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Posts Tagged ‘Canada’

Tejinder Singh – AHN News Correspondent

Washington, DC, United States (AHN) – President Barack Obama on Saturday called on Congress to pass the payroll tax cut for a full year after applauding the Senate for passing a two-month extension of the bill. He refrained, however, from commenting on the Republican demand in the bill requiring him to decide whether to move forward with a controversial oil pipeline project.

“While this agreement is for two months, it is my expectation — in fact it would be inexcusable for Congress not to further extend this middle-class tax cut for the rest of the year,” said Obama. “It should be a formality. And hopefully it’s done with as little drama as possible when they get back in January.”

Wearing a navy suit and a navy striped tie, the President took no questions after making his three-minute statement in which he said, “I’m glad that both parties in Congress came together, and I want to thank them for ensuring that as we head into the holidays, folks at home don’t have to worry about their taxes going up.”

Addressing a hurriedly-called gathering in the James S. Brady press briefing room, Obama called on Congress to get “this done when they get back on Monday.”

Stressing that he would like the extension to go for the full year of 2012, he said, “And hopefully we’re going to be able to make sure that when everybody gets back next year we extend this further all the way to the end of the year.”

Obama, however, did not go into details of the agreement the Republicans struck with Democrats, slipping in a requirement for the president to make a decision within 60 days on the Keystone oil sands pipeline, a 1,700-mile pipe that could carry crude oil from Canada through the central United States to the U.S. Gulf coast.

The president took the opportunity to make a statement after the Senate voted to extend the payroll tax cut by two months. Now the measure awaits a House vote where a tug-of-war is expected, according to political pundits.

Earlier on Saturday the Senate voted 67-32 to pass a compromise spending bill to keep the government funded for the rest of the fiscal year, which ended Sept. 30. The $1 trillion spending plan cleared the House on Friday and was on its way to President Obama to sign.

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Dhaka, Bangladesh (IRIN) – Ethnic minority children in Bangladesh from the southeast Chittagong Hill Tracts are among the country’s least literate and at heightened risk of dropping out of school, say experts and community leaders.

Children in this region bordering India and Myanmar face discrimination in government-run schools where they are often badly treated by teachers and students from the country’s largest ethnic group, Bengalis, said Saikat Biswas, a program officer with Oxfam GB.

The mostly Buddhist population of 1.3 million ethnic minorities – about 1 percent of the country’s predominantly Muslim population – are concentrated in the districts of Bandarban, Rangamati and Khagrachari, also known as Chittagong Hill Tracts (CHT).

Dozens of minority groups here lag behind the rest of the country in land ownership, income, employment, health and, significantly, literacy.

“The rate of literacy is far lower among the ethnic minorities than it is nationally,” said Rezai Karim Khondker, an economics professor at Bangladesh’s Shahjalal University of Science and Technology.

More than half of all household members surveyed in CHT (55.2 percent) have no formal schooling, according to a recent study by Khondker and others.

And for those who start schooling, fewer than 8 percent complete primary education while 2 percent complete secondary education, according to a 2009 study by the Dhaka-based research group, Human Development Research Centre, .

Nationwide, estimates of the percentage of children who finished their primary education from 2005-2009 varied from 55 to 94 percent, based on various UN surveys.

Communication concerns

Children from four to six years old soon lose interest in the classroom and drop out when they cannot communicate with teachers or understand lessons, said Biswas.

“Ethnic minority children communicate in their mother tongue in their house. But, in school, they are compelled to face Bengali text while the teachers are also from the Bengali community. The whole teaching method is in Bangla.”

Mongching Marma, 7, enrolled in Shishu primary school in Khagrachari District, but left within two years. “In school, we have to read in Bangla language. I struggled a lot to understand the Bangla text,” he said.

Many of his friends also left before finishing primary school for the same reason, he added.

“Children get a totally different environment in school when teachers are of another community and the text is in a different language,” said Sanjeeb Drong, general-secretary of the CHT-based ethnic minority rights coalition, Bangladesh Indigenous Peoples Forum. Most of the country’s 45 ethnic minority groups live in CHT.

“It is totally impossible to increase literacy rates among the ethnic minority groups if the government cannot introduce primary education in their mother tongue,” he added.

Teachers should also come from ethnic minority communities so pupils have a similar environment in school as they do at home, said Drong.

