2017年2月13日 星期一

Duterte’s rebalancing could be an opportunity 10周

Lord Palmerston said: “Nations have no permanent friends or allies, they only have permanent interests.” This is particularly true for the Philippines, whose President Rodrigo Duterte shocked the world when last week he announced his intention to break strategic and economic ties with the US and form an alliance with China.
While Duterte has a tendency to make outrageous public statements that he later retracts, his actions manifest a nationalist sentiment among Philippine elites and represents a new attempt to pursue an independent foreign policy.
This fiasco caused a great deal of confusion in Washington, Manila and other East Asian capitals. First, Duterte’s announcement came as a significant victory for China on the eve of the 80th anniversary of the Chinese Red Army’s Long March — a series of military retreats by Chinese Communists to evade the hostile pursuit of Chinese Nationalist soldiers during the early 1930s.
A week ago, Beijing was still coming to grips with the aftermath of diplomatic setbacks like South Korea’s deployment of the US Terminal High Altitude Area Defense anti-missile system against North Korea and the July ruling by the Permanent Court of Arbitration at The Hague, the Netherlands, that rebuked China’s historic claims over the South China Sea. Duterte’s rapprochement has re-energized Beijing’s ongoing efforts to lay claim to and militarize the area.
Second, Duterte completely reversed former Philippine president Benigno Aquino III’s tough stand on maritime sovereignty issues. When The Hague urged Beijing to suspend further expansion into the Philippines’ proclaimed territories, the Scarborough Shoal (Huangyan Island, 黃岩島) and Mischief Reef (Meiji Reef, 美濟礁), it was a legal victory for Manila. For months, Beijing has been contemplating whether to withdraw from the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea or to adhere to international law and reconcile with the Philippines.
When Duterte publicly acknowledged Beijing’s claims to maritime resources in the South China Sea in exchange for US$24 billion in Chinese investment and loan pledges, he gave China a face-saving platform to escape the legal crisis.
Third, some officials in the West have been frustrated by Duterte’s adventurism, seeing him as a wild card and have demonized him as “a [North Korean Leader} Kim Jong-un, minus the nukes.”
Whether Duterte is playing China against the US and Japan to extract further gains remains to be seen.
Politically savvy and pragmatic, Duterte understands that Washington has little room to maneuver. If it sets out to downgrade ties with Manila in retaliation, it gives Duterte a reason to reassess the mutual defense treaty of 1951 and prompt fresh anxieties for Tokyo, Seoul and other nations about their strategic agreements with the US.
As Washington has been strengthening ties with traditional allies in the Asia-Pacific, many Asian nations are seizing the opportunity to reset their own diplomatic and developmental agendas in a highly fluid landscape of geopolitics. Duterte’s Philippines is no exception. This regional rebalancing could prompt the next US president to rethink the East Asian strategy and identify new partners.
In this regard, Taiwan might want to reprioritize its “new southbound policy” from an economic to a geopolitical strategy. Besides looking for business opportunities, Taiwan should position itself as a new stabilizing force and support US allies in creating a multilateral platform to address maritime sovereignty disputes. Only by doing so can Taiwan effectively respond to China’s renewed international campaign to isolate the nation.


WHO-President Rodrigo Duterte 
WHAT-announced his intention to break strategic and economic ties with the US and form an alliance with China.
WHEN- -
WHERE- Philippines
WHY- -
HOW - announced

KEYWORDS-rebalancing,alliance,manifest, fiasco,diplomatic,rapprochement, re-energized ,sovereignty,maritime, reprioritize

I think Duterte is right. He has his way to rule his country. Although UN didn't agree what he did, he said something make sense about UN. UN also killed someone who was innocent, but you need to sacrifice to achieve what you want.

