2015年12月24日 星期四

Week6 - Syrian refugees

What you need to know: Crisis in Syria, refugees, and the impact on children.

Syria crisis: Fast facts

  • 13.5 million people in Syria need humanitarian assistance.1
  • 4.3 million Syrians are refugees, and 6.6 million are displaced within Syria; half are children.2
  • Most Syrian refugees remain in the Middle East, in Turkey, Lebanon, Jordan, Iraq, and Egypt; slightly more than 10 percent of the refugees have traveled to Europe.3
  • Children affected by the Syrian conflict are at risk of becoming ill, malnourished, abused, or exploited. Millions have been forced to quit school.

What’s so urgent now?

Winter is coming: Refugees in settlements have fewer resources than ever before. They need adequate food, warm clothes, shoes, blankets, heaters, and fuel.
In Lebanon alone, aid agencies estimate that 195,000 Syrian families will need assistance to stay warm and dry over the winter.
Despite rain and cold, thousands more refugees attempt sea crossings to reach Europe.
More than 3,200 have perished this year, including Aylan, a little Syrian boy whose photo touched hearts around the world.
Why Syrians are fleeing their homes: Three reasons
  1. Violence: Since the Syrian civil war began, 320,000 people have been killed, including nearly 12,000 children. About 1.5 million people have been wounded or permanently disabled, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights. The war has become more deadly since foreign powers joined the conflict.
  2. Collapsed infrastructure: Within Syria, healthcare, education systems, and other infrastructure have been destroyed; the economy is shattered.
  3. Children’s safety: Syrian children — the nation’s hope for a better future — have lost loved ones, suffered injuries, missed years of schooling, and witnessed violence and brutality. Warring parties forcibly recruit children to serve as fighters, human shields, and in support roles, according to the U.S. State Department.
     

What are the refugees’ greatest needs?


Syrians fleeing conflict need all the basics to sustain their lives: food, clothing, health assistance, shelter, and household and hygiene items.
They need reliable supplies of clean water, as well as sanitation facilities.
Children need a safe environment and a chance to play and go to school. Adults need employment options in case of long-term displacement.
As winter comes, refugees need warm clothing, shoes, bedding, heaters, and heating fuel.

Where are the refugees living?


Turkey is hosting more than 1.9 million Syrian refugees. Iraq, facing its own armed conflict, is hosting about 250,000 Syrians.
More than 1.1 million refugees are in Lebanon. Many have taken up residence there in communities’ abandoned buildings, sheds, spare rooms, garages, and in tent settlements on vacant land. Conditions are often crowded and unsanitary. Even so, families struggle to pay rent for these spaces.
About 630,000 refugees have settled in Jordan, mostly with host families or in rented accommodations. About 80,000 live in Za’atari, a camp near the northern border with Syria, and about 23,700 live in another camp, Azraq, where World Vision set up much of the water and sanitation system.

Four risks that children face
  1. Children are susceptible to malnutrition and diseasesbrought on by poor sanitation, including diarrheal diseases like cholera.
  2. Many refugee children have to work to support their families. Often they labor in dangerous or demeaning circumstances for little pay.
  3. Children are more vulnerable to sexual abuse and exploitation in unfamiliar and overcrowded conditions. Without adequate income to support their families and fearful of their daughters being molested, parents — especially single mothers — may opt to arrange marriage for girls, some as young as 13.
  4. Between 2 million and 3 million Syrian children are not attending school. The U.N. children’s agency says the war reversed 10 years of progress in education for Syrian children.                                                               Between 2.1 and 2.4 million school-age children are not attending school. In Syria, 5,000 to 14,000 schools have been damaged, destroyed, or occupied since 2011. The decline in education for Syrian children has been the sharpest and most rapid in the history of the region, according to UNICEF.                                             For refugee families that don’t live in camps, paying rent and other expenses can make it difficult for parents to afford books, uniforms, and tuition fees for their children. In some cases, children must give up school and start work to help provide for their families.                   In Lebanon, the government has opened public schools to Syrian children, but language barriers, overcrowding, and the cost of transportation keep many refugee children out of school.