Bangladesh’s 2010 National Education Policy recommended introducing primary education for ethnic minority groups in their own languages, but Drong said he had seen little progress and no “effective steps” toward implementing the initiative.

Bridging cultures

The government has formed committees to carry out the education policy, said the chairman of the parliamentary standing committee at the Education Ministry, Rashed Khan Menon, but expanding the languages of instruction is a big undertaking and requires “huge funding”.

Meanwhile, the government continues to take different steps to improve ethnic minorities’ access to education and literacy, including opening new schools in CHT and setting quotas for ethnic minority student university placements and employment, he added.

But even with little funding, governments can train non-ethnic minority teachers to support ethnic minority students who do not speak the dominant language, said Fred Genesee, a psychology professor at McGill University in Canada, who has researched language among minority children in the Americas.

“The tendency is to think there is nothing special that needs to be done with second language learners. This is a huge mistake… A century of research shows that education in the dominant language does not work for many children. These children underperform and drop out at higher rates.”

Poverty factors

A shortage of schools in rural areas is another hurdle to boosting literacy, said Biswas and Drong.

Poverty is also a factor, said the economics professor, Khondker. “When they have nothing to eat, parents prefer to employ their children in any work rather than sending them to school.”

Six out of 10 households in CHT – irrespective of ethnicity – live below the national absolute poverty line where each member consumes less than 2,100 calories per day; the other four households live in extreme poverty (less than 1,800 calories per day), according to a 2009 UN-funded study

mw/pt/mcw

– Provided by Integrated Regional Information Networks.

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Saudis tussle over a textbook

The Media Line Staff

Riyadh, Saudi Arabia Rob L. Wagner (The Media – A power struggle usually ends with winners and losers. If a new religious textbook critical of Western culture is any indication of who is winning the role of guardian of young minds in Saudi Arabia, then Islamic conservatives are the clear victors.

In what amounts to a rebuke of a scholarship program under the aegis of none other than King Abdullah himself that sends thousands of young Saudis to foreign universities, a new secondary school textbook called Hadith argues that Western culture exposes students to corruption.

“The conservatives have the upper hand and have made sure that it’s their voice that says what is permitted in Islam,” Ehsan Ahrari, a Middle East analyst based near Washington, DC, told The Media Line “The conservatives have the loudest voice in making a persuasive argument within the Saudi context. Saudi Arabia is truly concerned about modernization in its educational institution, but even the king doesn’t know how to deal with it.”

The publication of the book comes at a sensitive time for Saudi Arabia as it struggles to scrub its textbooks of derogatory language of other religions and cultures. The Ministry of Education has made progress to eliminate some passages, including controversial definitions of jihad.

More than 100,000 Saudis have obtained King Abdullah Foreign Scholarships to pursue studies in universities in professional fields such as medicine, computer science, engineering courses and administration and finance. About 30 percent study in the U.S., 15 percent in Britain, 11 percent in Canada and 8 percent in Australia. Only about 6 percent study in a Muslim country, Egypt. Saudi Arabia has the largest number of citizens studying abroad of any country in the world.

The textbook, which warns students of democratic countries’ attempts to Westernize Muslim countries by advancing the United Nations’ human rights agenda, has received little attention in the media, where restrictive laws were passed in response to the Arab Spring. The Saudi government can levy fines and jail sentences for criticizing government institutions

As a result, few Saudis are willing to publicly criticize for the record the Ministry of Education. Religious conservatives, Ahrari says, are taking advantage of the chilling effect of those laws to broaden their power.

But the book has lit up the social media with complaints – mostly anonymous – that politics have no place in teaching hadith, sayings attributed the Prophet Muhammad. The authors are accused of attempting to politicize Islam by slipping criticism of the West into religious texts just as students are preparing to enter foreign universities.

Saudis have also expressed bewilderment that the Ministry of Higher Education, which administers the scholarship program, and the Ministry of Education, which published Hadith, do not have a shared strategic education plan.

However, Hadith has brought renewed scrutiny to how the ministry vets textbooks that contain political opinion. The controversy also renews focus on how much influence Saudi conservatives wield at a time when Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood and the Islamic Ennahda Party in Tunisia are also flexing their political muscle.

The textbook details the “risks” scholarship students face. “A lot of them [student] have returned laden with the spirit of the West, breathe with its lungs and think with its mentality,” the book states. “They echo their Orientalist teachers in their own land and spread their ideas and theories with deep belief, increasing enthusiasm and eloquence so they become a burden on their society.”

