Asia

Cuando los árboles no dejan ver el bosque

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India contra Novartis
Karen Bocanegra
 Revista Pueblos

Después de varios aplazamientos, el día 10 de julio de 2012 es la nueva fecha establecida por el Tribunal Supremo de India, para dictar sentencia sobre la reclamación que mantiene la empresa Novartis desde el año 2006 por la patente de Glivec, un medicamento utilizado principalmente en el tratamiento de un tipo de cáncer sanguíneo conocido como leucemia mieloide crónica (LMC).

En este contexto, si la discusión se centra sólo en la patente de este fármaco, corremos el riesgo de que los árboles no nos dejen ver el bosque. Ciertamente, esta sentencia será definitiva para culminar un pleito legal que se ha extendido por seis años –definitiva sólo en el ámbito nacional, porque existe la posibilidad de que sea llevado a instancias internacionales-; pero su importancia no se limita a determinar si el fármaco debe o no ser patentado. Los alcances de esta decisión se extienden más allá, pues Novartis está cuestionando la esencia de la ley de patentes india, al poner en discusión las garantías que ésta ofrece para evitar el abuso de los derechos de patentes por parte de las empresas privadas. Marco legal de las patentes en India

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North Korea admits failed rocket launch

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State news agency says scientists investigating what went wrong after reports rocket broke up minutes after blast-off
North Korea's official news agency KCNA confirmed the rocket launch was a failure

A North Korean rocket launch has been confirmed as a "failure", the country's official news agency said, confirming earlier reports by neighbouring countries.

North Korea said on Friday that a satellite carried by the rocket launched earlier in the day did not enter orbit.

"The earth observation satellite failed to enter its preset orbit. Scientists, technicians and experts are now looking into the cause of the failure," North Korea's official KCNA news agency reported.

Kim Sung-hwan, South Korea's foreign minister, had earlier told journalists that the rocket disintegrated a few minutes after lift-off, losing altitude and showering debris into the ocean.


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Pakistani PM Gilani indicted for contempt

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Prime minister appears in country's top court to plead not guilty to charges that could cost him his job

The Pakistan supreme court on Friday threw out a last-ditch appeal from the embattled prime minister [Reuters]

Yousuf Raza Gilani, Pakistan's prime minister, has been charged with contempt of court by the country's supreme court, after he disobeyed a court order to open corruption cases against President Asif Ali Zardari.
Local television channels flashed the news less than half an hour after Gilani arrived on Monday at the courthouse, where he pleaded not guilty.
If convicted, Gilani faces six months in jail and disqualification from office in a case that has fanned political instability and may force elections.

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Dimite el presidente de Maldivas tras sublevarse la Policía

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El presidente de Maldivas, Mohamed Nasheed, ha presentado su dimisión después de que miembros de la Policía se hayan sublevado tras semanas de manifestaciones contra el Gobierno
 AzkenEzkmal.jpg
El presidente de Maldivas, Mohamed Nasheed, en una imagen captada de la televisión india NDTV. (AFP)

MALE-. El presidente de las islas Maldivas, Mohamed Nasheed, ha anunciado su dimisión en una rueda de prensa televisada en directo poco después de que un portavoz del palacio presidencial reconociera que un grupo de policías se ha sublevado y haya tomado la sede de la televisión pública en la capital, Male.
Nasheed ha afirmado que ha renunciado para evitar "el uso de la fuerza".
Poco antes, la oficina presidencial ha emitido un comunicado en el que llamaba a la población a "mantener la calma" y afirmaba que el presidente "trabaja con las otras instituciones para asegurar la paz y la estabilidad" del país.

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China y la crisis

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Guillermo Almeyra
La Jornada

La economía global está en crisis, pero no tiene los mismos efectos ni las mismas características y alcances en cada uno de sus principales componentes.
La economía de Estados Unidos, por ejemplo, ha tenido una leve recuperación, que se refleja en una pequeña reducción del número de desocupados, en una mayor producción industrial y en un poco más de ventas en el mercado de las viviendas nuevas y usadas. El dólar sigue siendo sostenido por el esfuerzo chino, por la compra china de bonos del Tesoro estadunidense, por las inversiones chinas, por las enormes ganancias que obtienen las empresas estadunidenses que desde China operan en todo el mundo y que, transformadas en dólares, retornan a Estados Unidos.