2017年1月2日 星期一

2016 RIO OLYMPICS: Kom will not quit over Rio KO

India’s “Magnificent” Mary Kom yesterday said that she was heartbroken after she failed to obtain a wild-card for the Rio Olympics, but the five-time world champion said she was not about to quit boxing.
Kom, 33, failed to qualify after losing a crucial bout at the Women’s World Boxing Championships in Kazakhstan last month, raising speculation about her future.
The 2012 Olympic bronze medalist had been pinning her hopes on a last-ditch plea for a wild-card spot, but the International Olympic Committee (IOC) has now turned down her request.
“I have been duly informed that I won’t be getting a wild-card. It is heartbreaking,” Kom was quoted saying by the Press Trust of India (PTI) news agency.
“I have to accept this decision, but I am not quitting the sport right now. I will continue to compete [while] I am feeling fit, and for the time being, I think I am fit,” Kom added.
Kom, a household name in India and the subject of a Bollywood film in 2014, always faced an uphill battle to secure a spot. Only one wild-card entry was on offer for each of the three women’s boxing categories in Rio in August.
“The IOC has ruled that the [wild-card] will be given only to countries which have had less than eight participants in the last two Olympics, and India had eight boxers in London,” said Kishen Narsi, chairman of India’s ad hoc boxing committee.
“They had taken the call in the previous meeting that they will stick to the rule of any country with less than eight participants in any sport. So it’s a call that they have taken and we have to fall in line,” Narsi said.
Despite her disappointment, Kom, a mother-of-three who hails from a poor family in the neglected and remote state of Manipur, said “the future is good.”
“I am aware that retirement is something that would be talked about a lot, but for the time being I have dropped the idea,” said Kom, dubbed “Magnificent Mary” after she won her fifth world championship title in 2010.
“Of course, I would be spending more time at my academy training young kids, but I will continue to devote as much time to my training as well,” Kom added.

http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/sport/archives/2016/06/24/2003649349

WHO-Mary Kom

WHAT-he was heartbroken after she failed to obtain a wild-card for the Rio Olympics, but the five-time world champion said she was not about to quit boxing.

WHEN-yesterday

WHERE-India

WHY- -

HOW- -

KEYWORDS-Boxing,last-ditch plea,neglected,uphill,categories,quoted 

India’s “Magnificent” Mary Kom yesterday said that she was heartbroken after she failed to obtain a wild-card for the Rio Olympics, but the five-time world champion said she was not about to quit boxing.

Autopilot criticism may cause deaths: Musk AP, DETROIT, Michigan

Self-driving cars hold the promise of saving thousands of lives each year on US roads, but does pointing out flaws with the technology effectively put people in danger?
That claim was put forth on Wednesday by Tesla Motors Inc chief executive officer Elon Musk, who criticized the media for harping on the relatively few crashes involving Tesla’s semi-autonomous driving system called Autopilot, while saying little about the about the 1.2 million people who die worldwide each year in human-driven vehicles.
“If, in writing some article that’s negative, you effectively dissuade people from using autonomous vehicles, you’re killing people,” said Musk, who expects his self-driving technology to be at least twice as safe as cars driven by humans.
The comments came as Musk announced that all new Tesla vehicles — including the lower-cost Model 3 — will have the hardware needed to drive themselves. The talk is bold, but experts say it is premature until self-driving cars prove they are better drivers than humans under any circumstances.
“Over time, after the technology has established itself, one would expect there would be a decrease in fatalities,” said Raj Rajkumar, a computer engineering professor at Carnegie Mellon University, Pennsylvania, who leads its autonomous vehicle research. “But this is too premature to make this claim. Tesla’s technology is known to be imperfect.”
In May, an Ohio man using Autopilot died when his Tesla Model S failed to spot a tractor-trailer crossing a divided highway. Neither the car nor the driver braked and the Model S crashed into the side of the trailer. US federal investigators are looking into Autopilot’s role in the crash.
Tesla’s Autopilot, introduced last year, can maintain a set speed and distance and keep the car in its lane, but the technology works mainly on highways and must be monitored by the driver. Autopilot will turn itself off if drivers have their hands off the wheel for too long.
Musk said Autopilot has already shown itself to be safer than humans.
He tweeted earlier this month that Tesla vehicles have been driven about 357 million kilometers in Autopilot mode, with one confirmed driver death. By comparison, the US fatality rate in 2014 was 2.16 deaths per 322 million kilometers traveled, according to US government data.
The new autonomous system has been in testing for more than a year, and Musk said it could cut worldwide deaths in half if all cars used it.
Rajkumar was skeptical and called the Tesla announcement “marketing hype.”
He said people should be skeptical of Tesla’s claims because of the Florida crash.
Self-driving technology “still needs to prove itself,” he said, adding that it has trouble operating in dense urban traffic and inclement weather.
Consumer Reports magazine is also concerned about semi-autonomous systems such as those that allow a car to steer itself. The magazine believes automakers like Tesla “should take stronger steps to ensure that vehicles with these systems are designed, deployed and marketed safely,” it said.
The new Tesla vehicles are to use Tesla-developed software and have more sensors. They will have eight cameras, compared with one in previous models, as well as advanced sonar and greater computing capacity.
Tesla said the system is fully autonomous and can work on city streets as well as highways. Buyers can pay US$3,000 for Autopilot or US$8,000 for the full self-driving system.

http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/biz/archives/2016/10/22/2003657649

WHO- -
WHAT-Self-driving cars hold the promise of saving thousands of lives 
WHEN- -
WHERE- US
HOW- -
WHY- -

KEYWORDS- criticized,autonomous,circumstances.,premature, Autopilot, inclement 

Self-driving cars hold the promise of saving thousands of lives each year on US roads, but does pointing out flaws with the technology effectively put people in danger?