“The percentage of those who survive from this influence is a very little one,” the book’s authors say.

Another section in Hadith, entitled “Westernization,” targets the United Nations. The section characterizes the international organization as a tool for “dominating” Western powers to apply political pressure on Muslim countries to adopt more aggressive human rights legislation. The West, the textbook argues, uses “the United Nations, the Security Council and its different committees, on weak countries, especially the Islamic ones. This is done for the sake of westernization under slogans such as reform, democracy, pluralism, liberation and human rights, in particular those related to women and religious minorities.”

In fact, some of the views expressed in Hadith are widely held by Saudis.

Maha A., a 33-year-old Jeddah native and university student studying in Newcastle, England, says the UN entry in the book is legitimate. She points to the UN Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) as meddling in the Kingdom’s affairs and with sharia, or Islamic law. Saudi Arabia ratified CEDAW in 2000. “I have no problems with the way the United Nations is portrayed in the book,” she told The Media Line.

The schoolbook also warns of Western attempts to subvert Islamic culture by distributing “immorality” through the media. It considers the media tools to advocate Western values.

Turki Al-Dakheel, a journalist and presenter on Al-Arabiya television, complained in a column in the Arabic-language daily Al-Watan that the textbook’s “extremist” portions are not consistent with the changes taking place in the international community and in Saudi society.

“The same educational institutes that send students abroad also criticize the scholarship [program],” Al-Dakheel argues. “We should take out the mentality of disagreement from our curriculum in order to protect our students from being politicized or being slaves to one single notion.”

Ahrari, the Washington-based analyst, told The Media Line that the book’s content is less a challenge to King Abdullah and more of “classic bureaucratic” infighting in the Ministry of Education

A Saudi Ministry of Education official, speaking on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitive nature of the textbook, agreed. He told The Media Line that there are two factions in the ministry struggling to implement their ideology: Western-educated liberals and Saudi-educated conservatives.

Many of the ministry’s decision-makers hold postgraduate degrees in education from the U.S. and Britain. These supervisors often square off with mid- and upper-level managers educated in Islamic studies from Imam Mohammed Bin Saud University in Riyadh and other Saudi universities.

“There is a great debate between conservatives and liberals. The conservatives are in the minority, but they are very active,” says the official, although he notes the ministry’s policy requires moderation in texts.

The infighting is so intense, he says, that the ministry recently began publishing school textbooks without authors’ names to prevent accusations of extremism. Yet the anonymously authored books have also led to the lack of accountability within the ministry’s ranks for authors failing to adhere to moderation guidelines.

One 22-year-old Riyadh student studying in Britain says there is little merit in warning scholarship holders of the dangers in the West.

“Saudi students are already asked to attend a two-week course on Western culture. The scholarship program selects the highest qualified students to go abroad. If a student is weak in religion and cultural values, he won’t be studious and he won’t be allowed in the program,” Muhammad A. told The Media Line.

But the student also says that human rights issues advocated by the UN are consistent with the pillars of sharia. “Sharia talks of human rights and it’s no different than the United Nations’ human rights. It’s compatible, and there are no negative effects on Saudi Arabia,” he says.

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Kris Alingod – AHN News Contributor

St. Paul, MN, United States (AHN) – Minnesota has joined the federal government and other states in suing Education Management Corp., the nation’s second-largest for-profit college.

According to the lawsuit, two EDMC colleges, Argosy University and the Art Institutes International, collected government financial aid despite the company having given incentives to recruiters based on new student enrollments.

EDMC allegedly used a compensation matrix that involved giving admissions workers points depending on the number of recruited students. The points were then used to calculate the recruiter’s salary.

“Incentive payments by for-profit colleges to their recruiters are illegal because they can lead to a hard-sell atmosphere where students are sometimes hustled to enroll in expensive programs paid for by taxpayer-backed student loans, hurting both students who are trying to better themselves and taxpayers who must pick up the tab if the loans default,” state Atty. Gen. Lori Swanson said in a statement.

Minnesota is the sixth state to file a lawsuit against EDMC for obtaining student aid despite illegally giving bonuses to admissions workers.

The U.S. Justice Department also filed a complaint against the company last month, accusing it of providing commissions to recruiters and falsely certifying compliance with the law that prohibits such incentive compensation. EDMC allegedly obtained $11 billion in federal aid despite its practices.

