6A - Thursday, January 9, 2014 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com India aims at limiting perks of members of US Embassy An Orbital Sciences Corporation Antares rocket is seen as it is rolled out to launch Pad-OA at NASA's Wallops Flight Facil- ity, Wallops Island, Va., Sunday, Jan. 5, 2014 in advance of the thwarted trip Wednesday, Jan. 8, 2014. Harsh solar storm halts space station supply flight New regulations come in light of controversial arrest NEW DELHI (AP) - India chipped away at America's diplomatic perks Wednesday, ordering the envoys to obey local traffic laws and warning that a popular U.S. Embassy club violates diplomatic law because it is open to outsiders. The moves were the latest in a campaign to exert pressure on the U.S. following the arrest and strip search last month of Devyani Khobragade, an Indian diplomat based in New York City. Indian officials have called the strip search barbaric and unnecessary. Khobragade, 39, is accused of paying her Indian maid less than the U.S. minimum wage and lying about it on a visa application. She pleaded not guilty to fraud charges and is free on bail. The case has caused an out- cry in India, where the idea of an educated, middle-class woman facing a strip search is seen as outrageous and heavy- handed. India has unleashed a steady stream of retaliatory measures. Some of the moves, such as preventing the Ameri- can Center from screening movies, are seen as little more than needling the U.S. But other actions have raised some alarm, including the removal of concrete traffic bar- riers around the U.S. Embassy and revoking diplomats' ID cards. On Wednesday, the Press Trust of India news agency reported that India ordered the U.S. to stop all "commer- cial activities" by Jan. 16 at the American Community Support Association club. The club has a restaurant, bar, bowling alley, swimming pool and other ame- nities. India says the fact that non- diplomats can join the club, at a cost of more than $1,300 per, year, violates the Vienna Con- ventionon Diplomatic Relations. In Washington, U.S. State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said the U.S. endeavors to always comply with local laws and regulations, and is review- ing India's requests for action. She declined to criticize India, and maintained that "both sides want to move this relationship forward." PTI also reported that New Delhi warned that U.S. Embassy vehicles would not be immune to penalties for traffic offenses such as unauthorized parking and running red lights. Khobragade was arrested Dec. 13 and was strip-searched in custody, as is common prac- tice according to the U.S. Marshals. But anger is still smoldering in India more than a month after the arrest. Khobragade could face a maximum sentence of 10 years for visa fraud and five years for making a false declaration if convicted. She has said she has full diplomatic immunity. U.S. federal officials dispute that, saying her immunity is limited to acts performed in the exer- cise of consular functions. U.S. prosecutors and lawyers for Khobragade are at odds over a possible plea deal. A letter filed Tuesday by attorneys for Khobragade accused federal prosecutors of trying to pressure her into pleading guilty by next week. The attorneys renewed a request for an extension of the Jan. 13 deadline for an indict- ment. Weather patterns suspend trip until Thursday afternoon CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) - A strong solar storm is interfering with the latest grocery run to the International Space Station. On the bright side, the orbiting lab has won a four-year exten- sion, pushing its projected end- of-lifetime to at least 2024, a full decade from now. "This is a big plus for us," said NASA's human exploration chief, Bill Gerstenmaier. On Wednesday, Orbital Sci- ences Corp. delayed its space station delivery mission for the third time. Another launch attempt will be made Thursday afternoon. The company's unmanned rocket, the Antares, was set to blast off from Wallops Island, Va., with a capsule full of sup- plies and science experiments, including ants for an educational project. But several hours before Wednesday afternoon's planned flight, company officials took the unusual step of postponing the launch for fear that solar radia- tion could doom the rocket. Orbital Sciences' chief tech- nical officer, Antonio Elias, said solar particles might interfere with electronics equipment in the rocket, and lead to a launch failure. After evaluating the situation all day Wednesday, Orbital Sci- ences decided to aim for Thurs- day at 1:07 p.m. EST. The solar flare peaked Tues- day afternoon and more activity was expected, but the compa- ny determined that the space weather was within acceptable risk levels. The sun is at the peak of a weak 11-year storm cycle. Although the solar storm bare- ly rated moderate, some passen- ger jets were being divertedfrom the poles to avoid potential com- munication and health issues. GPS devices also were at risk. But the six men aboard the space station were safe from the solar fallout, NASA said, and sat- ellites also faced no threat. The Cygnus cargo ship aboard the rocket, for example, is built to withstand radiation from solar flare-ups. The storm also will push the colorful northern lights farther south than usual to the northern U.S. The Cygnus was supposed to fly in December, but a break- down in the space station's cool- ing system required repairs by spacewalking astronauts. The repair job, which was completed on Christmas Eve, bumped the supply mission to this week. Then frigid temperatures forced a launch delay from Tuesday to Wednesday. Then came the sun - at full force. Frank Culbertson, an