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IHT Quick Read: March 7

NEWS Cardinals gathered for a third day to choose a successor to Benedict XVI, but leaks to the news media have complicated the proceedings. Rachel Donadio and Laurie Goodstein report from Vatican City.

Philippine officials appealed Thursday for the release of nearly two dozen Filipino United Nations peacekeepers who were seized by insurgent fighters from Syria while patrolling the disputed Golan Heights region between Syria and Israel. Floyd Whaley reports from Manila, and Gerry Mullany from Hong Kong.

As President Hugo Chávez’s death neared, Vice President Nicolás Maduro’s imitatons of him became apparent, but less clear are Mr. Maduro’s intentions toward the United States. William Neuman reports from Caracas, and Ginger Thompson from New York.

The entire secret military file that was used to wrongly convict Capt. Alfred Dreyfus of spying for Germany in 1894 has been posted online by the historical department of the French Ministry of Defense. Steven Erlanger reports from Paris.

In Jordan, call-in radio shows are now able to address political topics and human rights issues that were unmentionable in public before the Arab Spring. Rana F. Sweis reports from Amman.

Houses of worship have been slow to embrace green initiatives, for reasons including architectural challenges and a lack of incentive to make the upfront investment. Kate Galbraith reports from Austin, Texas.

The European Union fined Microsoft $732 million on Wednesday for failing to respect an antitrust settlement with regulators. But in a highly unusual mea culpa, the European Union’s top antitrust regulator said that his department bore some of the responsibility for Microsoft’s failure to respect a settlement that caused the fine. James Kanter reports from Brussel..

The euro zone economy ended the year on a sour note, official data confirmed Wednesday, with major indicators shrinking across the 17-country currency zone. David Jolly reports from Paris.

Just two months into office, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe is showing an increasing willingness to take on some pillars of Japan’s establishment â€" the central bank and the country’s politically influential farmers â€" in an aggressive attempt to finally breathe some new life into Japan’s listless economy. Martin Fackler reports from Tahara, Japan.

FASHION As the autumn 2013 season closed, Marc Jacobs sent out a Louis Vuitton show that was an! exercise! in the erotic. Suzy Menkes reports from Paris.

ARTS Prosecutors have yet to lay out a possible motive in the January attack on the Bolshoi Ballet’s artistic director, Sergei Filin, but the revelations of the past few days suggest that it may boil down to a ballerina. Ellen Barry and Sophia Kishkovsky report from Moscow.

SPORTS When Nani was shown the red card during United’s loss to Real Madrid in the Champions League, the referee did what he was supposed to do: judge action, not intention. Rob Hughes on soccer.

Angelo Mathews and Sri Lana’s 23 leading players were feuding with the Sri Lanka Cricket Board over pay, but they reached a settlement Monday. Huw Richards reports.



Amid Suffering, Animal Welfare Legislation Still Far Off in China

BEIJING â€" About animals, “The question is not, ‘Can they reason’ nor, ‘Can they talk’ but, ‘Can they suffer’” So wrote Jeremy Bentham, the English philosopher, more than 200 years ago.

It seems anomalous. China, the world’s second-biggest economy, lacks animal welfare legislation (other places do too, though in Asia, Taiwan, Hong Kong and the Philippines have been praised for their protection laws.) In the country that is a motor for regional and world economic activity and home to one-sixth of the world’s population, growing numbers of activists are still waiting for protection laws amid enormous, routine animal suffering, they say.

In a new report by the online environmental magazine, chinadialogue, Peter Li, a politics professor in the United States and China policy expert at the Humane Society International, predicted such protetion would come in China, though he’s not holding his breath: “I know animal protection legislation will not be born in the near future,” he said in an article titled, “Younger generation face long wait for law-change on animal cruelty.” (Here it is in Chinese, too.)

A proposed draft of China’s first comprehensive animal welfare law, the China Animal Protection Law, was issued in September 2009, according to Xinhua, the state news agency. It has yet to become law, Xinhua said late last month. “In terms of law we haven’t seen any progress since 2009,” said Toby Zhang of Animals Asia, a China spokesman for the Hong Kong-based NGO.

Meanwhile, the suffering goes on.

