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IHT Quick Read: Feb. 19

NEWS An overwhelming percentage of online attacks toward U.S. companies, organizations and government agencies originate from one area of a Shanghai neighborhood, home to a Chinese army unit, according to a report by the computer security firm Mandiant. David E. Sanger, David Barboza and Nicole Perlroth report.

In a surprise predawn homecoming, President Hugo Chávez returned to Venezuela more than two months after having cancer surgery in Cuba, potentially clearing up some of the legal questions that have roiled the nation during his absence but doing little to dispel the uncertainty over who is running the country. Wiliam Neuman reports from Caracas.

With conditions continuing to deteriorate, President Obama may reopen the debate over providing weapons to opponents of President Bashar al-Assad’s government in Syria. Mark Landler and Michael R. Gordon report from Washington.

The president of the European Central Bank sought to ease fears that countries including Japan were deliberately weakening their currencies. James Kanter reports from Brussels.

Striking ground workers and flight attendants for Iberia, the money-losing Spanish airline, clashed with riot police officers at Madrid-Barajas Airport on ! the first day of work stoppages to protest a plan to eliminate more than 3,800 jobs. Nicola Clark reports.

The online retailer Amazon severed all contact with the security company whose guards are alleged to have worn clothing associated with neo-Nazis and intimidated immigrant temporary workers. Melissa Eddy reports from Berlin.

FASHION Christopher Kane’s first show for PPR is a blend of original ideas, new silhouettes and otherworldly effects. Suzy Menkes writes from London

ARTS Two exhibitions in Udine, Italy, reflect the grand ambitions of Giambattista Tiepolo, the 18th-century Venetian artist. Roderick Conway Morris reviews from Udine, Italy.

SPORTS Back on top at age 31, Serena Williams’s achievement should rank high on a list of career achievements that already includes 15 Grand Slam singles titles. Christopher Clarey reports.



Women Tortured, Killed as \'Witches,\' in Papua New Guinea, in 2013

BEIJING â€" “They’re going to cook the sanguma,” or witchcraft, “mama!”

This terrifying cry by Papua New Guinean children opens “It’s 2013, and They’re Burning ‘Witches’,” a long and eloquent report in The Global Mail, an Australia-based online news site.

It was published last week before news shot around the world on Tuesday that the police in Papua New Guinea, in another case, had charged two people with torturing and killing a 20-year-old mother, Kepari Leniata, whom they accused of being a witch. Ms. Leniata was “stripped, tortured with a hot iron rod, doused in gasoline and set alight on a pile of car tires and trash” earlier this month in front of a crowd of hundreds of people, including young children, The Associated Press reported.

Why

“Leniata had been accused of sorcery by relatives of a 6-year-old boywho had died in a hospital. Ware and Watea are believed to be the boy’s mother and uncle, police said in a statement,” The A.P. reported.

The year 2013 or not, such violence against women is not that uncommon in Papua New Guinea, where “witches” (in reality just women, often older ones) may be blamed when things go wrong, a reflection of the powerful belief in sorcery in the Pacific nation just north of Australia. A key reason for identifying a woman as a witch and attacking her is when a man, or child, dies unexpectedly.

But there may be other reasons. As the Australian international television station Australia Network reported, in a resource-rich country undergoing a boom, accusing her of being a witch is an easy way to take her land.

Dame Carol Kidu, a Papua New Guinean politician, told the station: “There are other things involved nowadays, like greed, acquisition of people’s properties and land, and all s! orts of things might be all tied up in all of this, using - killing the sorcerers as a reason to acquire land. So it needs to be investigated and we need to work out how we can deal with it. It is a very complex issue.”

The United Nations also found that accusations of sorcery can be used to kill women for a range of motives: “The U.N. Human Rights agency says they’ve seen an increase in these types of killings as well as torture and rape. They say the accusations are often used to deprive women of land and property,” U.N. radio reported recently.

What lies behind the ferocity Traditional beliefs, alcohol and drug use among men, and uneven development in a country that is in the middle of a mining boom where, as The Global Mail wrote, “the wealth bypasses the vast majority.”