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China and India: Rival Middle East strategies

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 Nima Khorrami Assl
Nima Khorrami Assl is a security analyst at Transnational Crisis Project, London.
The Asian giants are making calculated geopolitical decisions when it comes to their strategy in the Middle East
 
Nearly six million Indians are employed in the GCC states [GALLO/GETTY]

London, United Kingdom - Claiming that a great deal of uncertainty hangs over the contemporary security/strategic environment in the Middle East is neither a novel statement nor an exaggeration. Although it is commonly acknowledged that the regional politics will have a stronger Islamic flavour in the years ahead, it is not at all clear how various Islamic parties will conduct themselves once in government, and how their political activism will affect extremist groups in the region and beyond. Similarly, while there is a general consensus that US power in the region is waning, the trajectory of this expected demise is yet to be determined; will it be a sudden fall or will it be a gradual one?
At the same time, certain projections can be made confidently - two of which make the whole picture more complicated. The Middle East is home to 65 per cent of proven global oil reserves and 45 per cent of its natural gas. Concentration of so much of the world's hydrocarbons in this geographical location implies that global dependency on the region is only going to grow, leading to intense geopolitical competition over access to the region's vast resources.

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Fallece el líder de Corea del Norte, Kim Jong-Il

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El líder de Corea del Norte, Kim Jong-Il, falleció el sábado de un infarto mientras viajaba en tren, según ha informado la agencia estatal KCNA. Su hijo Kim Jong-un será su sucesor y presidirá el funeral, el 28 de diciembre en Pyongyang. AzkenEzkko.jpg
Kim Jong-Il (derecha), su hijo Kim Jong-un (izquierda), en una fotografía tomada en setiembre en Pyongyang junto al presidente de Laos, Choummaly Sayasone. (AFP)

PYONGYANG-. La agencia de noticias KCNA ha informado hoy de que el líder de Corea del Norte, Kim Jong Il, murió a las 8.30 horas del sábado de un infarto, durante un viaje en tren.
Kim Jong-Il, de 69 años, había sufrido una apoplejía en agosto de 2008 y desde entonces había numerosos rumores sobre su estado de salud. Sus apariciones públicas han sido contadas y en ellas mostraba una figura cada vez más frágil, siempre con sus inseparables gafas de sol y el uniforme militar.
Este año, el líder norcoreano había viajado en mayo en su tren blindado a China, principal aliado y benefactor de Pyongyang, y en agosto viajo por el mismo medio al extremo oriente ruso.
"Nuestro querido líder Kim Jong-Il falleció el sábado 17 a las 8.30 de la mañana mientras viajaba para realizar sus funciones de liderazgo", ha señalado, entre lágrimas y con traje de luto, la presentadora de la televisión estatal, KCTV.

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Al menos 446 muertos y un millar de desaparecidos por inundaciones

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FILIPINAS

La tormenta tropical "Washi" ha causado graves inundaciones en el sur de Filipinas. Las autoridades prevén que el número de víctimas mortales aumentará
AzkenEzkfil.jpg
Inundaciones en Filipinas. (Cherryl VERGEYRE / AFP)

MANILA-. Al menos 446 personas han muerto y más de un millar han sido dadas por desaparecidas en las graves inundaciones que han causado en el sur de Filipinas las copiosas lluvias de la tormenta tropical "Washi".

Las autoridades prevén que el número de víctimas mortales aumentará a medida que progresen las operaciones de búsqueda y rescate en la región septentrional de la isla de Mindanao.

Hasta el anochecer y tras una jornada de trabajo, los equipos de emergencia y los soldados habían recuperado 446 cadáveres, la mayoría en la ciudad de Cagayan de Oro y en la vecina Iligan.

En el resto de localidades de la provincia de Zamboanga del Norte, la cifra provisional de víctimas ascendía a 26, ha indicado la Cruz Roja filipina.


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El partido Suu Kyi ha sido autorizado a presentarse a las elecciones

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MYANMAR

La formación liderada por la Nobel de la Paz Aung San Suu Kyi ha sido legalizada, por lo que tiene abierta la vía para pugnar en las próximas elecciones al Parlamento de Myanmar.

