Showing posts with label Protest. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Protest. Show all posts

Friday, September 21, 2012

Anti-Islam film controversy: US turns to TV ads to spread message in protest-hit Pakistan

Washington: The United States has paid Pakistani television stations to run advertisements featuring President Barack Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, hoping to soothe public opinion in a country hit by protests against an anti-Islam movie made in California, the State Department said on Thursday.

The US embassy in Islamabad spent about $70,000 to run the announcement, which features clips of Obama and Clinton underscoring U.S. respect for religion and declaring the U.S. government had nothing to do with the movie, it said.

"In order to ensure we reached the largest number of Pakistanis, some 90 million as I understand it in this case with these spots, it was the judgment that this was the best way to do it," State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland told a news briefing.

The U.S. announcement aired as Washington warned Americans to avoid non-essential travel to Pakistan, one of the mostly Muslim countries hit by a wave of anti-American demonstrations. In Libya, a deadly assault last week killed the U.S. ambassador and three other Americans.

The protests, which were sparked by an Internet video that mocked the Prophet Mohammad and swept through Yemen, Egypt and other countries, also prompted the U.S. government to withdraw non-essential personnel in Tunisia and Sudan.

In Pakistan, protesters have demonstrated in more than a dozen cities.

Counter-terrorism analysts for the New York Police Department warned in a paper circulated on Thursday that the anti-U.S. and anti-Western protests would continue to spread, fueled most recently by a French magazine's publication of cartoons lampooning the Prophet Mohammad.

The cartoons in France's Charlie Hebdo satirical weekly have provoked relatively little street anger thus far, although about 100 Iranians demonstrated outside the French embassy in Tehran.

Nuland said the decision to buy the television ads, identified as paid public service announcements, was not unusual in countries where this is "the norm for getting your message out."

"I think the sense was that this particular aspect of the president and the secretary's message needed to be heard by more Pakistanis than had heard it, and that this was an effective way to get that message across," she said.

She said it would take time to measure the effectiveness of the ads in Pakistan, where on Thursday huge crowds again gathered to protest against the video.

(Reporting by Andrew Quinn and Mark Hosenball; editing by Warren Strobel and Mohammad Zargham)


© Thomson Reuters 2012

Thursday, September 13, 2012

Kudankulam protesters to stand in sea today, taking cue from Khandwa 'jal satyagraha'

Kudankulam protesters to stand in sea today, taking cue from Khandwa 'jal satyagraha'Kudankulam: Taking a cue from  the 'Jal Satyagraha' activists in Madhya Pradesh, opponents of the Kudankulam Nuclear Power Plant will stand in the sea off Idianthakarai coast today as a stepped-up form of agitation.

Sources in People's Movement Against Nuclear Energy (PMANE), which is spearheading the stir, said the agitators have put forward four demands - stoppage of the process of fuel-loading in KNPP, giving up of the plan to arrest anti-nuclear movement leaders, adequate compensation for those who suffered losses and release of those already taken into custody.

The agitators yesterday ended their 48-hour relay fast at Idinthakarai to protest the police action which saw them resorting to lathicharge and bursting of teargas shells, besides conducting house-to-house searches.

Security forces had sealed almost the entire town housing the nuclear plant even as PMANE convenor S P Udayakumar remained elusive after a volte face on his surrender offer.

The forces allowed transportation of only essential commodities while clamping down on strangers.

The stepped-up security came as KNPP officials continued to make preparations for loading enriched uranium into the first reactor, expected to start in the next few days.

The current bout of intensified protests, including the failed bid to lay a siege to the plant, was launched by People's Movement Against Nuclear Energy to prevent loading of fuel for which regulatory authorities gave the approval recently.

On Sept 10, Madhya Pradesh government had agreed to the main demands of protesters who undertook a 'Jal Satyagraha' in Khandwa district, saying they would be given land as compensation and the height of Omkareshwar Dam would be reduced.

Both were key demands of the protesters who stood in neck- deep water since August 25 to agitate for proper rehabilitation and compensation.

From: NDTV

Wednesday, September 12, 2012

Harda jal satyagraha: Police start forcibly evicting protesters

Harda: A jal satyagraha to demand a reduction of water level in the Indira Sagar Dam from 262 metres to 260 metres entered the 15th day today in Khardana village of Madhya Pradesh's Harda district. And now the police have begun cracking down on the protesters who have been sitting in neck-deep water.

The cops are evicting villagers from the protest site after authorities clamped prohibitory orders under Section 144 of the Indian Penal Code (IPC) on Tuesday, asking villagers to come out of water citing health concerns. Some ambulances have also reached the spot.

However, the police are facing problems in bringing these protesters out of water as they continue with their key demands that the water level of the dam should be brought down and affected people be rehabilitated. After the prohibitory orders were imposed in the area yesterday, the protesters had intensified their agitation and moved at least 200 metres away from the banks, into the water. 200 others are protesting outside.

Harda jal satyagraha: Police start forcibly evicting protestersThe district authorities, meanwhile, say that the government has agreed to 14 of the protesters' 16 demands. Harda's Sub-Divisional Magistrate (SDM) Manjusha Rai, Collector Sudam Khade and the Superintendent of Police are at the protest site and are taking stock of the situation.

Over a hundred policemen and Rapid Action Force personnel have been deployed in the area.

The protests in Harda came to prominence after the state government gave into demands of villagers in nearby Khandwa who sat on a jal satyagraha for 17 days. Villagers in Harda allege that while the state government agreed to the demands of Khandwa protesters, it has not addressed their grievances yet. They also accuse the government of "double standards".

The state government has increased the water level in the Indira Sagar dam to 262 metres, which threatens to inundate 19 villages. Three villages are already submerged in water. In fact, the state government plans to further increase the water level in the dam by .02 metres.

"The Chief Minister has not announced anything for us, just for the protesters in Khandwa. He has agreed to bring down the water level there, and to rehabilitate the people affected. Until they will accept our demands we will not leave, the chief minister has done discrimination with us," said one of the protesters.

The protest in Khandwa's Ghogalgaon village ended on Monday after 17 days when Chief Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan agreed to lower the water level in the Omkareshwar dam, one of the key demands of the 51 protesters, sitting in neck-deep water.

Both Omkareshwar and Indira Sagar dams are built across the Narmada river and are part of the Indira Sagar Project. The water protests were launched with the help of the Narmada Bachao Andolan to demand proper rehabilitation for land that the villagers have lost and a reduction in the water level of the dam.

The unusual protest was highlighted by the media and brought widespread attention to the villagers sitting in water. The photograph of the shriveled, bruised feet of a woman protester went viral on social networking sites.