মঙ্গলবার, ৩০ এপ্রিল, ২০১৩

Malaysia's opposition banks on new economic deal

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia (AP) ? With less than a week to general elections, Malaysia's opposition alliance is banking on the promise of bold change to end the governing coalition's 56-year rule. It says a new economic playing field will strip away decades of race-based policies that it believes bred corruption and hampered growth

The three-party opposition alliance led by former Deputy Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim says it cannot be business as usual in Malaysia, where affirmative action policies that favor majority ethnic Malays in business, jobs and education have polarized the country and suppressed its economic competitiveness.

Despite posting robust economic growth in the past decade, the opposition says the cost of living has surged in Southeast Asia's third largest economy, outpacing rise in wages. The country is lagging behind many of its Asian peers such as Taiwan and South Korea, as its race-based policies fueled a brain drain abroad. Corruption is endemic, and the government ran a budget deficit for the last 15 years, swelling the national debt.

Anwar's People's Alliance promises a more competitive merit-based system and a clean break from what it calls a corrupt past if it wins May 5 national polls.

Its election manifesto says it will end monopolies in sectors such as telecommunications, rice and sugar that kept prices high. It will review suspicious government concessions, abolish highway tolls, cut taxes to lower car prices and free up civil liberties.

"This election offers a possibility of a political transition of power. The campaign will come down to who can deliver more genuine and fundamental reforms and who will give them a better deal," said Bridget Welsh, a political science professor at Singapore Management University.

Anwar's alliance surged into political prominence in 2008 elections when it won more than a third of seats in the federal parliament and gained control of several states. It was the biggest blow for Prime Minister Najib Razak's National Front coalition since independence from Britain in 1957 and was spurred by discontent about corruption and racial and religious discrimination.

The keystone of the opposition policies is reform of preferential treatment started in 1971 to lift Malays, who account for 60 percent of Malaysia's 29 million people, from poverty after race riots. The policies are credited with enlarging the Malay middle class and putting 20 percent of corporate wealth in Malay hands, but the opposition says the system has been abused to enrich the well-connected elite and distorted the economy. Many contracts go to businesses with links to the ruling party, which has created a powerful culture of cronyism and a nexus between politics and business.

Najib, 59, who is seeking his first mandate at the polls since becoming prime minister in 2009, has taken on the reform mantle to counter the opposition.

He has embarked on a series of economic and government transformation efforts to revamp his coalition's image, including abolishing security laws widely considered repressive, wooing investment from abroad and bolstering public welfare including cash handouts for civil servants and the poor.

With his battlecry of "1 Malaysia," Najib also trimmed affirmative action policies but is restrained by hardliners in his ruling Malay party. He has pointed to the National Front's stewardship that turned Malaysia from an agricultural backwater into a modern, stable nation.

Malaysia's focus on heavy industries and manufacturing in the 1980s drew multinational corporations to its shores but it has since lost out to neighboring countries as a low-cost manufacturing base. Government spending in the last decade helped bolster growth as foreign investment ebbed.

A 2011 World Bank report said Malaysia's brain drain was intensifying with more than one million of its citizens, mainly ethnic Chinese, living in Singapore and other countries largely due to higher wages, unhappiness over poor governance and lack of meritocracy. It warned the outflow of skilled people could bog down Malaysia's economy.

Najib insists his government is on a reform path, with Malaysia on track to become a developed nation by 2020. He has warned an opposition win would bring economic ruin and political chaos.

"Certain politicians are talking about change but what is it you want to change? Do you want to change from peace and harmony to a country full of conflict and violence? Do you want to change the economic success that we have achieved?" he said at a mammoth political rally last week.

The concern resonates with some voters, who fear differences among the three parties in the opposition alliance may hinder their ability to govern nationally.

The alliance comprises Anwar's multi-racial People's Justice Party, the Democratic Action Party dominated by ethnic Chinese and the conservative Islamic Party. The three parties first worked together in 2008 by agreeing not to contest the same seats. They have deepened their alliance since then, unveiling a common election manifesto for the first time and setting aside differences over the Islamic Party's ambition to set up an Islamic state.

Unlike the 13-party National Front dominated by Najib's ruling Malay party, the three opposition parties are equals in the alliance.

Anwar, a former deputy premier and finance minister who was sacked in 1998 and subsequently jailed for sodomy and corruption, was credited for bringing the parties together after his release from jail in 2004. Anwar, who says the charges were politically motivated, made a political comeback in a by-election after 2008 polls.

