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Cat Rescues in China Raise Host of New Questions

BEIJING â€" The crazy meowing from a truck crashed on a highway outside Changsha, in central China, told rescuers this was no ordinary cargo; inside, over 1,000 cats and kittens were crammed into bamboo cages, headed for restaurant tables in the southern city of Guangzhou, Chinese media reported.

Some cats were badly injured in the nighttime accident two Sundays ago. Some were dying of thirst. Some were giving birth. Some were adopted by animal lovers who rushed to the scene, alerted by text message, telephone or microblog posts, said participants. In all, about 200 cats died; about a dozen are still in animal hospitals in Changsha, the capital of Hunan province, according to local media reports.

But in a new twist, 800 cats released by rescuers into the city are now causing a different kind of concern: how will they impact on the local environment As well as dealing with hundreds of new, potentially fast-multiplying cats in te neighborhood, some rescuers are afraid the animals have simply escaped one fate for another and will soon be caught and sold again by the cat trappers and traders. As the Sanxiang Metropolitan News, a local newspaper, wrote, the fate of these cats is “an awkward fate.”

China has a different “cat problem” from the one my colleague, Gerry Mullany, wrote about yesterday in a post about a New Zealand economist who wants cats to be removed from his country because of their threat to the native bird species.

In China, in a brutal trade, cats are widely eaten, as are dogs. But increasingly, ordinary citizens are acting to stop it, carrying out “animal rescues” like in Changsha. The trade is a barely regulated free-for-all, and rescuers, well-wired, can be quick on the scene. There have been at le! ast five major rescues over the last two years, according to Chinese animal rights activists.

In the case of Changsha, the cargo was reportedly worth about 50,000 renminbi, according to some Chinese media; to get the cats away from the drivers at the crash scene, animal rescuers paid between 7,000 and 10,000 renminbi ($8,000 US), according to people there (the detail remains a little unclear.)

A man who asked to be identified as Hunter, who works for the Changsha Small Animal Protection Association was there that night.

“The truck was badly destroyed and some of the cages broken, some cats escaped but we don’t know how many,” he said in a telephone interview.

“It was crowded and a mess, very smelly and dirty,” he added. “When we got there about 25 cats had already died and some were very weak or injured.”

“About 50 animal lovers came to the truck to rescue the cats and many people brought one home, or called their friends o adopt a cat,” he said.

In a recent article, the Sanxiang Metropolitan News interviewed an animal welfare volunteer called Ms. Tian who recently had become concerned about the fate of the 800 released cats.

“Cats reproduce fast,” she said. “It’s very possible that it could cause alarm among people living in the community and lead to disaster for the feline ecosphere,” she said.

As the newspaper wrote: “From a journey to death to a journey to homelessness, from the table to the street, luck will determine which cats live.”

“Though neither their rescue nor their current conditions are ‘perfect,’ yet when seen from the point of view of living creatures, every good heart that protects life is worthy of respect,” the paper wrote. “Cat traders, cat catchers and cat eaters cannot escape people’s pursuit of morality.”



Cat Rescues in China Raise Host of New Questions

BEIJING â€" The crazy meowing from a truck crashed on a highway outside Changsha, in central China, told rescuers this was no ordinary cargo; inside, over 1,000 cats and kittens were crammed into bamboo cages, headed for restaurant tables in the southern city of Guangzhou, Chinese media reported.

Some cats were badly injured in the nighttime accident two Sundays ago. Some were dying of thirst. Some were giving birth. Some were adopted by animal lovers who rushed to the scene, alerted by text message, telephone or microblog posts, said participants. In all, about 200 cats died; about a dozen are still in animal hospitals in Changsha, the capital of Hunan province, according to local media reports.

But in a new twist, 800 cats released by rescuers into the city are now causing a different kind of concern: how will they impact on the local environment As well as dealing with hundreds of new, potentially fast-multiplying cats in te neighborhood, some rescuers are afraid the animals have simply escaped one fate for another and will soon be caught and sold again by the cat trappers and traders. As the Sanxiang Metropolitan News, a local newspaper, wrote, the fate of these cats is “an awkward fate.”

