Bamiyan Panorama

Bamiyan Panorama

Friday, August 22, 2014

Egypt urges US restraint in Ferguson

Ferguson unrest: Egypt urges US to show restraint

August 19, 2014
Police in riot gear patrol the streets in Ferguson, Missouri - 18 August 2014 Heavily armed police wearing riot gear have become a regular sight on the streets of the St Louis suburb

 

Egypt's government has called on US authorities to show restraint against protesters in Ferguson, Missouri.

It said it was "closely following the escalation of protests" after the fatal shooting of an unarmed black teenager by a white policeman on 9 August.

The statement echoes US President Barack Obama's comments during Egypt's crackdown on protesters in 2013.   (HA!  Imitation is the greatest form of flattery. -ruthriv)

Correspondents say the criticism is unusual since Egypt gets about $1.5bn (£1bn) in aid from the US every year.

President Obama is under increasing pressure to bring an end to the violent scenes in the St Louis suburb.

It is now 10 days since Michael Brown's death, which sparked mass demonstrations.

Jay Nixon, the governor of Missouri, has ordered the National Guard to support police operations, but violence flared again on Monday night, with law enforcement officers arresting 31 people.

Police officers point their weapons at demonstrators protesting against the shooting death of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri - 18 August 2014 The unrest continued on Monday night, with police firing tear gas at crowds of demonstrators

The statement from Egypt's foreign ministry followed a similar call from United Nations chief Ban Ki-moon, who called on Missouri police to abide by "US and international standards".

Iran added its voice to the criticism, with Majid Takht-Ravanchi, the deputy foreign minister for European and American Affairs, saying the unrest was a sign of "the phenomenon of racism" in the West.

Meanwhile Chinese state news agency Xinhua said that despite the US playing the role of an international human rights defender, the clashes showed "there is still much room for improvement at home".

"Obviously, what the United States needs to do is to concentrate on solving its own problems rather than always pointing fingers at others," the Xinhua editorial added.   (look who's talking - you have 10x more problems with street protests and heavy handed police than the US -ruthriv)

India Independence Day: PM Modi says nation shamed by rape

India Independence Day: PM Modi says nation shamed by rape


Narendra Modi said India had been shamed by a recent spate of rapes, as he made his first Independence Day speech as prime minister.

He called on parents to take responsibility for their sons' actions, saying parents must teach their sons the difference between right and wrong.

Mr Modi also pledged bank accounts for all and toilets in every school.

The capital has been under a blanket of security, with thousands of police and soldiers deployed across the city.

Mr Modi, who led his party to victory in this summer's general election, addressed the nation from the 17th Century Red Fort in Delhi.

He did not read from a prepared text and for the first time in many years the prime minister did not stand behind a bullet-proof screen.

line
Analysis, Geeta Pandey, BBC News, Delhi
Schoolchildren wave as PM Modi leaves the Red Fort after he gave a speech to mark the country's 68th Independence Day in New Delhi on August 15, 2014
A large number of schoolchildren were present for the celebrations
 
 

Prime Minister Narendra Modi's first Independence Day address carried some very significant social messages. In a departure from tradition, Mr Modi spoke extempore, without consulting any notes, and in his hour-long speech, did not falter even once.

He talked about societal and family responsibility in ending rapes, advising parents to bring up better sons and not just question daughters. He lamented the skewed sex ratio and appealed to doctors to end abortion of female foetuses and advised mothers not to hanker after sons. And he spoke proudly of the "29 medals women athletes have won" at the 2014 Commonwealth Games.

Over many years, prime ministers have used their annual Independence Day speeches to warn Pakistan and for grandstanding, but Mr Modi used the historic occasion to say how he was bothered by the all-pervasive filth around him and why India must end open-air defecation and build more toilets.

The address, televised live across the country, received a huge thumbs up with many Indians taking to social media to describe it as "refreshing", "inspiring" and "impressive".

