Sunday, May 11, 2008

Hezbollah to withdraw gunmen in Lebanon

By Robert F. Worth and Nada Bakri
Published: May 10, 2008
BEIRUT, Lebanon: Hezbollah and its allies began withdrawing their gunmen here in the capital on Saturday evening, raising hopes for a political settlement after four days of street battles that left at least 29 people dead. The fighting has stoked fears of a broader civil conflict. Skip to next paragraph Enlarge This Image Lefteris Pitarakis/Associated Press The scene in Beirut after members of a funeral procession began smashing windows, prompting a store owner to open fire.
Hezbollah acted shortly after the Lebanese Army — widely seen as a neutral force here — proposed to resolve the dispute that provoked the latest round of bloody confrontations between the Hezbollah-led opposition and government supporters.
Armed Hezbollah supporters seized control of western Beirut on Friday, patrolling the empty streets and prompting angry accusations that the group, which is backed by Iran and Syria, had staged a coup.
On Saturday afternoon, after another day of sporadic violence, the army offered to broker a face-saving solution by promising to "investigate" Hezbollah's controversial private telephone network without harming the group's integrity. It also proposed to retain the current chief of airport security, a Hezbollah ally whom the government had tried to fire.
That proposal — quickly embraced by both government leaders and the opposition — sharply underscored the Lebanese Army's role as the one national institution seen as neutral here. Many have feared that the army would fragment along sectarian or political lines, as it did during Lebanon's 15-year civil war.
Instead, it has come through the latest conflict unscathed. That neutrality has come at a price: in this crisis, as in others, the army stood passively by, unwilling to be seen as taking sides, even when street battles were taking place.
Still, the army's proposal is likely to enhance the political prospects of its leader, General Michel Suleiman, who appears to be the only man both political camps are willing to accept as Lebanon's next president. The presidency has been vacant since November.
"All this has proved that the army is the only guarantor of security in Lebanon," despite its relative weakness, said Osama Safa, the general director of the Lebanese Center for Policy Studies.
It remained unclear on Saturday how the recent confrontations might alter the balance of power here. Hezbollah clearly hoped that its show of force would translate into enhanced power in the political stalemate that has crippled Lebanon for 17 months now.
But Lebanon is notoriously resistant to political settlements, and some political analysts here say they believe that the government may have won a moral victory by abstaining from large-scale violence in response to Hezbollah's aggression. Some government leaders were already accusing the Shiite group of betraying its promise to use its weapons only against Israel.
Earlier in the day, Lebanon's prime minister, Fouad Siniora, lashed out at Hezbollah in a televised address for using its weapons against fellow Lebanese, and he called on the Lebanese Army to retake control of the streets from militia fighters.
"The core of the problem with Hezbollah is that they have decided to force their will on the Lebanese," Siniora said, in his first public comments since the latest crisis began on Wednesday.
At least 29 people have been killed and scores wounded in gun battles since Wednesday, in the worst sectarian bloodshed since Lebanon's 15-year civil war ended in 1990.
The confrontation has posed a fresh challenge to the Bush administration, which has supported Siniora's government in part to counter Hezbollah and its patrons, Iran and Syria.
On Saturday, Hezbollah officials announced that three Hezbollah members had been kidnapped in the Chouf mountain town of Aley, and that two others had been killed by fighters loyal to Walid Jumblatt, the Druse leader. Hezbollah's statement made it clear that the group held Jumblatt, who is allied with Siniora's government, responsible for the kidnapping and murders of the men, who were found shot and stabbed in front of a hospital.
In northern Lebanon, at least 10 people were killed in scattered gun battles between supporters of the government and the Hezbollah-led opposition, Al Jazeera television reported.
Although most of Beirut was somewhat calmer on Saturday, a funeral for a Sunni government supporter erupted into bloodshed when a Shiite storeowner opened fire on the mourners.
As the pallbearers approached a store owned by a member of the Amal Party, which is allied with Hezbollah, mourners urged the owner to close his store. When he refused, they started smashing the windows. Furious, the store- owner opened fire at them, killing Ali Masri, 23, and Moussa Zouki, 24.
Meanwhile, with violence continuing, the governments of Turkey and Kuwait began evacuating their citizens through Lebanon's northern border with Syria, the only open route out of the country. The road to Lebanon's airport has been blocked since Wednesday by Hezbollah supporters. Other land routes are cut off, and the Beirut port is also shut.
Some Lebanese took to the streets on Saturday to express their outrage over Hezbollah's show of force, and over the armed attacks on a television station and newspaper allied with the government. A group of government supporters marched to the offices of Future Television, a satellite channel that was commandeered by the army after Hezbollah supporters threatened it on Friday.
"Hezbollah are liars; they are despicable," said Nawal al-Meouchi, 60, who had come to show her support along with her husband, her son and her daughter. "They said they would never turn their arms on the Lebanese, but they
have."