China has a different “cat problem” from the one my colleague, Gerry Mullany, wrote about yesterday in a post about a New Zealand economist who wants cats to be removed from his country because of their threat to the native bird species.

In China, in a brutal trade, cats are widely eaten, as are dogs. But increasingly, ordinary citizens are acting to stop it, carrying out “animal rescues” like in Changsha. The trade is a barely regulated free-for-all, and rescuers, well-wired, can be quick on the scene. There have been at le! ast five major rescues over the last two years, according to Chinese animal rights activists.

In the case of Changsha, the cargo was reportedly worth about 50,000 renminbi, according to some Chinese media; to get the cats away from the drivers at the crash scene, animal rescuers paid between 7,000 and 10,000 renminbi ($8,000 US), according to people there (the detail remains a little unclear.)

A man who asked to be identified as Hunter, who works for the Changsha Small Animal Protection Association was there that night.

“The truck was badly destroyed and some of the cages broken, some cats escaped but we don’t know how many,” he said in a telephone interview.

“It was crowded and a mess, very smelly and dirty,” he added. “When we got there about 25 cats had already died and some were very weak or injured.”

“About 50 animal lovers came to the truck to rescue the cats and many people brought one home, or called their friends o adopt a cat,” he said.

In a recent article, the Sanxiang Metropolitan News interviewed an animal welfare volunteer called Ms. Tian who recently had become concerned about the fate of the 800 released cats.

“Cats reproduce fast,” she said. “It’s very possible that it could cause alarm among people living in the community and lead to disaster for the feline ecosphere,” she said.

As the newspaper wrote: “From a journey to death to a journey to homelessness, from the table to the street, luck will determine which cats live.”

“Though neither their rescue nor their current conditions are ‘perfect,’ yet when seen from the point of view of living creatures, every good heart that protects life is worthy of respect,” the paper wrote. “Cat traders, cat catchers and cat eaters cannot escape people’s pursuit of morality.”



Jamie Dimon in F.B.I. Cuff Links

It’s only the first day of the World Economic Forum festivities in Davos, Switzerland, and already the gloves are coming off.

Jamie Dimon, the chief executive of JPMorgan Chase, clashed with an official of the International Monetary Fund in a debate over the financial system, as Jack Ewing reported in DealBook. In addition, Mr. Dimon tangled with Paul Singer, the head of the hedge fund Elliott Management, over bank transparency.

In response to Mr. Singer’s assertion that it was impossible to know which banks were “actually risky or sound,” Mr. Dimon said, according to The Financial Times: “With all due respect, hedge funds are pretty opaque, too.”

The talk turned to regulation â€" specifically, limits on proprietary trading, a central aim of the Dodd-Frank Act. Luren LaCapra of Reuters reported:

Mr. Dimon was wearing an unusual accessory on Wednesday, as David Enrich of The Wall Street Journal noticed:

The day was full of celebrity-spotting. In addition to the bold-face names in attendance (including Charlize Theron, Derek Jeter and the writer Paulo Coelho) some big financial heavyweights roamed the Congress Hall in Davos.

Daniel S. Loeb of Third Point was spotted standing near Mr. Dimon. Ray Dalio of Bridgewater Associates was “holding forth” about markets, according to Daniel Gross of Newsweek/Daily Beast. Steven A. Cohen of SAC Capital Advisors was spotted by Felix Salmon of Reuters:

Mr. Enrich snapped a picture of Michael Dell, who is in talks with a private equity backer to acquire his company.

Stephen A. Schwarzman of the Blackstone Group, who once compared the Obama administration’s tax proposals to Hitler’s invasion of Poland (and later apologized), appeared to soften his tone at the forum. “I like President Obama as a person, and he’s well intentioned,” Mr. Schwarzman told Bloomberg TV.

But he made some more pointed remarks in an encounter with Ms. LaCapra of Reuters. Mr. Schwarzman, who was sitting alone at a small table, referred to President Obama as “the guy who forgot to mention the economy after f! our years! as president” in his inauguration speech this week, according to Ms. LaCapra. “That wasn’t an accident,” Mr. Schwarzman said.

The overall mood was more sober than in years past, with some well-known parties off the agenda, Andrew Ross Sorkin reported. Even the swag bag for attendees was “serious and well meaning,” as well as “pragmatic” and “boring,” according to Henry Blodget of Business Insider.