But critics have used the occasion to question his performance in the months since taking over as prime minister and his government's failure to deliver reforms to overhaul the economy going through the worst slowdown in two decades.

It's a speech not easy to find fault with, but critics say Mr Modi will ultimately be judged on his performance.


line

Unlike previous leaders, he did not make any grand announcements or criticise arch-rival Pakistan.

Instead, Mr Modi spoke about how growing sex crimes against women had left him ashamed and asked Indians to stop discriminating against female children.

Scrutiny of sexual violence and rape in India has been high ever since a 23-year-old student was gang-raped on a bus in Delhi in December 2012.

The outcry over the crime forced India to introduce tough new laws, but there have since been more high-profile assaults, including a number of attacks on foreign tourists.

"When we hear about these rapes our heads hang in shame," Mr Modi said.

Indian artist Harwinder Singh Gill decorates his car with Indian flags on the eve of India"s Independence Day in Amritsar, India, 14 August 2014. India is celebrating its 68th Independence Day

Narendra Modi inspects a guard of honour during the country's 68th Independence Day at the Red Fort in New Delhi on August 15, 2014. The prime minister inspected a guard of honour during the Independence Day celebrations

Indian PM Narendra Modi, addresses the nation from the Red Fort on Independence Day in Delhi, Friday, Aug 15, 2014 Nearly 10,000 people were present at the Red Fort in a departure from the last few years when the event was attended only by officials

Former PM Manmohan Singh listens to a speech by Modi at the Red Fort to mark the country's 68th Independence Day in New Delhi on August 15, 2014 Former PM Manmohan Singh came accompanied by his wife

"Young girls are always asked so many questions by their parents, like 'where are you going?'. But do parents dare to ask their sons where they are going?" he asked.

"Those who commit rape are also someone's sons. It's the responsibility of the parents to stop them before they take the wrong path," he added.

The prime minister asked MPs and business leaders to help build toilets, especially for women, and model villages.

Mr Modi also talked about turning India into a manufacturing hub and moving from an import-based economy to an export-driven one.

He pledged bank accounts for all in a country where nearly 40% of people have little access to financial services and are often at the mercy of moneylenders who charge extortionate interest.

Monday, August 11, 2014

Amir Mehdi: Left out to freeze on K2 and forgotten


Amir Mehdi: Left out to freeze on K2 and forgotten


K2

Amir Mehdi wanted to be the first Pakistani to scale the country's highest peak, K2, and as one of the strongest climbers in the first team to conquer the summit, 60 years ago, he nearly did. Instead he was betrayed by his Italian companions, left to spend a night on the ice without shelter, and was lucky to survive.
In the picturesque Hunza Valley, off the Karakoram Highway that connects north Pakistan with the Chinese province of Xinjiang, lies the village of Hasanabad.
I travelled to this remote place after discovering it had been the home of one of Pakistan's pioneering high altitude porters, Amir Mehdi - also known as Hunza Mehdi.
The Hunza porters, equivalent of the Sherpas in Nepal, are still in great demand for expeditions to Pakistan's highest peaks, such as K2, Nanga Parbat, Broad Peak and Gasherbrum I and II - five of the world's 14 mountains more than 8,000m high.
But Amir Mehdi, a member of the Italian expedition that triumphed on K2 in 1954, is today a forgotten man.
"My father wanted to be the first Pakistani to put his country's flag on top of K2," says Amir Mehdi's son Sultan Ali, aged 62. "But in 1954 he was let down by the people he was trying to help."

Amir Mehdi (in 1994) Amir Mehdi in later years, wearing medals awarded by the Italian government
 
A year earlier, in 1953, Mehdi had proved his strength on Nanga Parbat (8,126m) assisting the Austrian mountaineer, Hermann Buhl. Buhl, the first person to reach the summit, had been forced to spend a night alone standing on a narrow ledge as he descended, and had later needed help to reach the base of the mountain. Mehdi and another local porter took turns carrying him on their backs.
So, when the Italians approached the Mir of Hunza, Jamal Khan, asking for men to help with the K2 ascent, Mehdi was among those picked from the hundreds of aspirants who packed the royal court.
He went on to make a huge contribution to the success of the expedition, which turned two climbers - Achille Compagnoni and Lino Lacedelli - into Italian national heroes.
A day before their summit bid, Mehdi had been persuaded to help an up-and-coming Italian climber, Walter Bonatti, to carry oxygen cylinders up to a height of about 8,000m, where they were to meet Compagnoni and Lacedelli.

