Saturday 22 March 2008

Holy Saturday, 2008






Here're a bunch of pictures of Eli at buxiban....

He's outside on the balcony next to his plants -- we're doing a science project of growing plants from beans, peas, corn or whatever other seeds anyone could find. That's his friend Jack.

And a bunch of pictures of Eli in my class. I teach four classes there, and Eli's in all four -- reading, writing, science, and social studies. Plus he gets math and goat herding 101 at home.

PLUS,

in local news...
down under the pictures.

Taiwanese face tough decision in vote


By PETER ENAV, Associated Press Writer1 hour, 49 minutes ago

Taiwanese voters were deciding Saturday whether to stick with a party whose pro-independence bent has strained ties with China or switch to one pushing for a reduction of tensions and more economic engagement with the communist country.

Just two weeks ago, opposition candidate Ma Ying-jeou seemed ready to cruise to victory in the island's fourth direct presidential election, promising to work toward friendlier relations and even a common market with China.

But ruling party candidate Frank Hsieh appears to have been closing the gap. His party used the last day of campaigning to fan outrage over China's crackdown in Tibet.

Hsieh warns that China's crackdown in Tibet could be replicated in Taiwan, which split from the mainland amid civil war in 1949. Beijing still considers the island to be part of its territory and has threatened to attack if Taiwan rejects unification and seeks a permanent break.

"If Ma is elected, Taiwan's future will be in danger," Hsieh told a cheering crowd at a rally Friday in the southern city of Chiayi. "It will be the same for China to attack Tibet or Taiwan because it will be China's domestic issue."

But Ma has accused Hsieh of exploiting Tibet for political gain, although he himself has threatened to boycott the Summer Olympic Games in Beijing if the Tibetan situation worsens.

He also has accused Hsieh's Democratic Progressive Party of recklessly provoking Beijing during its eight years in power, and promised to reverse the pro-independence direction of outgoing President Chen Shui-bian.

"We won't rock the boat in regional waters," he said. "We will make ourselves a peacemaker not a troublemaker."

Ma has proposed a formal peace treaty with Beijing that would demilitarize the Taiwan Strait, the 100-mile-wide waterway that separates the two heavily armed sides. But he too has drawn the line at unification, promising that it would not be discussed during his presidency.

Hsieh, a former premier and dissident lawyer, has criticized Ma's common market plan as a half-baked idea that would flood the island with migrant Chinese workers who would steal jobs from working-class Taiwanese.

Ma claims that Hsieh has been distorting his proposal. The common market framework would be negotiated over time, Ma says, and Chinese workers wouldn't be allowed to come to the island.

"There are so many unemployed people in Taiwan," Ma told thousands of supporters at a rally on Friday in the southern city of Kaohsiung. "If I allow Chinese laborers to come, then that means I am becoming stupid. I won't allow Chinese laborers to come, but I'll allow Chinese tourists to come to spend money here."

Speaking to reporters Friday, Hsieh acknowledged that the ruling party has fallen short in its China policy. He also promised to ease tensions with China — but not at the expense of Taiwan's de facto independence.

"I will open up to China and maintain Taiwan's sovereignty at the same time," he said. "Ma is opening up but not maintaining sovereignty. I am taking a balanced approach."

While Taiwanese law forbids the publication of opinion polls in the last 10 days of campaigning, both parties agree that Hsieh has been closing in on his rival over the last two weeks.

Copyright © 2008 The Associated Press.

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