administration, residence of the chairmen, public hall and religious shrine.

Eventually, the existence of the independent and democratic kongsi became a threat to the local kingdoms and their ally, the Dutch colonial power. In September 1850, the Dutch colonial government began a military campaign to dismiss the kongsi.

This resulted in three kongsi wars (1822-1824, 1850-1854, 1884-1885), with a spillover in the 1857 Chinese uprising in Sarawak (in Malaysian Borneo). The first conflict was an attempt by the new Dutch regime to control the kongsi. The last kongsi, Lanfang, vanished in 1884-1885.

The kongsi wars were not simply an outcome of the Chinese resistance against the Dutch. There were complex ethnic and political alliances. After the demise of the kongsi, depopulation and impoverishment followed.

It was only at the end of the 19th century that Chinese people started to return to West Kalimantan in significant numbers. This time, it was not gold but agriculture that drove them to come. They dominated the trade of forest products (gutta-percha, rattan and lumber).

In the political field, the Dutch colonial government appointed Chinese officers to control the work and become the intermediaries between them and the Chinese settlers. Their tasks were to collect taxes, to organize forced labor and to collect the opium levy.

Burdened by the heavy taxes in 1912 and 1914 the Chinese, along with the Dayaks and Malayans, rebelled against the Dutch .The colonial government blamed the Chinese secret societies and nationalist movement – inspired by the 1911 Chinese revolution – for being behind the rebellion. But a small number of Dutch troops suppressed the rebellion.

During World War II, the Dutch colonial regime fell under Japanese occupation, including West Kalimantan. In early 1943, the Japanese military orchestrated a massacre of the locals. They accused the former West Kalimantan governor of collaborating with a multi-ethnic rebellion to fight against the Japanese colonial power.

Thousands of people, including the local sultan, nobles, ex-Dutch officers, journalists, doctors and Chinese businessmen, were killed. This incident was remembered as the Pontianak Affair; to commemorate it, the Indonesian government built a memorial monument at the scene in 1970.

After Indonesia gained independence, the Chinese community came under further pressure. Beginning in the 1950s, a set of regulations destabilized the local economy and cultural institutions of the Chinese in West Kalimantan as Jakarta extended its authority throughout the region.

The government of Indonesia issued a regulation in 1959 that limited various economic activities by non-citizens. As a consequence, thousands of Chinese people fled back to their motherland and overseas. Chinese schools were also closed.

Most devastating and traumatic was the event known as the “Dayak raids” in 1967, which took place after the failed coup by the Indonesian Communist Party in 1965.

In the name of the Dayak people, the Indonesian military ran a campaign against what they called the “communist element” in Indonesian society. All Chinese communities at the time were considered supporters of communist China.

Thousands of people were killed and others fled to refugee camps. The result of the raid was the expulsion of Chinese from rural areas.

The authoritarian New Order government banned every cultural expression of China including its languages (Mandarin, Hakka and Teochiu), the barongsai lion dance and the celebration of the Chinese Lunar New Year.

In the Reform era, all these bans were lifted by then president Abdurrahman Wahid.

This book, which is a complete study of the Chinese minority in West Kalimantan in the context of social, economic and political struggle, makes a huge contribution to local history in Indonesia.

Gold Miners, Farmers and Traders in the *Chinese Districts’ of West Borneo

bron: www.thejakartapost.com [meer informatie is toegevoegd aan dit artikel]

In New Zealand: Opotiki teens jailed for raping Japanese tourist

A Japanese tourist was brutally raped and robbed in her bedroom by two teenage gang prospects, as her Opotiki host family watched television in another room.

Today her attackers Ranginui Rahi, 18, and Mark Hati, 16, both of Opotiki, were convicted and sentenced in Whakatane District Court to nine years’ imprisonment for rape and sexual violation. Judge Peter Rollo also sentenced them to four years’ jail for aggravated robbery to be served concurrently.