Achille Compagnoni Compagnoni fell out with fellow climbers Lacedelli and Bonatti before his death in 2009
 
 
"Other high altitude porters refused. My father agreed to the mission because he was offered a chance to get to the top," says his son, Sultan Ali.
But when they got to the designated spot, late in the evening, the tent was nowhere to be seen.
Eventually, as they searched for their Compagnoni and Lacedelli, and continued to climb, one of Bonatti's shouts was answered. The camp had been moved to a point now beyond their reach. A voice shouted to them to leave the oxygen and go back down, but the darkness made this impossible.
Mehdi and Bonatti were forced to spend the night huddled together on an ice ledge enduring temperatures of -50C (-58F). Both were ready to die, but somehow they survived what was, at the time, the highest ever open bivouac, at an altitude of some 8,100m (26,570ft).
It would later be revealed that Compagnoni had deliberately moved the camp because he wanted to prevent Bonatti and Mehdi from joining the summit bid. Compagnoni apparently feared that Bonatti, who was younger and fitter, would steal the limelight.
The next morning, leaving the oxygen cylinders there, Mehdi and Bonatti descended. Compagnoni and Lacedelli then picked up the oxygen and went on to claim the summit.
Unlike his Italian colleagues, Mehdi hadn't been given proper high-altitude snow boots. He was wearing regular army boots - according to some reports, they were two sizes too small for him. Inevitably, he suffered severe frostbite, and by the time he reached base camp he was unable to walk. He had to be carried on a stretcher to a hospital in the town of Skardu, where he was given first aid, and transferred from there to a military hospital in Rawalpindi.
Doctors had no choice but to amputate all his toes to prevent gangrene from spreading. He was only released from hospital eight months later.
When he finally returned home to his village in Hunza, Mehdi put away his ice axe and told his family he never wanted to see it again.
"It reminded him of his suffering and how he was left out in the cold to die," recalls his son, Sultan Ali.
Sultan Ali, with Amir Mehdi's ice axe
While his Italian colleagues went on to build careers, write books and make money, Mehdi never climbed a mountain again.


Mehdi's frostbite was a diplomatic embarrassment - for Italy, as well as Pakistan, where the press responded with fury.
The Italians were accused of tricking Mehdi and leaving him mutilated. Officials from the two governments went into overdrive to put a lid on the controversy.
Italian officialdom at the time was keen to protect Campagnoni's legacy. And to do so, they needed someone else to take the heat for Mehdi's suffering. Bonatti was turned into the fall guy - in Italy and in Pakistan - accused of reckless risk-taking and scheming to claim the summit himself before the others.
Mehdi was asked to offer his official testimony. He obliged, travelled to the city of Gilgit and spent three days narrating his ordeal before a Pakistani official. Sultan Ali, maintains that his father broadly supported Bonatti's version of events of how the two of them were tricked at K2. But he says he can't be sure if Pakistani officials tampered with his father's evidence or made him sign false testimony, to wrongly blame Bonatti for his suffering - which is how most people interpreted his statement.
"My father was a simple man. He knew how to climb mountains, but he didn't know how to read or write. It's possible that his testimony was used to discredit Bonatti," says Sultan Ali.
Amir Mehdi would spend the next five decades of his life scarred by his ordeal.
For some years, he was unable to move or find work, and struggled to feed his wife and children. Gradually, he learned to walk on his stumps.

Amir Mehdi's mutilated feet
The Italian government sent him a certificate in the post, informing him that the president had awarded him the rank of cavaliere.