It wrtes: “enduring tradition widely resists the notion that natural causes, disease, accident or recklessness might be responsible for a death. Rather, bad magic is the certain culprit.”

The dead person if often a man; the culprit is a woman. Or, a “witch.”

“When people die, especially men, people start asking ‘Who’s behind it’ not ‘What’s behind it’” said Philip Gibbs, a longtime resident, anthropologist, sorcery specialist and Catholic priest who was quoted by The Global Mail.

But in its report, the news site was careful to point out that while many Papua New Guineans believe in sorcery to some degree, that doesn’t mean they support the lynchings.

“In the words of the editor of the national daily Post Courier, Alexander Rheeney, city and country folk alike overwhelmingly ‘recoil in fear and disgust’ at lynch mobs pursuing payback, and at the kind of extremist cruelty that Sister Gaudentia was about to witness,” it wrote, referring to the “cook! ing” th! at the children were shouting about.

That’s Sister Gaudentia, a Swiss nun who tries to save “Angela,” a woman accused of witchcraft in the Global Mail article. The article includes powerful photos of accused “witches” (warning - they are graphic, showing machete injuries or healed, hacked-off limbs.)

Hearing the children shout that a witch was about to be cooked, Sister Gaudentia rushed after them. “Two days earlier, she had tried to rescue Angela (not her real name), an accused witch, when she was first seized by a gang of merciless inquisitors looking for someone to blame for the recent deaths of two young men.”

“Angela” was luckier than Ms. Leniata.

She had no male relatives to protect her (a common profile for accused “witches”) and was horribly tortured, but lived, the article says. A “sorcery survivor,” today she is in hiding with her small son.

“Those victims who lived to tell the tale owe their lives either to individual police members or to strong church leader who intervened for them,” Mr. Gibbs, the anthropologist and priest, told the Global Mail.

“In effect it means that, if sufficiently motivated to act, the power of the police and civil authorities, or the power of the church, can be enough to defend a person who is otherwise powerless,” he said.



Holding Obama\'s Feet to the Climate-Change Fire

At first glance, it was hard to tell whether they had come to bury Obama or to praise him.

Thousands of activists from hundreds of environmental, social justice and community groups marched on Washington yesterday in the biggest climate rally ever held in the U.S. capital. Activists both called on President Obama to make good on his climate change policy promises and protested the Keystone XL pipeline project.

“For 25 years our government has basically ignored the climate crisis: now people in large numbers are finally demanding they get to work,” Bill McKibben, head of 350.org, one of the environmental groups organizing the event, told the crowd.

The “Forward on Climate” rally comes less than a week after President Obama urged American leaders to “act before it is too late,” on climate change during his State of the Union address.

The demonstration’s timing â€" early in the administration’s second term â€" was important. While many say Mr. Obama achieved important green goals in his first term (Rendezvous wrote about tougher fuel efficiency standards for cars), critics say he did not achieve enough in the fight to address climate change. Many blame an uncooperative Congress and the always-looming re-election campaign. (The words “climate change” were not uttered during any of the three presidential debates between Mr. Obama and Mitt Romney.

The s! ecretaries of the interior and energy â€" portfolios where green leadership is seen as important â€" are being replaced. The head of the Environmental Protection Agency, Lisa Jackson, announced her resignation late last year.

Despite the President’s recent emphatic address to the nation, critics point out that his speech was short on details. And for many of the organizers of yesterday’s rally, the fact that the President did not mention the controversial Keystone XL pipeline â€" a pipeline that is to bring crude oil from Canada to Texas refineries â€" was a warning sign.

At the rally on the National Mall, activists from the ‘Backbone Campaign’ carried a 70-foot model of a spine, with an anti-Keystone XL pipeline message painted on the side, imploring the President to tand strong against the project.

As my colleagues John M. Broder, Clifford Krauss and Ian Austen reported, the Keystone XL pipeline issue is particularly thorny for Mr. Obama because the project is so detested by environmentalists, but supported by so many other players, including the government of Canada, one of the United States’ most important trading partners.

On Thursday, the House of Representatives passed an energy bill that would allow Congress, rather than the White House, to issue a permit for the Keystone XL pipeline. The President had put plans for the pipeline on hold temporarily.