"Hijack" Bantuan Kemanusiaan

Memang menyedihkan. Tetapi itulah hakikat dan realitinya bila berhadapan dengan situasi sengal dan menyesakkan. Sang Penguasa dan kebiasaannya ahli politik akan menjadi juara dalam urusan pengagihan bantuan makanan atau bantuan kecemasan. Mereka akan menetapkan siapa yang dapat dan siapa yang tidak - di Malaysia pun ada berlaku gak. Mereka juga menetapkan berapa yang mereka sendiri patut dapat dan dalam situasi sebegini, pekerja bantuan kemanusiaan tidak ada banyak pilihan melainkan berkompromi dan bekerjasama dengan mereka.
Pengalaman di "hijack" ketika mengagihkan bantuan kemanusiaan bukanlah fenomena asing tetapi ianya adalah sesuatu yang real dan kebarangkalian untuk ianya berlaku adalah tinggi - 1 dalam 3.
Shahrul Peshawar
program pengagihan khemah kami untuk mangsa banjir dulu pun pernah kena hijack

Race to prevent disease among Myanmar cyclone victims


By MARGIE MASON, AP Medical Writer Sat May 10, 4:22 PM ET

BANGKOK, Thailand - Preventing a disease disaster in Myanmar is now a "race against time," as many impoverished victims still await help a week after the brutal cyclone, experts warned Saturday.

Reports of diarrhea and skin problems already have surfaced, and health officials fear waterborne illnesses will emerge because of a lack of clean water, along with highly contagious diseases such as measles.

Children, especially those orphaned by the storm, face some of the greatest risks. Cyclone Nargis left more than 60,000 people dead or missing. The U.N. estimates that at least 1.5 million people have been severely affected in the military-run country, which has one of the world's worst health systems.

"The fact that there are people we still haven't gotten to is very distressing to all of us. We don't know how many that is," Tim Costello, president of the aid agency World Vision-Australia, said by telephone from Myanmar's largest city, Yangon. "The people are all exposed to the elements, and they are very, very vulnerable. It's a race against time."

In the badly hit town of Labutta, family members were forced to use rusty sewing needles to close wounds at a hospital where no doctors or supplies were visible. One man lay dying from a lack of care after his foot was cut off in the cyclone.
The World Health Organization has reported children suffering from upper respiratory diseases, and with next week's forecast calling for rain, there was yet another urgent reason to move quickly.

Fears of mosquito-borne diseases such as malaria and dengue fever, which are endemic to the area, also have heightened. However, outbreaks would not be expected for another week or longer because the mosquitoes need time to breed in stagnant water left from the storm, said Osamu Kunii, UNICEF's chief of health and nutrition in Yangon.

Cholera remains another concern, but there have been no diagnosed cases. Kunii said Myanmar's health ministry also agreed to start a mass vaccination campaign against measles.

"Once those diseases start, it's very hard to control," he said, adding that food and water were reaching more survivors but not everyone. Some victims have been drinking whatever water is available, with many freshwater sources contaminated by saltwater or littered with decaying human bodies and animal carcasses. UNICEF has reported diarrhea in up to 20 percent of the children living in some badly affected areas. Injuries suffered from high winds and debris that struck people during the storm also remain a problem, with many suffering from raw open wounds.

Costello said frustration with the military junta's slow response and restrictions placed on humanitarian aid entering the country has reached a critical point. "The government initially admitted that this was bigger than them. But now they have said, `While we need more aid, we are the military. We made this nation, and we're very proud of it and we can cope with it,'" Costello said. "It is absolutely clear that they can't."

Tens of thousands of people die every year in Myanmar, also known as Burma, from diseases such as tuberculosis, AIDS and diarrhea. Malaria alone kills about 3,000 people annually in a country where medical care is too expensive for most people to afford. In 2000, WHO ranked Myanmar's health system as the world's worst after war-ravaged Sierra Leone.

About 90 percent of the population lives on just $1 a day. Millions also go hungry, with a third of Myanmar's children estimated to be malnourished. "It is an unfortunate reality that this storm hit a country that already had this very marginal ... health system," said Dr. Chris Beyrer, an epidemiologist from Johns Hopkins University who has worked extensively in Myanmar. "When you have malnourishment with infectious diseases, the fatality rates go up."