From time to time, he received letters and books from Italy. But Mehdi couldn't read them and they did nothing to address his financial difficulties.
Occasionally, foreign mountaineers who had heard about his open bivouac at 8,100m would come to meet him.
"Sometimes, his eyes welled up with tears," recalls his son who helped translate the conversations. "He would tell them he had risked his life for the honour of his country, but he was treated unjustly."
For the most part, though, Mehdi kept his pain to himself.
In 1994, he met up with Compagnoni and Lacedelli in Islamabad to mark the 40th celebrations of the first ascent.
Sultan, who accompanied his father to the event, recalls it as a highly emotional reunion.
"They didn't understand each other's language. But the three of them cried like babies when they hugged each other."
All along, Mehdi didn't ask for an apology. And none was offered.

Ascent of K2, Ardito Desio
The official Italian narrative, which effectively concealed the truth about the expedition, remained unchanged for decades - although Bonatti did his best to challenge it. Only the publication of reminiscences by Lacedelli in 2004 prompted an investigation, which led in 2007, to formal recognition by the Italian Alpine Club of the essential role Mehdi and Bonatti played in K2's conquest.
But that was too late for Mehdi. He died in December 1999 at the age of 86.
After the Italian expedition, 23 years were to pass before the next successful ascent of what mountaineers consider one of the most treacherous of the world's highest mountains. One member of that Japanese-led expedition was the Pakistani climber Ashraf Amman, also from Hunza, who claimed the title Mehdi had longed for - that of the first Pakistani to climb the world's second highest mountain.
But it took much longer for a fully homegrown Pakistani expedition to scale K2. That finally happened on 26 July this year, just a few days short of the 60th anniversary of Amir Mehdi's frozen night at 8,100m.
Amid all the celebrations, Amir Mehdi's name has rarely been heard, either in Pakistan or anywhere else.

Photos of Kabul & Afghanistan in the 50's and 60's. (From a Russian perspective)

(All captions and descriptions translated from Russian)






Bruised internal conflicts and foreign intervention in Afghanistan for centuries took a step towards modernization in the mid-20th century. In the 1950s and 1960s have been great strides towards a more liberal and pro-Western lifestyle. Although Afghanistan was officially a neutral country during the Cold War, he also was influenced by both the United States and the Soviet Union, with Soviet equipment and weapons and financial assistance from the United States. At this time, the streets of Afghanistan prevailed relative peace and tranquility in Kabul were built modern building, the veil for a time became optional, the country embarked on a path towards a more open and prosperous society. Progress stopped in the 70s, when a series of bloody coups, invasions and civil wars shocked the country. All steps taken earlier in the direction of modernization, proved futile. The average life expectancy of Afghans who were born in 1960, was 31 year, so the vast majority of the people depicted in the photo, did not survive to the present day.



Афганистан 50-х и 60-х годов
Roadside vendors on a busy street in Kabul, Afghanistan, in November 1961.











Афганистан 50-х и 60-х годов
Two Afghan students from the Faculty of Medicine listening to their professor (right), 1962.

Афганистан 50-х и 60-х годов
Kabul 1968

Афганистан 50-х и 60-х годов
Kabul, November 1961

Афганистан 50-х и 60-х годов
People walking through a market in Kabul in May 1964.

Афганистан 50-х и 60-х годов
US President Eisenhower in Kabul, December 9, 1959, Eisenhower met with the 45-year-old King of Afghanistan Mohammad Zahir Shah to discuss the Soviet influence in the region and an increase in American aid to Afghanistan.

Афганистан 50-х и 60-х годов
Afghans lined up during the visit of President Dwight D. Eisenhower in the United States Kabul, December 9, 1959.

Афганистан 50-х и 60-х годов
 Dancers perform on the street during the visit of President Eisenhower in the United States Kabul, December 9, 1959 after a five-hour visit to Kabul by plane Eisenhower went to New Delhi.