One thing everyone could agree on: the weather was chilly. Mr. Coelho observed:



Britons Promised Vote on Europe, Again

LONDON â€" A British political leader faces internal dissent within his own party over the country’s membership of Europe. He promises to renegotiate the terms and to hold a referendum on the issue if he wins the next election.

That was Harold Wilson, the Labour Party leader, who as prime minister in 1975 fulfilled an election pledge to hold a nationwide vote on Britain’s continued membership of what was then the European Economic Community.

Plus ça change, as the French would say.

David Cameron, the Conservative prime minister who was 8 at the time of Britain’s first and only referendum, has now promised a rerun, announcing on Wednesday in a long-anticipated speech:

“It is time for th British people to have their say. It is time to settle this European question in British politics.”

There seemed little doubt that he had been pushed to the decision by Euro-skeptic sentiment in his own party and the emerging electoral challenge from the right-wing United Kingdom Independence Party, which is threatening to capture Tory votes.

Divisions over Europe used to be the Labour Party disease. The left of the party viewed the E.C.C. as a club for the rich that had more to do with enhancing the profits of transnational business than enhancing the lot of the common man.

“The development of the Community since its inception has been largely directed to business rather than social goals,” the Trades Union Congress, the umbrella group for British labor unions, argued at the time. “The effect has been to increase the mobility of capital . . . enabling business to avoid mo! re easily its obligations to employees.”

The split continued to dog the Labour Party, in and out of government, long after two-thirds of voters opted in 1975 to remain in Europe.

These days, labor union spokesmen are as likely to argue that Europe has been good for workers in terms of Continent-wide rights and protections.

But Euro-skepticism was never confined to the Labour Party. For the Conservatives, it was and remains a divisive issue between a broadly pro-European mainstream and right wingers who rail at loss of sovereignty and an overweening Brussels bureaucracy.

Harold Wilson’s 1975 referendum was a gamble that paid off. He supported Britain’s continued membership in the face of opponents who included members of his own cabinet.

Will David Cameron’s own “dangerous gamble” pay off in terms of silencing Conservative dissent Or will Britain end up sleepwalking out of Europe, as some have warned

Peter Kellner, a veteran political commentator, says there’s an “uncanny resemblance” between public opinion in 1975 and today.

So, if there is a referendum in which Britons again opt to stay in, will that be the end of the argument

Tell us what you think Is David Cameron playing domestic politics over Europe and, if so, what are the risks And, if you’re British, which way would you vote

,



Britons Promised Vote on Europe, Again

LONDON â€" A British political leader faces internal dissent within his own party over the country’s membership of Europe. He promises to renegotiate the terms and to hold a referendum on the issue if he wins the next election.

That was Harold Wilson, the Labour Party leader, who as prime minister in 1975 fulfilled an election pledge to hold a nationwide vote on Britain’s continued membership of what was then the European Economic Community.

Plus ça change, as the French would say.

David Cameron, the Conservative prime minister who was 8 at the time of Britain’s first and only referendum, has now promised a rerun, announcing on Wednesday in a long-anticipated speech:

“It is time for th British people to have their say. It is time to settle this European question in British politics.”

There seemed little doubt that he had been pushed to the decision by Euro-skeptic sentiment in his own party and the emerging electoral challenge from the right-wing United Kingdom Independence Party, which is threatening to capture Tory votes.

Divisions over Europe used to be the Labour Party disease. The left of the party viewed the E.C.C. as a club for the rich that had more to do with enhancing the profits of transnational business than enhancing the lot of the common man.

“The development of the Community since its inception has been largely directed to business rather than social goals,” the Trades Union Congress, the umbrella group for British labor unions, argued at the time. “The effect has been to increase the mobility of capital . . . enabling business to avoid mo! re easily its obligations to employees.”

The split continued to dog the Labour Party, in and out of government, long after two-thirds of voters opted in 1975 to remain in Europe.

These days, labor union spokesmen are as likely to argue that Europe has been good for workers in terms of Continent-wide rights and protections.

But Euro-skepticism was never confined to the Labour Party. For the Conservatives, it was and remains a divisive issue between a broadly pro-European mainstream and right wingers who rail at loss of sovereignty and an overweening Brussels bureaucracy.