The False Claims Act bans post-secondary schools from compensating admissions employees based on the number of students recruited, which results in the enrollment of unqualified students, and the pay out of federal grants and student loans.

Pittsburgh-based EDMC, which has about 148,000 students enrolled in more than 100 branches nationwide and in Canada, has denied the allegations.

Former Iowa state Atty. Gen. Bonnie Campbell, who serves as adviser and spokesperson for the company’s legal counsel, said last month the legal action from the “handful of states” is “flat-out wrong.”

“Federal regulations issued in 2002 permitted companies to consider enrollments in admission officer compensation, so long as enrollments were not the sole factor considered,” Campbell said.

“To ensure compliance… EDMC worked closely with outside experts in both human resources and education law to develop a plan that required consideration of five quality factors along with enrollment numbers to determine salaries,” she added.

Early this year, EDMC said it adopted its compensation system in 2003 “based on the advice of and good faith reliance on the opinion of outside counsel that [it] was lawful.”

The company added that it “has long maintained an uncompromising commitment to sound business principles with an emphasis on compliance with laws and regulations.”

The allegations against the company were made by Lynntoya Washington, who worked as a recruiter, and Michael Mahoney, a former training director for the company’s online education division.

The Justice Department decided to intervene in the case along with the states of California, Florida, Illinois and Indiana after investigating the whistleblowers’ claims.

The agency filed friend-of-the-court briefs and did not intervene in the whistleblower case against the University of Phoenix, the nation’s largest for-profit college, which agreed to pay $67.5 million to settle allegations of incentive compensation.

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Vittorio Hernandez – AHN News

Ottawa, Ontario, Canada (AHN) – British Prime Minister David Cameron warned of a new economic crisis in his address before the Canadian Parliament on Thursday.

Cameron pointed to the failure of U.S. and European leaders to address government deficits that led to the threats to the stability of the world economy.

On the same day, stock markets across the globe dipped sharply again amid worries by politicians, central bank heads and investors that the rich nations would enter another recession because of huge government debts.

The British leader said that while Britain and Canada are not yet staring done the barrel, the indicators point to that direction and warned British and Canadian families could face a tough time in coming months.

He said the world is suffering from unparalleled debt levels not seen in decades, which clearly points to a debt crisis, not a traditional cyclical recession. To address the problem, Cameron said the usual solution of fiscal and monetary policies to stimulate the battered economies would not necessarily work.

Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper, in his introduction of Cameron, pushed for nations to resist trade protectionism, accept more flexible exchange rates and commit to reduce deficits and dangerous and unsustainable levels of national indebtedness.

Cameron challenged Western politicians to exercise more leadership and warned their indecision would worsen the crisis.

Prior to his Ottawa speech, Cameron headed a new group of nations from the G20 that wrote a letter to American and European leaders to blame them for their lack of action that led to the crisis. The letter was signed by leaders from Australia, Canada, Indonesia, Mexico and South Korea.

Similar warnings were previously made by the heads of the International Monetary Fund and World Bank.

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Vittorio Hernandez – AHN News

Montreal, Quebec, Canada (AHN) – The threat of a strike by Air Canada’s cabin crew was averted Tuesday after negotiators reached a tentative agreement with the air carrier. The interim deal came just hours before the 6,800 members of the Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE) were scheduled to walk off their jobs.

CUPE Air Canada component president Jeff Taylor said he would recommend the flight attendants accept the tentative agreement.

The air carrier’s operations were almost paralyzed when Air Canada’s senior vice president of customer service, Susan Welscheid, angered the flight attendants when she stated in a letter that when people choose to become a steward or stewardess they must accept as part of the deal irregular work schedules.

In August, 88 percent of the cabin crew voted to reject a proposed contract. However, federal Labor Minister Lisa Raitt threatened to file a bill that would have forced them back to work had the strike pushed through.

CUPE set ratification meetings in Vancouver, Calgary, Toronto and Montreal to discuss the interim agreement, which include an offer of better job security even if Air Canada should launch a discount leisure air carrier next year.

CUPE declined to provide details of the interim agreement until the flight attendants ratify it.

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Vittorio Hernandez – AHN News

St. Louis, WA, United States (AHN) – Many colleges across the U.S. are hitting two birds with one stone by installing water stations throughout their campuses. The move aims to promote tap water and help cut use of throwaway bottled water.

