FEATURED PHOTOS AND STORIES

January 13, 2020

Two new flags will be flying high at the Olympic Games in Rio.

For the first time, South Sudan and Kosovo have been recognized by the International Olympic Committee. Kosovo, which was a province of the former Yugoslavia, will have 8 athletes competing; and a good shot for a medal in women's judo: Majlinda Kelmendi is considered a favorite. She's ranked first in the world in her weight class.

(South Sudan's James Chiengjiek, Yiech Biel & coach Joe Domongole, © AFP) South Sudan, which became independent in 2011, will have three runners competing in the country's first Olympic Games.

When Will Chile's Post Office's Re-open? 

(PHOTO: Workers set up camp at Santiago's Rio Mapocho/Mason Bryan, The Santiago Times)Chile nears 1 month without mail service as postal worker protests continue. This week local branches of the 5 unions representing Correos de Chile voted on whether to continue their strike into a 2nd month, rejecting the union's offer. For a week the workers have set up camp on the banks of Santiago's Río Mapocho displaying banners outlining their demands; framing the issue as a division of the rich & the poor. The strike’s main slogan? “Si tocan a uno, nos tocan a todos,” it reads - if it affects 1 of us, it affects all of us. (Read more at The Santiago Times)

WHO convenes emergency talks on MERS virus

 

(PHOTO: Saudi men walk to the King Fahad hospital in the city of Hofuf, east of the capital Riyadh on June 16, 2013/Fayez Nureldine)The World Health Organization announced Friday it had convened emergency talks on the enigmatic, deadly MERS virus, which is striking hardest in Saudi Arabia. The move comes amid concern about the potential impact of October's Islamic hajj pilgrimage, when millions of people from around the globe will head to & from Saudi Arabia.  WHO health security chief Keiji Fukuda said the MERS meeting would take place Tuesday as a telephone conference & he  told reporters it was a "proactive move".  The meeting could decide whether to label MERS an international health emergency, he added.  The first recorded MERS death was in June 2012 in Saudi Arabia & the number of infections has ticked up, with almost 20 per month in April, May & June taking it to 79.  (Read more at Xinhua)

LINKS TO OTHER STORIES

                                

Dreams and nightmares - Chinese leaders have come to realize the country should become a great paladin of the free market & democracy & embrace them strongly, just as the West is rejecting them because it's realizing they're backfiring. This is the "Chinese Dream" - working better than the American dream.  Or is it just too fanciful?  By Francesco Sisci

Baby step towards democracy in Myanmar  - While the sweeping wins Aung San Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy has projected in Sunday's by-elections haven't been confirmed, it is certain that the surging grassroots support on display has put Myanmar's military-backed ruling party on notice. By Brian McCartan

The South: Busy at the polls - South Korea's parliamentary polls will indicate how potent a national backlash is against President Lee Myung-bak's conservatism, perceived cronyism & pro-conglomerate policies, while offering insight into December's presidential vote. Desire for change in the macho milieu of politics in Seoul can be seen in a proliferation of female candidates.  By Aidan Foster-Carter  

Pakistan climbs 'wind' league - Pakistan is turning to wind power to help ease its desperate shortage of energy,& the country could soon be among the world's top 20 producers. Workers & farmers, their land taken for the turbine towers, may be the last to benefit.  By Zofeen Ebrahim

Turkey cuts Iran oil imports - Turkey is to slash its Iranian oil imports as it seeks exemptions from United States penalties linked to sanctions against Tehran. Less noticed, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, in the Iranian capital last week, signed deals aimed at doubling trade between the two countries.  By Robert M. Cutler

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TRUCE BEGINS: 157 DAYS

PETITION SIGNATORIES: 521

man MILES WALKED: 2698.3      

LORD MICHAEL BATES is walking from Olympia, Greece to London to highlight the UN Resolution declaring the London 2012 Olympic Truce.