On the same day in the Senate, se! veral senators co-sponsored legislation for a carbon tax program that would finance clean-energy projects, in a move largely seen as symbolic because of the legislation’s scant chance of passing either house of Congress.

Partially due to recent extreme weather events, the issue of climate change is once more at the forefront of American politics. A survey carried out by the League of Conservation voters found that 65 percent of American voters were in favor of “the President taking significant steps to address climate change now.”

“Twenty years from now on President’s Day, people will want to know what the President did in the face of rising sea levels, record droughts and furious storms brought on by climate disruption,” said Michael Brune, head of the Sierra Club, an environmental organizaton that helped organized Sunday’s rally.

A man dressed as the grim reaper held a sign that read: “the only steady job on a dying planet will be mine.”

While no official attendance numbers were recorded, participating organizations estimated that more than 35,000 people attended. On its Facebook page, 350.org claimed that 50,000 protesters took part in the event.



Holding Obama\'s Feet to the Climate-Change Fire

At first glance, it was hard to tell whether they had come to bury Obama or to praise him.

Thousands of activists from hundreds of environmental, social justice and community groups marched on Washington yesterday in the biggest climate rally ever held in the U.S. capital. Activists both called on President Obama to make good on his climate change policy promises and protested the Keystone XL pipeline project.

“For 25 years our government has basically ignored the climate crisis: now people in large numbers are finally demanding they get to work,” Bill McKibben, head of 350.org, one of the environmental groups organizing the event, told the crowd.

The “Forward on Climate” rally comes less than a week after President Obama urged American leaders to “act before it is too late,” on climate change during his State of the Union address.

The demonstration’s timing â€" early in the administration’s second term â€" was important. While many say Mr. Obama achieved important green goals in his first term (Rendezvous wrote about tougher fuel efficiency standards for cars), critics say he did not achieve enough in the fight to address climate change. Many blame an uncooperative Congress and the always-looming re-election campaign. (The words “climate change” were not uttered during any of the three presidential debates between Mr. Obama and Mitt Romney.

The s! ecretaries of the interior and energy â€" portfolios where green leadership is seen as important â€" are being replaced. The head of the Environmental Protection Agency, Lisa Jackson, announced her resignation late last year.

Despite the President’s recent emphatic address to the nation, critics point out that his speech was short on details. And for many of the organizers of yesterday’s rally, the fact that the President did not mention the controversial Keystone XL pipeline â€" a pipeline that is to bring crude oil from Canada to Texas refineries â€" was a warning sign.

At the rally on the National Mall, activists from the ‘Backbone Campaign’ carried a 70-foot model of a spine, with an anti-Keystone XL pipeline message painted on the side, imploring the President to tand strong against the project.

As my colleagues John M. Broder, Clifford Krauss and Ian Austen reported, the Keystone XL pipeline issue is particularly thorny for Mr. Obama because the project is so detested by environmentalists, but supported by so many other players, including the government of Canada, one of the United States’ most important trading partners.

On Thursday, the House of Representatives passed an energy bill that would allow Congress, rather than the White House, to issue a permit for the Keystone XL pipeline. The President had put plans for the pipeline on hold temporarily.

On the same day in the Senate, se! veral senators co-sponsored legislation for a carbon tax program that would finance clean-energy projects, in a move largely seen as symbolic because of the legislation’s scant chance of passing either house of Congress.

Partially due to recent extreme weather events, the issue of climate change is once more at the forefront of American politics. A survey carried out by the League of Conservation voters found that 65 percent of American voters were in favor of “the President taking significant steps to address climate change now.”

“Twenty years from now on President’s Day, people will want to know what the President did in the face of rising sea levels, record droughts and furious storms brought on by climate disruption,” said Michael Brune, head of the Sierra Club, an environmental organizaton that helped organized Sunday’s rally.

A man dressed as the grim reaper held a sign that read: “the only steady job on a dying planet will be mine.”

While no official attendance numbers were recorded, participating organizations estimated that more than 35,000 people attended. On its Facebook page, 350.org claimed that 50,000 protesters took part in the event.



Human Rights and Sports Events

Earlier this month, President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia sacked a senior Russian Olympic Committee official over rising costs and a delay in the construction work for the 2014 Winter Olympics.