This article cited Liao Kan, a researcher at the Shanghai Institutes for Biological Scie! nces, saying about 15 million animals are involved in scientific research in China each year.

“The poor treatment of animals has provoked public uproar in recent years, resulting in an increase in the number of organizations like NSAPA,” the Nanchang Small Animals Protection Association, Xinhua wrote.

Mr. Zhang agreed. “There is a lot of pressure and calls for change among the people,” he said, pointing to regular “animal rescues” staged by ordinary citizens, with a latest one a dog rescue in Chongqing early this month, he said. The rescued animals are generally headed for sale in markets and restaurants.

The situation is extreme. Here’s an excerpt from a recent report by Animals Asia, “Friends… or Food” on the dog trade in China. It makes for tough reading. You can download and read it here.

Dogs are raised on small farms of up to about 200 animals, says Animals Asia, the Hong Kong-based NGO with offices around the world. When they’re ready for market they are jammed into cages for “a long road journey by truck which often lasts for several days, throughout which the animals have no free access to food or water, and only an occasional cursory hose down to prevent dehydration and death.”

On arrival at the wholesale market, “The drivers climb the pyramid of cages, before hurling each one several metres to the ground, crushing limbs and paws and smashing faces of the terrified prisoners as the cages crash to the concrete.

“Using crude metal tongs which clamp the choking dogs and cats around the neck (or sometimes miss and stab into the soft palate), the traders then either hurl them into larger cages for weighing and onward sale, or offload them into pens. Once on solid ground the trembling ani! mals urin! ate, defecate and literally fall on any available water bowls in the pens to quench a 3 day thirst, visibly relieved that the pain has stopped and hopeful that their nightmare is over.

However, “their relief is short-lived as customers walk by, chose their victim, and the tongs grip once again. The screaming animals are then bludgeoned in front of the other terrified dogs with a blow across the muzzle, using an instrument resembling a baseball bat.

“Tragically, the blow is not hard enough to render the poor animals unconscious for long. At this point they are howling pitifully in pain and confusion, with blood and mucus pouring from their nose and mouth - only to be bludgeoned again and again.”

Why There’s a culinary reason.

“We’re told the idea is that when the traders finally dispatch the dogs, they want the heart beating rapidly so that the blood will gush out swiftly, which is believed to enhance the flavour of the meat. 
In amongst all this carnage, the other dogs nd cats are looking on, knowing that their turn is soon to be dragged out and slaughtered.”

Why is it tolerated

Animals Asia writes: “Cruelty to animals is not unique to Asia: animals all over the world are horrendously mistreated in factory farms, the fur trade, sport hunting or in animal testing.

“But rather than happening behind closed doors as it often does in the West, the cruelty in Asia is more open and therefore subject to greater scrutiny and judgment.

“Animal welfare is a relatively new concept in many places in Asia, and as a result it is vital that we ensure we work together with one voice to give the animals the best protection possible,” the group wrote.

There are other reasons, rooted in politics, said Mr. Li, the China specialist at the Humane Society International.

“Compared with other interest groups in China, animal activists have received less attention from the government since they do not pose imme! diate thr! eat to social or political stability,” he said.

However, like all NGOs in China, their activities are viewed with suspicion and are monitored. The authorities “are not prepared to lift controls on the registration of animal protection NGOs,” said Mr. Li.

The debate will rage on. Is “Asian culture” an excuse for allowing animals to suffer Or, as Mr. Bentham said, is the only reason we need to treat animals better a recognition that they suffer, too

In its report, Animals Asia quoted a Korean animal rights activist:

“Culture has often been used as an excuse to turn away from suffering and people in both Asia and the West often use cultural relativism to soothe their conscience for doing nothing,” Sung Su Kim said.

“Surely we want to regard various practices in our history (such as slavery and cannibalism) as something to be rid of rather than treat them as ‘culture’ and demand respect accordingly.”



Amid Suffering, Animal Welfare Legislation Still Far Off in China

BEIJING â€" About animals, “The question is not, ‘Can they reason’ nor, ‘Can they talk’ but, ‘Can they suffer’” So wrote Jeremy Bentham, the English philosopher, more than 200 years ago.