PHOTOS ALONG THE WALK FOR TRUCE 

LORD MICHAEL BATES: I have decided to walk over 3000 miles in the hope that we can persuade all signatories to the Truce to do just one thing to implement it. Not only would this bring the flame of hope into conflict zones around the world it would mean that we would rediscover the central purpose of the Ancient Games which was to provide for a pause in the endless cycle of violence through the observance of the Sacred Truce. If they could do it 3000 years ago, then surely we can do it now. If you agree then please join us in this campaign….

(Video produced and edited by Sam Farmar)

Tuesday
Aug302011

DAY 119 - KRILO JESENICE TO SPLIT: 12.1 MILES (24,200 STEPS)

17 August, 2011

12.1 miles (Total:  1149.5 miles) 24,200 steps (Total: 2,232,291 steps)

A diplomat is a man who always remembers a woman’s birthday, but never remembers her age.” Robert Frost (American poet)

The signs from Krilo stated that Split was only 10km away. Normally the signs show the distance to the centre of town, but this one I was to discover was only to the edge of town. Split is a very active port and the Old Town where I was looking to stay was at the end of the peninsula—a further 10km. It was one of the busiest holiday weekends of the year so accommodation and certainly cheap accommodation were very hard to come by.

My visit to split was being organised by the great British team of Chris Frean, Head of the Political Section at the Embassy in Zagreb and Sarina Kalebota, Pro-Consul at the British Consulate in Split. Having seen a great deal of the British diplomatic team, I am hugely impressed by the extraordinary ‘value add’ they provide for the UK overseas. One of the differences between British and other diplomatic missions is that they retain the services of local people. This may have initially been a budgetary inspired move, but the combination of experienced British diplomats and local representatives can be a very powerful, as is the case here in Split.

So during my first visit is to the British Consulate, which is located on the popular ‘Riva’ next to the Palace of Diocletian and the harbour, Sarina Kalebota gave me a tremendous briefing on the “do’s and don’ts” of life in Split. She has lived here all her life and worked at the Consulate for almost fifteen years and as they say, ‘What Sarina doesn’t know about Split—ain’t worth knowing’. Sarina is very discrete, but one can imagine that if ever you wanted a documentary series that would expose to the world the full spectrum of life it would be called the ‘British Consul’—the Consulate is the first port of call for Brits abroad who get ill, drunk, lose their money, get arrested or want to develop business opportunities.  However, the Consulate is also the cultural representative in the town for the UK—which in Split means a very busy life.

Chris Frean had been incredibly busy and travelled down from Zagreb to meet us for dinner and go through the programme for the next few days; a series of excellent meetings. I hadn’t appreciated how ‘sports mad’ the town of Split is. It prides itself on having produced more Olympians than any other city of comparable size, with the possible exception of Leipzig. They can point to 186 Olympians and 56 medallists. If there was any town that should grasp the importance of the Olympic Truce, then it is Split, with the recent experience of the horrors of war and a proud tradition of sporting excellence. I was told that there was one street in Split which can boast four previous world top ten tennis players, including the most famous—Goran Ivanisevic.

We discuss over dinner why Split should produce so many sporting greats and conclude whilst the climate and the existence of sporting role models was important, so was the genetic physique of the local people—invariably tall, in perfect proportion, and strong—this is the case for both men and women. Intrigued and on a purely scientific quest, I return to the busy Riva area of the city where the nightlife is just getting underway and get a seat with a good view to test the theory.  It is hard work, but after only four hours and three bowls of chocolate ice cream, I am able to conclude that there is some truth in the observation; it will require more work to be completely sure.

Monday
Aug292011

DAY 118 - SESTANOVAC TO KRILO JESENICE: 28.2 MILES (56,400 STEPS)

16 August, 2011

28.2 miles (Total:  1137.4 miles) 56,400 steps (Total: 2,208,091 steps)

How do you tell a communist? Well, it’s someone who reads Marx and Lenin. And how do you tell an anti-Communist? It’s someone who understands Marx and Lenin.‘ Ronald Reagan

Matko droped me off at Pizza Amor, Setanovac  at 6.10AM—I had said the plan was to set off at 6AM, so in a perfect imitation of a British Officer in a war movie, who having fought his way through enemy lines, arrives and declares “terribly sorry old chap—few minutes late—ran into a spot of bother.’ It was a perfect note on which to part company; as he drove off he shouted “Don’t forget turn right immediately after the plastic Jesus.”