Harold Wilson’s 1975 referendum was a gamble that paid off. He supported Britain’s continued membership in the face of opponents who included members of his own cabinet.

Will David Cameron’s own “dangerous gamble” pay off in terms of silencing Conservative dissent Or will Britain end up sleepwalking out of Europe, as some have warned

Peter Kellner, a veteran political commentator, says there’s an “uncanny resemblance” between public opinion in 1975 and today.

So, if there is a referendum in which Britons again opt to stay in, will that be the end of the argument

Tell us what you think Is David Cameron playing domestic politics over Europe and, if so, what are the risks And, if you’re British, which way would you vote

,



A Break in the Case of the Kunsthal Heist

Three people have been arrested in connection with the case of the theft of seven paintings from a museum in the Netherlands, the police in Rotterdam announced Tuesday.

The paintings have not been recovered. Estimates of the value of the paintings, which include works by Monet, Matisse, Picasso, Gauguin and Lucian Freud, have varied, with some art experts speculating that they could be worth as much as 100 million euros. The museum, the Kunsthal in Rotterdam, has not disclosed their value.

The three men were arrested in Romania in an unrelated criminal investigation involving art, said Roland Ekkers, a spokesman for the Rotterdam police.

“They are arrested in Romania for a Romanian matter, but obviously we have questions for those three as well,” said Mr. Ekkers.

On Wednesday morning the Rotterdam police were determining whether they would send detectives to Romania to question the suspects, according to Mr. Ekkers.

The heist was carried out on Oct. 16 at about 3:15 a.m., when the thieves entered the Kunsthal through a fire escape door. Surveillance footage shows the thieves were inside the museum for no more than two minutes.

A surveillance tape showing the robbers entering and leaving the museum was released by the police in October:

In the absence of news following the heist, the Dutch press theorized that the robbers were part of an Irish crime ring, or that the burglary was hastily planned by underworld figures to repay debts after a major drug shipment was intercept! ed in Antwerp last fall.

The stolen art had been on loan to the Kunsthal from the Triton Foundation, a private foundation of the family of the late Willem Cordia, a Dutch investor and collector.

The investigation of the robbery is far from over, said Mr. Ekkers.

“Their arrest has not cracked the case,” he said.



In Saint-Émilion, Rich and Proud of It

SAINT-ÉMILION, Franceâ€"There is a saying in France: Vivre cachée, vivre heureux; “live hidden, live happily.” It applies especially to the country’s rich people. Not only do public displays of wealth draw the covetous gaze of tax collectors, they are frowned on by a culture that values solidarity.

Jean-Luc Thunevin, a vigneron in this Bordeaux village, whose latest effort to rank its greatest wines I write about in my latest column, has no time for this kind of faux understatement.

“In France, money is considered a bad thing,” he said. “It’s strange. Europe is the only place in the world where we don’t like the rich.”

Mr. Thunevin was complaining variously about the French government’s recent moves to raise taxes, as well as the envy that he and other newcomers here have prompted by making wines that have gone from nowhere to the top ranks of the Bordeaux rankings in only a handfl of years.

Mr. Thunevin’s top wine, Chateau Valandraud, may be the best example of these, because it has been around for only two decadesâ€" a mere blink of the eyes in the eternal world of French wine. For a few years in the late 1990s, after it was discovered by critics, Valandraud was the most expensive wine in Bordeaux.

Others have caught up, but Valandraud still costs 400 euros or so in top vintages. Yes, this has been enough to make Thunevinâ€" he admits it â€" rich. When Valandraud was recently promoted to Premier Grand Cru B status, the second-highest rung in the Saint-Émilion ladder, Mr. Thunevin said his bankers ratcheted up the estimated value of the vineyard to 40 million euros from 15 million.

Mr. Thunevin is certainly an antidote to the pessimism, born of nostalgia, that sometimes seems to hang over French vineyards, despite the recognized greatness of the country’s wines.