Афганистан 50-х и 60-х годов
Selling fruit and nuts on the market in Kabul, November 1961.

Афганистан 50-х и 60-х годов
Children on the street in Kabul in November 1961.

Афганистан 50-х и 60-х годов
Modern traffic lights on the corner of a street in Kabul, May 25, 1964.

Афганистан 50-х и 60-х годов
 Afghans ride in a cart through arid rocky region of Afghanistan in November 1959.

Афганистан 50-х и 60-х годов
A worker checks a truck Russian production at the plant for the manufacture of chassis for the cars in the center of Kabul. The plant, like many other industries in the Afghan capital, was looted during the reign of the Afghan mujahedeen from 1992 to 1996.

Афганистан 50-х и 60-х годов
Log in Karkar coal mine, located approximately 12 kilometers from the provincial town of Puli Khumri in northern Baghlan province. Karkar coal deposits at the same time fully meet the needs of Kabul.

Афганистан 50-х и 60-х годов
Caravan of mules and camels moves along the winding paths Lataband Pass on the way to Kabul, October 8, 1949.

Мохаммад Захир-Шах и Джон Кеннеди
King of Afghanistan Mohammad Zahir Shah and President John F. Kennedy talk in the car on the way to the White House in Washington, DC, September 8, 1963.

Никита Хрущев
Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev (in black hat) and Marshal Nikolai Bulganin make a review of the Afghan guard of honor during a visit to Kabul on 15 December 1955 left the Afghan Prime Minister Sardar Mohammed Daoud Khan, behind Foreign Minister Prince Naim.

Афганистан 50-х и 60-х годов
Street scene in Kabul in November 1966.

Афганистан 50-х и 60-х годов
City park in Kabul, May 28, 1968.

Афганистан 50-х и 60-х годов
Now destroyed Kabul-Herat highway that connects the Afghan capital with the Iranian border town of Mashhad.

Афганистан 50-х и 60-х годов
The modern building of the Ministry of Finance in Kabul, June 9, 1966 The building also houses a restaurant in western style. Fountain had a night light.

Афганистан 50-х и 60-х годов
Kabul, Afghanistan, in November 1961.

Афганистан 50-х и 60-х годов
Inside the modern government printing plant in Kabul, June 9, 1966.

Афганистан 50-х и 60-х годов
Amanullah Khan Palace in Kabul, October 8, 1949, the King of Afghanistan in the early 20th century, Amanullah Khan tried to modernize his country by means of reforms and the elimination of the age-old customs and traditions. He acted on the basis of what he saw during his visit to Europe.

Афганистан 50-х и 60-х годов
Bazaar in Kabul, December 31, 1969.

Афганистан 50-х и 60-х годов
Old and new buildings in Kabul, August 1969 In the background at the top of the hill stands the mausoleum of the late King Mohammed Nadir Shah.

Афганистан 50-х и 60-х годов
An Afghan man leads camels and donkeys through arid mountainous region in November 1959.

Афганистан 50-х и 60-х годов
King of Afghanistan Mohammad Zahir Shah rides his limousine on the main road Kabul Idga Wat, 1968, Zahir Shah, being the last king of Afghanistan, lived in exile in Rome after the coup in 1973. He returned to Afghanistan in 2002 after the removal of the Taliban from power in Kabul, and died in 2007 at the age of 92 years.

Афганистан 50-х и 60-х годов
Afghan boys play with a kite, in November 1959.

Афганистан 50-х и 60-х годов
Selling fruit and nuts on the open market in Kabul, November 1961.

Афганистан 50-х и 60-х годов
cobbled streets in Kabul, 1951.

Афганистан 50-х и 60-х годов
A new mosque in the outskirts of Kabul, in November 1961.

Афганистан 50-х и 60-х годов
Street scene in Kabul, March 26, 1954.

North America's 1st Black Town?

North America's 1st Black Town?