I did pass a roadside crucifix, but it didn’t look plastic—I just smiled recalling the wonderful time I had with the Marusic family and friends and turned down into a deep canyon through which the fast flowing Cetine river passed—its full force broken temporarily by an ugly Communist era hydro electric plant.  How on earth could any group of people fall for such an unreal and ugly ideology?  It organised against the basic human instincts for creativity, freedom, knowledge, ownership, travel, enterprise and spirituality.

Having spent nearly three months in former communist countries, I am just amazed that thinking people could have been fooled by it. That is why the essential requirement of a communist regime is total control—if people are able to travel freely and interact with other people and ideas, then the indoctrination that this is some perfect system fails.

I recall speaking with students in North Korea and they genuinely believed that I must be so envious of their lives that I was visiting and wanting to stay. One thing I would say that communism does far better than capitalism, and this is in the words of people who have experienced both systems, is that under communism people did genuinely seem to look after each other in their family and community.  Capitalism, in its extreme version, creates an ‘It’s all about me’ attitude, in which the advancement of personal self-interest is the only life goal.  Ultimately this breaks down community and breaks down family, which both require the individual to accept the wishes of the majority—this is democracy and it is the essential thermostat which regulates the selfish instincts of capitalist economies.

The journey down the canyon was longer than I had expected and I arrived in Omis around 3PM in the afternoon. Omis is a beautiful former smuggling port with lots of historic buildings and narrow streets. I hoped to find accommodation there. I checked a number of travel agents and they all told me that I have no chance of getting a room for under 200 euros a night. I suspected that this was a ‘line’ for gullible looking Western tourists to stump up ridiculous sums. I resolved that I would rather sleep at the in the bus station than blow a week’s accommodation budget on one night in Omis.

I was tired. It was very hot. My rucksack was cutting into my hips. I stopped at a cafe and ordered a tall Macchiato coffee and three scoops of chocolate ice-cream and studied my map. I had already walked twenty miles, but thought I might be able to manage another five, especially if it meant lower prices. I checked the prices at various stages along the way and there seemed to be a remarkable consistency around 90 euros per night. I walked on in the hope that I would get something cheaper.  After a further eight miles, I reached Krilo Jesenice, but couldn’t walk any further, so I started to haggle on the prices and managed to get the price down to 70 euros – still twice the budget, but they could see from my face that I was a captive market.

Sunday
Aug282011

DAY 116 - IMOTSKI TO SESTANOVAC: 21.7 MILES (43,400 STEPS)

4 August, 2011 –Professor Matko Marusic & friends

21.7 miles (Total:  1109.2 miles) 43,400 steps (Total: 2,151,691 steps)

With perfect timing I arrived into Imotski during the busiest weekend of the year—during the Imotski Wine Festival. There wasn’t a spare room in the town. Time to call Dr Bagaric who came up trumps again, finding me an annex to a private house which I was to share with a German couple who were in town to enjoy the festival. I was so tired from the day of walking that I had a shower and went straight to bed, only to be slightly stirred by my fellow German guests as they arrived back from the festival and tripped over, the cat, the mat, the chair, the table, the TV ….

I made an early start, as I was aiming for Sestonovac about 20 miles away. I saw a bit of a short-cut on the map over the hills to Zagvodz – as usual with my short cuts, there are lots of cuts but they’re not short. The climb over the hills was on a quieter road and quite spectacular in parts, especially the long ‘B’ road to Sestanovac, but the hills were more like mountains and they took it out of me.   So I struggled into Sestanovac confident of a choice of accommodation, but there was none. I asked in the bars and in the shops for rooms to rent, but again there were no offers—they told me the nearest were 30km away on the coast at Baska Voda.