BANGKOK-. El diario "Nueva Luz de Myanmar" informa que el nuevo estatus de la Liga Nacional por la Democracia (LND) ha sido aprobado ayer mismo, tres semanas después de que una delegación del partido presentara en la Comisión Electoral la documentación para su inscripción, incluidos los 21 nombres que encabezan la formación.
La inscripción de la documentación en el registro de partidos políticos, último trámite del proceso, se completará en los próximos días y para ello Suu Kyi se desplazará hasta Naypyidaw, la capital, según ha indicado el portavoz de la Liga, Nyan Win.
Además de Suu Kyi, en calidad de secretaria general, en la lista figuran el hasta ahora vicepresidente de la Liga, Tin Oo, así como Win Tin, destacado miembro del comité ejecutivo, y representantes de diferentes etnias y del colectivo femenino de Myanmar.
El partido presentó el lunes nuevo logotipo de su bandera, en la que sobre un fondo de color rojo destacan una estrella blanca y un pavo real amarillo en posición de ataque.

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El partido de Suu Kyi se presentará a las elecciones parlamentarias

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MYANMAR

La Liga Nacional para la Democracia (LND), liderada por Aung Saan Suu Kyi, ha anunciado que pedirá su legalización y se presentará a las elecciones parlamentarias.

AzkenEzksu.jpg Aung San Suu Kyi interviene en la reunión de la Ejecutiva de su partido. (AFP)

RANGUN-. Los 106 miembros de la Ejecutiva central de la Liga Nacional por la Democracia que lidera la Premio Nobel de la Paz Aung Saan Suu Kyi han votado por unanimidad a favor de registrar las candidaturas del partido de cara a las elecciones parlamentarias parciales que tiene previsto convocar el Gobierno birmano para ocupar los escaños que están vacantes.
La decisión se ha adoptado a raíz de que el nuevo Gobierno, formado por ex generales del anterior régimen militar, retirara las restricciones legales que impedían su participación activa en la política.
"La LND ha decidido inscribirse de nuevo como partido y pugnar en las próximas elecciones por 48 escaños vacantes", ha anunciado Suu Kyi en una nota al final de la votación.
El partido de Suu Kyi, que ganó por amplia mayoría las elecciones celebradas en 1990 y cuyos resultados nunca han sido aceptados por los militares, fue ilegalizada por negarse a participar en los comicios de noviembre del año pasado, que boicoteó al considerar que eran antidemocráticos.


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The dead begin to speak up in India

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Kashmir is one of two war zones in India from which no news must come. But those in unmarked graves will not be silenced

Arundhati Roy

Kashmir unmarked graves
A Kashmiri farmer walks past unmarked graves in Bimyar, west of Srinagar, in 2009. Photograph: Mukhtar Khan/AP

    At about 3am, on 23 September, within hours of his arrival at the Delhi airport, the US radio-journalist David Barsamian was deported. This dangerous man, who produces independent, free-to-air programmes for public radio, has been visiting India for 40 years, doing such dangerous things as learning Urdu and playing the sitar.
    Barsamian has published book-length interviews with public intellectuals such as Edward Said, Noam Chomsky, Howard Zinn, Ejaz Ahmed and Tariq Ali (he even makes an appearance as a young, bell-bottom-wearing interviewer in Peter Wintonick's documentary film on Chomsky and Edward Herman's book Manufacturing Consent).
    On his more recent trips to India he has done a series of radio interviews with activists, academics, film-makers, journalists and writers (including me). Barsamian's work has taken him to Turkey, Iran, Syria, Lebanon and Pakistan. He has never been deported from any of these countries. So why does the world's largest democracy feel so threatened by this lone, sitar-playing, Urdu-speaking, left-leaning, radio producer? Here is how Barsamian himself explains it:

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The blacklisting of Rio Tinto - Part 1

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Too many invest in companies - such as Australia's Rio Tinto - without any consideration of the ethics of doing so
NAJ Taylor
 
Papuans protest against Freeport and Rio Tinto's Grasberg mine outside of Freeport's office in Jakarta [EPA]

Investing in conflict-affected and high-risk areas is a growing concern for responsible businesses and investors. Often times companies based in developed countries operate in lesser-developed foreign markets, where governance standards are lax, corruption is high and business practices are poor.
These pieces focus on one specific Anglo-Australian company and their American partner that jointly operate a mine in West Papua, one of the poorest provinces of Indonesia. The risks for the company include the potential to contribute to environmental and social damage in a foreign market. The risks for investors include financing a company that does not get its risk management right.