It seems anomalous. China, the world’s second-biggest economy, lacks animal welfare legislation (other places do too, though in Asia, Taiwan, Hong Kong and the Philippines have been praised for their protection laws.) In the country that is a motor for regional and world economic activity and home to one-sixth of the world’s population, growing numbers of activists are still waiting for protection laws amid enormous, routine animal suffering, they say.

In a new report by the online environmental magazine, chinadialogue, Peter Li, a politics professor in the United States and China policy expert at the Humane Society International, predicted such protetion would come in China, though he’s not holding his breath: “I know animal protection legislation will not be born in the near future,” he said in an article titled, “Younger generation face long wait for law-change on animal cruelty.” (Here it is in Chinese, too.)

A proposed draft of China’s first comprehensive animal welfare law, the China Animal Protection Law, was issued in September 2009, according to Xinhua, the state news agency. It has yet to become law, Xinhua said late last month. “In terms of law we haven’t seen any progress since 2009,” said Toby Zhang of Animals Asia, a China spokesman for the Hong Kong-based NGO.

Meanwhile, the suffering goes on.

This article cited Liao Kan, a researcher at the Shanghai Institutes for Biological Scie! nces, saying about 15 million animals are involved in scientific research in China each year.

“The poor treatment of animals has provoked public uproar in recent years, resulting in an increase in the number of organizations like NSAPA,” the Nanchang Small Animals Protection Association, Xinhua wrote.

Mr. Zhang agreed. “There is a lot of pressure and calls for change among the people,” he said, pointing to regular “animal rescues” staged by ordinary citizens, with a latest one a dog rescue in Chongqing early this month, he said. The rescued animals are generally headed for sale in markets and restaurants.

The situation is extreme. Here’s an excerpt from a recent report by Animals Asia, “Friends… or Food” on the dog trade in China. It makes for tough reading. You can download and read it here.

Dogs are raised on small farms of up to about 200 animals, says Animals Asia, the Hong Kong-based NGO with offices around the world. When they’re ready for market they are jammed into cages for “a long road journey by truck which often lasts for several days, throughout which the animals have no free access to food or water, and only an occasional cursory hose down to prevent dehydration and death.”

On arrival at the wholesale market, “The drivers climb the pyramid of cages, before hurling each one several metres to the ground, crushing limbs and paws and smashing faces of the terrified prisoners as the cages crash to the concrete.

“Using crude metal tongs which clamp the choking dogs and cats around the neck (or sometimes miss and stab into the soft palate), the traders then either hurl them into larger cages for weighing and onward sale, or offload them into pens. Once on solid ground the trembling ani! mals urin! ate, defecate and literally fall on any available water bowls in the pens to quench a 3 day thirst, visibly relieved that the pain has stopped and hopeful that their nightmare is over.

However, “their relief is short-lived as customers walk by, chose their victim, and the tongs grip once again. The screaming animals are then bludgeoned in front of the other terrified dogs with a blow across the muzzle, using an instrument resembling a baseball bat.

“Tragically, the blow is not hard enough to render the poor animals unconscious for long. At this point they are howling pitifully in pain and confusion, with blood and mucus pouring from their nose and mouth - only to be bludgeoned again and again.”

Why There’s a culinary reason.

“We’re told the idea is that when the traders finally dispatch the dogs, they want the heart beating rapidly so that the blood will gush out swiftly, which is believed to enhance the flavour of the meat. 
In amongst all this carnage, the other dogs nd cats are looking on, knowing that their turn is soon to be dragged out and slaughtered.”

Why is it tolerated

Animals Asia writes: “Cruelty to animals is not unique to Asia: animals all over the world are horrendously mistreated in factory farms, the fur trade, sport hunting or in animal testing.

“But rather than happening behind closed doors as it often does in the West, the cruelty in Asia is more open and therefore subject to greater scrutiny and judgment.

“Animal welfare is a relatively new concept in many places in Asia, and as a result it is vital that we ensure we work together with one voice to give the animals the best protection possible,” the group wrote.

There are other reasons, rooted in politics, said Mr. Li, the China specialist at the Humane Society International.

“Compared with other interest groups in China, animal activists have received less attention from the government since they do not pose imme! diate thr! eat to social or political stability,” he said.

