2016年12月19日 星期一

Military extends UAV deployment area

The military said it is able to effectively detect military deployments in China through the use of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), after it expanded detection zones from airspace over eastern and southern Taiwan to airspace over the Taiwan Strait.

According to a military official, who wished to remain anonymous, the US has expressed concern over how the UAV project has developed and military missions the drones are commissioned to perform.

The US has demanded that the Ministry of National Defense send specialists to brief the US Department of Defense on the project before a delegation was to head to the US for a meeting about bilateral cooperation on military issues involving high-level officials from both countries, the military official said.

A UAV launched from a base in western Taiwan would be able to detect military movement in China’s southeast coastal area, he said.

Given Taiwan’s proximity to China, the capability of the UAVs to detect military deployments on the other side of the Taiwan Strait is highly valued by the US, he said.

Despite the US having sophisticated UAVs that can fly long distances to access the area, there are concerns within the US military that such missions would be costly, as well as there being political and military issues preventing its use of UAVs in the area, he added.

The UAV development program was undertaken by the National Chungshan Institute of Science and Technology. It has delivered 32 UAVs to the army.

In addition to Taimali (太麻里) in Taitung County, where the UAVs are based and training exercises are carried out, the ministry has been in talks with the Civil Aeronautics Administration over the possibility that part of the Hengchun airport in Pingtung could be used as another training base for the drones.

According to sources from the military, the air force’s airspace training area is within the range of missiles deployed in southeast China, making it impossible for the air force to carry out missions in the areas that the UAVs can access.

The military said it was still deliberating whether it would deploy the UAVs in western Taiwan.


WHO: Unmanned Aerial Vehicle(UAN);Taiwanese Military;American Military 
WHAT: American Military left a UAN in the southern of Taiwan 
WHEN: in July,2014
WHERE: Taiwan
WHY: Because American Military regards Taiwan as an important part when the war broke out
HOW: not given

Keywords:

1. aerial (n.) 天線
2. airspace (n.) 領空
3. drone (n.) (引擎的)轟鳴聲/嗡嗡聲
4. commission (v.) (正式的)安排(某人)做/委任/認命
5. delegation (n.) 代表團/授權
6. bilateral (adj.) 雙方的
7. sophisticate (n.) 精明幹練的人
8. institute (n.) 研究院  (v.)建立 
9. ministry (n.) (政府的)部/牧師職責
10. missile (n.) 導彈/投擲物

Reference:

http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/front/archives/2014/07/13/2003594974

President Obama and President Putin hold side meeting as world leaders open COP21 Paris

As 150 leaders met in Paris to open a landmark 14-day conference, a tense 30 minutes spent in the wings had the world talking.

Barack Obama and Vladimir Putin held private talks at the sidelines of the Leaders Event at the COP21 climate conference, where Presidents, Prime Ministers and royalty from nearly every country in the world have gathered to push for an urgent deal to prevent the world warming by more than two degrees by 2100.


While the side meeting was not an any agenda, a White House official said President Obama urged President Putin to back down in his war of words with Turkey after the country shot down a Russian plane last week. The pair also discussed a ceasefire in the Ukraine and resolution in Syria, where Obama warned Putin that Syrian President Assad would have to leave power as part of a transition in the country.


It was a rare tense moment in an extraordinary day of solidarity from global leaders who expressed overwhelming support for a global agreement on climate change. During hours of official speeches they showed allegiance with Paris in the fight against terror and issued an unmistakeable warning to their delegates who will hammer out a deal over the next 14 days: Do not mess this up.


President Obama said the world had come to Paris to “show their resolve” in preventing global warming in an “act of defiance that proves nothing will deter us from the future we want for our children.”
“What greater rejection of those that would tear down our world than martialing our best efforts to save it?” he said.

The US leader also held a side-meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping and the world’s two largest emitters — responsible for around 45 per cent of emissions combined — reiterated their commitment to bringing that portion down.


“There is such a thing as being too late and when it comes to climate change that hour is almost upon us,” the President said, emphasising there are “hundreds of billions of dollars ready to deploy” when it comes to investing in renewable energies.


President Putin used his speech to call climate change one of the “gravest challenges humanity is facing” and said Russia’s efforts to reduce emissions have slowed down global warming by “more than a year.”


“At the same time we have managed to double our GDP. Thus we have demonstrated that we could ensure economic development and take care of our environment at the same time.”


The event was also used by countries to announce billions of dollars in funding for renewable energy, clean technology and mitigating the effects of climate change around the world.


Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull said Australia would ratify the second commitment of the Kyoto Protocol and said $1 billion of the existing aid budget would go to building climate resilience and reducing emissions — something Greens climate spokesman Senator Larissa Waters called “fudging the figures”. However he failed to join 40 other nations in pledging an end to subsidies in the fossil fuels industry

.
The backdrop of the terror attacks in Paris nearly three weeks ago led to emotional opening statements from leaders at the Le Bourget site on the outskirts of the city.


UN Secretary-general Ban Ki Moon held a minute’s silence in honour of the victims and said “political momentum like this may not come again.”


He also issued a direct line to delegates: “The future of our planet is in your hands. We cannot afford indecision, half measures or merely gradual approaches” using marches held around the world as a sign that global eyes are upon them.


French President Francois Hollande expressed gratitude for those that had showed solidarity with Paris and said it meant the world would not be disappointed.


“Climate change will bring conflict, just like clouds bring storms causing migration, resource shortages, famine, rural exodus and clashes for access to water,” he said.


