Weekly Insight and Features from The Asia Foundation

Archive for April, 2008

From Thailand: Pondok Students Learn In and Outside the Classroom

Wednesday, April 30th, 2008

For more information about conflict and governance programs in Thailand, please contact Debbie Felix at dfelix@asiafound.org.

Nakmeen Waeming is a 14-year-old student who dreams of becoming a diplomat. “In the future I would like to be Thailand’s ambassador to Malaysia and work on border issues between the two countries.”

To achieve her goals, Nakmeen understands that having foreign language proficiency, in particular English, is an essential part of her future. Yet students from Thailand’s southernmost provinces face particular challenges.
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In Thailand: Violent Conflict: Past and Present

Wednesday, April 30th, 2008

By Thomas Parks

Thomas Parks is The Asia Foundation’s Regional Director for Conflict and Governance Programs. He is based in Bangkok and can be reached at tparks@asiafound.org. To read more about The Asia Foundation’s Programs addressing violent conflict, click here.

Ubon Ratchathani, Thailand – For more than 800 km, the muddy brown waters of the Mekong River divide Thailand and Laos. Here at Khong Jiem, the easternmost point of Thailand, the Mekong drifts slowly into Lao territory, leaving Thailand for the last leg of its journey to the South China Sea. In this remote corner of Thailand, the economic and political ties with Bangkok are relatively recent, but growing quickly. By contrast, the links with the Lao across the river are ancient. While the Mekong today divides these two places across an international border, for most of the past 600 years, it was a unifier.
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Malaysia and its Blogolution

Wednesday, April 30th, 2008

By Jeremy Gross

Jeremy Gross is The Asia Foundation’s Election Program Manager in Indonesia. He can be reached at jeremy@tafindo.org.

Historians and political scientists are long used to identifying the key ingredients in the making of revolutions - price hikes, splits in the elite, repression - all waiting for a magic trigger to unite and ignite a radical change in political systems.

Perhaps there is now a new trigger for change forcing an overhaul if not overturn of political establishments: the Internet. And, potentially the Internet can have a more powerful impact than the traditional chant and blockade style revolution, which often results in counter-revolutions, messy politics and bloodied bodies on the street.
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Averting the Impending Food Crisis

Wednesday, April 23rd, 2008

By V. Bruce J. Tolentino

Bruce Tolentino is The Asia Foundation’s Director for Economic Reform. He can be reached at btolentino@asiafound.org.

Widespread hunger now threatens the developing world, especially in Asia. The knee-jerk reactions of individual countries are worsening the situation. Unilateral actions by certain countries have exacerbated the problem of food price increases. Countries and economies are inextricably and unavoidably ever more linked; actions in one nation impact all.

For example, the Indian government imposed a ban on rice exports in November 2007 and took itself—the world’s second-largest exporter of rice—out of the market. This immediately set off repercussions in the countries of other major exporters—particularly Vietnam. In the last twelve months, Vietnam has experienced unprecedented inflation and suffered a slight downturn in rice production. Now, Vietnam is limiting its own exports.
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In Indonesia: Keeping Trucks Moving

Wednesday, April 23rd, 2008

By Neil McCulloch

Neil McCulloch is Economics Program Director for The Asia Foundation in Indonesia. He can be reached at nmcculloch@tafindo.org.

In Indonesia, we’ve all heard stories about trucks being stopped by police, thugs and sometimes government officials, extracting payments, but it was hard to know the extent of the problem, exactly how much was being paid, to whom and where. The only way to do that was to ride some trucks.
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In Sri Lanka: Election Opportunities and Risks in the East

Wednesday, April 23rd, 2008

By Nilan Fernando

Nilan Fernando is The Asia Foundation’s Country Representative in Sri Lanka. He can be reached at nfernando@asiafound.org.