Japan searches for quake survivors

Shaken residents of a southern Japanese island rocked by a powerful earthquake that left at least nine dead lined up for water in rubble-strewn streets yesterday, with many facing a second night of uncertainty away from their ruined homes.
Rescuers continued to search through damaged buildings for possible survivors after the violent quake that also injured hundreds, although officials said the death toll was unlikely to rise significantly.
In Taipei, President Ma Ying-jeou (馬英九) sent a letter to Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe to extend the nation’s sympathies after the massive earthquake that struck Kumamoto Prefecture on Thursday night, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs said.
The letter was forwarded to the Interchange Association, Japan through Taiwan’s representative office in Tokyo, the ministry said.
Tens of thousands of people fled their homes after the magnitude 6.5 quake struck the southwestern island of Kyushu, leaving lumps of concrete strewn in the streets.
Houses collapsed, factories stopped work and a high-speed train was derailed, while the roof of the treasured Kumamoto Castle in the southern city of the same name was also damaged.
“We tried our best to take all our belongings and go to a shelter by car,” said Haruki Ito, 62, whose house tilted 45 degrees after the quake.
“Our dogs got so scared and hid themselves inside the collapsed house,” he said, adding that he hoped he and his wife could stay in a local shelter with their pets.
Dozens of aftershocks followed the quake, which struck at 9:26pm on Thursday, and officials said the death toll could still rise as rescuers scoured the collapsed structures.
As rescue workers toiled through the night hours after the quake struck, an eight-month-old baby girl was pulled from the rubble alive and unharmed.
“As far as we can tell from infrared images from a police helicopter, there appears to be a significant number of houses destroyed or half-collapsed,” Japanese Minister of State for Disaster Management Taro Kono said.
Rescuers were concentrating their searches in Mashiki, near the epicenter of the quake, where eight of the nine deaths occurred.
On the streets, the remains of collapsed houses — many of them aged, wooden structures — could be seen, and damaged roof tiles lay in piles.
A rescue team with several search dogs patrolled around half-collapsed houses in the town, but no new deaths had been announced for more than 14 hours.
Scores of people spent the night huddled in front of Mashiki’s town hall, some in tears, while others wrapped themselves in blankets to ward off the night chill.
By yesterday afternoon, the government said it had confirmed that 881 people were injured, at least 52 seriously. An official from the local Kumamoto disaster agency said at least nine were dead.
However, Japanese Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga said at a regular press conference that the death toll was unlikely to sharply increase, but that search operations were continuing just to make sure. He added that Abe plans to visit Kumamoto today to meet victims.
Gen Aoki, a Japan Meteorological Agency seismologist, urged residents to be on guard for more aftershocks and warned that rain in coming days could make the situation worse.
About 24,900 households in Kumamoto have been left without water, according to the government, a big improvement from an earlier figure of about 57,000.

http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/front/archives/2016/04/16/2003644063
WHO-Shaken residents 
WHAT-Japanese island rocked by a powerful earthquake that left at least nine dead lined up for water in rubble-strewn streets
WHEN-yesterday
WHERE-Japanese island
HOW- -

KEYWORDS- magnitude, rubble,agency ,seismologist, survivors

Shaken residents of a southern Japanese island rocked by a powerful earthquake that left at least nine dead lined up for water in rubble-strewn streets yesterday, with many facing a second night of uncertainty away from their ruined homes