                              How is World Vision helping refugees and others affected by the crisis?                                    Since the Syria crisis began in 2011, World Vision has helped more than 2 million people in Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, and Iraq. We also provide aid in Serbia to refugees fleeing to Europe.
  • Syria: food aid, health assistance, hygiene support, baby care kits, water and sanitation, shelter repair kits, winterization supplies
  • Iraq: food aid, health services, water and sanitation, baby kits, stoves and other winter supplies; for children: education and recreation, programming for life skills, peace building and resilience
  • Jordan and Lebanon: personal and household supplies, clean water and sanitation, education and recreation, Child-Friendly Spaces and child protection training for adults, winter kits and psychosocial support for children
  • Serbia: basic necessities, including cold-weather gear for refugees traveling to Europe; Child-Friendly Spaces and rest areas for women and babies
Structure of the Lead 
WHO-Syrian residents
WHEN-2015
WHAT-civil war
WHY-Inflammable
WHERE-Tianjin
HOW-Sadness 

keywords
massive 巨大的;大規模的
investigation 調查;研究
hazardous 有危險的;碰運氣的
debris  殘骸;碎片
insist 堅決主張;堅持
industry 勤勉;工業
executive 實施的;行政的;有執行權的




http://www.worldvision.org/news-stories-videos/syria-war-refugee-crisis

2015年12月17日 星期四

Week5- Tianjin explosion

Chinese authorities ended the search for the remaining eight missing in a massive chemical warehouse explosion last month, setting the final death toll at 173 in China’s worst industrial disaster in years.

Related: Tianjin blasts: plans to turn site into 'eco park' mocked on Chinese social media

The announcement by the Tianjin city government said there was no hope of finding the eight people and the court would start issuing death certificates.

“After thorough investigations by all parties it is certain that there is no possibility of survivors,” said a statement on Friday night.

The eight include five firefighters, underscoring the explosion’s status as the worst disaster for Chinese first responders, more than 100 of whom were killed, including police officers. Among firefighters a total of 104 were killed.

Investigations into the 12 August blasts at the Ruihai International Logistics warehouses showed they were located closer to homes than permitted, and stored much more hazardous material than authorised, including 700 tonnes of highly toxic sodium cyanide.

A series of massive explosions late at night shattered windows and tore facades off buildings for miles around, while launching debris including heavy steel storage canisters into nearby communities with the force of an artillery shell. Homeowners have held protests demanding the government buy back their apartments, saying they are unliveable.

The disaster has raised questions about corruption and government efficiency, potentially tarnishing the government led by Xi Jinping, who has made those two issues a hallmark of his administration.

Authorities are investigating malfeasance in the issuing of permits and regulation of the company, and have detained 12 of its employees and executives. They include the primary owner, who was on the board of a state-owned company and kept his ownership of Ruihai hidden as a silent partner.

Also detained as part of the investigation are 11 government officials, while the head of the government body in charge of industrial safety, Yang Dongliang, has been placed under investigation for corruption.

Related: Tianjin blasts: Communist party insists there will be no cover-up as anger grows

Yang had previously worked for 18 years in Tianjin in state industry and local government, rising to executive vice mayor.

Authorities say they have sealed all waterways leading out of the blast zone to curb cyanide contamination as teams in hazmat suits clean up hazardous debris.

According to the Tianjin Environmental Protection Bureau, water samples inside the disaster zone have shown levels of cyanide as high as 20 times above that considered safe. No cyanide has been detected in nearby seawater or areas outside the 1.8-mile (three-kilometre) radius quarantine zone.