Anwar, 65, says weeding out corruption, fixing economic distortions due to race-based policies and better economic management can save the country billions of dollars a year. His alliance is hoping the momentum in 2008 polls will catapult them into federal power, eyeing support from about a third of new voters among 13.3 million people eligible to vote on Sunday.

The political threat has caused anxiety in Najib's camp, which has embarked on an extensive publicity blitz. Welsh estimated the coalition spent 100 million ringgit ($33 million) on advertisements on websites such as Yahoo, mass media, billboards and sending millions of text messages to voters' mobile phones.

Banners of Najib and his achievements flutter along streets in Malaysia's cities and rural villages. "Who says change is good for you?" declares one of dozens of full-page advertisements in mainstream newspapers, citing turmoil after revolts in Middle East nations.

Most analysts, however, believe Najib's coalition has the upper hand due to deep pockets and support in predominantly rural constituencies that are the key to a large number of Parliament's seats.

Anwar has pointed to his alliance's track record in the last five years in Penang and Selangor, two of the country's most industrialized states. Government contracts have been awarded through open tenders rather than behind closed doors, and state officials have to declare their assets. Fiscal prudence has also reversed state budget deficits while the poor in Penang have received cash handouts and water is subsidized in Selangor.

In northern Penang state, an industrial hub also famed for its beaches and cultural heritage, the opposition has embarked on an ambitious 6.3 billion ringgit ($2.1 billion) project to build Southeast Asia's first seabed tunnel linking Penang island to the mainland part of the state and three highways to alleviate daily traffic snarls.

The record is more mixed in two poorer northern Malay-majority states that are reliant on federal funds, but opposition officials said corruption is minimal in the state government administration. The four opposition states jointly contribute about 36 percent to gross domestic product.

"The last five years, if anything, is an indication of our ability to govern and to do well without corruption, that things will not crumble," said opposition strategist Rafizi Ramli, who helped draw up the election manifesto and is also a candidate.

"Our biggest achievement is to give hope to the people that there can be a credible alternative to the National Front, that there can be a better Malaysia," he said.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/malaysias-opposition-banks-economic-deal-065126402.html

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Mitch McConnell Wants to be the Republican Party's Chief Tech Innovator

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell has set an ambitious goal for his reelection campaign: to build the most sophisticated Republican digital and data operation to date.

The 71-year old Kentucky Republican, known more as tactician than technologist, is making a major investment in technology infrastructure in hopes that a treasure trove of real-time data about the electorate will help guide him to a sixth term.

?We?re making a commitment that we?re going to be on the cutting edge of both digital outreach and data collection and analysis,? said Jesse Benton, McConnell?s campaign manager. ?We?re committed to setting the gold standard.?

The McConnell operation, which is sitting on $8.6 million and likely to the be one of, if not the best-funded campaign in the nation next year, will be a crucial test case for Republicans who are desperate to close the technological divide that Democrats, led by President Obama?s political apparatus, have opened up on them.

The recent Republican Party ?autopsy? of its shortcomings listed high-quality data collection and deployment as among the party?s greatest weaknesses. The McConnell team campaign sees itself as a pilot program to fix the problem, road-testing new methods for the GOP that, if successful, could be adopted more broadly by Republican campaigns.

McConnell still doesn?t have any credible opposition, either in the form of a tea party insurgent from the right or a prominent Democratic challenger. But his woeful approval ratings have Democrats believing they could still knock him out.

So 18 months before the 2014 election, the McConnell campaign is busy building dozens of personalized experiences for its website visitors. They are measuring Kentucky voters? emotional state in real-time. And, perhaps most importantly, they are matching up the Kentucky voter file with people?s digital presences, so individual voters can be tracked and targeted based on what they?re saying online.

Cyrus Krohn, one of the campaign?s data consultants, said they have already matched the voting records of close to 40 percent of Kentuckians ? more than 1 million voters ? with their online persona.

?That universe is large enough to model all kinds of things predictively,? said Krohn, who has split his career between the tech sector, at Microsoft and Yahoo!, and the political world, where he once worked for the Republican National Committee. Krohn?s latest venture is Crowdverb, a company he founded last year to perform live data-scrapping of what people are saying and how they are feeling online about a given topic (such as McConnell). Krohn calls it ?extracting human emotion in real time.?

Another McConnell consultant, Vincent Harris, who spearheaded online operations for the 2012 presidential campaigns of Rick Perry and then Newt Gingrich, said McConnell has promised to outspend either of those presidential-level efforts.

?They?re investing millions of dollars. It is a lot of money,? Harris said.

The McConnell campaign?s first quarter spending report doesn?t show that level of investment and Benton declined to comment on an exact digital and data budget. (Engage LLC, another digital company, was also by the McConnell campaign last quarter but they and the campaign have since parted ways. Patrick Ruffini, president of Engage, did not return a call for comment.)