This is the first in a four-part essay that examines how the Norwegian Pension Fund came to blacklist Rio Tinto.

Part 1: The blacklisting of Rio Tinto

An ancient copper mine located near Huelva in southernmost Spain changed hands in 1873. A group of opportunistic Anglo-German investors, equipped with modern techniques that favored mining aboveground, acquired it from the Spanish government. The mine's copper had stained the surrounding water to such an extent that the indigenes named the river Rio Tinto - literally meaning "red river".

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West Papua: A history of exploitation - Part 2

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West Papua was taken over by Indonesia in 1969, and a legacy of oppression and environmental devastation has followed.
NAJ Taylor


The Grasberg mine has damaged surrounding river systems, such as the Ajikwa river above [West Papua Media]

 

Investing in conflict-affected and high-risk areas is a growing concern for responsible businesses and investors. Companies based in developed countries often operate in lesser-developed foreign markets, where governance standards are lax, corruption is high and business practices are poor.

These pieces focus on one specific Anglo-Australian company and their American partner that jointly operate a mine in West Papua, one of the poorest provinces of Indonesia. The risks for the company include the potential to contribute to environmental and social damage in a foreign market. The risks for investors include financing a company that does not get its risk management right.

Part 2: A history of exploitation

New Guinea, geographically as well as historically, is Australia's closest relative. Separated from the mainland during the last glacial period, the waters filled in what now separates them: about 152km of the Torres Strait.

While Australia and New Guinea both have enviable mineral stores, economic and political exploitation has left the latter as home to many of the poorest people on Earth. New Guinea is also an island of two histories.

The eastern half forms the independent state of Papua New Guinea - a status it has enjoyed since breaking from Australia in 1975. With its natural resources of oil and industrial metals, Papua New Guinea has long been exploited for its minerals at places like Ok Tedi and Bougainville.

Both projects ended in social and environmental disaster. The environmental impact of Ok Tedi was so great that, in 1999, Paul Anderson, then chief executive of Australian mining company BHP, conceded that the mine was "not compatible with our environmental values". But it did serve the company's pursuit of profit. It was not until the Ok Tedi environmental disaster three years later that the true impact of BHP's mining practices came to the attention of the global public. BHP subsequently sold its interest, established a fund to restore the sustainable development of the affected people, and received immunity from further prosecution.

BHP Billiton acknowledged that its mine at Ok Tedi was 'not compatible with our environmental values' [GALLO/GETTY]

The western half of New Guinea has had a lesser-known but equally tragic history centred around the Jayawijaya Mountain, home to the Amungme, and farther downstream, the Kamoro people. As with much of East Asia, the indigenes were under Dutch rule when a geological expedition in 1936 located a significant ertsberg (ore mountain) deep in the southwestern highlands. World War II intervened, and the Japanese claimed Indonesia and some of the western parts of New Guinea.

Following defeat in the war, the Japanese were marshalled back to their home territory, and Dutch colonialism resumed. Importantly, when Indonesian independence was obtained from the Dutch in 1949, few knew of the ertsberg (mineral ore) hidden deep in West Papua's wilderness.

The Dutch began a ten-year Papuanisation programme in 1957 that would see West Papua handed back to the indigenes, and would create the independent state of West Papua around 1972.

Despite multiple territorial claims, the ore mountain lay dormant for over 20 years.

On March 6, 1959, the New York Times reported the presence of alluvial gold in the Arafura Sea just off the coast of West Papua. Reminded of their earlier discovery, Dutch geologists were said to be returning to the ore mountain, now simply known as Ertsberg.

Independence denied

The indigenes, meanwhile, as part of their programme toward independence, established a Papuan National Council and provisional government as well as their own military, police force, currency, national anthem, and flag. At the time, West Papua's independence was due before the United Nations Decolonisation Commission, and representatives took part in various cultural and political activities throughout the region. By December 1, 1961, the West Papuan "Morning Star" flag had been raised alongside the Dutch for the first time. Many assumed that independence was imminent.