I was so tired that I could have slept on a clothesline and just lay down on a verge of grass by a car park. A waitress from a coffee bar came out and told me that the pizzeria had rooms that they often let out and if I went and ordered a meal, then they might take pity on me.  It seemed like a plan, so I walked off to the Pizzeria Amor and asked if they had any rooms—there was a blunt ‘no’ and I realised this was probably because I looked like some aged hippy and stunk to high heaven—who could blame them. I sat down and ordered a bottle of mineral water, which they weren’t too enthusiastic about serving to me and really wanted me to move on—but they took my money—good of them.

For some reason I had the ‘Ghostbusters’ theme ‘Who you go’na call….’ whistling in my head and so I thought there is only one man who could possibly help here—Ivan Bagaric. I sent a text to Ivan: “Dear Ivan, you know when you said there was no chance of accommodation in Sestanovac and suggested I take another route, well I just wanted to let you know I am in Sestenovac and that you were right. Your humble friend, Michael’.  Within seconds, almost as if he had anticipated the call, Ivan sent a text back saying a friend of his lived in the neighbouring village of Katuni and he would come and pick me up if I sent my exact location.

Twenty minutes later Matko Marusic arrived—if one hundred people were asked to pick a brilliant professor out of an identity parade, Matko wouldn’t have stood chance, but was I so glad to see him. It was clear that he was widely known, as the restaurant staff rushed out to greet him, and he brushed them away with an imperious gesture, which I confess I just loved and wanted to go back to them and say, ‘I’m with him’, but that would be childish and ungracious.  So I did the only ‘Christian’ thing, I muttered it, thought it and grinned, as I swaggered out of the restaurant to the waiting car.

“Have you eaten?” Matko asked in perfect English. “No” I replied. “Good, my mother makes the finest egg and chips in the whole of Croatia and she is making them for you now.” We drove a short distance into Katuni and turned into a street called ‘Marusic’ – a hamlet with about twenty homes in it – and arrived at a beautiful understated cottage. Here I was introduced to Matko’s mother, Tonka and ushered into the kitchen where truly the most wonderful egg and chips I have ever tasted were served.

After supper we sat out in the garden with a glass of wine and exchanged introductions. Matko was Professor Matko Marusic, Dean of the Medical School of the University of Split. Like his great friend Ivan Bagaric, Professor Marusic was a passionate man; there were no half opinions, whether it was egg and chips being the best in the world (probably true), his wife, Ana being the most beautiful and brilliant woman in all Croatia (certainly true), or his team Hadyuk Split playing the finest football in Europe (bit of a fib, but a nice one).

We were not going to stay in Katuni, but instead were going to go down to his beech house at Baska Voda.  However, first he wanted to show me his family village.  It was early evening as we walked around the village, and people were sitting outside their homes.  He would greet everyone with what sounded like stern words in Croatian, but which invoked smiles and laughter in a way which would suggest that he was teasing them.  We were invited to join virtually every home for a drink or food as children rode around on bikes or played games. It was an idyllic picture of a functioning community.

Matko was keen that we should accept one invitation from the Nejasmic family as they spoke some English.  He explained how the son (now I guess in his early forties) was the first man from the village to volunteer for the Croatian army in the war, how he was a hero and his prize for volunteering was to win the heart of the most beautiful girl in the village, whose name I never got, but whom Matko simply called ‘the movie star’—she was indeed very beautiful, though clearly not as beautiful as Ana. They served an enormous meal and when I explained that we had already eaten our hostess told me “that was for food, this is for friendship.” It was quite an experience and reminded me of Hilary Clinton’s book ‘It takes a village’ (to raise a child).  As the rioters rampaged through the streets of London, you couldn’t imagine a more distant example of what they have and what we have lost.