“The French always want to say things were better before,” he said. Gesturing tow! ard bottles of Valandraud in his wine shop in Saint-Émilion, he added, rhetorically:

“Were they better before”



At Davos, Crisis Is the New Normal

DAVOS, Switzerland â€" In certain ways, the very setting of the World Economic Forum reflects the restless, challenged state of human affairs. Our footing is uncertain, as on this ski resort’s slithery streets, and we have steep slopes to climb, as the Magic Mountain will remind the global elite this week.

Barely into 2013, Mali and Algeria are new sites of hot war and chilling fear. Where the tumult that began in the Arab Spring will end is still as unclear as when it erupted â€" far from Davos â€" two years ago.

The challenge posed by the free flow of information in China went to the New Year streets in Guangzhou. Washington’s feuding politicians walked up to the brink before resolving not to jump off the so-called fiscal cliff. Europe seems to have averted a collapse of the euro, but even in Germany, growth is anemic.

Crisis, in short, is the new normal.

And while the business community determinedly seeks opportunity in troubled times, even many an entrepreneur views the yers since the financial crisis of 2008 as what Rich Lesser, the new chief executive of the Boston Consulting Group, called “a higher period of turbulence and uncertainty in the global economy than we have experienced in a very long time.”

The days in which “quants” and algorithms reigned supreme are gone, their increasingly untrackable results having helped the financial system spin out of control in 2008 and 2009. The heady triumph of capitalism after 1989 is also a distant memory, although its chief effect â€" that capital went global â€" remains a driving force of our age.

But global capital does not solve big world issues: debt and financial crisis, political paralysis or gridlock, the transformative effects of the digital revolution, climate change, resource shortages, shifting demographics.

For those tasks, we must rely either on the nation state â€" an aging collective unit that does not readily serve transnational action â€" or on international institutions whose effe! ctiveness is regularly questioned by the Davos crowd.

“The global economy has integrated, but global society is as fragmented as ever,” said Dennis J. Snower, president of the Kiel Institute for the World Economy.

In that fragmentation, there is an increasing lack of consensus about the global way forward. A few years ago, the inexorable rise of China led to talk of a new Beijing consensus, replacing the Washington consensus that epitomized the confident domination of the United States.

But China, while still growing, is growing less fast. It remains a one-party state, and its advance has arguably resulted more from enormous investment than creative increases in productivity. The challenges to its new leadership are clear: the need for financial reform; the perils of shadow banking and corruption; thick urban pollution; and, above all, the free flow of information, as seen in the standoff this month between a state censor in Guangzhou and journalists at the Southern Weekend and their spporters.

Ian Bremmer, head of the Eurasia Group political consulting firm, who in general sees a big return of politics in business calculations as the world becomes permanently restless, likened China to a large car that is racing toward a brick wall, “and we don’t know if they have steering” to skirt the obstacle, or whether they will hit it.

“As China grows wealthier,” he said in an interview, “entrenched Chinese will see the benefit of the rule of law” â€" a key element of the Washington consensus. But “the new leadership is not anywhere near there.”

For Yasheng Huang, a professor at the Sloan School of Management at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, the saving grace of the incoming president, Xi Jinping, and his colleagues is that they are pragmatists. Pragmatism, he argued in an interview by phone, “means that you weigh the costs and benefits of certain actions.” It “checks the ideology.”

Yet even as China helps to sustain internationa! l growth ! â€" where would Europe’s purveyors of luxury be without the eager Chinese consumer â€" it remains, like other emerging countries, self-absorbed.

“Look at the big debates of the last five years,” said Minxin Pei, like Mr. Huang a Chinese-born academic, who teaches at Claremont McKenna College in California. “It’s very hard to find one that originated in Beijing. People talk about China outside China, but still the country is very inward-looking.” This also feeds rising nationalism seen most markedly in the escalating dispute between China and Japan in the East China Sea.

As with China, so with Russia, India and Brazil, or indeed South Africa, Nigeria, Indonesia and other favorites of those who seek bright spots on a gloomy globe. In Brazil, “everything is focused on being Brazilian, how great it is,” noted Misha Glenny, a British analyst who has written on global mafias, cybercrime and is now working on a book about Brazil.

In these countries, absorbed in their own material dvances and increasingly wary of a Washington-made prescription for their future, the “fiscal cliff” and debate about the limit on the United States deficit serve as proof that they are on the right path, though critics might dispute it.