He co-authored a critical report published last year that found the government spends only about 3 percent of its annual budget on health, compared to 40 percent on the military. The country's ailing health system combined with the junta's paranoia of foreigners is a cocktail for an even bigger disaster in the storm's aftermath, Beyrer said.

"I think when it comes to this regime, nothing is that surprising," he said by telephone from Maryland. "The fundamental issue is access. This is what we were arguing about for HIV/TB and malaria control five years ago — that it is access and that the international community is ready to help."

Sunday, April 20, 2008

NAHDAH PKPIM

Fun & Enjoying
Listening carefully
Front Page of my presentation

I was invited by Bro. Saiful from PKPIM to deliver a slot on humanitarian which I turned into leadership slot.

An energetic crowd of 150+ students leader around Petaling Jaya... well done PKPIM.

Shahrul Peshawar
Kg. Baru




Monday, April 14, 2008

International Bill Of Human Rights

As a Humanitarian Worker, we must understand the issues of Human Rights and to guide us in understanding universal concepts on human rights we need to study and familiar with the International Bill of Human Rights:-
The International Bill of Human Rights consists of three parts. The first part is the Universal Declaration of Human Rights which was unanimously adopted on 10 December 1948 by the United Nations General Assembly "as a common standard of achievement for all peoples and all nations."
The second and third part of the International Bill of Human Rights were adopted by the UN General Assembly on 16 December 1966. These consisted of two Covenants:- The International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights- The International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and its two Optional Protocols.
shahrul peshawar
shah alam, selangor

Sunday, April 13, 2008

Humanitarian Aid

Humanitarian aid is material or logistical assistance provided for humanitarian purposes, typically in response to humanitarian crises. The primary objective of humanitarian aid is to save lives, alleviate suffering, and maintain human dignity. It may therefore be distinguished from development aid, which seeks to address the underlying socioeconomic factors which may have led to a crisis or emergency.
source Wikipedia

Friday, April 11, 2008

KENAPA PERLU BERALIH KE PERTANIAN ORGANIK?

SM Mohamed Idris
Presiden Persatuan Pengguna Pulau Pinang


Pertanian organik didefinisikan sebagai 'sistem pengurusan pengeluaran makanan holistik, yang menggalakkan dan meningkatkan kesihatan ekosistem pertanian, termasuk kepelbagaian bio, pusingan biologikal dan aktiviti biologikal tanah. Ia menekankan penggunaan amalan pengurusan dalam mengutamakan penggunaan input luar ladang, dengan mengambil kira keadaan wilayah yang memerlukan penggunaan sistem tempatan. Ini boleh dilakukan dengan menggunakan seberapa yang boleh, agronomi, kaedah mekanikal dan biologikal, bertentangan terhadap penggunaan bahan sintetik, untuk memenuhi sebarang fungsi khusus dalam sistem." (FAO/WHO Codex Alimentarius Commission).

Melalui kaedah holistik semula jadi, pertanian organik menyatukan kepelbagaian bio liar, kepelbagaian bio pertanian dan pemuliharaan tanah, dan membawa pertanian satu langkah ke hadapan dengan menghapuskanbaja kimia, racun makhluk perosak dan organisme ubah suai genetik (GMO), yang bukan hanya memperbaiki kesihatan manusia, tetapi juga flora dan fauna yang berkait dengan ladang dan alam sekitarnya. Pertanian organik menguatkan struktur tanah, memelihara air dan memastikan pemuliharaan dan penggunaan mapan kepelbagaian bio.

Pencemaran pertanian seperti baja bukan organik, racun rumpai dan racun makhluk perosak daripada pertanian konvesional adalah menjadi kebimbangan utama di seluruh dunia. Eutrophication, tumbuhan dan binatang akuatik menjadi lemas akibat pertumbuhan algae yang cepat, dirujuk sebagai 'algae blooms', membunuh tasik, sungai dan air. Penggunaan berterusan racun rumpai dan racun makhluk perosak boleh melangkaui sasaran rumpai dan serangga apabila diperkenalkan dalam alam sekitar akuatik. Bahan kimia ini berkumpul dalam rantaian makanan di mana pemangsa pada bahagian paling atas sering mengambil dos toksik. Pertanian organik mengembalikan keseimbangan alam sekitar dan tidak mempunyai kesan yang merosakkan ke atas alam sekitar (IFOAM).