Structure of the Lead 
WHO-Tianjin residents
WHEN-2015
WHAT-explosion
WHY-Inflammable
WHERE-Tianjin
HOW-Sadness 

keywords
massive 巨大的;大規模的
investigation 調查;研究
hazardous 有危險的;碰運氣的
debris  殘骸;碎片
insist 堅決主張;堅持
industry 勤勉;工業
executive 實施的;行政的;有執行權的




http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/sep/12/tianjin-explosion-china-sets-final-death-toll-at-173-ending-search-for-survivors






2015年12月3日 星期四

Week4 - Dengue fever

Dengue fever facts

Dengue fever is a disease caused by a family of viruses that are transmitted by mosquitoes.
Symptoms include severe joint and muscle pain, swollen lymph nodes, headache, fever, exhaustion, and rash. The presence of fever, rash, and headache (the "dengue triad") is characteristic of dengue fever.
Dengue is prevalent throughout the tropics and subtropics.
Because dengue fever is caused by a virus, there is no specific medicine or antibiotic to treat it. For typical dengue fever, the treatment is directed toward relief of the symptoms (symptomatic treatment).
The acute phase of the illness with fever and muscle pain lasts about one to two weeks.
Dengue hemorrhagic fever (DHF) is a specific syndrome that tends to affect children under 10 years of age. It causes abdominal pain, hemorrhage (bleeding), and circulatory collapse (shock).
The prevention of dengue fever requires control or eradication of the mosquitoes carrying the virus that causes dengue.
There is currently no vaccine to prevent dengue fever.

What is dengue fever?


Dengue fever is a disease caused by a family of viruses that are transmitted by mosquitoes. It is an acute illness of sudden onset that usually follows abenign course with symptoms such asheadache, fever, exhaustion, severe muscle and joint painswollen lymph nodes (lymphadenopathy), and rash. The presence of fever, itchy rash, and headache (the "dengue triad") is characteristic of dengue. Other signs of dengue fever include bleeding gums, severe pain behind the eyes, and red palms and soles.



Dengue Symptoms and Signs

Primary symptoms of dengue appear three to 15 days after the mosquito bite and include the following:
  • high fever and severe headache,
  • with severe pain behind the eyes that is apparent when trying to move the eyes.
Other associated symptoms are:
  • joint pain,
  • muscle and bone pain,
  • rash,
  • and mild bleeding.
Many affected people complain of low back pain.


http://www.medicinenet.com/dengue_fever/article.htm


Structure of the Lead 
      WHO-Everyone
      WHEN-2015
      WHAT-Dengue fever
      WHY-  Mosquitoes caused this seek
      WHERE-The country has mosquitoes
      HOW- Dangerous




Keywords

disease 疾病,弊病,病害
transmit 傳染,傳送,傳播
exhaustion 耗盡,精疲力盡
specific 明確的,特殊的,特有的
hemorrhagic 出血,溢血
eradication 放射,發射
swollen 使膨脹,使驕傲自大
presence 存在,出席,風度







2015年11月12日 星期四

Week3 - The same sex of marriage in the US

Same sex marriage is now legal in the entire US after a Supreme Court ruling striking down state marriage bans.
The ruling means all US states must grant marriage licences to gay and lesbian couples and recognize marriages that have taken place in other states.
So how did we get to this point?