The cost of the games, to be held in the southern resort of Sochi, is expected to reach the equivalent of $50 billion. Mr. Putin said corruption had pushed up costs.

For human rights organizations, the issue is not cost or corruption. It is the principle of holding such a prestigious event in Russia as the Kremlin implements tough measures against nongovernmental organizations and clamps down on the opposition.

Why, ask human rights organizations, should Russia host such an event when even punk singers, such as some members of the Pussy Riot band, languish in prison And why should neighboring Belarus be allowed to host the 2014 World Hockey Championships when the regime has imprisoned pro-democracy activists

Despite the support by some political parties in Europe, human rights organizations ave been unable to prevent high-profile events taking place in autocratic countries.

Last April, the Grand Prix was held in Bahrain, the subject of my latest Letter from Europe.

This was despite the fact that the regime had already imprisoned hundreds and killed at least 50 people after the short-lived Arab Spring of February 2011, according to Human Rights Watch. To this day, pro-democracy activists are detained or constantly under surveillance.

It was the same in Azerbaijan, which hosted the Eurovision Song Contest in May 2012. Human rights organizations and some European politicians had called for the event to be held elsewhere because of Azerbaijan’s appalling human rights record. The event went ahead.

A few months later, the Eur! opean Football Championships were held in Poland and Ukraine. Again, there were calls by pro-democracy activists but also German politicians, to boycott the matches in Ukraine because of the continuing imprisonment of the former prime minister, Yulia Timoshenko. The matches went ahead.

Some politicians argue that it is far better to allow these events to take place in these countries. They put the spotlight on conditions there. But once the event is over, the spotlight moves elsewhere.

Maybe it is time that the international sports federations and the Olympic Committee established democracy criteria for holding such events. They will, no doubt, immediately respond that this is introducing politics into sports. But was there ever a time when sports was innocent



Romanian Film Takes Top Prize at the Berlinale

Calin Peter NetzerDominik Bindl/Getty Images Calin Peter Netzer

10:46 a.m. | Updated

BERLIN â€" “Child’s Pose,” a film by the Romanian director Calin Peter Netzer, took the top prize, the Golden Bear, at the 63rd Berlin International Film Festival on Saturday.

The story of a privileged woman whose maternal instincts kick into overdrive when her son kills a teenage boy in a car accident, “Child’s Pose” shares several hallmarks of the recently revitalized Romanian cinema, not least a focus on institutional malaise and corruption. It was written by Mr. Netzer and Razvan Radulescu, who also collaborated onthe screenplays of many other acclaimed Romanian films, including “The Death of Mr. Lazarescu” and “4 Months, 3 Weeks, 2 Days.”

The runner-up prize, the Silver Bear, went to another Eastern European social drama, “An Episode in the Life of an Iron Picker.” Directed by the Bosnian filmmaker Danis Tanovic (best known for the Oscar-winning “No Man’s Land”) and based on actual events, the film recounts an impoverished Roma family’s struggles with an unjust health care system, and enlists the real-life couple to re-enact their plight. The male lead, Nazif Mujic, won the best actor prize.

Paulina García, the star of Sebastián Lelio’s “Gloria,” about the romantic reawakening of a Chilean divorcee, won the tightly contested best actress category. David Gordon Green won best director for “Prince Avalanche,” a buddy comedy starring Paul Rudd and Emile Hirsch. And best screenplay went to Jafar Panahi and Kamboziya Partovci for one of t! he most talked-about films in the competition, “Closed Curtain,” a confessional, self-reflexive drama about an artist and his demons. It is the second movie, after “This Is Not a Film” (2010), that Mr. Panahi has made in defiance of a ban on filmmaking by the Iranian authorities.

The Alfred Bauer Prize for innovation, named for the founder of the Berlinale, went to perhaps the most eccentric film in the competition, the French Canadian director Denis Côté’s “Vic and Flo Saw a Bear,” a darkly comic and melodramatic lesbian love story. The Australian director Kim Mordaunt won the best first feature award for “The Rocket.” And the Teddy Award for best gay-themed film went to the Polish director Malgoska Szumowska’s “In the Name of …,” about a Catholic priest struggling with his homosexuality.