Unbeknown to both the indigenes and the Dutch, US mining company Freeport-McMoRan Copper and Gold was negotiating directly with Suharto - at the time an Indonesian army general - for a small group of its experts to prospect this ore mountain. The path into West Papua through Suharto promised to be fruitful for Freeport, since its board was stacked with the Rockefeller's Indonesian oil interests who already were versed in the general's way of doing business. An exploration agreement was reached, and soon after a geologist from Freeport was forging his way through the wilderness toward Ertsberg.

West Papua was about to change hands again.

Armed with Chinese and Soviet weapons, as well as an increasingly public friendship with the communists, Indonesia declared war on the Netherlands. To protect Western interests from the threat of communism, on August 15, 1962, the United Nations and the United States orchestrated a meeting between Dutch and Indonesian officials during which interim control of West Papua was signed over to Indonesia.

Six years of UN interregnum followed, after which a plebiscite would decide whether to form a separate nation or integrate into Indonesia. All 815,000 West Papuans were to vote in an Act of Free Choice.

To ensure a favourable outcome, the Indonesians worked to suppress Papuan identity. Raising the West Papuan flag and singing of the national anthem were banned, and all political activities were deemed subversive. Indonesia ruled through force, for self-interest. Alarmed by ongoing media reports, on April 5, 1967, in the British House of Lords, Lord Ogmore called for a UN investigation. By early 1968, with Suharto having assumed the presidency of Indonesia, a US consular visit almost unanimously agreed that "Indonesia could not win an open election" in West Papua.

West Papua still wanted its independence.

In a desperate attempt to secure West Papua's right to self-determination, two junior politicians crossed the border into Australian-administered Papua and New Guinea on May 29, 1969. They carried damning evidence of Indonesian repression; the hopes of a yet-unformed nation rested on the politicians reaching the UN. As Australia and its allies were amenable to Indonesian control of West Papua, the two were imprisoned upon crossing the border until after the referendum. Their brave plea was silenced.

Between July and August 1969, less than a quarter of one per cent of the population - some 1,026 West Papuans - signed the country's freedom over to Indonesia. The election, held under the aegis of the UN, was far from an act of free choice. The following day West Papua was declared a military operation zone, the local people's movement was restricted, and expression of their national identity banned under Indonesian law.

Poor, neglected West Papua.

Selling West Papua

Control of West Papua proved a lucrative business deal for the Indonesians. Two years prior to the Act of Free Choice - coincidentally on the same day the plight of Papua was raised in the House of Lords - Freeport signed a contract of work with the Suharto government entitling a jointly owned company, PT Freeport Indonesia (Freeport-Indonesia), full rights to the Ertsberg mine. In return, Indonesia would derive significant tax revenues and fees as well as a minority 9.36 per cent shareholding. Without the authority to do so, Indonesia nevertheless cut itself into a deal that sold large tracts of West Papua to the US company, intent on sifting it for copper and gold.

Although Ertsberg fulfilled its promise, as production slowed in the mid-1980s, Freeport-Indonesia began to explore surrounding mountains and ridges for other reserves. As is often the case, the best place to establish a new mine is next to another. Sure enough, significant copper and gold reserves were located at Grasberg only a couple of miles southwest of Ertsberg.

Grasberg has the largest recoverable reserves of copper and gold in the world. It's also Indonesia's economic beachhead.

Observing the Grasberg mine via Google Earth, one sees a scar like no other: Located about 13,000 feet (4,000 meters) above sea level, open-pit (above ground) mining has bored a hole through the top of the mountain more than half a mile (1 km) wide. What they're digging for is more than $40bn worth of copper and gold. Every day the operation discharges 230,000 tons of tailings (waste rock) into the Aghawagon River. This process is expected to continue for up to six more years, at which point exploration will go underground until there's no value left. Freeport estimates that will occur by 2041.

The operation is so large that it has shifted the borders of the adjacent Lorenz National Park. Listed as a World Heritage site by the UN's Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) in 1999, the park is "the only protected area in the world to incorporate a continuous, intact transect from snowcap to tropical marine environment, including extensive lowland wetlands". For the Amungme and Kamoro indigenes, corporate imperialism had replaced European colonialism.

The ramifications are both environmental and social.