Democrats are dubious that McConnell or the Republicans can close the technology gap in one fell swoop. Jeremy Bird, the national field director for Obama?s reelection campaign and now a partner at 270 Strategies, said many political campaigns end up chasing ?vanity metrics? by purchasing ?off the shelf vendor tools that any corporation or any candidate could buy.?

?So much of this stuff is overblown,? Bird said.

?The question is,? he added, ??Is your online presence connected to your offline get-out-the-vote operation in a meaningful way so you can take this operation that?s online and turn it into voters???

Benton, who previously ran Ron Paul?s presidential campaign, said the McConnell campaign knows those are the pitfalls. ?You can have all the data in the world and if you?re not integrating into the right outputs, it?s not going to do the job you?re going to need it to do,? he said.

For now, the McConnell campaign is engaged in the same kind of rigorous trial-and-error of digital schemes that the Obama campaign helped pioneer, from measuring effectiveness of email subject lines to the color palette and size of donation buttons.

?Does a green donation button work better than the red?? Harris asked. ?There?s a lot of testing going on which is something this campaign respects and values ? and most campaigns don?t.?

The language in a recent TV ad questioning ?how dirty will Obama?s allies get? in attacking McConnell was actually informed by the data-scrapping from Crowdverb, Benton said. The original script, as drafted, questioned ?how low? the Democrats would go.

?We found that, particularly a female audience [ages] 35- 55, that they responded to ?dirty? a lot better than ?low,?? said Benton. ?So we made that change.?

In addition, visitors to McConnell?s website get different experiences, depending on what they?ve done there before, Harris explained. If a person has donated after a guns-related email, then McConnell?s stance on the second amendment is front-and-front, for instance. If they?ve been back repeatedly, but not donated yet, the donate button may begin to grow in size.

All the various designs are then analyzed to see what was most effective. The goal is to turn curious web visitors into supporters, supporters into donors and donors into full-fledged activists.

But all those elements need eyeballs and Mitch McConnell is not the transcendent and motivating figure that Barack Obama was in 2007. So the campaign has made a big push to modernize his appeal.

The McConnell campaign recently produced a Harlem Shake video, has begun posting memes on its Facebook page (including this one, which stirred some controversy) and hired video-producing wunderkind Lucas Bainano to make splashy YouTube clips (including this one, though there are some questions about whether the McConnell campaign has inflated its page views).

Harris, a Texas-based consultant, said he had high hopes the McConnell campaign will help the GOP catch up to Obama?s digital and data prowess.

?Is there a gap? Yes. Is the gap fixable? Yes,? he said. ?The problem is Republican look to themselves to find the problem, Republicans look inside the Beltway and that has to stop.?

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/mitch-mcconnell-wants-republican-partys-chief-tech-innovator-140353245.html

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সোমবার, ২৯ এপ্রিল, ২০১৩

Fire breaks out at collapsed factory in Bangladesh

SAVAR, Bangladesh (AP) -- A fire broke out late Sunday in the wreckage of the garment factory that collapsed last week in Bangladesh, with smoke pouring from the piles of shattered concrete and some of the rescue efforts forced to stop.

The fire came four days after the collapse, as rescuers were trying to free a woman they found trapped in the rubble. The flames broke out when sparks were generated by those rescuers trying to cut through a steel rod to reach the woman, said a volunteer rescuer, Syed Al-Amin Roman. At least three rescue workers were injured in the fire, he said.

Rescuers have retreated from the part of the wreckage where the fire erupted, but were still trying to reach any possible survivors in other parts of the destroyed eight-story building.

Firefighters were frantically hosing down the flames.

"Hopefully we will be able to control it," said Brig. Gen. Mohammed Siddiqul Alam Shikder, who is overseeing rescue operations.

It wasn't immediately clear what happened to the trapped woman.

The fire came hours after the owner of the illegally-constructed building was captured Sunday at a border crossing with India.

Mohammed Sohel Rana was arrested in Benapole in western Bangladesh, just as he was about to flee into India's West Bengal state, said Jahangir Kabir Nanak, junior minister for local government. Rana was brought back by helicopter to the capital Dhaka where he faced charges of negligence.

Rana's capture brought cheers and applause when it was announced on a loudspeaker at the site of the collapsed building in the Dhaka suburb of Savar.

At least 377 people are confirmed to have died in the Wednesday collapse. Three of the building's floors were built illegally. The death toll is expected to rise but it is already the deadliest tragedy to hit Bangladesh's garment industry, which is worth $20 billion annually and is a mainstay of the economy. The collapse and previous disasters in garment factories have focused attention on the poor working conditions of workers who toil for as little as $38 a month to produce clothing for top international brands.