However, like all NGOs in China, their activities are viewed with suspicion and are monitored. The authorities “are not prepared to lift controls on the registration of animal protection NGOs,” said Mr. Li.

The debate will rage on. Is “Asian culture” an excuse for allowing animals to suffer Or, as Mr. Bentham said, is the only reason we need to treat animals better a recognition that they suffer, too

In its report, Animals Asia quoted a Korean animal rights activist:

“Culture has often been used as an excuse to turn away from suffering and people in both Asia and the West often use cultural relativism to soothe their conscience for doing nothing,” Sung Su Kim said.

“Surely we want to regard various practices in our history (such as slavery and cannibalism) as something to be rid of rather than treat them as ‘culture’ and demand respect accordingly.”



City Life Takes a Toll on China’s Children

BEIJING â€" Life in China isn’t cheap any more, despite its reputation as a low-cost center. While many families have prospered from economic liberalization, others struggle to get by. And that includes many considered to be doing fairly well.

Many migrants from the countryside who are driving growth with their labor have few rights in the cities because they don’t possess an urban residence permit. That means life is highly insecure and everything is cash up front, which is largely true for legal city-dwellers as well. When sickness hits and requires medical treatment, it’s a problem. When something truly dreadful happens, like a family member committing or being suspected of committing a crime, the costs can be horrendous.

That’s what happened to Shi Ayi, as I wrote in my “Letter from China” this week. Her nephew, suspected of involvement in a murder, is 16, so the police told his parents tha they could not visit him in custody but would have to hire a lawyer, she said. That cost 50,000 renminbi, or about $8,000.

It’s that kind of thing that drives parents to work crazy hours â€" the fear of slipping back, of falling off the upwardly mobile ladder.

In China, widespread anecdotal evidence suggests that children are suffering. Shi Ayi said that her nephew’s busy parents left him alone from a young age, lacking the time to pay him much attention. He is unusual in being in the city with them; many parents leave their children in the countryside to be raised, often by elderly relatives, as Shi Ayi did herself.

Stories of children going off the rails abound. Addiction to online games is common. In her village, Shi Ayi said, teen pregnancy is frequent. Some parents sense something is wrong but may believe a child should do what he or she is told â€" “ting hua,” or “be obedient” â€" and that should solve the situation. They know their lives are lived on a tightrop! e, and see their children’s neglect.

Some ask themselves if it’s worth it.

But most say, as Shi Ayi did: What else can we do



Drum Roll for a Summer Festival of the New

MANCHESTER, Englandâ€"Kenneth Branagh was there with the director Rob Ashcroft. The actress Maxine Peake was there. Josie Rourke, the artistic director of London’s Donmar Warehouse, was there. The occasion The announcement of this year’s Manchester International Festival program by its director, Alex Poots.

The setting last week was a suitably dramatic one: the cavernous space of the late 19th-century Campfield Market Hall, thronged with festival participants, sponsors and journalists, and lined with local food stalls to feed the hungry crowd after Mr. Poots made his announcements.

The biennial Manchester International Festival, which had its first edition in 2007, isâ€"at least on an international scaleâ€" the only multi-arts festival worldwide to feature exclusively new work.

There’s a good reason for that: Creating new artworks is expensive and risky, with no predictable outcome or financial reward. But it’s a thrilling idea, and the Mancheser International Festival and Mr. Poots (who has directed it from the outset) have established a reputation for imaginative, outlandish, ambitious projects that often subsequently migrate to other countries: Bjork’s futuristic “Biophilia” concert; an opera by Damon Albarn of Blur; Robert Wilson’s “Life and Death of Marina Abramovic.”

This year’s edition, from July 4 to 21, keeps the ante up. Mr. Poots, who is also the director of the Park Avenue Armory in New York, spent an hour describing a dazzling array of projects, sometimes stepping back to let the artists involved take the spotlight.

The filmmaker Adam Curtis talked about his collaboration with the band Massive Attack (“You’re going to get a classic Massive Attack gig, but something else also,” he! said. “I don’t want to spoil the surprise.”). Ms. Peake spoke about starring in an adaptation of Percy Bysshe Shelley’s “Masque of Anarchy,” an epic 91-verse poem that was inspired by the 1819 Peterloo massacre in Manchester in 1819. Ms. Rourke, who hails from neighboring Salford (as she was careful to point out, after Mr. Poots introduced her as Mancunian) will direct Matt Charman’s drama “The Machine,” about the 1997 faceoff between the chess champion Garry Kasparov and the I.B.M. computer, Deep Blue.