'Slow-motion genocide'

The social and economic condition of the indigenous Amungme and Kamoro poses fundamental human rights concerns. Although Freeport-Indonesia directly or indirectly employs a large number of West Papuans and is regularly Indonesia's biggest taxpayer, in 2005, the World Bank found that Papua remained the poorest province in Indonesia. With a marked rise in military personnel and foreign staff has come a number of social issues, including alcohol abuse and prostitution such that Papua now has the highest rate of HIV/AIDS in Indonesia.

Indonesian control of West Papua has been characterised by the ongoing and disproportionate repression of largely peaceful opposition. Few sustained violent interactions have occurred; however, in one major conflict in 1977, more than 1,000 civilian men, women, and children were killed by the Indonesian military in Operasi Tumpas ("Operation Annihilation") after a slurry pipe was severed and partially closed the Ertsberg mine.

More recently, in 1995, the Australian Council for Overseas Aid reported that the Indonesian army and security forces killed 37 people involved in protests over the mine in the preceding seven-month period. While the level of violence is difficult to establish, academics at the Centre for Peace and Conflict Studies at the University of Sydney maintain that up to 100,000 West Papuans may have been killed since Indonesian occupation. They call what's happening to West Papua "slow-motion genocide".

"Grasberg's reserves are so vast that extracting them is expected to create 6 billion tons of industrial waste."

There are also two primary environmental concerns over Grasberg. The first is that the mine discharges 230,000 tons of waste rock a day into surrounding waterways; given the escalating rate of processing, this rate is arguably above that allowed by national law. Secondly, acid rock drainage - the outflow of acidic water - has resulted from the disposal of a further 360,000 to 510,000 tons a day of overburden and waste rock in two adjacent valleys covering 4 miles (6.5 km), up to 975 feet (300 metres) deep. The mine operators dispute both claims.

Riverine methods of waste disposal are banned in every developed country on Earth. The World Bank no longer funds projects that operate this way, due to the irreversible ecological devastation, and the International Finance Corporation requires that rock be treated prior to disposal, which is not a practice carried out at Grasberg. Since the mid-1990s, a number of independent environmental assessments have found unacceptably high levels of toxicity and sediment as far as 140 miles away.

Freeport and Rio Tinto maintain that riverine tailings disposal is the best solution, given the difficult terrain, the threat of earthquakes, and heavy rainfall.

Grasberg's reserves are so vast that extracting them is expected to create 6 billion tons of industrial waste.

President Suharto, who is now recognised as one of the most corrupt and tyrannical leaders in history, renewed Freeport-Indonesia's exclusive mining rights in 1991 for a further 30 years with an option of two 10-year extensions. The license included an option to prospect another 6.5 million acres (2.6 million hectares), as far as the Papua New Guinea border. "The potential is only limited by the imagination," Freeport's chairman, James Moffett, remarked to shareholders in March 1995. "Every other mining company wants to get into Irian Jaya [West Papua]. Bougainville and Ok Tedi don't hold a candle to Grasberg."

Part 3 to follow next week.

This is an extract of a chapter from the book, Evolutions in Sustainable Investing: Strategies, Funds and Thought Leadership, to be published by Wiley in December 2011.

NAJ Taylor is a PhD candidate in the School of Political Science and International Studies at the University of Queensland, and casual lecturer in the Faculty of Law and Management at La Trobe University.

Follow NAJ Taylor on Twitter: @najtaylordotcom

The views expressed in this article are the author's own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera's editorial policy.


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Al menos nueve muertos en un atentado en Nueva Delhi

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Al menos nueve personas han fallecido y medio centenar han resultado heridas tras estallar una bomba ante el Tribunal Superior de Nueva Delhi.
NUEVA DELHI
La explosión se ha producido frente a la puerta principal del Tribunal Superior de Nueva Delhi, según ha informado el secretario de Interior de la India, R.K. Sinngh.
El artefacto había sido colocado en el interior de un maletín y frente a la recepción del Supremo, en pleno centro de la capital, cerca del Parlamento y la sede del primer ministro.
Tras la deflagración, que se ha escuchado varios kilómetros a la redonda, las fuerzas de seguridad han acordonado las inmediaciones del tribunal y se ha declarado la máxima alerta en Delhi.