“On the whole, we made a recovery from the crisis even faster than other countries,” President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia told a news conference last month. “Just look at the recession in Europe, while Russia has posted growth, albeit a modest one, but we still have a much better situation than in the once-prosperous euro zone, or even in the United States.”

In the United States, recent books have argued that the country’s status as a debtor nation is curbing its global reach. After the last-minute fiscal deal this month, a commentary of the kind believed to reflect high government thinking on the state-run Chinese news agency Xinhua noted tartly: “The American people were once better known for their ability to make tough choices on diffi! cult issu! es.” It went on, “The Americans may be proud of their mature democracy, but the political gridlock in Washington really looks ugly from an outsider’s view.”

One example of how nations in transition are going their own way is Egypt, where President Mohamed Morsi seems to seek a geopolitical mix: a dose of Turkey, an Islamist-leaning democracy, with much-needed financial aid from China, and relations with Washington warm enough to garner more aid and collaborate on diplomacy like mediating the Israeli-Palestinian fighting over the Gaza Strip last November.

The fluid nature of this world is enhanced by digital communication. With the collapse in newspaper readership and the spread of social media, “everyone gets little snippets of information, and never fully understands the implications,” Mr. Glenny noted. “Very few people do deeper reading and thinking.”

This, he argued, increases people’s sense that “everything has just become too big to grasp and understand.”

Acrucial topic for the dozen or so analysts interviewed for this article, and central also to discussions of increasingly important trends like the global rise of women, is education. Instead of machines being in charge, a nimble human mind, connecting individuals with collective wisdom, is seen as the antidote to cacophony, poverty and chaos.

In this view, more and better schooling will help lift hundreds of millions out of poverty, make it easier for populations to cope with change and stimulate the kind of innovation that Mr. Lesser sees already in technology, medicine and health care.

What kind of education is a topic that will be much debated at Davos, to judge from several scheduled sessions on disruptive universities and the like.

“We need government to recognize the need to build the next-gen work force,” Mr. Lesser said. This is “fundamental to staying competitive in the future,” he said. “The challenge goes beyond education. It’s also about good immigration poli! cies.” ! In this way, he argued, a country facing demographic challenges â€" Germans, according to a government survey released last week, are the most childless adults in Europe â€" may preserve wealth and adapt to the future.

Whether by increasing online courses, interacting with students or raising the relatively dismal level of numeracy and literacy among American high school graduates, improving education “is one of the few things I can be unguardedly optimistic about,” said Niall Ferguson, the Harvard University historian. “The solutions are relatively cheap, simple and to hand.”



Taiwan\'s Diverse Literature and History on Show in Two New Museums

TAIWAN â€" Two new museums in Tainan, a city in Taiwan’s south, say much about how the island’s people have worked in recent years to build an unusually inclusive cultural identity, a model for Chinese-speaking societies, as I write in my Letter from Taiwan this week.

At the National Museum of Taiwan Literature, founded in 2003, exhibits explore the writing, film and music of indigenous cultures such as the Siraya, and of speakers of Taiyu, Holo and Hakka. (The name “Taiwan” is widely believed to come from the Sirayan word for a port in the south of the island, Tayovan.)

Another exhibit, “The Inner World of Taiwan Literature,” shows diverse voices from both before and after the Chinese Nationalists moved their seat of government to Taiwan in 1949.

The National Museum of Taiwan History opened at the end of 2011. It vision is “To protect Taiwan, our homeland, and to creating a single diverse and harmonious society,” as it says on its Web site, and offers exhibits such as “Taiwan Memories: A Century of Life,” and “On the Tracks of Anthroplogists,” an exhibit of Taiwan anthropology.

At the museum’s opening, its director, Lu Li-cheng, noted its tens of thousands of objects of local cultural life, and the museum’s emphasis on the interactions among ethnic groups in Taiwan through history.

“Of particular note is the collection of historic maps, charts and documents that the museum has obtained from foreign collectors,” Taiwan Today reported, quoting Mr. Li: “They will provide us with different viewpoints from which to look at Taiwan’s history.”

As Mark Harrison, a Taiwan specialist at the University of Tasmania, said in a telephone interview, it’s all part of Taiwanese people’s attempts to build an inclu! sive society.