Mr. Poots provided details for those not in Manchester to introduce their projects. Robert Wilson is directing a new show, “The Old Woman,” an adaptation of a story by theRussian author Daniil Kharms, and starring Willem Dafoe and Mikhail Baryshnikov (described by Mr. Poots as “the dancer and ‘Sex and the City’ star”). Peter Sellars will direct “Michelangelo Sonnets,” using Shostakovich’s “Suite on Verses of Michelangelo Buonarroti” and the artist’s drawings.

There will be a one-off concert from the great Sufi singer Abida Parveen; a group art show, “do it 20 13,” curated by the director of London’s Serpentine Gallery Hans Ulrich Obrist; a performance by the Argentinean pianist Martha Argerich; a “Rite of Spring” from the theater director Romeo Castellucci and the Perm orchestra that involves, according to Mr. Poots, “the choreography of bone dust.”

With the exception of performance pieces from Dan Graham, Tino Sehgal, Mette Ingvartsen, and Marten Spangberg, that’s more or less the only choreography around for thi! s festiva! l. Asked later why there was such a minimal dance component, Mr. Poots said that he had commissioned a major, large-scale dance piece for this festival, but that it hadn’t been ready, and would be scheduled for 2015.

Towards the end of the presentation, Mr. Branagh arrived on stage with Mr. Ashford to speak of the “Macbeth”â€"or, as he said, “the Scottish play”â€"that they will present in a deconsecrated church. (Performances are already sold out, but a big-screen relay to a crowd of 5,000 is planned for July 20.)

During his speech, Mr. Branagh thanked the city of Manchester for having the vision and courage, at a difficult economic moment, to sustain the ambitious, adventurous festival. Mr. Poots echoed his words in his closing remarks. “The arts are at the heart of our society,” he said. “We can’t cut the heart out.”

Have you been to past Manchester festivals What have you seen and how did you like it



A New Global Drug Problem

The United Nations warned in a report released Monday that permissive new drug laws permitting the use of medical marijuana in American states like California and Washington could endanger public health.

During a press conference in London, Raymond Yans, president of the United Nations’ drug-monitoring body, the International Narcotics Control Board, said that recently passed laws in California and Washington legalizing medical marijuana were nothing short of pathways “for recreational use.”

The world has a growing drug problem, and much of the drugs are legal.

The proliferation of both traditional garden-variety illicit drugs and high-end, pharmaceutically complex drugs - as well as the opening of previously closed markets, has officials from Brussels to New York in a tizzy.

In the United States, marijuana farms in places like California and Washington are supplying huge quantities ofpotent medical marijuana to anyone with a “condition” requiring treatment. The conditions often turn out to be fraudulent. In Europe and other parts of the world it’s often synthesized chemical cocktails that are leading to spikes in overdoses and medical ailments.

As the Moscow Times reported this week, Europe’s regulatory environment isn’t particularly stringent. A form of “synthetic marijuana” known generically as “Spice” is making the rounds and generating hundreds of millions in profits. The biggest problem isn’t the chemistry, however, it’s the law. Spice relies primarily on a synthetic compound called “quinolin-8-yl 1-pentyl-1H-indole-3-carboxylate.” Imported mostly from Asia, it can be lethal, but a loophole in Moscow’s laws makes banning it virtually impossible, the Moscow Times reports. The compound has been linked to kidney failure and acute coron! ary syndrome.

Estonia, meanwhile, was revealed to have an overdose rate roughly five times higher than the EU average. In a report issued last month by the Europe Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addictions, the tiny land-locked country led EU nations with 160 overdose deaths last year, mostly from a synthetic form of heroin called China White, a 21-percent increase over the previous year.

The news from Estonia and Russia is indicative of a trend the INCB warned about - the proliferation of so-called “designer drugs” throughout Europe and much of the world. The report said these “legal highs” - many of them dangerous â€" are appearing in European markets at the rate of about one per week: 49 in 2011.