In 1996, the US Congress passed and President Bill Clinton signed the Defense of Marriage Act, a law that prohibited federal recognition of same-sex marriages.
In 2003, Massachusetts judges ruled the state constitution allowed gay marriage, and marriage licences followed shortly after that. In the following years, a handful of states passed gay marriage bans while others began working towards allowing same-sex unions - either by court order or legislation.
One high-profile ban occurred by referendum in California in 2008 after courts had previously allowed same-sex marriage.
This continued across the US until the Supreme Court heard a challenge to the Defense of Marriage Act in 2013.
The justices, who had previously stopped short of resolving the question of same-sex marriage nationally, had to consider whether or not states were constitutionally required to issue marriage licences and if states were required to recognize same-sex marriages performed elsewhere.
How many states previously allowed same-sex unions?
Before the ruling, 36 states were issuing marriage licences to same-sex couples, as well as Washington DC, which sets its own marriage laws but is not legally a state.
A critical turning point came in October 2014, when the Supreme Court chose not to hear appeals against lower court rulings that had overturned same-sex marriage bans - expanding the legality of gay unions to many more states.
In other states, same-sex marriage has been approved either through legislation or voter referendum.
Michigan couples were briefly able to marry before a court stayed a ruling overturning its ban.
What have been the key Supreme Court rulings?
On 6 October 2014, the court turned away appeals from five states with gay marriage bans on the books that had challenged court rulings overturning those bans.
In challenging the gay marriage bans, proponents relied on a 2013 Supreme Court ruling in the case of United States v Windsor.
In that case, the court overturned the Defense of Marriage Act (Doma), which barred the federal government from recognizing same-sex marriages.
Under Doma, for example, individuals in same-sex marriages were ineligible for benefits from federal programmes such as the Social Security pension system and some tax allowances if their partners died.
Another key case, Hollingsworth v Perry of 2013, was filed by two lawyers, Theodore Olson and David Boies, working together on behalf of their California clients, Kristin Perry and Sandra Stier and another couple, Jeffrey Zarrillo and Paul Katami.
They argued that the Supreme Court should strike down a state law, called Proposition 8, which stated that marriage is between a man and a woman. The law, approved by California voters in 2008, overrode a state Supreme Court decision that allowed for same-sex marriage.
What is next?
Marriages will continue as before in the 36 states. The remaining states will have to issue licences, although it is unclear how long they have to comply with the court's ruling. However, there were reports of court clerk offering licences only an hour after the Supreme Court decision.


Structure of the Lead 
      WHO-The resident of USA
      WHEN-2015
      WHAT-The law of the same sex marrige
      WHY- Giving fair to the people of the same sex love 
      WHERE-USA
      HOW- wonder



Keywords
recognize 辨識,了解
remain 逗留,留待;剩餘,遺留;繼續存在
clerk  職員,辦事員,書記員,秘書;管理員;店員
licence 執照,許可証,特許
issue 議題




2015年11月5日 星期四

Week2 - Nepal earthquake

A major earthquake has struck eastern Nepal, near Mount Everest, two weeks after more than 8,000 people died in a devastating quake.
At least 48 people have been killed and more than 1,000 injured, officials say. At least 17 have also died in India.
The latest earthquake hit near the town of Namche Bazaar and sent thousands of panicked residents on to the streets of Nepal's capital, Kathmandu.
It had a magnitude of 7.3, compared with the 7.8 of the 25 April quake.
The latest quake struck at 12:35 Nepali time (06:50 GMT) and was centred about 76km (47 miles) east of Kathmandu, in a rural area close to the Chinese border.
The quake was felt in northern India, Tibet and Bangladesh. India's home ministry said 16 people had been killed in the state of Bihar, and one more in Uttar Pradesh. Officials in China said one person was confirmed dead in Tibet.
Rescue helicopters have been sent to districts east of Kathmandu that are believed to be worst hit. Police in Charikot, 80km north-east of the capital, said 20 people had died there.
Later on Tuesday, the US military said a Marine Corps helicopter involved in disaster relief efforts had gone missing while working in the vicinity of Charikot. Eight people were on board.
A spokesman for Nepal's government told the BBC that 31 of the country's 75 districts had been affected by the latest quake.
Prime Minister Sushil Koirala called for "courage and patience" and urged all those who had assisted Nepal since the 25 April quake "to once again extend your helping hand".
The BBC's Yogita Limaye, who was in Nepal's mountains when the latest earthquake struck, said: "The earth shook and it shook for a pretty long time.
"I can completely understand the sense of panic. We have been seeing tremors - it's been two-and-a-half weeks since the first quake. But this one really felt like it went on for a really long time. People have been terrified."
At least four people were killed in the town of Chautara, east of Kathmandu, where a number of buildings are reported to have collapsed.
The International Organisation for Migration said bodies were being pulled from rubble there.
Krishna Gyawali, the chief district officer for Chautara, said there had been a number of landslides.