“It was a disgusting, brutal, degrading crime – a prolonged and violent attack on a young Japanese tourist to our country,” Judge Rollo said. He said Hati and Rahi had damaged their 22-year-old victim’s mana as well as physically injuring her internally and externally. “You treated her with degrading violence for your own sexual pleasure.”

Flanked by police officers, the teenagers stood with blank faces and hands clasped in front of them as the judge told how they broke into the Ford Street house on the night of August 31.

Rahi was armed with a baseball bat while Hati had a piece of firewood. Judge Rollo said they saw the host family watching TV and crept into the girl’s room to steal a laptop they had seen through the window.

Finding her in the room, they shut the door and each raped her several times and forced her to perform oral sex on them, all the while threatening her and searching the room for valuables, Judge Rollo said.The pair were caught by police two days later and entered guilty pleas soon after.

The judge said Hati had been prospecting for the Mongrel Mob since he was 13 and said he expected to become a patched member as a result of this offending when he was released from prison.

Detective Senior Sergeant Greg Standen said police would convey the outcome to the victim, who was still in New Zealand, as soon as she could be contacted and they had also been in touch with the Japanese Consulate.

bron: www.nzherald.co.nz - NZPA

Chinese workers living in Angola targeted by gangs

Chinese businessmen in Angola said Sunday that armed gangs are staging “mafia-style” attacks on their workers, calling for the local government to deploy more police to fight crime.

“In the last three months, everyday I have gotten reports from Chinese targeted by robbery, rape and beatings. The criminals are so cruel that they make me feel horrible,” said Xu Ning, the head of the Chinese Business Council in Luanda, who has lived in the Angolan capital for more than 10 years.

Xu told the Global Times that gunmen took away his newly bought Mitsubishi truck Saturday near a police station. “The robbers are not afraid of the police at all,” Xu said. “Some police offices only have one policeman, and they themselves are frightened by the gunmen, not to mention helping us.”

“These are not just normal robberies. … They are planned, like mafia-style attacks. The gangs go first to inspect premises, and then they go back with AK-47s,” said Eddie Zhang, head of the Shanghai Urban Construction Group, the company building Luanda’s new football stadium for the 2010 Africa Cup of Nations.

Zhang said his staff had not had any problems, but he had warned his workers to take extra care. More than 40,000 Chinese workers are employed in Angola, around 90 percent on construction sites. Language, cultural barrier, and the habit of carrying cash, seem to be the reasons they are targeted.

Xu said the largest amount robbed he knew of was $700,000. “As the Chinese seldom resist, the hijackers became ever bolder,” he added. According to Xu, Angolans are allowed to carry guns, but foreigners who are not entitled to permanent residency are not.

A spokesman for the Chinese embassy in Luanda said that they were aware of incidents against Chinese nationals and were working with Angolan authorities to resolve the problem.

Not only in Angola are Chinese nationals facing a rise in violent attacks, theft and extortion, according to Xinhua, but also in Kyrgyzstan. Several Chinese were injured in burglaries and road robberies in which they were attacked with sticks and guns, said a statement released by the Chinese embassy Friday.

Having been to more than 20 African countries, Liu Hongwu, director of the Institute of African Studies at Zhejiang Normal University, told the Global Times ways of looking after oneself abroad.

“First, you should learn about consular protection, and know where and how to get help when an emergency occurs; second, you should have enough knowledge of the culture, religions and laws in the country and make sure you do not go against them. Finally, it never hurts to be cautious, cautious and cautious, especially when you know the place is not safe,” Liu said.

bron: china.globaltimes.cn [16-11-2009]

Agencies contributed to this story

American grandpa with children, abuses grandchildren

Authorities on Wednesday searched a rural property in western Missouri for bodies and buried glass jars containing notes written more than 15 years ago by children who may have documented sexual abuse by five members of their own family.