They’re often advertised as natural and harmless like plant foods, supplements or brain-boosting cocktails. But regulators say they’re anything but. The Independent reported that in 2010, 43 people died from a substance known as mephedrone, or “miaow, miaow” on the streets.

These trends highlight what a recent piece in the Saratogian argued was a trend away from traditional drug use of marijuana, cocaine and heroin and toward legal, pharmaceutically produced drugs. In the United States, abuse of these over-the-counter legal highs is 40 percent higher than for previous generations.

From the Saratogian:

“There are so many more drugs out there than there used to be,” says Professor Richard Miech, a University of Colorado sociologist who has conducted studies into how and why today’s adolescents are switching from marijuana to the medicine cabinet in pursuit of narcotic nirvana.

So even as UN regulators fuss about pot-smoking hippies in the United States, Europe is grappling with the ! effects o! f chemical narco-mania. Two weeks ago, the Trans European Drug Information Project issued what it called a “red alert” after an Australian man essentially beat himself to death while high on a substance called “25I-NBOMe,” which was being sold on the market as LSD.

It’s not that traditional drugs have fallen by the wayside. Far from it. In Norway this week, even as the country’s Health Minister admitted that the rate of overdoses (294 of roughly 10,000 heroin addicts died in 2011) was “shamefully” high, he advocated allowing addicts to smoke the substance as a way to curb deaths and increase overall safety when using. Norway, which has stringent anti-(tobacco)smoking laws, also has one of Europe’s highest drug-related mortality rates.

Next week all of these matters ae going to be discussed at the first ever United Nations meeting where officialdom will discuss how to develop a coordinated response to both the proliferation of new and increasingly hazardous drugs, and the parallel easing of restrictions on traditional drugs in certain places.

Scott Johnson is the author of the forthcoming memoir “The Wolf and the Watchman” about life with his CIA father, to be released by W.W Norton in May, 2013



IHT Quick Read: March 6

NEWS President Hugo Chávez of Venezuela died Tuesday afternoon after a struggle with cancer, the government announced, leaving behind a bitterly divided nation in the grip of a political crisis that grew more acute as he languished for weeks, silent and out of sight, in hospitals in Havana and Caracas. William Neuman reports from Caracas.

Confusion and anxiety rose in Kenya on Tuesday as results from the presidential election were delayed by electronic breakdowns and officials announced a late-night change in tabulating votes, leading several observers to predict that a runoff might follow. Jeffrey Gettleman reports from Nairobi.

A dancer at the Bolshoi Ballet and two other mn have confessed to carrying out an acid attack in January on the company’s artistic director, Sergei Filin, a crime that gripped Moscow and left one of Russia’s most revered institutions in turmoil, the police announced on Wednesday. Ellen Barry reports from Moscow.

A new study credits the Cuban leadership with legally mandating equality for women, yet their opportunities in work and politics remain far below those of their counterparts in many parts of the world. Luisita Lopez Torregrosa reports from Washington.

Reeva Steenkamp, who was shot by sprinter Oscar Pistorious, had big plans for her newfound fame, including speaking about violence against women in South Africa, fri! ends and family said. Suzanne Daley and Lydia Polgreen report from Johannesburg.

The British government stood isolated Tuesday after finance ministers from elsewhere in the European Union rejected its effort to water down proposed limits on bankers’ bonuses. James Kanter reports from Brussels.

Such is the state of the European car industry that one of the main topics at the Geneva auto show on Tuesday was the political situation in Italy.

FASHION On Tuesday, the penultimate day of the autumn 2013 collections and after four weeks of shows across two continents and in four cities, there needs to be a moment of reflection. And it came at the Valentino show on Tuesday. Suzy Menkes reviews from Paris.

ARTS “A Chorus Line” and “Trelawny of the Wells” come to the London stage. Matt Wolf reviews from London.

No opera has experienced greater flux in how people have viewed it over the years than Mozart’s “Così Fan Tutte.” And perspectives continue to shift, as is demonstrated by the Teatro Real’s new production by Michael Haneke. George Loomis reviews from Madrid.

SPORTS Even FIFA admits that there was corruption inside its ruling executive committee at the time when future World Cup destinations were being decided. Rob Hughes reports from London.