Asia/Oceana

Burmese Women Expose Rapes by Military Regime.  [Burma] Women who have fled Burma to escape what they describe as systematic violence against women by the military have banded together to help other survivors.  Last week, their work was recognized by the Peter Gruber Foundation, which awarded them $200,000 and the 2005 International Women's Rights Prize.  The award was given jointly to the Shan Women's Action Network and the Women's League of Burma.  In 2002, women in this activist network issued "License to Rape"--a report whose findings were echoed by a subsequent State Department investigation-detailing over a five-year period 173 incidents of rape and sexual violence involving 625 girls and women in Shan, a state in northeastern Burma.  Multiple women were raped in some incidents.  An update to that report, conducted by the network and other Burmese women's groups, has documented another 188 rapes as an officially sanctioned "strategy of war" during the past three years.  Twenty-five percent of the rapes resulted in death and 61 percent were gang rapes, with women in some cases detained and raped repeatedly for up to four months, the report found.  "There appears to be a concerted strategy by the Burmese army troops to rape Shan women as part of their anti-insurgency activities," the report said.
Koizumi Invites More Women to the Party.  [Japan] Koizumi has suggested that more women run for office in Japan's election Sept. 11.  Among industrialized nations, Japan has the lowest level of female participation in politics. It also has the lowest level of women in executive suites. Males dominate in this nation of 127 million, and it is an economic problem.   Politicians do not seem to realize that tapping only half of the country's labor pool is holding back growth. Japan hardly has a monopoly on sexism in the workplace, yet how often does the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development urge other developed nations to provide women more opportunities to help lift the economy?
Go Forth and Multiply.  [Korea] South Korea has long had a habit of thinking ahead and investing heavily in the future.  So its latest goal of driving up its birth rate is a signal to other countries in the region to consider the consequences of present fertility trends.  Japan and much of Europe should do the same; they fret about their own woeful fertility but either take refuge in technical fixes to pension challenges or do nothing.  They decline to penalize those who expect a pension but do not contribute to the workforce of the future.  For now, South Korea's population is still much younger than Japan's, which started its demographic transition a decade earlier.  But unless its procreation campaign succeeds, it will be in the same position as Japan, or worse, by 2035.   Japan's population is already in decline.  Could it be that after centuries of being oppressed, women in these newly industrialized Confucian societies have finally acquired economic independence and are rebelling against tradition?   It may not be mere coincidence that Japan and Korea, countries where the subservient role of women has long been most apparent, now have by far the lowest fertility rates, the city-states excluded.  In East Asia, educated women in Singapore are showing a marked reluctance to marry.  The same applies in Hong Kong, which imports brides from the mainland, and Taiwan, which imports them from Vietnam and elsewhere.
An Itsy-Bitsy Definition of a Korean 'Amenity'.  [ Korea ] It seemed like a good idea, a surefire way to catapult this beach into the ranks of Bali and Waikiki: a 10 percent discount for anyone in a bikini.  It all started back in 2003 when local officials here, racking their brains over how to lure visitors to this stretch on South Korea's rural west coast, decided that a name change was due.  Byeonsan Beach was reborn, with " Bikini" in its name.
Nina Wang to Inherit Her Husband's Empire.  [Hong Kong ] Hong Kong's richest woman won an eight-year legal battle Friday when the city's highest court ruled that she - not her father-in-law - should inherit her late husband's business empire.  Nina Wang was chairwoman of Chinachem Group as it grew into a property powerhouse.   Forbes magazine estimates her net worth at $3.1 billion.   Nicknamed "Little Sweetie," she is known for wearing her hair in pigtails and dressing in girlish outfits.
Nepal Dreams of Nobel Prize for Its Women.  [ Nepal ] The State media in Nepal is throwing the spotlight on the nine women from the kingdom who are in the fray for the Nobel Peace Prize as the countdown begins for announcement of the winner October 14.   The nine women, nominated as part of the "1,000 Women for the Nobel Peace Prize 2005" from 153 countries, are as diverse as Nepali society itself.  The oldest, 78-year-old Sahana Pradhan, is one of Nepal's veteran communist leaders.  A politburo member of the Communist Party of Nepal-Unified Marxist Leninist, Pradhan is also president of the Women's Security Pressure Group that lobbies for women's socio-political rights.  At the other end of the spectrum is 25-year-old Jhamak Ghimire, who was born with a congenital disability and cannot speak, move or use her hands.   Though without any formal education, Ghimire uses her feet to write.  A columnist with Nepal's largest daily Kantipur, she has enriched Nepal's literary world with hundreds of poems, songs, stories and essays.

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