Led by the Hong Kong director Wong Kar-wai, whose new film, “The Grandmastr,” opened the festival, this year’s Berlinale jury included the actor Tim Robbins; the filmmakers Susanne Bier, Andreas Dresen and Athina Rachel Tsangari; the cinematographer Ellen Kuras; and the artist Shirin Neshat.



Romanian Film Takes Top Prize at the Berlinale

Calin Peter NetzerDominik Bindl/Getty Images Calin Peter Netzer

10:46 a.m. | Updated

BERLIN â€" “Child’s Pose,” a film by the Romanian director Calin Peter Netzer, took the top prize, the Golden Bear, at the 63rd Berlin International Film Festival on Saturday.

The story of a privileged woman whose maternal instincts kick into overdrive when her son kills a teenage boy in a car accident, “Child’s Pose” shares several hallmarks of the recently revitalized Romanian cinema, not least a focus on institutional malaise and corruption. It was written by Mr. Netzer and Razvan Radulescu, who also collaborated onthe screenplays of many other acclaimed Romanian films, including “The Death of Mr. Lazarescu” and “4 Months, 3 Weeks, 2 Days.”

The runner-up prize, the Silver Bear, went to another Eastern European social drama, “An Episode in the Life of an Iron Picker.” Directed by the Bosnian filmmaker Danis Tanovic (best known for the Oscar-winning “No Man’s Land”) and based on actual events, the film recounts an impoverished Roma family’s struggles with an unjust health care system, and enlists the real-life couple to re-enact their plight. The male lead, Nazif Mujic, won the best actor prize.

Paulina García, the star of Sebastián Lelio’s “Gloria,” about the romantic reawakening of a Chilean divorcee, won the tightly contested best actress category. David Gordon Green won best director for “Prince Avalanche,” a buddy comedy starring Paul Rudd and Emile Hirsch. And best screenplay went to Jafar Panahi and Kamboziya Partovci for one of t! he most talked-about films in the competition, “Closed Curtain,” a confessional, self-reflexive drama about an artist and his demons. It is the second movie, after “This Is Not a Film” (2010), that Mr. Panahi has made in defiance of a ban on filmmaking by the Iranian authorities.

The Alfred Bauer Prize for innovation, named for the founder of the Berlinale, went to perhaps the most eccentric film in the competition, the French Canadian director Denis Côté’s “Vic and Flo Saw a Bear,” a darkly comic and melodramatic lesbian love story. The Australian director Kim Mordaunt won the best first feature award for “The Rocket.” And the Teddy Award for best gay-themed film went to the Polish director Malgoska Szumowska’s “In the Name of …,” about a Catholic priest struggling with his homosexuality.

Led by the Hong Kong director Wong Kar-wai, whose new film, “The Grandmastr,” opened the festival, this year’s Berlinale jury included the actor Tim Robbins; the filmmakers Susanne Bier, Andreas Dresen and Athina Rachel Tsangari; the cinematographer Ellen Kuras; and the artist Shirin Neshat.



IHT Quick Read: Feb. 18

NEWS Millions of Chinese sacrifice heavily for their children’s education, but as college graduates saturate a slowing job market, the security they seek is increasingly elusive. Keith Bradsher reports from Hanjing, China.

A plan by President Obama for an overhaul of the immigration system would put illegal immigrants on a path to citizenship that could begin after about eight years and would require them to go to the back of the line behind legal applicants, according to a draft of the legislation that the White House has circulated in the administration. Michael D. Shear and Julia Preston report.

An epidemic of suicides among the elderly is the counterpoint to Soth Korea’s runaway economic success, which has worn away at the Confucian social contract that formed the bedrock of culture for centuries. Choe Sang-Hun reports from Seoul.

President Obama faces a knotty decision in whether to approve the much-delayed Keystone oil pipeline: a choice between alienating environmental advocates who overwhelmingly supported his candidacy or causing a deep and perhaps lasting rift with Canada. John M. Broder, Clifford Krauss and Ian Austen report.

