2016年12月12日 星期一

Week Seven - 白頭盔

The Guardian view on the Nobel peace prize: give it to Syria’s White Helmets

Wednesday 5 October 2016 
his is the backdrop against which the White Helmets operate – a western-funded Syrian search-and-rescue organisation whose members put their lives at great risk to save civilians, receiving only a monthly stipend of $150. Danger is made worse by the fact those who bomb routinely resort to double-tap strikes, with fighter jets dropping ordnance and then returning to target rescue teams.
These volunteers know all too well that great power politics, alongside a tyrant’s brutal policies, have brought Syria to the abyss. They entertain no illusions that genuine measures will be taken swiftly to end massacres on a scale unprecedented in decades. The White Helmets do what they can, locally. It’s the very least the west can do to back them. No one should be surprised that Bashar al-Assad has compared these humanitarian activists to terrorists: that’s what he calls anyone who opposes him.
What the White Helmets accomplish may seem like a drop in the ocean, but what they represent is immense: resilience and bravery in the face of barbarism. They are a constant reminder that those targeted by Russia and the Assad regime’s massive bombing campaign in Aleppo are civilians, not terrorists. And they show that individual acts of courage can go a long way to fight indifference. They also embody a spirit of civic resistance – upholding some of the ideals of the peaceful, popular uprising of 2011 and exemplifying courage and solidarity in the face of state-sponsored terror. The international community has utterly failed Syrians, by failing to protect them from mass atrocities. No Nobel peace prize can erase that. But because symbols can be powerful, the White Helmets should be recognised with this award.

Who:White Helmets
What:They rush towards the site instead of towards shelters. With their bare hands, they search for people in the rubble
How:Nobel committee prepares to announce this year’s peace prize

keywords:
1.shelters 庇護所
2.precisely 明確地
3.devastation 毀壞
4.ordnance 軍械
5.illusions 幻想
6.immense 極廣大
7.resilience 彈性
8.routinely 常規
9.atrocities 暴行

Week Six - 美古關係

President Obama Declares a ‘New Day’ in U.S.-Cuba Relations After Castro Meeting
Updated: March 21, 2016 3:17 PM
President Barack Obama hailed “a new day” in the relations between the U.S. and Cuba on Monday as he spoke alongside Cuban President Raúl Castro following a historic bilateral meeting.
“For more than half a century, the sight of a U.S. President in Havana would have been unimaginable, but this is a new day,” Obama said.
The leaders’ remarks followed a bilateral meeting at the Revolutionary Palace on Monday, the first major event of Obama’s historic trip to the island nation. He is the first U.S. President to visit Cuba in 88 years.
Both leaders made clear that though profound differences between the two countries remain, they hope to find common ground as they improve relations.
Obama noted Monday that he brought 40 members of Congress with him on the trip, which he said was an indication “growing interest in the U.S. Congress in lifting the embargo.”
Since the President announced the beginning of normalized relations between the two countries, the Obama Administration has rolled out changes including direct mail service, commercial flights and the expansion of business opportunities.
But as important as those incremental steps are, the long-standing embargo must end, Castro said on Monday.
“The blockade stands as the most important obstacle to our economic development and the well-being of the Cuban people,” he said. “That’s why its removal will be of the essence.”
Obama said he’s confident the embargo will end, but, “when, I can’t be entirely sure.”
The issue of human rights is the biggest disagreement between the U.S. and Cuba, given Cuba’s detention of political prisoners. During a question-and-answer session, Castro was asked about political prisoners, but he denied that any were being held, and asked the reporter who asked the question to provide him with a list.
Castro also went on the attack against the U.S., criticizing Americans for “political manipulation and double standards” on human rights and calling the lack of access to health care, education and equal pay in the U.S. “inexcusable.”
Obama implied that both countries have work to do to further normalize relations.
“The U.S. will continue to speak up on behalf of democracy,” he said, “including the right of the Cuban people to decide their own future.”

Who:Obama
What:hailed “a new day” in the relations between the U.S. and Cuba
When:on Monday
How:a historic bilateral meeting

keywords:
1.bilateral 雙邊
2.unimaginable 不可思議
3.profound 深刻
4.session 會議
5.inexcusable 不可原諒 無法辯解

2016年12月2日 星期五

Week Five - 無人機

Military extends UAV deployment area

US WORRY?A military official said that the US was concerned over the development of the drone program and asked that the defense ministry brief it on the project

By Lo Tien-pin  /  Staff reporter

An unmanned aerial vehicle built by the National Chungshan Institute of Science and Technology is displayed at last year’s Taipei Aerospace and Defense Technology Exhibition at the Taipei World Trade Center.

The military said it is able to effectively detect military deployments in China through the use of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), after it expanded detection zones from airspace over eastern and southern Taiwan to airspace over the Taiwan Strait.

According to a military official, who wished to remain anonymous, the US has expressed concern over how the UAV project has developed and military missions the drones are commissioned to perform.

The US has demanded that the Ministry of National Defense send specialists to brief the US Department of Defense on the project before a delegation was to head to the US for a meeting about bilateral cooperation on military issues involving high-level officials from both countries, the military official said.

A UAV launched from a base in western Taiwan would be able to detect military movement in China’s southeast coastal area, he said.

Given Taiwan’s proximity to China, the capability of the UAVs to detect military deployments on the other side of the Taiwan Strait is highly valued by the US, he said.

Despite the US having sophisticated UAVs that can fly long distances to access the area, there are concerns within the US military that such missions would be costly, as well as there being political and military issues preventing its use of UAVs in the area, he added.

The UAV development program was undertaken by the National Chungshan Institute of Science and Technology. It has delivered 32 UAVs to the army.
In addition to Taimali (太麻里) in Taitung County, where the UAVs are based and training exercises are carried out, the ministry has been in talks with the Civil Aeronautics Administration over the possibility that part of the Hengchun airport in Pingtung could be used as another training base for the drones.

According to sources from the military, the air force’s airspace training area is within the range of missiles deployed in southeast China, making it impossible for the air force to carry out missions in the areas that the UAVs can access.

The military said it was still deliberating whether it would deploy the UAVs in western Taiwan.

http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/front/archives/2014/07/13/2003594974

When: last year(2013)
Where: Taipei
What: an unmanned aerial vehicle built by the National Chungshan Institute of Science and Technology

Key Words:
1.deployments 部署
2.anonymous 匿名
3.commissioned 委託
4.delegation 代表團
5.bilateral cooperation 雙方合作
6.proximity 接近
7.sophisticated 複雜
8.missiles 導彈
9.deliberating 審議