November 16, 2009

Australian Leader Apologizes for Child Migrants

Australia:  The children were gathered up by the tens of thousands, some of them as young as 3, taken from single mothers and impoverished families in Britain, then sent abroad for what was supposed to be a better start in life. What they found was isolation, physical and sexual abuse, and what the prime minister of Australia said Monday was “the absolute tragedy of childhoods lost.”

In an emotional address in Canberra, with many in the audience weeping, Prime Minister Kevin Rudd issued a national apology for Australia’s role in child migrant programs that forcibly brought an estimated 150,000 British youngsters — known in Australia as the Lost Innocents — to Australia, Canada and other parts of the Commonwealth.

“We come together today to deal with an ugly chapter of our nation’s history and we come together today to offer our nation’s apology,” Mr. Rudd said. “The truth is this is an ugly story and its ugliness must be told without fear or favor if we are to confront fully the demons of our past.”

He said Australia was “sorry for the physical suffering, the emotional starvation, and the cold absence of love of tenderness of care.”
A 1998 report by the British Parliament said that the child migrant program helped relieve financial burdens on Britain’s social service agencies. Also, the report noted, “a further motive was racist: the importation of ‘good white stock’ was seen as a desirable policy objective” that would “maintain the racial unity of the Empire.”

The British prime minister, Gordon Brown, is expected to add Britain’s apology soon.

Mr. Rudd also expressed regret Monday about the so-called Forgotten Australians, those children who were placed in state institutions — and suffered there — during the 20th century. A 2004 Senate report said more than 500,000 children were placed in foster homes and orphanages during the last century. Many of those children, the report said, were abused.
“The truth is,” said Mr. Rudd, “a great evil has been done.”
“Today is your day,” said the opposition leader, Malcolm Turnbull, who also spoke at the Canberra ceremony. “Today we acknowledge that with broken hearts and breaking spirits you were left in the custody — you can hardly call it care — of too many people whose abuse and neglect of you made a mockery of the claim you were taken from your own family for your own good.”
Rod Braydon, 65, in an interview with The Associated Press, said he was 6 years old when he was raped by a Salvation Army officer. It was his first night in a Melbourne boys’ home.

“When we reported this as kids, we were flogged to within an inch of our lives, locked up in dungeons and isolation cells,” Mr. Braydon said.
He reportedly has received a cash settlement from the Salvation Army and has sued the Victoria state government.
John Hennessey, 72, from Campbelltown, near Sydney, was a former child migrant who cooperated with the 1998 British parliamentary inquiry. On Monday, he told The A.P. he was 6 when he was sent from a British orphanage to a boys’ school in Western Australia.
Mr. Hennessey still speaks with a stutter that was caused, he said, by a savage beating he received from an Australian headmaster when he was 12. He said his transgression was stealing grapes from a vineyard because he was hungry.

November 15, 2009

Visit a hamam, step back in time to old Yemen

Yemenis flock to traditional Turkish-style bathhouses
SANAA : A hint of incense in the dark and narrow alleys leading to the 410-year-old Hamam al-Abhar in the Yemeni capital's old city reminds the visitor that each step taken is one farther back into history.
For centuries, the traditional Turkish-style bathhouse, hamam in Arabic, has been a cornerstone of life in the Middle East, a place for social gatherings as well as for ritual cleansing.
Many hamams are also architectural jewels in their own right. Inside Hamam al-Abhar men of all ages relax after their steam bath in rounded halls where beams of natural light stream through holes in dome-shaped ceilings.
Sanaa has been inhabited for more than 2,500 years, and its old quarter, a UNESCO World Heritage site, has 14 hamams in an architectural treasure trove of 103 mosques and more than 6,000 houses, all built before the 11th century.
On arrival at Hamam al-Abhar, bathers leave their traditional daggers and long white robes in lockers before indulging in the age-old ritual.
Many believe a visit to the hamam helps to keep disease at bay, while others swear it does wonders for sexual prowess.
For 65-year-old jeweler Ismail Abu Taleb, the hamam is a place where friends can discuss the issues of the day as they chew qat, the mildly narcotic leaves used daily by most Yemenis.
"I live in the old city and visit this hamam almost every day," he told AFP. "For many people, all these surroundings are remnants of a glorious history, but for us history is part of our daily lives."
Boosting sex life
Hashem al-Hamzei, a 30-year-old merchant with two wives, says he comes to the bathhouse four days a week both to bathe and also to boost his sex life.
"The hot water and the massage makes your blood circulate better and makes you a better man during the night," he said, explaining that he divides the days of the week between his two women -- and also takes a day off.
"Tuesday is my private day. I come here to bathe, enjoy time with my friends. On that day I cannot look at any woman."
Hamzei said that most of the young generation in Yemen visit hamams for the same reason. "The hamam is just the beginning. Then chewing the qat makes you feel like a tiger," he added with a smile.
The first stage of the ritual is the warm room, where bathers perspire in a flow of hot dry air as they sit on stone black benches.
The next room is warm and humid. Here customers wash, and the soapy water runs away through gutters cut into the floor.
In the hot massage parlor, a masseur pummels vigorously at a client, working on his legs, hands, stomach and back.
For women only
The hamam's doors also open at other times for women only, especially on Thursdays, the weekend in Yemen when most weddings take place.
"On the wedding day special rituals are observed for both bride and groom," said Yehya al-Sadik, 40, one of the owners of Hamam al-Abhar.
"After the bride takes a steam bath, special oil and incense is used on her body to prepare her for the big night."
The cost of a visit to the bathhouse varies between 200 riyals (one dollar) and 2,000 riyals.
"As soon as the client enters the hamam, he is charged 200 riyals and then the price depends on what the client wants. For each service there is a price. That may also include lunch inside the hamam," said Sadik.