Landslides were also reported by Save the Children in Sindhupalchok and Dolakha. A spokeswoman told the BBC its staff had been "dodging huge rocks rolling off the hillside".
Home Minister Bam Dev Gautam said: "Many houses have collapsed in Dolakha... there is a chance that the number of dead from the district will go up."
The BBC's Navin Singh Khadka says the new earthquake has brought down more houses and lodges in the Everest region but that local officials report very few tourists are still in the area following the 25 April quake.
A nurse in Namche Bazaar, Rhita Doma Sherpa, told Reuters: "The school building is cracked and bits of it, I can see, they have collapsed. It was lunchtime. All the kids were outside."
The latest quake struck at a depth of 15km (9.3 miles), according to the US Geological Survey - the same depth as the April quake. Shallow tremors are more likely to cause greater damage at the surface.











Tuesday's earthquake is likely to be one of the largest to hit Nepal, which has suffered hundreds of aftershocks since 25 April.
The 7.3 quake was followed by six aftershocks of magnitude 5.0 or higher.
One tremor that hit 30 minutes later, centred on the district of Ramechhap, east of Kathmandu, had a magnitude of 6.3.

Analysis: Jonathan Amos, science correspondent, BBC News

Scientists are already producing some preliminary analyses of Tuesday's quake.
The epicentre this time is about 80km (50 miles) east-north-east of Kathmandu, halfway to Everest. On 25 April, the big quake began 80km to the north-west of the capital.
In April, we saw the fault boundary rupture eastwards for 150km (93 miles). And the immediate assessment suggests Tuesday's tremor has occurred right at the eastern edge of this failure.
In that context, this second earthquake was almost certainly triggered by the stress changes caused by the first one. Indeed, the US Geological Survey had a forecast for an aftershock in this general area.
Its modelling suggested there was 1-in-200 chance of a M7-7.8 event occurring this week. So, not highly probable, but certainly possible.
Quake experts often talk about "seismic gaps", which refer to segments of faults that are, to some extent, overdue a quake. Tuesday's big tremor may well have filled a hole between what we saw on 25 April and some historic events - such as those in 1934, that occurred further still to the east.
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-32701385


Structure of the Lead 
      WHO-The resident of Nepel
      WHEN-2015
      WHAT-Earthquake
      WHY-Movig plate caused Earthquake
      WHERE-Nepel
      HOW-Tragic



Keywords
panicked 慌恐的,焦慮不安的 
magnitude 大小,巨大,重要,重大,廣大
correspondent 一致的,符合的
helicopters 直升飛機
district  地區,地域,行政區
tremor 興奮,戰慄,震動
assessment 評價,評估
patience 忍耐,耐心,毅力,耐性,容忍
confirm 證實,堅定,確定,確認,加強



2015年10月29日 星期四

Week1 - Malala

   

Youngest Nobel Peace Prize Winner Malala Celebrates Exam Success

       Malala Yousafzai, the youngest person ever to win the Nobel peace prize, has another reason to celebrate after posting a string of top grades in her GCSEs, a set of important exams faced by British teenagers.
       Her father Ziauddin Yousafzai said on Twitter on Friday his 18-year-old daughter had achieved six A*s and four As, placing her in the top tier of school kids to take the exam.
       After rising to global fame as an education activist after she was shot in the head by a Taliban gunman in Pakistan in 2012, her family resettled in Birmingham in Britain.Last year she became the youngest person ever to win the Nobel Peace Prize.
       Yousafzai, whose own education was disrupted when she was attacked and moved to Britain for rehabilitation, took her exams two years after most British teenagers take them.
Pakistani media praised her good results.
       "Nothing that Malala Yousafzai achieves seems startling any more but she continues to make Pakistan proud," said the Express Tribune, an English-language Pakistani newspaper.
http://www.voanews.com/content/nobel-laureate-malala-celebrates-exam-success/2927473.html
Structure of the Lead 
      WHO-Mala
      WHEN-2012
      WHAT-She posting a string of top grades in her GCSEs.
      WHY-Not given
      WHERE-Britain 
      HOW-Celebratory



Keywords
string 字串,繫繩,,帶子,一串,一行,一列
GCSE 英國的普通中等教育證書
achievement 成績,成就,完成
resettle (使)再安頓下來
attack 進攻,襲擊,侵襲,抨擊
rehabilitation 更新,修復,復興,恢復名譽 
startling 令人吃驚的,驚人的