Racun makhluk perosak telah digunakan dalam pertanian sejak Perang Dunia Kedua, dan sejak dari mula lagi terdapat kebimbangan mengenai pengkomersialan bahan kimia racun makhluk perosak. Buku 'Silent Spring' oleh Rachel Carson yang diterbitkan pada 1964 mendedahkan kesan racun makhluk perosak terhadap alam sekitar. Racun serangga era Perang Dunia Kedua, DDT diharamkan di negara maju dalam tahun 1970-an tetapi terus digunakan di India sehingga tahun 1990-an. Tragedi Bhopal 1984 menjadi pembuka mata kepada sebahagian besar penduduk India dan dunia luar.

Menurut penyelidikan terhadap gangguan kesihatan akibat daripada penggunaan bahan kimia berasaskan petroleum dalam produk pengguna dan persekitaran kerja boleh diperolehi daripada laman sesawang yang berkaitan di bawah. Bahan kimia berasaskan petroleum didapati menyebabkan kesan terhadap sistem imun dan saraf selepas pendedahan dalam jangka panjang.

Penyakit yang dikenal pasti dalam penyelidikan perubatan termasuklah kanser dalam kalangan kanak-kanak dan orang dewasa, pelbagai gangguan neurologi, kelemahan sistem imun, gangguan autoimun, asma, alergi, ketidaksuburan, keguguran, dan gangguan tingkah laku kanak-kanak termasuk kesukaran dalam pembelajaran, mental yang terencat, hiperaktiviti dan gangguan kurang perhatian (ADD). Bahan kimia berasaskan petroleum dipercayai menyebabkan masalah ini melalui pelbagai jalan termasuklah mencacatkan DNA (gen) yang sempurna, melemahkan pembaikan DNA, mempercepatakan kehilangan gen, kemerosotan sistem pertahanan penyahtoksikan tubuh (hati dan buah pinggang) serta melemahkan pertahanan utama otak - (the Blood Brain Barrier) (http://www.chem-tok.com/).

Hampir lima dekad, orang ramai dan petani telah diberitahu bahawa racun makhluk perosak penting untuk pertanian moden dan untuk memberi makan kepada penduduk dunia, pada hal perkara ini adalah tidak benar. Racun makhluk perosak melemahkan ekosistem yang telah mengekalkan pertanian manusia sejak beribu tahun lalu, memusnahkan mikrob tanah dan menghapuskan pemangsa dan serangga yang memberikan manfaat. Tambahan, serangga akan terus mutasi untuk menjadi tahan kepada racun makhluk perosak. Di sebalik peningkatan 10 kali ganda dalam penggunaan racun serangga dalam beberapa tahun lalu, kajian menunjukkan pertumbuhan 30% dalam beberapa jenis makhluk perosak. Penghasilan bagi setiap hektar dalam pengeluaran pertanian pada umumnya semakin merosot dalam banyak sistem pertanian akibat kemerosotan kandungan bahan organik dalam tanah. Adalah sesuatu yang terlambat jika kita pada masa ini tidak merancang dasar yang sempurna untuk mengembalikan semula tanah kita dengan bahan organik. Untuk bahan organik apa yang kita perlukan ialah baja yang baik.

Persoalan yang sering ditanya ialah di mana untuk kita mendapatkan baja yang banyak ini. Jawapannya terletak dalam kompos. Sebahagian besar sisa oragnik daripada pertanian serta sisa pasar dengan mudah boleh ditukarkan kepada baja, tanpa kos pelaburan yang besar. Ini menggalakkan industri bagi kompos berasaskan tempatan. Semburan dedaun organik serta semburan penghalau serangga juga boleh disediakan pada peringkat tempatan. Ia juga boleh menghasilkan peluang untuk sebahagian besar belia dan wanita di luar bandar.

Kerajaan membelanjakan wang yang besar terhadap perbelanjaan perubatan apabila menumpukan kepada makanan yang sihat boleh menjadi jawapannya. 'Mencegah lebih baik dari mengubati' dan dasar kerajaan terhadap pertanian perlu disesuaikan untuk menggalakkan serta melindungi pertanian organik.

Pertanian organik menyumbang kepada keselamatan makanan dan alam sekitar melalui kombinasi beberapa ciri terutamanya:

* Meningkatkan hasil di kawasan input rendah.
* Memelihara kepelbagaian bio & sumber semula jadi di ladang dan kawasan sekitarnya.
* Meningkatkan pendapatan dan mengurangkan kos.
* Mengitar semula sisa organik untuk pengeluaran baja, menyelesaikan pengurusan sisa.
* Usahawan mikro dalam ekonomi luar Bandar.
* Melindungi kesihatan petani dan pengguna.
* Menghasilkan pelbagai makanan dan selamat.
* Kemapanan dalam jangka panjang.
Oleh sebab itu pertanian organik perlu menjadi bahagian penting daripada sebarang dasar pertanian yang bertujuan menjamin keselamatan makanan dan kini adalah masanya bagi kerajaan Malaysia mengambil tindakan ke arah ini.