Amidst the escalating war between the Sri Lankan government and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) in the north, voters in the multi-ethnic Eastern Province will vote on May 10 for a provincial council for the first time since 1988. In 1987, the Indo-Lanka Peace Accord merged the Eastern Province with the Northern Province; a referendum was to make the merger permanent but was never held. In 2006, the Supreme Court voided the merger and the two provinces were subsequently de-merged. According to the 2001 census, the ethnic composition of the Eastern Province is 45% Tamil, 32% Muslim, and 23% Sinhalese. The potential for conflict between the communities looms large if post-election power-sharing arrangements are mismanaged.
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Pakistan, Afghanistan & NATO: A New Compact

Wednesday, April 23rd, 2008

By Karl Inderfurth

Ambassador Karl F. Inderfurth, a professor at the Elliott School of International Affairs at George Washington University, served as US assistant secretary of state for South Asian affairs from 1997 to 2001. He is a Trustee of The Asia Foundation. The following is an excerpt from an op-ed he wrote at the time of the NATO summit in Bucharest (click here to view). Views expressed by individuals are their own and not endorsed by The Asia Foundation.

Afghanistan and Pakistan are inextricably linked. There can be no successful outcome for Afghanistan, if Pakistan is not a part of the solution. The future stability of both depends on developing an effective regional strategy to counter and uproot the Taliban/Al Qaeda sanctuary in Pakistan’s tribal border areas. Despite Pakistan’s counterinsurgency efforts over the last four years (or lack thereof, according to critics), the Taliban and Al Qaeda have developed a stronghold in this region that bolsters the Taliban’s capabilities against coalition forces in Afghanistan, poses a direct threat to the Pakistani state itself, and facilitates Al Qaeda planning and execution of global terrorist plots, including those directed against the United States.
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From Indonesia: Mass Licensing Event Registers Thousands of Small Businesses

Wednesday, April 23rd, 2008

By Neil McCulloch

Neil McCulloch is Economics Program Director for The Asia Foundation in Indonesia. He can be reached at nmcculloch@tafindo.org.

More than 12 licenses must be obtained just to start a business in Indonesia. A study by The Asia Foundation in five districts in Indonesia shows that the time needed to obtain just a business registration, trade license, and a nuisance permit (all basic business licenses), has reached 107 days, at a cost of 931,00 Rupiah ($100 USD). The World Bank’s Doing Business Survey found that the number of days required to start a business in Indonesia increased from 97 days to 105 days between 2007 and 2008.

Given these difficulties, it is no surprise that the vast majority of all businesses remain in the informal sector. Improving licensing services is a key to creating a better investment climate in Indonesia. Business owners need licensing and registration documents not only to start a business, but also to access credit and to export.
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Earth Day 2008: Got Stoneflies?

Wednesday, April 16th, 2008

By Christopher Plante

Christopher Plante is The Asia Foundation’s Director for Environment Programs. He can be reached at cplante@asiafound.org.

Got Stoneflies? How about mayflies? Caddisflies? And midge and black flies? Do you have bugs in your water? I hope so - because after all – they are indicators of clean running waters and economic sustainability. We need them.

The presence of benthic macroinvertebrates (BMIs), such as these critters, indicates how clean our creeks, streams, and rivers are around the planet. Stoneflies, mayflies, and caddisflies have a hard time surviving in polluted waters and are known for their sensitivity to degraded water quality. Damselflies and crane flies are generally less sensitive. Midge flies can indicate polluted conditions. And black flies, where they dominate the sample collection, are indicators of moderate organic or nutrient pollution. Got good indicators?
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In Laos: Paradise Found

Wednesday, April 16th, 2008

By Gretchen Kunze

Gretchen Kunze is The Asia Foundation’s Deputy Country Representative in Thailand and Laos. She can be reached at gkunze@asiafound.org.

The annual New York Times’ feature on hot travel destinations named Laos as number one on its list of “Places to Go in 2008.” The spotlight is now on Laos, and a recent spate of articles has been written about Lao tourism, notably Tuesday’s International Herald Tribune article by Seth Mydans and one a few weeks earlier by Denis D. Gray for Associated Press. These and other commentaries lament the cultural changes arising from the huge influx of tourists. What these changes mean for the overall development of Laos, and whether the country is ready for the rapid growth that the tourism industry is bringing, are issues receiving less attention.
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