“Taiwan’s history is very complex, and it’s a very strange history,’’ said Mr. Harrison. “In that history, there have been whole periods erased by various regimes,” as they asserted power over the island, including the Qing dynasty from China, the Japanese colonialists and, finally, the Nationalists.

“What’s been really interesting about Taiwan,’’ he said, “is how it has gone about recovering its history and understanding itself, and many nations could learn from that.’’



A Crystal Award for Charlize Theron

DAVOS, Switzerland â€"The actress Charlize Theron and two documentary filmmakers received awards for their humanitarian work as the World Economic Forum opened in Davos, Switzerland, Tuesday. Ms. Theron, who won the best actress Oscar in 2004 for the film “Monster,” was honored Tuesday for her work fighting H.I.V. among impoverished young people in South Africa, where she was born.

Ms. Theron’s appearance was a bit of a departure for the World Economic Forum, which had dialed back the celebrity glamor after attendance by Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie in 2006 threatened to overshadow the rest of the annual conclave.

Ms. Theron was decidedly low key and humble as she accepted the Forum’s Crystal award from a stage in the Davos Congress Center.

“There is an incredibl brain trust in this room,” she said, apparently referring to the Davos participants. “I feel like I’m getting smarter just by osmosis.”

Wearing a simple blue dress and heels, Ms. Theron noted, with some understatement, that she was often in the spotlight.

“I decided the best thing you can do with that spotlight is to stand in the shadow of something and shed some light,” she said.

The Charlize Theron Africa Outreach Project finances programs designed to prevent the spread of H.I.V. among young Africans, particularly in South Africa, which has 5.9 million infected people, Ms. Theron said. According to the organization’s Web site, charlizeafricaoutreach.org, the programs include mobile health services in an exceptionally impoverished region of South Africa.

The World Economic Forum also honored two other artists: Sharmeen Obaid Chinoy, a filmmaker in Pakistan; and Vik Muniz, a Brazilian artist.

Ms. Obaid Chinoy’s film “Saving Face” chronicles the efforts of a plastic surgeon to help women disfigured by acid thrown by abusive husbands or other family members. In her acceptance remarks, Ms. Obaid Chinoy said the film, which won an Oscar in 2012 for best short documentary, had prompted Pakistan to increase criminal penalties for such acts.

Mr. Muniz and his work was featured in “Waste Land,” a documentary about the lives of scavengers at the world’s largest garbage dump, outside Rio de Janeiro. In 2011 the film was nominated for an Academy Award.



IHT Quick Read: Jan. 23

NEWS A weakened Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu emerged Wednesday from Israel’s national election likely to serve a third term, according to preliminary results and political analysts, after voters on Tuesday gave a surprising second place to a new centrist party founded by a television celebrity who emphasized kitchen-table issues like class size and apartment prices. Jodi Rudoren reports from Jerusalem.

De Gaulle once described Europe as “a coach with horses, with Germany the horse and France the coachman.” Since he signed the treaty with the German chancellor Konrad Adenauer in 1963, successive governments in both countries have struggled to overcome, or overlook, what divides them. But the relationship has never been as close as some hoped. Melissa Eddy reports from Berlin and Steven Erlanger from Paris.

A fatal shooting in a central Philippine courtroom on Tuesday added impetus to a growing national debate over firearms regulation in a country with an enthusiastic gun culture much like America’s. Floyd Whaley reports from Manila.

After nearly two days of hiding from the hostage-takers, Liviu Floria and seven others decided their only chance at survival would come from climbing the fence and running away. They left around 2 a.m. for what became a harrowing desert trek, guided only by the flickering flame atop a gas well in the distance and a compass application on Mr. Floria’s iPhone. Nicholas Kulish reports from Bergen, Norway.

An Indonesian ! court sentenced a 56-year-old British woman to death on Tuesday for smuggling $2.5 million worth of cocaine onto the island of Bali, a decision that went far beyond the prosecutors’ recommendation of 15 years in prison. Sara Schonhardt reports from Jakarta.

Following the lead of their counterparts in the United States, Japan’s central bankers announced Tuesday what they called a groundbreaking effort to reinvigorate the country’s long-moribund economy and defeat deflation. Nelson D. Schwartz and Hiroko Tabuchi report.