execu- tive vice president for Virginia- based Orbital Sciences, said the delays can be frustrating, but he pointed out there's nothing wrong with the rocket itself. "All we're really delaying is the success that's going to come when we execute this mission," he told reporters. NASA is using two private companies - Orbital Scienc- es and the California-based SpaceX - to keep the space sta- tion stocked. The space agency turned to private industry for help following the space shuttle program; the last shuttle flight was in 2011. Russia, Europe and Japan also periodically launch supply ships. Russia corners the space sta- tion market, though, on astro- naut travel. NASA astronauts are hitching rides on Russian Soyuz capsules until American companies are ready to launch human crews. Gerstenmaier said that should happen by 2017. NASA will eval- uate the proposals again this spring before deciding whether to buy more Soyuz seats for that year and beyond, he said. Each seat costs many tens of millions of dollars. US doctors attempt to treat ethnic divisions in S. Sudan Last year, doctors restored over 200 patients vision JUBA, South Sudan (AP) - After receiving eye surgery from the American doctors, a South Sudanese man sat with other patients who belonged to tribes he once considered ene- mies. The men spoke about their newly restored vision - both their eyesight and how they now perceive members of other eth- nic groups as potential friends, not sworn enemies. 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As a condition for the free surgery, the American doctors demanded that the members of rival groups sit together and talk. Michael Yei of the Moran Eye Center at the University of Utah recalls one particular member of the Murle tribe who sat with men who belonged to the Nuer and Dinka groups. The man soon reached a conclusion that made the hearts of the med- ical team soar. "I always thought in many ways that the Dinka were devils and had horns, but they're just like us," the patient said, accord- ing to Yei. "That's the kind of response we had and were so encour- aged," Yei continued. "Getting your sight back is a major and powerful motivator for people. It just changes your life." Capt. Dhuor Andrew Makur, a 31-year-old doctor in South Sudan's military, is not sur- prised that misconceptions like the one held by the Murle man could exist in South Sudan. The population is poorly educated, with only a 27 percent literacy rate. Makur studied at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, an experience that showed him what it's like to live in an advanced society. The West has spent hun- dreds of millions of dollars in South Sudan, but Makur said not enough is being directed to education and to ways in which the disparate ethnic groups can interact. There are only a couple dozen miles of paved roads in South Sudan, the world's newest country but also one of its least developed. "The good things you want you have to press for - educa- tion. We're still wild. We come from the jungle," Makur said. "Don't bring money to our people. Bring U.S. companies. Investin roads. Let people inter- act" Four of his relatives, cousins mostly, have been killed in the outbreak of violence. The violence, which forced the American eye surgeons to cancel a planned trip this month to Jonglei state where they intended to treat hundreds of patients, has riven South Sudan along ethnic lines. They hope to return when the vio- lence subsides. Ethnic frictions have long existed but were largely over- looked during the civil war with Sudan that ended with a 2005 peace agreement that set the stage for South Sudan becoming a nation in 2011. Once independence was achieved, ethnic fault lines began shining through. A power struggle brewing for months between President Salva EMir, a Dinka, and former Vice President Riek Machar, a Nuer who was fired in July, broke out into massive violence just over three weeks ago. The sudden violent spiral recalled a battle in 1991 that saw Machar lead a Nuer slaughter of the Dinka, said Jok Madut Jok, the co-founder of the Sudd Insti- tute, a research body in South Sudan. "This conflict escalated so fast partly due to the history of the liberation wars, in which South Sudanese committed atrocities against one another and no accountability for these atrocities was established when those wars ended, leaving gap- ing wounds in the hearts and minds of so many citizens," Jok wrote in a paper published this week. South Sudan's biggest prob- lem is that it is a patchwork of small ethnic groups seeking power, said Edmund Yakani, the executive director of a peace-building organization called CEPO. Potential solu- tions include more inter-mar- riage between ethnic groups, a government not dominated by ethnicity and an informed citi- zenry, Yakani said. Dr. Alan Crandall, vice-chair of the department of ophthal- mology at the University of Utah, remembers the members of the Dinka, Nuer and Murle tribes interacting after their cataract surgeries last year. Elderly men sat in a circle on plastic chairs, their eyes shield- ed from the sun by large black post-operation glasses. During the "peace circle," Crandall heard a Nuer man say he would tell his tribe's young warriors that they should not attack other ethnic groups. The medical group began its mission in the village of Duk Payuel in Jonglei through the efforts of John Dau, a former "Lost Boy" of Sudan who fled the 1990s conflict by walking to Ethiopia and eventually finding his way to Syracuse, New York. His foundation provides health care and medical training. tor@aol.com 01/09/14 I '7 8 9 10 11 12 13 16 19 24 30 31 32 33 34 37 40 42 43 46 49 50 55 56 57 58 59 61 64 67 01109114 1i I I p