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Indian activist 'detained' ahead of mass fast

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Anna Hazare had planned action to force tougher laws against corruption
Local media said police took Hazare into custody to prevent a breakdown in law and order in India's capital [AFP]

A veteran Indian social activist was detained by police at his home to prevent him from defying authorities with a fast to the death to force tougher laws against corruption, local media reported.
Anna Hazare had said that he would start fasting on Tuesday and would gather along with supporters in a public park in New Delhi despite police denying him permission to do so.
"Police have detained us," Arvind Kejriwal, an aide to Hazare, told NDTV broadcaster before being taken away by plainclothes police in a white car early on Tuesday.

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Kashmir: The forgotten conflict

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Repression and resistance in Kashmir
Even after years of struggle for independence, much of Kashmir remains under the control of the Indian government
Wajahat Ahmad

Supporters of the Islamic political party Jamaat-e Islami shout during a rally to show solidarity with Kashmiris, during Kashmir Solidarity Day, in Multan, Pakistan [EPA]

A year ago I was chatting with a young Kashmiri acquaintance who professed his love for English literature and wanted to enter a quality graduate programme in the discipline. I suggested that he apply to some international graduate programmes in the United Kingdom and the US. To my embarrassment, I was to learn that the young man did not have a passport.

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China’s Premier Seeks Reforms and Relevance

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Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Prime Minister Wen Jiabao, bowing, at the scene of a deadly July 23 train wreck near Wenzhou. The crash, and subsequent official efforts to suppress information, have stirred anger in China.


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India blasts: All 'hostile groups' suspected

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Police search for clues to perpetrators of deadly attacks as Mumbai reels from rush-hour blasts that killed at least 17

The bulk of the injuries from Wednesday's blasts - possibly caused by Molotov cocktails - are burns [Reuters]

Indian police are searching for clues into who was behind three coordinated bomb blasts that killed at least 17 people in Mumbai in an evening rush hour attack.Palaniappan Chidambaram, India's home minister, said on Thursday that all groups "hostile to India" were being treated as possible suspects behind the attacks.
The government's official press office lowered the death toll from Wednesday's attacks 17 from an earlier figure of 21 killed, although the number may change again.Al Jazeera's Kamal Kumar, reporting from Mumbai, said that details of the attack were still "sketchy".
"As of now, there hasn't been any official line on who could be behind these attacks, but there is speculation that this could be the act of Indian Mujahideen or Lashkar-e Taiba (an armed Pakistani group)," said Kumar."But there hasn't been any official line put out by the government authorities or the security authorities."
There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the blasts.

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Thai PM quits party post after poll defeat

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Abhisit Vejjajiva resigns as Democrat party head after Yingluck Shinawatra leads opposition Pheu Thai party to victory

 Abhisit Vejjajiva, the Thai prime minister, has decided to step down as leader of his Democrat party, a day after its loss to the opposition Pheu Thai party led by Yingluck Shinawatra.
The Democrats, led by the 46-year-old British-born, Oxford-educated Abhisit, won just 160 seats in the 500-seat parliament, compared with Pheu Thai's 265, according to the latest projection from the Election Commission.
"As the election results came out with the party winning fewer votes and fewer seats than in the 2007 poll, and in the spirit of a good leader of an organisation, I should take responsibility," Abhisit said on Monday. "I therefore have decided to resign from the party leadership." He said the Democrats will hold a general meeting within 90 days to choose a successor.

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Saleh: Suppressing opponents from within

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In Yemen, president's regime has long used torture as part of its "security apparatus"
Nir Rosen

Though some anti-government protesters were killed in clashes with security forces, many others have died at the hands of guards in prisons or during military sieges [EPA]

Yemeni president Ali Abdullah Saleh's violent suppression of peaceful demonstrators since February, and his seeming determination to drive his country to civil war must surely be embarrassing to his former allies and sponsors. Chief among them, the US and Saudi governments must be aghast with horror at the upheaval today. But his regime was brutal - and his rule arbitrary - long before the revolutionary demonstrations swept east from Tunisia to Egypt and on to Yemen. When he is gone will the structure of terror he created remain?
Twenty-three year old Badr al Sabili was a student in Sanaa University, and an active member in the loyal opposition Islamist party, al Islah. In the 2006 presidential elections, he volunteered as an election monitor. His whole family supported al Islah. On election day, neighbours told Badr that the 'aqil, or neighbourhood headman, called Muhamad Adhib, had threatened him - warning that if he was "curious" he might be arrested by the Political Security force.

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