In certain ways, the very setting of the World Economic Forum reflects the restless, challenged state of human affairs. Our footing is uncertain, as on this ski resort’s slithery streets, and we have steep slopes to climb, as th Magic Mountain will remind the global elite this week. Alison Smale reports from Davos, Switzerland.

ARTS Productions of Verdi in Venice and Handel in Vienna work hard to bring freshness to well-used material. George Loomis reviews from Venice.

FASHION The surreal walk through the woods â€" flat flowers glowing like fireflies and models’ shoulders framed as if in a portrait â€" was Chanel’s take on a springtime couture. Suzy Menkes reviews from Paris.

SPORTS What was supposed to be a learning experience against one of the greatest tennis players in history turned into one of the biggest upsets in tennis history on Wednesday, when the 19-year-old Sloane Stephens introduced herself to a global aud! ience by ! rallying to defeat her 31-year-old American elder Serena Williams, 3-6, 7-5, 6-4. Christopher Clarey reports from Melbourne, Australia.

Freddy Adu and Federico Macheda, apparently wonderfully prodigious soccer talents when they were in their teens, are finding it tough to make the grade in the men’s game. Rob Hughes reports from London.



IHT Quick Read: Jan. 23

NEWS A weakened Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu emerged Wednesday from Israel’s national election likely to serve a third term, according to preliminary results and political analysts, after voters on Tuesday gave a surprising second place to a new centrist party founded by a television celebrity who emphasized kitchen-table issues like class size and apartment prices. Jodi Rudoren reports from Jerusalem.

De Gaulle once described Europe as “a coach with horses, with Germany the horse and France the coachman.” Since he signed the treaty with the German chancellor Konrad Adenauer in 1963, successive governments in both countries have struggled to overcome, or overlook, what divides them. But the relationship has never been as close as some hoped. Melissa Eddy reports from Berlin and Steven Erlanger from Paris.

A fatal shooting in a central Philippine courtroom on Tuesday added impetus to a growing national debate over firearms regulation in a country with an enthusiastic gun culture much like America’s. Floyd Whaley reports from Manila.

After nearly two days of hiding from the hostage-takers, Liviu Floria and seven others decided their only chance at survival would come from climbing the fence and running away. They left around 2 a.m. for what became a harrowing desert trek, guided only by the flickering flame atop a gas well in the distance and a compass application on Mr. Floria’s iPhone. Nicholas Kulish reports from Bergen, Norway.

An Indonesian ! court sentenced a 56-year-old British woman to death on Tuesday for smuggling $2.5 million worth of cocaine onto the island of Bali, a decision that went far beyond the prosecutors’ recommendation of 15 years in prison. Sara Schonhardt reports from Jakarta.

Following the lead of their counterparts in the United States, Japan’s central bankers announced Tuesday what they called a groundbreaking effort to reinvigorate the country’s long-moribund economy and defeat deflation. Nelson D. Schwartz and Hiroko Tabuchi report.

In certain ways, the very setting of the World Economic Forum reflects the restless, challenged state of human affairs. Our footing is uncertain, as on this ski resort’s slithery streets, and we have steep slopes to climb, as th Magic Mountain will remind the global elite this week. Alison Smale reports from Davos, Switzerland.

ARTS Productions of Verdi in Venice and Handel in Vienna work hard to bring freshness to well-used material. George Loomis reviews from Venice.

FASHION The surreal walk through the woods â€" flat flowers glowing like fireflies and models’ shoulders framed as if in a portrait â€" was Chanel’s take on a springtime couture. Suzy Menkes reviews from Paris.

SPORTS What was supposed to be a learning experience against one of the greatest tennis players in history turned into one of the biggest upsets in tennis history on Wednesday, when the 19-year-old Sloane Stephens introduced herself to a global aud! ience by ! rallying to defeat her 31-year-old American elder Serena Williams, 3-6, 7-5, 6-4. Christopher Clarey reports from Melbourne, Australia.

Freddy Adu and Federico Macheda, apparently wonderfully prodigious soccer talents when they were in their teens, are finding it tough to make the grade in the men’s game. Rob Hughes reports from London.