2016年12月26日 星期一

Galaxy Note 7 death to hurt Vietnam

The fallout from Samsung Electronics Co’s dramatic move to end production of its Galaxy Note 7 smartphone is set to spread to Vietnam, hurting an economy already hit by drought and lower oil prices.
“Samsung’s decision to kill off Galaxy Note 7 will certainly impact Vietnam’s exports this year,” since the company’s exports represent about 20 percent of the nation’s shipments, said Nguyen Mai, chairman of Vietnam’s Association of Foreign Invested Enterprises.
The recall of 2.5 million smartphones after complaints of exploding batteries contributed to a US$1.1 billion decline in exports last month, Vietnam’s General Statistics Office said.
Samsung helped to turn Vietnam into an electronics manufacturing hub almost single-handedly with US$15 billion in investments from the technology giant and its affiliates, including battery-maker Samsung SDI Co.
The South Korean company is Vietnam’s biggest exporter, shipping about US$33 billion of electronics last year.
Vietnam now faces the loss of millions of US dollars in exports at a time when its struggling to meet its economic growth target of 6.7 percent for this year.
Part of the reason for the 6.8 percent decline in exports last month from the previous month was due to the Note 7 recall, statistics office head Nguyen Bich Lam said.
“It’s another blow,” said Alan Pham, the Ho Chi Minh City-based chief economist at VinaCapital Group Ltd, the country’s largest fund manager.
“This is the risk of putting all your bets on one company or industry, but that is the natural progression of a developing country: It starts by exporting commodities then turns to manufactured products, industrial products,” he said.
Even before the Note 7 fallout, Vietnam was struggling to meet its target of 10 percent export growth this year, Vietnamese Trade and Industry Minister Tran Tuan Anh said in a July interview.
Still, Vietnam’s economic growth is better than neighboring countries, Pham said.
Vietnam’s annual economic growth accelerated to 6.4 percent last quarter, from 5.78 percent in the previous three months, the Vietnamese General Statistics Office said on Sept. 29, behind only the Philippines in Southeast Asia. The government is pushing for 6.7 percent growth target this year.
Earlier this month local news Web sites reported that Samsung had applied to the customs department for tax exemptions to re-import flawed Galaxy Note 7 smartphones and export replacements to Samsung’s headquarters in South Korea.
The company declined to comment on ending production of the Note 7.
“Samsung told me earlier this month that they have no lay-off plans for now as smartphones are just a part of their production portfolio,” said Mai, who estimated the total workforce tied to Samsung in Vietnam is about 400,000 people, including 130,000 direct workers.

http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/biz/archives/2016/10/13/2003657036&gws_rd=cr&ei=ic9hWNbpIMOc8QW38Z2IBw

WHO- -
WHAT- Samsung Electronics Co’s dramatic move to end production of its Galaxy Note 7 smartphone is set to spread to Vietnam
WHEN- -
WHERE- Vietnam
WHY- -
HOW- -

KEYWORDS-  fallout ,exploding, affiliates,progression ,commodities,accelerated,exemptions, portfolio


The fallout from Samsung Electronics Co’s dramatic move to end production of its Galaxy Note 7 smartphone is set to spread to Vietnam, hurting an economy already hit by drought and lower oil prices.

2016年12月12日 星期一

Japan quakes leave at least 35 dead

Army troops and other rescuers yesterday rushed to save scores of trapped residents after a pair of strong earthquakes in southwestern Japan killed at least 35 people, injured about 1,500 and left hundreds of thousands without electricity or water.
Rainfall was forecast to start pounding the area soon, threatening to further complicate the relief operation and set off more mudslides in isolated rural towns, where people were waiting to be rescued from collapsed homes.
Kumamoto Prefecture official Riho Tajima said the death toll stood at 22 from the magnitude 7.3 earthquake that shook the Kumamoto region on the southwestern island of Kyushu early yesterday. On Thursday night, Kyushu was hit by a magnitude 6.5 quake that left 10 dead.
Japanese media reported that nearly 200,000 homes were without electricity and that drinking-water systems had also failed in the area. Television footage showed people huddled in blankets, sitting or lying down shoulder-to-shoulder on the floors of evacuation centers. An estimated 400,000 households were without running water.
Japanese Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga said that 1,500 people had been injured in the quakes. Tajima said that 184 people were injured seriously and that more than 91,000 people had been evacuated from their homes. More than 200 homes and other buildings were either destroyed or damaged, she said.
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe expressed concerns about secondary disasters as forecasters predicted rain and strong winds later in the day. With soil already loosened by quakes, rainfall can set off mudslides.
“Daytime today is the big test” for rescue efforts, Abe said.
Landslides have already cut off roads and destroyed bridges, slowing down rescuers.
Police received reports of 97 cases of people trapped or buried under collapsed buildings, while 10 people were caught in landslides in three municipalities in the prefecture, Japan’s Kyodo news agency reported.
Kumamoto Prefecture has been rocked by aftershocks, including the strongest with a magnitude of 5.4 yesterday morning. The Japan Meteorological Agency said that the magnitude 7.3 quake early yesterday might have been the main one, with one from Thursday night a precursor.
The quakes’ epicenters have been relatively shallow — about 10km — resulting in more severe shaking and damage. National broadcaster NHK said as many as eight quakes were being felt per hour in the area.
Suga told reporters that the number of troops in the area was being raised to 20,000, while additional police and firefighters were also on the way.
He urged people not to panic.
“Please let us help each other and stay calm,” Suga said in a nationally televised news conference.
Kyushu island’s Mount Aso, the largest active volcano in Japan, erupted for the first time in a month, sending smoke rising about 100m into the air, but no damage was reported.
The Nuclear Regulation Authority reported no abnormalities at Kyushu’s Sendai nuclear plant.