Many Yemenis also believe visiting the hamam is good for the health, and that a day there is better than any prescription from the doctor.
Some also say it is a natural remedy to combat swine flu, the potentially deadly A(H1N1) virus sweeping the world.
"My son Mohammed is suffering from flu, so I bring him here for a daily bath. The hot water and steam are better than any medicine," said Khaled Rafiq, 39.

Japan to operate solar energy station in outer space

TOKYO: The Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) has big plans, as it wants to conquer outer space to generate solar energy by 2030.

The idea is to collect solar power in space and beam it down to earth, in the form of lasers or microwaves. The so-called Space Solar Power System project is led by big corporations such as Mitsubishi, NEC, Fujitsu und Sharp.
As a first step, JAXA wants to deploy photovoltaic elements in outer space where they will be assembled in the form of dishes several square kilometers in size. Solar energy in space is about five times stronger than on earth, and the solar energy will be transformed into power in space.
The dishes are supposed to zap the lasers and microwaves to gigantic parabolic antennae located on earth, probably in remote areas such as dam reservoirs, for example. JAXA wants to begin conducting feasibility tests with a 100-kW demo system before eventually boosting that number to 1 Gigawatt.

NASA readies space shuttle Atlantis for Monday launch

WASHINGTON: The US space agency was readying for the launch Monday of the space shuttle Atlantis and its crew of seven astronauts to deliver equipment that will maintain the nearly completed International Space Station.

Lift-off is set for 1928 GMT from the Kennedy Space Centre near Cape Canaveral, Florida, NASA said Saturday.
"Atlantis is ready to go, in really great shape," said shuttle launch manager Mike Moses at a press conference broadcast on NASA television.
"Here at Kennedy Space Center weather should be very good," said Meteorologist Kathy Winters, adding that there was just a ten percent chance of weather prohibiting the launch.
Captained by Marine Corps colonel Charlie Hobaugh, the all-male crew arrived Thursday at Kennedy Space Center from Houston, Texas, where the astronauts are based.
The shuttle mission is set to include three spacewalks aimed at storing space hardware on the exterior of the orbiting outpost.
The 11-day space outing will be the fifth and last shuttle mission for 2009.
There are just five more shuttle launches scheduled before the planned September 2010 retirement of the fleet.

British commander urges on winning Afghan hearts

LONDON: The British government has faced repeated accusations that troops are being put at increased risk because of insufficient equipment and helicopters.

But Lieutenant General Nick Parker, the British deputy commander of NATO forces in Afghanistan insisted shortages of kit were not to blame for his 26-year-old son Harry losing both legs in a booby-trap bomb in July.
Parker told the News of the World that the equipment supplied to British troops was right for the job they are doing.
He suggested that the key to stemming casualties and achieving military success in the country was not more helicopters but a strategy to win the hearts and minds of local people by getting out into their communities.
"Rather than asking for more helicopters -- which may be a requirement -- what we've got to do is develop tactics that get you out and amongst the people and re-establish ourselves as a force for good in the community," he told the newspaper.
"I know my view, as a fat general sitting behind a desk, will be treated with derision... (but) I genuinely believe there is no need to buy extra kit.
"I'm absolutely convinced that what Harry was given was right for what he was doing. However, nothing was ever going to stop his leg getting blown off."
A total of 232 British personnel have lost their lives in Afghanistan since 2001.