Thursday, April 10, 2008

UNHCR and Google unveil new map programme for humanitarian operations








Tuesday, 8 April 2008


GENEVA – Representatives of Google and the UN refugee agency on Tuesday unveiled a powerful new online mapping programme that provides an up-close and multifaceted view of some of the world's major displacement crises and the humanitarian efforts aimed at helping the victims. www.unhcr.org/googleearth
The "Google Earth Outreach" programme gives UNHCR and other humanitarian agencies the ability to use Google Earth and Maps to highlight their work on behalf of millions of refugees and other populations of concern in some of the world's most remote and difficult areas.

Google's outreach programme provides humanitarian agencies with the skills and resources to use Google Earth and Maps to highlight their work to a mass audience. The agencies can overlay text, audio and video information onto Google Earth in what is known as a "layer," enabling them to explain and illustrate their humanitarian work to a worldwide audience.

Unveiling a new UNHCR layer in Google Earth before invited guests at UNHCR's Geneva headquarters, Deputy High Commissioner for Refugees L. Craig Johnstone hailed the project as means to educate people worldwide on the plight of refugees and on the humanitarians who help them.

"Google Earth is a very powerful way for UNHCR to show the vital work that it is doing in some of the world's most remote and difficult displacement situations," said Johnstone. "By showing our work in its geographical context, we can really highlight the challenges we face on the ground and how we tackle them."

The new UNHCR layer shows three levels of detail. The first provides an overview of UNHCR itself and takes the user on a journey to three major displacement operations – in Darfur/Chad, Iraq and Colombia. The impact on neighbouring countries, including Sudan, Syria and Ecuador, is also explored, and refugee camp locations are highlighted on the Google Earth maps.
The second layer brings the user even closer to the life of those in exile, exploring such elements as refugee health, education, water and sanitation. Pop-up windows linked to precise geographical points in camps and refugee communities provide written explanations, photos and videos of specific needs and operations. The third level, the "macro-view," takes the online visitor right down to the local level within a refugee camp, allowing examination of schools, water points and other infrastructure found in a typical site. Visit the layer at www.unhcr.org/googleearth


The new Google Earth Outreach programme includes grants for licences of the professional versions of Google Earth and Google SketchUp (the 3D modelling software) plus text and video tutorials on how to use these powerful tools. UNHCR's technical experts say that as it grows, the Google Earth programme will allow UNHCR and its humanitarian partners to build and share with each other a visual, geographic record of their joint efforts on the ground to help refugees. This could include, for example, cross-border mapping of population flows as well as the location of displaced persons in relation to their places of origin – useful information in logistical planning for eventual repatriation operations.

Also speaking at the Geneva event was the Afghanistan-born photographer Zalmai, himself a former refugee. "As a photographer, I know the power of images," Zalmai said. "Combining the many features of Google Earth and Maps with graphics, photos and other timely information from UNHCR staff working in some of the world's most pressing humanitarian crises provides an incredibly powerful way of conveying the urgent needs of millions of refugees in places most of us would never otherwise see."

Rebecca Moore, head of Earth Outreach at Google, said: "Charities and NGOs are constantly looking for new ways to make people aware of the issues they are trying to solve. Putting information into its geographical context makes it possible to show the complexity and the effect of the work of organizations such as UNHCR."

To date, 350 million people have downloaded Google Earth around the world. There are 13 layers in the Global Awareness section of Google Earth and thousands of KML (Keyhole Markup Language) layers have been created by individuals and organizations around the world.

More information on Google Earth Outreach can be found at earth.google.ch/outreach. The website includes tutorials, case studies, a KML showcase and other online resources. Swiss-registered charities and NGOs can apply for pro grants of Earth and SketchUp under the programme.

Further information available at www.unhcr.org/googleearth
The High Commissioner for Refugees is mandated by the United Nations to lead and coordinate international action for the worldwide protection of refugees and the resolution of refugee problems. UNHCR is a two times Nobel Peace Prize winner.

8 April 2008UNHCR Press Releases

Wednesday, January 02, 2008

WHY KILL BENAZIR?


I just dont understand why they need to kill Benazir. I knew that she was favourite to the west, but killing her doesnt change anything into betterment but it is more damaging and the image of Pakistani muslim had been tarnished all over the world.

Pity Pakistan Zindabad


shahrul peshawar
Kg. Changkat