A 77-year-old American man from Missouri together with his 4 sons would allegedly have sexually abused 6 grand-children. Besides their own relatives, authorities won’t rule out the possibility of other victims among the abused or buried.

The abuse took place during the ’80s and ’90s.

bron: www.spitsnieuws.nl, www.youtube.com [11-11-2009]

In Australia: Focus on balcony horror

The cousin of a man accused of raping an overseas student before she fell to her death from a Sydney balcony in an attempt to escape is making a movie about the ordeal.

A little more than a year to the day after the 18-year-old Chinese woman jumped from her Waterloo unit after a harrowing sexual assault, the accused’s relative wants to release a film about the attack.

Reliving ordeal... Wu Liping, who has been told the story of her daughter's death is being made into a film.

On October 26 last year a homeless man, Brendan David Dennison, 26, allegedly broke into the Hunter Street apartment. The woman and her boyfriend, a South Korean national, were allegedly terrorised for an hour while two other female students barricaded themselves in a locked room.

Police said the couple had tried to escape by jumping naked from the third-floor unit on to concrete. The woman died.

 

 

[photo: Reliving ordeal... Wu Liping, who has been told the story of her daughter's death is being made into a film. Photo: Adam Hollingworth]

Wu Liping, the mother of the victim, told the Sydney Chinese newspaper Australian News Express Daily that Mr Dennison’s cousin had identified himself to her as ”Evan”, an Aboriginal-German filmmaker living in Hong Kong. He said he was shooting a film based on the case called The Land of Dreams.

Ms Wu said he had told her he was making the film to ”comfort” the victim’s parents.

The man had flown from Hong Kong (香港) to attend a memorial that Ms Wu and husband He Fa Heng, the victim’s stepfather, held last Sunday at a temple in the family’s home province of Sichuan (四川省), China.

About 10 friends and relatives travelled from around China and from as far as Britain to attend the ceremony, bringing flowers and paper money. Evan could not be contacted by The Sun-Herald.

Last month Ms Wu had two operations for what is believed to be a throat condition, and said the night before one of the procedures her dead daughter visited her in her sleep. ”She said, ‘Don’t be afraid, I will always take care of you,”’ the mother said.

Her daughter’s boyfriend still lives in Sydney, where he is studying at the University of NSW. Now 19 and living with his sister, friends have said that his leg – which was seriously injured in the fall – has almost fully recovered.

The man did not respond to a request to comment but it is understood he will take the stand if asked to testify at Mr Dennison’s trial.

Since last year, more than 1200 messages have been posted about the dead woman on the instant messenger service ICQ. Her mother wrote: ”Last night, your dad dreamed of you again. He asked you to turn your face to him for a kiss, but you turned back and disappeared …We love you too much, we miss you too much. If you were not that lovely, that clever, that empathetic, we would not feel so heartbroken and pained now.”

Ms Wu said she hoped that whoever attacked her daughter would be given a life sentence.

Mr Dennison faces a total of 21 charges relating to the attack, including murder, sexual assault, robbery, and detaining for advantage. His case is set for mention on Friday, when a date for his next court appearance is expected to be set.

bron: www.smh.com.au [01-11-2009, in Europe 31-10-2009]

‘Gang rapists threatened to chop up victim’

English police stormed a gangsters’ safe-house to rescue a woman from a gang of rapists who threatened to chop up and bury her, a court heard.

The men, said to be members of a Far Eastern crime syndicate, kept their victim prisoner for three days in a suburban home in Lewisham, England, it is claimed.

Four men took turns to rape her, before warning her that she would be “chopped into pieces” if her family in China did not pay a huge ransom, Southwark Crown Court heard on Wednesday. But it is alleged they were foiled when police smashed their way into the building following a joint operation by British and Chinese authorities.

Prosecutor Ken Millett told jurors that the men struck on the morning of March 24 last year.