WHO-Army troops,  residents 
WHAT- a pair of strong earthquakes in southwestern Japan killed at least 35 people
WHEN-  yesterday
WHERE-Japan
WHY- -
HOW- -

keywords- magnitude ,earthquakes, mudslides ,erupted,abnormalities

Army troops and other rescuers yesterday rushed to save scores of trapped residents after a pair of strong earthquakes in southwestern Japan killed at least 35 people, injured about 1,500 and left hundreds of thousands without electricity or water.


http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/front/archives/2016/04/17/2003644128

Visions of life on Mars in Earth’s depths

More than a kilometer down in an unused mine tunnel, scientists guideds by helmet lamp trudged through darkness and the muck of a flooded, uneven floor.
In the subterranean world of the Beatrix Gold Mine, they shed their backpacks, took out tools and meticulously prepared test tubes to collect samples.
Leaning a ladder against the hard rock wall, Tullis Onstott, a geosciences professor at Princeton University, climbed to open an old valve about 3.66m up.
Out flowed water chock-full of microbes, organisms flourishing not from the warmth of the sun, but by heat generated from the interior of the planet below.
These tiny life-forms — bacteria, other microbes and even little worms — exist in places nearly impossible to reach, living in eternal darkness, in hard rock.
Scientists like Onstott have been on the hunt for life in the underworld, not just in South Africa, but in mines in South Dakota and at the bottom of oceans.
What they learn could provide insights into where life could exist elsewhere in the solar system, including Mars.
Microbial Martians might well look like what lives in the rocks in the deep underground mine.
The same conditions almost certainly exist on Mars. Drill a hole there, drop these organisms in, and they might happily multiply, fueled by chemical reactions in the rocks and drips of water.
“As long as you can get below the ice, no problems,” Onstott said. “They just need a little bit of water.”
Mars has long been a focus of space exploration and science fiction dreams. NASA has sent more robotic probes there than any other planet. However, now there is renewed interest in sending people as well. NASA has been enthusiastically promoting its “Journey to Mars” goal to send astronauts there in the 2030s. Elon Musk, the billionaire founder of SpaceX, is promising that he will be able to get there a decade sooner and set up colonies.
Astronauts on Mars would be able to greatly accelerate the quest for answers to the most intriguing questions about the red planet. Was there ever life on Mars? Could there be life there today?
It was not that long ago that scientists had written off Mars as lifeless.
Forty years ago, NASA spent about US$1 billion on its Viking program, which revealed a cold, dry world seemingly devoid of organic molecules that are the building blocks of life.
However, more recent missions have discovered compelling evidence that Mars was not always such an uninviting place. In its youth, more than 3 billion years ago, the planet was warmer and wetter, blanketed with a thick atmosphere — possibly almost Earthlike.
A fanciful, but plausible notion is that life did originate on Mars, then traveled to Earth via meteorites, and we are all descendants of Martians.
Eventually, Mars did turn cold and dry. Radiation broke apart the water molecules and the lighter hydrogen atoms escaped to space. The atmosphere thinned to wisps.
However, if life did arise on Mars, might it have migrated to the underworld and persisted?
For a couple of decades, Onstott has been talking his way into South African gold mines, regaling the mine managers with the wonder of deep-Earth life to overcome their wariness. In many ways, the mines provide easy access to the depths — a ride in a cage-like elevator, jammed against miners starting their shift, descending quickly as lights from the different levels zip past. Think of it as traveling through a 450-story skyscraper, going down.

WHO- scientists
WHAT-guided by helmet lamps trudged through darkness and the muck of a flooded, uneven floor.
WHEN- -
WHERE-More than a kilometer down in an unused mine tunnel
HOW-by helmet lamp
WHY- -
keywords- trudged,  subterranean, meticulously, microbes, 
http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/editorials/archives/2016/09/16/2003655234




More than a kilometer down in an unused mine tunnel, scientists guideds by helmet lamp trudged through darkness and the muck of a flooded, uneven floor.