100 Amazing Facts About the Negro: It was founded during slavery, and it wasn't in the U.S. South.

Posted:

 
gasparyanga279
Gaspar Yanga's statue in the town named after him
(Erasmo Vasquez Lendechy)
Editor's Note: This column was first published on Dec. 3, 2012.
Amazing Fact About the Negro No. 8: What was the first black town in North America?
As I mentioned in my column about Juan Garrido, the first documented African to land in what is now the United States, in 1513, as a student I was under the impression that the first Africans arrived in the North America in 1619. That was when 20 or so slaves from Angola ended up at Jamestown, Va. Nothing could be further from the truth. 
As a matter of fact, by 1620, when the Mayflower landed, about 500,000 Africans had already been shipped as slaves to the New World. In other words, those first 20 Africans who arrived in Virginia had a lot of company further to the south, starting in Florida. 
And many of the first African slaves who arrived in the New World before 1620 landed in Mexico, which is a surprise to most of us living in the United States. By 1570, the year that a slave named Gaspar Yanga fled to the mountains near Veracruz to escape slavery, the colony of New Spain (as Mexico was called) "had received an estimated 36,500 Africans," the historian Herman Bennett tells us in his book, Africans in Colonial Mexico, "of which 20,000 had survived.
Moreover, by 1600, Bennett concludes, the number of Africans "collectively rivaled, if not outnumbered, Spaniards throughout New Spain." And at Veracruz, "persons of African descent constituted 63 percent of the nonindigenous population." 
By 1810, Bennett continues, free blacks "numbered approximately 624,000, or 10 percent of the total population." Bennett correctly observes that the fact that Mexico by this time was "home to the second-largest slave and the largest free black populations may come as a revelation to those unaccustomed to thinking of Mexico as a prominent site of the African presence." Most Americans will find these facts astonishing. I know that I did when I first learned of them.
Mexico's African population traditionally was concentrated along its two coasts, one around the port of Veracruz (where most of the slaves landed) on the Gulf of Mexico, and the other in a district known as the Costa Chica, on the Pacific Ocean near Acapulco. And it was near Veracruz that the first black-ruled town was granted its status as a self-governing municipality by Spain in 1609, 11 years before the Mayflower. It is called Yanga, and a large statue of its founder graces the town square today.
The town of Yanga is named for Mexico's most famous runaway slave, Gaspar Yanga, whom the historian Jane Landers tells us in her book Slaves, Subjects, and Subversives: Blacks in Colonial Latin America was "an enslaved West African of the Bran nation." In 1570 or so, Yanga escaped from his enslavement near Veracruz and formed a "palenque" (a community of runaway slaves, or "maroons") in the mountains nearby at Cofre de Perote. Yanga's palenque survived illegally for almost 40 years, "raiding Spanish convoys along the Camino Real [Royal Road] to Ciudad Mexico [Mexico City] and nearby haciendas." 
By 1609, the Spanish authorities had had enough. The Viceroy, Luis de Velasco II, mounted a major assault on the settlement, but to no avail. Under the leadership of an Angolan named Francisco de la Matosa, Yanga and his compatriots successfully defended themselves and then negotiated a settlement with the Spanish.
Their demands included 11 conditions, Landers tells us, among these: freedom for all of the runaway slaves who had lived in the settlement before 1608; official recognition of the town's sovereignty, including the right of Yanga and his heirs to become governors; exclusion of the Spanish, except on market days; and a Roman Catholic church administered by Franciscan monks. In return, Yanga agreed to pay tribute to the Spanish and to serve the king militarily when asked. They also agreed to return future fugitive slaves, if paid for returning them, but subsequent complaints from the Spanish suggest that the town continued to be a haven for runaway slaves.
Yanga and his followers established the town of San Lorenzo de los Negros (also called San Lorenzo de Cerralvo) in 1609, and it was formally recognized by the Spanish in 1618. Landers quotes an Italian visitor in 1697 commenting that San Lorenzo was so full of black people that it "would make anyone think they were in Guinea." Now called Yanga, after its founder, the town exists to this day in the state of Veracruz.