Militants’ infiltration into freed areas of Mali, in a string of neighboring village! s along the Niger River, is what enabled last Sunday’s attack in the heart of Gao, a town of about 86,000. Peter Tinti reports from Gao, Mali, and Adam Nossiter from Dakar, Senegal.

Pope Benedict XVI asked the tens of thousands of people who had flocked to St. Peter’s Square on Sunday for one of his last public appearances to pray for him and his successor. Elisabetta Povoledo reports from Vatican City.

Nearly a year after word leaked about an S.E.C. investigation into possible corrupt practices in the China film trade, there is a still a chill over dealings between Hollywood and China. Michael Cieply reports from Los Angeles.

Publishers in France say they have struck an agreement with Google on the use of their content online. Their counterparts elsewhere in Europe, however, say the French gave in too easily. Eric Pfanner reports from Paris.

EDUCATION Issues involving online courses were the subject at a conference at the University of London, which has been in the distance-learning business since 1858. D.D. Guttenplan reports from London.

! FASHIONMary Katrantzou’s show was one of those heart-stopping moments when fashion goes beyond the commercial or the attractive to embrace art. Suzy Menkes reviews the shows in London.

ARTS Which movies in 2012 had the best-designed titles Alice Rawsthorn writes from London.

SPORTS Retroactive has become the new active in this polluted, convoluted sports era, in which you can too rarely be sure whether the race or game or shot-put contest you just watched was legitimate. Christopher Clarey repors.

Arsenal was eliminated from the English F.A. Cup in its own stadium against a second-division side, the first time that has happened since Arsène Wenger took over the team in 1996. Rob Hughes on soccer.



IHT Quick Read: Feb. 18

NEWS Millions of Chinese sacrifice heavily for their children’s education, but as college graduates saturate a slowing job market, the security they seek is increasingly elusive. Keith Bradsher reports from Hanjing, China.

A plan by President Obama for an overhaul of the immigration system would put illegal immigrants on a path to citizenship that could begin after about eight years and would require them to go to the back of the line behind legal applicants, according to a draft of the legislation that the White House has circulated in the administration. Michael D. Shear and Julia Preston report.

An epidemic of suicides among the elderly is the counterpoint to Soth Korea’s runaway economic success, which has worn away at the Confucian social contract that formed the bedrock of culture for centuries. Choe Sang-Hun reports from Seoul.

President Obama faces a knotty decision in whether to approve the much-delayed Keystone oil pipeline: a choice between alienating environmental advocates who overwhelmingly supported his candidacy or causing a deep and perhaps lasting rift with Canada. John M. Broder, Clifford Krauss and Ian Austen report.

Militants’ infiltration into freed areas of Mali, in a string of neighboring village! s along the Niger River, is what enabled last Sunday’s attack in the heart of Gao, a town of about 86,000. Peter Tinti reports from Gao, Mali, and Adam Nossiter from Dakar, Senegal.

Pope Benedict XVI asked the tens of thousands of people who had flocked to St. Peter’s Square on Sunday for one of his last public appearances to pray for him and his successor. Elisabetta Povoledo reports from Vatican City.

Nearly a year after word leaked about an S.E.C. investigation into possible corrupt practices in the China film trade, there is a still a chill over dealings between Hollywood and China. Michael Cieply reports from Los Angeles.

Publishers in France say they have struck an agreement with Google on the use of their content online. Their counterparts elsewhere in Europe, however, say the French gave in too easily. Eric Pfanner reports from Paris.

EDUCATION Issues involving online courses were the subject at a conference at the University of London, which has been in the distance-learning business since 1858. D.D. Guttenplan reports from London.

! FASHIONMary Katrantzou’s show was one of those heart-stopping moments when fashion goes beyond the commercial or the attractive to embrace art. Suzy Menkes reviews the shows in London.

ARTS Which movies in 2012 had the best-designed titles Alice Rawsthorn writes from London.

SPORTS Retroactive has become the new active in this polluted, convoluted sports era, in which you can too rarely be sure whether the race or game or shot-put contest you just watched was legitimate. Christopher Clarey repors.

Arsenal was eliminated from the English F.A. Cup in its own stadium against a second-division side, the first time that has happened since Arsène Wenger took over the team in 1996. Rob Hughes on soccer.