The victim, a Chinese prostitute, was lured to the house in Talisman Square, Lewisham, by a man claiming to be a customer, the court heard. She was met at Peckham Rye station by a man in a yellow jacket and escorted to the address, where the door was opened by 25-year-old Bing Li, it was claimed.

Also present were alleged ringleader Ming Zhuang, 25, and Xin Da Yu, 39, the court heard.

It is claimed that after she arrived at the house more men arrived, including Ming Chen, 24, and a 17-year-old who cannot be named for legal reasons. Jurors were told the gang had carefully researched their victim’s background, and knew details about her parents’ addresses and finances. In all, the gang made between 50 and 60 calls to the family to demand money, it was alleged.

The woman was eventually found on March 26 after her parents called the Chinese police, who in turn contacted their British counterparts. Li, of Talisman Square, Lewisham, Yu, of no fixed address, and the 17-year-old, of Lewisham, each deny rape, sexual assault, false imprisonment and blackmail.

Chen and Zhuang, both of no fixed address, admit blackmail and false imprisonment.

The Crown say Zhuang was one of the men who forced himself on the victim, but he does not face a rape charge in the trial. The trial continues.

bron: www.southlondon-today.co.uk [5-10-2009]

[We of Wocview did some online CSI-work: There was another article regarding the same case but it didn't mention the victim being a prostitute: http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/crime/woman-gang-raped-in-kidnap-ordeal-1795473.html [29-09-2009]]

Arrest made in brutal rape and murder of Japanese tourist in Indonesia

West Java Man Arrested in Malang in Connection with the Rape and Death of 33-Year-Old Japanese Woman in Kuta, Indonesia.

After a massive nationwide manhunt lasting one week, Bali police have arrested a man suspected of murdering a 33-year-old Japanese female Rika Sano. Sano’s decomposing and battered remains were found on Monday, September 28, 2009, in an empty field on Jalan Mertanadi in Kuta, near the Oleh Oleh Kampoeng Bali store.

The man arrested for the murder, identified by police as David Goltar Wicaksono, was apprehended at a hideaway in Malang, East Java. Police traced the crime to the 26-year-old man, a native of Bandung, West Java, via a MP4 player found at the same location of the dead woman’s body. Authorities say the electronic device was owned by the accused and purportedly dropped in a struggle with the Japanese woman. With the help of the cyber-crime unit a picture of the man was found that matched descriptions provided by witnesses of a man with whom Sano left her Kuta hotel.

The information initially led police to a local boarding house in the Pemogan sub-district of Denpasar where the landlord confirmed that Wicaksono had not been seen for several days. Similar efforts to trace the man to his place of employment, a cigarette distributor in Denpasar, were unsuccessful. Based on leads received at his place of residence and employment, police eventually located the man in Malang.

Wicaksono has been flown back to Bali under police escort.

The Crime

The ill-fated Rika Sano was reported missing by her traveling companion, Mayumi Someya, on Friday, September 25, 2009. Sano’s body was discovered in tall grass at the vacant lot in Kuta three days later with indications that she had been brutalized and raped prior to her death.

Sano was last seen on the Friday, leaving her hotel with a man, now believed to be Wicaksono, who told hotel staff that he was a plain-clothes officer assigned to the Bali Police.

bron: www.balidiscovery.com

China’s anxieties after 60 years

China’s past has been a tumultuous one. Its history can explain how it will behave, now, as a global power.

In reflecting upon the 60th anniversary of China’s Liberation Day, one must use the occasion not only to assess where China may be going to in the global firmament, but also where it has come from. China’s history should give the world some idea of its anxieties and aspirations.

When Mao Zedong stated that never would China be humiliated again, as a Chinese nationalist and keen historian, he was acutely aware of China’s shamed past. There are many distinctive (or “unique”) characteristics about China. There is, of course, its 4,000-year-old history, its national unity stretching back to the emperor Qin Shi-Huang in the 2nd century BC. But also one must not forget its precipitate decline in the course of the 19th and first half of the 20th centuries.

