Showing posts with label longest running civil war in asia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label longest running civil war in asia. Show all posts

Thursday, October 6, 2011

WEBCAST: Truth Behind War on Afghanistan


On the 10th Anniversary of the US war, an underground activist tells the real story of the Occupation and Afghan Resistance

Reena, a member of the Revolutionary Association of the Women of Afghanistan (RAWA), will address American audiences via live video stream.

AWM Co-Director and KPFK’s Uprising radio show host Sonali Kolhatkar will lead the conversation with Reena via video streaming in front of a live audience. The event will be webcast live on AWM’s website. Questions will be drawn from the in-person audience and the online audience via Facebook.

  • WHEN: Friday, Oct. 7, 2011 7:00 pm PST/10:00 pm EST
  • WHERE: Creveling Lounge (CC Bldg., 2nd floor) Pasadena City College campus, Pasadena, California or afghanwomensmission.org.
  • WHAT: Open to the public. Entrance is free.

If you are unable to attend this event, you can watch a live webcast of the entire event on this website! Click here to find out the time of the webcast in your city.

Organized in collaboration with PCC’s Students for Social Justice. KPFK is a media sponsor. More

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

Thai Elephant steps on Burmese landmine

Elephant tears (Tasos_49/Digifancanon/Flickr)

(Telegraph.co.uk) Soraida Salwala of the Friends of the Asian Elephant conservation group in northern Thailand says the pachyderm's left foot was severely hurt in Sunday's blast in Burma's Kayin state.

Salwala said Tuesday that the elephant named Pa Hae Po was taken by truck to the group's hospital in the Thai city of Lampang and is expected to recover.

The elephant is the 14th such injury to be treated at the hospital since it began operating in 1993. He joins three other landmine victims that remain hospitalized at the facility. Rights groups say both the Burma army and rebels have laid mines during decades of conflict.
Buddha's Kapilavastu relics to go from India to Sri Lanka
The relics were excavated in the 19th century by Alexander Cunningham, the first director of the Archaeological Survey of India. The place of excavation, now called Piprahwa in Bihar, was known as Kapilavastu earlier [leading to Indian claims that the Buddha was born in India proper rather than in an outlying region, be it in what is now Afghanistan or Nepal]. Indian and Sri Lankan officials on Saturday unveiled a 16-foot tall [statue of the] Buddha in the Sarnath style from the Gupta period, installed at the entrance to the International Buddhist Museum complex...