It is also in response to the ban on sale of plain bottled water by some schools.

By installing hydration stations linked to the tap, the students would be encouraged to bring refillable water bottles instead of buying new throwaway ones. Similar stations are now seen in airports, parks and offices.

To help push the idea, more than 800 dining establishments and cafes across the U.S. are giving diners and patrons who come with reusable bottles free water refills. So far, 22 states are part of the initiative started by the New York-based non-profit group Tapit in 2009. Philadelphia will be the 23rd member by October.

To push for healthier and more environment-friendly drinking options is also a boost for manufacturers such as Elkay which is selling different models of the hydration stations since 2010. Over 150 educational institutions have purchased the water filling stations from Elkay.

The initiative is expected to gain more followers. So far, 14 college and universities in the U.S. and Canada have prohibited the sale of throwaway bottled water throughout their campuses, while there are some more educational institutions that put in place partial bans.

Among the schools with full bans are the Seattle University and Washington University, which removed bottled water from vending machines and school canteens in February 2009.

Although most of the bans are student-led, some college groups are against the prohibition because it removed students’ free choice.

The ban has not hurt the bottom line of bottled water producers. According to the industry group, International Bottled Water Association, their sales went down for two years, but grew again in 2010 by 3.5 percent. The group estimates the average American buys 28.3 gallons of water annually.

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Diane Alter – AHN News Reporter

London, England, United Kingdom (AHN) – Some psychopaths are aggressive, some are manipulative, some are charming and some are–business leaders.

Research reveals that as many as one in 25 business leaders could be a psychopath. While the percentage among the general population is a scant 1 percent, the research, to be shown in full on Wednesday on BBC television, found that among business leaders the level may be as high as 4 percent.

A successful psychopath mimics the qualities corporate leaders admire, the study says, which helps them quickly climb the corporate ladder. The psychopath uses his charm and aggressiveness to achieve status and promotions rapidly despite actually being a poor boss.

It is the psychopath’s abilities to deceive that make it virtually impossible to tell the difference between a truly good boss and a psychopath.

If you think your boss may be a psychopath you may be right. Professor Bob Hare of the University of British Columbia in Canada says as many as one in 100 Americans have psychopathic traits.

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Vittorio Hernandez – AHN News

Toronto, Ontario, Canada (AHN) – The average Canadian pinpoints 55 as they age they would likely be free from debt, according to a Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce survey released on Monday.

The poll, conducted by Harris/Decima, surveyed Canadians between the ages 18 and 64. It found that only 35 percent of those in the age group 55 to 64 had no debt.

On the average, the respondents see themselves paying off their debts within 10 to 15 years.

Thus, those in the age group 18 to 24 said they would likely be free from debt by 32, while those in the 24-34 group placed it at 44, those in the 45 to 55 group pointed at 60 and those in the 55 to 64 bracket said 65.

However, the study pointed out that most of their expectations of being debt free are unrealistic given their current level of indebtedness.

Christina Kramer, CIBC executive vice president of retail distribution, said that more than a planned timetable to get out of debt, Canadians must also make a realistic strategy that would include extra payments allocated for their debt and to minimize interest cost.

Among the 2,000 respondent, 10 percent said they would never be debt free and 8 percent forecast being in debt until they reach their 70s.

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Linda Young – AHN News Writer

Washington, D.C., United States (AHN) – Google will pay a $500 million fine to settle government charges the company displayed illegal ads online in the United States for products for Canadian pharmacies.

It was one of the largest penalties ever to settle such a case, Justice Department officials said.

The fine covers revenue that Google made selling online ads to illegal advertisers, along with the sales made by Canadian pharmacies in connection with the scheme.

In addition, Google admitted that it had improperly aided Canadian pharmacies in operating illegally by allowing them to advertise through Google’s AdWords program. Under federal law, pharmacies in Canada cannot sell prescription medications to customers in the United States without a doctor’s prescription. Moreover, counterfeit drugs were involved.

Web sites are legally liable for the actions of advertisers on their sites that break federal laws.

After Google became aware of the federal investigation in 2010, it began requiring Canadian pharmacies to only direct advertising to customers in Canada.

In addition, Google now requires that Canadian online pharmacy advertisers must be certified by the Canadian International Pharmacy Association and United States pharmacy advertisers to be certified by the National Association of Boards of Pharmacy.

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