After visiting the neighbours Matko drove me up to Kresevo Hill overlooking Katuni where there was a giant cross and where pilgrims for the Festival of the Great Virgin Mary were gathering for pilgrimage to Sinj the next day.  As we stood at the foot of the cross, Matko looked out towards Split and said in profound tone: “I said there were three things I wanted to see before I would die. The first was the independence of Croatia—this I have witnessed thanks to the great man Dr Franj Tudjman. The second was the construction of the A1 motorway all the way to Zagreb and there it is—it is beautiful.” He paused “And the third?” I asked. His eyes went heavy and with ‘dead pan’ delivery he said, “For Hadyuk Split to win the European Champions League”—he shook his head, reached for a cigarette from his pouch, lit it, took a long draw and exhaling said “I think I am going to be around for a very long time.”

We arrived at Baska Voda late, but not too late for Marusic family debate. One feels that this is a family tradition and it would be as improper to retire to bed without a political debate, as it would be not to brush your teeth. Matko’s son Berislav, a university professor in philosophy in the United States, and his wife, Jennifer, also a professor and specialist in the thought of Karl Popper, were the formidable ‘liberal’ defence and Matko’s daughter and classical scholar, Marija in midfield. Matko was relishing the contest as he had a fellow ‘conservative’ to join the fray and expose the weakness of the liberal arguments. Instead, conversation revolved around peace the Olympic truce and the philosophy and theology of war and peace, on which was widespread agreement. Matko retired from the field to puff on another cigarette – in disgust that his chance of scoring a rare and essential victory over the liberals was descending into a cosy cross-party consensus.

The experience of being with the Marusic family reminded me of what I was missing on this walk, my own family debates, teasing and laughter. So when they suggested I take the day off the next day to go to Sinj for the Great Festival of the Virgin Mary, I didn’t take much persuading.

We set off early to go Trilj, where a lecturer at the medical school, Slavica Kozina and her husband, Tonci, had invited the family to join them for the traditional feast day celebration and lunch of roast lamb. It was a wonderful setting; a home filled with kittens and an adoring young child and the smell of the marinated meat being slow cooked for lunch once we returned from the service at Sinj. It was an extremely hot day and Sinj was filled with over 100,000 pilgrims—parking was difficult so we missed the famous procession of Alka knights, which didn’t trouble me, but Matko teased Slavica about for the rest of the day. I didn’t dare suggest that Matko’s decision to drive us the long way round to Trilj along the A1, so as to show his guest the glorious highway, may have contributed also to the slight delay.

Slavica had written extensively on the medical effects of war and in particular types of mourning especially amongst women. I asked Slavica a question that had puzzled me: where were the women in the Balkan wars—why didn’t they intervene to stop the madness and the killing? Slavica said that she felt that women were as caught up in the march to war as the men. The image of Croatian culture is that it is male dominated, but this is a facade—it is the women who are in charge and women can see the attraction of war every bit as much as men. Later, Matko told a wonderful story that underlined this: when he was being particularly contentious at a faculty meeting and the chairman asked if there was anything she could do to reign-in Matko , she replied, “Croatian women treat their men like their dogs—they keep them on a short leash and let them bark.”

Slavica and Tonci were wonderful hosts and I wished the day could have lasted longer, but even for us there was a time to go. At 6AM the next morning Matko drove me back to Pizzaria Amor to re-commence my walk – with detailed instructions on the route to take down to Omis and accommodation. I was sad to leave Matko; he had been such a wonderful host and I could have listened to him talk forever. I found the colour, passion, directness of his thought and speech generously drenched in self-deprecation, such a refreshing change from the often insipid, politically correct, pious conversation with which we are more familiar in the UK.  From an early age, we Brits are trained to suppress our true thoughts in the name of the higher virtue of politeness and in the belief that by only thinking it, but not actually saying it, we are somehow morally superior. Even the thought of the Dean of a Medical School puffing away on a cigarette would be enough to cause convulsions of organic muesli onto the comment pages of The Guardian all across Islington and Notting Hill.  Professor Matko Marusic serves as a reminder of full the joy of life and the beauty of freedom of speech; that is what we say we are fighting for, and yet place in chains.