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Afghanistan: Politics and Football add Fresh Meaning to 9/11

Published on Oct 3, 2013 by Luke Hunt

This article first appeared in The Edge ReviewBy LUKE HUNT / KabulThe sound of gunfire rang out across Kabul. Mobs were rampaging through the streets. Foreign and Afghan troops, fearing the capital was under attack, reached for their guns as civilians scampered for cover.It was September 11, the 12th anniversary of the al-Qaeda strikes on New York, Washington D.C. and Pennsylvania, and across Afghanistan security was tight and tensions high.The mood quickly brightened when troops realized their reaction was misguided. While bombings and firefights were being reported from the countryside, Kabul was not under attack – it was a false alarm. Afghanistan had just defeated old rivals India 2-0, winning the South Asia Football Federation Championship.Such a victory was unprecedented....

Click for full post : 6 - min read.

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On a Warpath: Turkey’s Dangerous Take on Syria

Published on Sep 14, 2013 by Luke Hunt

This article first appeared in The Edge ReviewBy LUKE HUNT / IstanbulThroughout the Cold War, Turkey played a deft diplomatic hand. With neighbours like the Soviet Union and its recalcitrant regional satellites, Syria, Iraq and Iran, keeping the peace was the mantra underpinning Turkey’s projection of soft power within the politics of the region.It was a common sense policy that earned Ankara a wealth of respect across the Middle East and beyond – until very recently. A combination of nasty domestic differences, unfettered access to oil and gas and a leader’s uncompromising ego is heralding an end to a once peaceful approach.At the center of this policy shift is Turkey’s Prime Minister TayyipErdogan, whose formidable abilities have achieved what many....

Click for full post : 5 - min read.

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Hazy Business, Shallow Governments

Published on Jul 8, 2013 by Luke Hunt

This article first appeared in The Edge Review.By Luke HuntBack in 1997 a rather irate Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohammad put a lid on local reporting of an unprecedented phenomenon. Burning off by major palm oil companies in nearby Indonesia had reached such levels that the entire region was blanketed by smog.A petulant Mahathir also yelled at foreign correspondents covering the story alleging a grand conspiracy to blacken Malaysia’s name and undermine its tourism industry. Not quite.A few years later a Malaysian minister famously snapped at critics of the government’s burgeoning love affair with palm oil plantations — and the scorched earth policy required to grow them. “What do you want?” He asked, “monkeys or gold?”Ever since companies like Sime....

Click for full post : 5 - min read.

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A King's Final Journey

Published on Nov 5, 2012 by Luke Hunt

Half of the country’s population is expected to make the pilgrimage to Phnom Penh to pay their respects to King Father Norodom Sihanouk, demonstrating their reverence for him as well as their unease about what his absence will mean for the country’s future. Luke Hunt Reports for the Bangkok PostFor weeks, Cambodians have filed into the capital, ending a pilgrimage which for most is a once in a lifetime event. The streets along the riverside are jammed with traffic while in the parks outside the Royal Palace children dressed in white with black ribbons play and pray with their parents.From a distance the palace gates - adorned by portraits of the late King Father Norodom Sihanouk _ appear like an....

Click for full post : 7 - min read.