Photograph: Vincent Thian / AP

Photograph: Vincent Thian / AP

No nation, no civilization, fell so low from so high so quickly. As the Middle Kingdom, China correctly saw itself as the centre of global civilization. Everything else was, to a greater or lesser extent, barbarian. And this state of affairs also radiated as far as the West. There was an aura about China that greatly captivated Western imagination; this was true not only in the pages of Marco Polo’s Travels in the 13th century, and continued in the accounts written by Jesuit missionaries from China in the 16th and 17th centuries, but also in the works of the 18th century Enlightenment philosophers. China was rich in cultural and material terms.

The decline can be gauged from China’s global economic standing. In 1820, China accounted for 33% of global gross domestic product. By the time Mao entered Beijing, it had fallen to somewhere in the region of 3%. In the interim, China can be said to have been “gang-raped”. China was repeatedly invaded—first by the British in 1839 in the First Opium War; then by the British again, this time with the help of the French, in the Second Opium War; then in the ensuing decades by virtually every other Western power. Finally, from the late 19th century onwards, the Japanese presence, starting with the Sino-Japanese War of 1894-95, manifested itself most egregiously in the Nanking Massacre of 1937.

Though bits and pieces of the Chinese periphery were colonized—Hong Kong by the British in 1841, Taiwan in 1895 and Manchuria in 1931 by the Japanese, with Tibet also being invaded by the British in 1904—mainland China per se, unlike India, was not colonized. In theory, it remained a sovereign state. As the leader of the 1911 Revolution and founder of the first Chinese Republic, Sun Yat-sen stated, however, that China had become a “poly-colony”. In other words, no single nation actually colonized China, but multiple nations cut out their spheres of influence and their own neo-colonial outposts. One of the features of these neo-colonial outposts were the “treaty settlements”. These consisted of areas reserved for Westerners (and eventually Japanese) and that were under Western and not Chinese jurisdiction and jurisprudence. In reality, China was everybody’s puppet state.

After World War I, the Chinese discovered at the Paris Peace Conference that the Germans’ Chinese concessions were being secretly handed over to the Japanese. This caused numerous riots and brought together Chinese nationalist reformist intellectuals who founded what came to be known as the May 4th (1919) Movement, which in turn lay the foundations for the establishment of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) two years later. It took an additional 30 years and five months for liberation at the hands of Mao.

Many have argued that though the CCP was undoubtedly Marxist-Leninist (at least initially) and eventually Maoist, it was perhaps above all nationalist. Marxism-Leninism-Maoism was seen as the means to restore China’s place in the world and to liberate its people from feudalist and imperialist oppression.

In the first three decades after 1949, there was some very bitter and quite violent ideological infighting between the so-called “capitalist roaders”—the pejorative term for those seen to side with bourgeois ideas—and the Maoist fundamentalists. But the battle remained essentially one of means: What was the best means to restore Chinese greatness?

There was, on the part of the Maoists, a justified fear that if China chose the capitalist road, once again it would be flooded and overwhelmed by neo-imperialist foreign capital. In 1979, as China began liberalizing under Deng Xiaoping, leading reformist intellectual Zheng Bijian noted: “The most important strategic choice the Chinese made was to embrace globalization rather than detach themselves from it.”

It seems to have been indeed a very wise choice. China has soared in the global economy from virtually nowhere. Not only has it emerged as a major economic power, but it has also resumed its position as a leading global nation. Once humiliated, China is now highly respected. But while the wounds of the past century and a half of humiliation may have healed, the scars are still there.

This 60th anniversary constitutes an appropriate occasion for everyone, Chinese and non-Chinese, to reflect on the past. While conscious of the many daunting challenges ahead, the West and China (and other nations such as India) must work together. But, in seeking to go forward, ignoring history would be definitely perilous.

Jean-Pierre Lehmann is professor of international political economy at IMD, a business school in Lausanne, Switzerland. Comment at theirview@livemint.com