Bangladesh's garment industry was the third largest in the world in 2011, after China and Italy, having grown rapidly in the past decade. The country's minimum wage is the equivalent of about $38 a month.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/fire-breaks-collapsed-factory-bangladesh-165955376.html

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বুধবার, ৩ এপ্রিল, ২০১৩

Kevin Ware Broken Leg Photo: NSFW

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/04/kevin-ware-broken-leg-photo-nsfw/

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Wow, Watch This ATM Machine Get Blown to Bits and Pieces By Genius Thieves

If you're looking to steal money from an ATM, what do you do? Try to wheel it to your house and smash it until it opens? Continually rob people who try to take money out of the machine? Hmm, what about just blowing the freaking ATM up to smithereens with explosives. That's what these thieves did. The explosion was insane. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/oghIPEI7g1w/wow-watch-this-atm-machine-get-blown-to-bits-and-pieces-by-genius-thieves

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Suspect in Colo. prison chief death got out early

DENVER (AP) ? Because of a paperwork error, the suspect in last month's killing of Colorado's corrections chief was freed from prison in January ? four years earlier than authorities intended.

Judicial officials acknowledged Monday that Evan Spencer Ebel's previous felony conviction had been inaccurately recorded and his release was a mistake.

In 2008, Ebel pleaded guilty in rural Fremont County to assaulting a prison officer. In the plea deal, Ebel was to be sentenced to up to four additional years in prison, to be served after he completed the eight-year sentence that put him behind bars in 2005, according to a statement from Colorado's 11th Judicial District.

However, the judge did not say the sentence was meant to be "consecutive," or in addition to, Ebel's current one. So the court clerk recorded it as one to be served "concurrently," or at the same time. That's the information that went to the state prisons, the statement said.

So on Jan. 28, prisons officials saw that Ebel had finished his court-ordered sentence and released him. They said they had no way of knowing the plea deal was intended to keep Ebel behind bars for years longer.

Two months later, Ebel was dead after a shootout with authorities in Texas. The gun he used in the March 21 gunbattle was the same one used to shoot and kill prisons chief Tom Clements two days earlier. Police believe Ebel also was involved in the death of a Domino's Pizza delivery man, Nathan Leon, in Denver.

"The court regrets this oversight and extends condolences to the families of Mr. Nathan Leon and Mr. Tom Clements," said a statement signed by Charles Barton, chief judge of the 11th Judicial District, and court administrator Walter Blair.

Leon's father-in-law told The Associated Press he had no immediate comment.

Leon's widow told KUSA-TV in Denver the apology wouldn't cut it for the death of her husband and the father of her twin girls.

"It ain't going to bring Tom Clements back. It's not going to bring my children's father back. How do I tell my 4-year-olds, 'Daddy was murdered because of a clerical error'?" Katherine Leon said.

The court officials vowed to review their procedures to ensure the error isn't repeated.

"The Colorado Department of Corrections values its long-standing partnership with the 11th Judicial District and the district attorney's office to maintain order at the prisons in Canon City. We commend both the 11th Judicial District and the DOC for reviewing their own internal processes and procedures," Gov. John Hickenlooper's spokeswoman Megan Castle said in a written statement.

The attack that led to the plea deal took place in 2006. According to prison and court records, Ebel slipped out of handcuffs while being transferred from a cell and punched a prison officer in the face. He bloodied the officer's nose and finger, and threatened to kill the officer's family.

"If Mr. Ebel was prosecuted for an assault on an officer, it had to be pretty severe, because in the course of day-to-day work, correctional officers are regularly assaulted or threatened," said Pueblo County Commissioner Buffie McFadyen, who is executive director of the correctional officer group Corrections U.S.A.

"It sounds like a horrific oversight," she said of the mistake that led to Ebel's release this year. "It's a tragic clerical error."

Ebel spent much of his time behind bars in solitary confinement and had a long record of disciplinary violations. Records show he joined a white supremacist prison gang.

Ebel's early release was just the latest twist in a case full of painful ironies. His father is friends with Hickenlooper and had testified before the Colorado Legislature about the damage solitary confinement did to his son. Clements was worried about that very issue.

Hickenlooper raised the case with Clements when the governor hired him to come to Colorado in 2011. The Democratic governor said he never mentioned Ebel's name and the inmate received no special treatment.

___

Associated Press writer Catherine Tsai contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/suspect-colo-prison-chief-death-got-early-224924922.html

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