“Essentially what is at stake with this climate conference is peace.”


A final verdict on the negotiations will be delivered on December 11 before the baton is handed to Morocco who will host next year’s event.


WHO: 150 leaders from different countries
WHAT: a meeting about Paris climate change
WHEN: in December last year
WHERE: in Paris
WHY: discuss about a deal to prevent global warming
HOW: not given


Keywords: 

1. ceasefire (n.) 停火協定
2. overwhelming (adj.) 無法抗拒的
3. delegate (n.) (尤指會議的)代表
4. hammer (v.) (用力)敲打  (n.) 鐵鎚
5. emitter (n.) 輻射體
6. reiterate (v.) 重申
7. grave (adj.) 嚴重的  (n.)墳墓
8. ratify (v.) (尤指政府或組織)正式批准/使正式生效
9. resilience (n.) 韌性
10. baton (n.) 接力棒/(樂隊指揮用)指揮棒

References: 

http://www.news.com.au/technology/environment/climate-change/president-obama-and-president-putin-hold-side-meeting-as-world-leaders-open-cop21-paris/news-story/6a6ce3588af139eb61f5d18e8ff3c29b

Mars Rover Curiosity Gets Smarter

Curiosity has gotten smarter: the Mars rover now has the capability to select ChemCam laser targets autonomously, allowing the four year-old prospector to choose its own targets for remote evaluation.

ChemCam has been a godsend for qualifying geological targets for closer evaluation by the roving laboratory. It can also provide remote analysis of interesting formations that cannot be physically reached by the rover—for instance, something too high or beyond an obstacle that the rover drivers do not want to risk crossing.

ChemCam—short for Chemistry and Camera complex—consists of a high-powered laser that operates in conjunction with a telescopic spectrometer mounted on Curiosity’s camera mast. This technique is called LIBS, for Laser-Induced Breakdown Spectroscopy. The laser can be fired at targets up to about 25 feet away, and in the brief moment that a plasma is formed by the extreme heat from the laser, the spectrometer can extract information about the elemental composition of the rock or other target area.

ChemCam has greatly expanded the rover’s capability to explore areas otherwise unavailable to Curiosity, and has saved a lot of time by allowing scientists to take a chemical snapshot of an interesting target in order to decide if it merits further, closer investigation by contact tools, such as those on the end of the robotic arm. These include optical instruments for microscopic imaging, the Alpha Particle X-ray Spectrometer and sample gathering for evaluation within Curiosity’s onboard lab.


This new capability will allow Curiosity to select targets autonomously, first identifying a promising rock formation, for example, using software with criteria specified by the science team, and then firing the laser and recording the analyses for future transmission to Earth. This is particularly useful when the rover is making a long drive and is not in contact with controllers at JPL, or is otherwise out of contact due to the Mars orbiters that are used to relay information being out of range.

Since it began operation in 2012, Curiosity has used the ChemCam laser method over 1400 times with 350,000 laser bursts. The newfound autonomy should cause the rate of ChemCam investigations to rise appreciably.


WHO: Mars Rover Curiosity 
WHAT: the ability of Curiosity has improved
WHEN: in July this year
WHERE: not given
WHY: not given
HOW: not given


Keywords:

1. laser (n.) 雷射/雷射光
2. autonomous (adj.) 自主的
3. prospector (n.) 探勘者
4. evaluation (n.) 評估
5. godsend (n.) 天賜之物
6. conjunction (n.) 聯合/同時發生/連接詞
7. mast (n.) 天線杆/桅杆
8. plasma (n.) 等離子體/血漿
9. snapshot (n.) (快速)拍照
10. criteria (n.) 準則  (plural of the word "criterion")

References:

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/rod-pyle/mars-rover-curiosity-gets_b_11219308.html?utm_hp_ref=mars-rover

2016年12月8日 星期四

Paris attacks ringleader Abdelhamid Abaaoud dead

Paris, France (CNN)The ringleader behind the Paris attacks is dead, killed during a dramatic raid that shook a neighborhood and collapsed an entire floor of an apartment building. But French authorities say their work is far from finished.

Six days after a coordinated string of shootings and bombings killed 129 people in the French capital, at least one suspect is still on the run. A series of raids in Belgium and a search of a home on the outskirts of Paris on Thursday were the latest signs of investigators' efforts to piece together -- and take down -- the network of terrorists behind the attacks before they can strike again.
And authorities say the threat from ISIS, which claimed responsibility for the attacks and threatened more worldwide, remains real.

"We just now have to be ready for anything, any kind of an attack. ... Although we know that the mastermind of the attacks of Paris has been killed, the risk is still very high," Paris Deputy Mayor Patrick Klugman told CNN's "Erin Burnett: OutFront" on Thursday.

French officials said the raid Wednesday at an apartment building in the northern Paris suburb of Saint-Denis was a significant step. On Thursday, they confirmed they'd identified the body of Abdelhamid Abaaoud, the ringleader of the Paris attacks, found in the rubble of the apartment.
Official sources in France have also identified a woman who blew herself up during the raid: 26-year-old Hasna Ait Boulahcen, a relative of Abaaoud.

Investigators haven't revealed much about the suicide bomber. Friends of her family in their hometown of Aulnay-sous-Bois, on the northeastern outskirts of Paris, said she had lived there until recently. Residents in the area told CNN authorities had taken her mother and brother into custody. And the Paris prosecutor's office told CNN that police were searching the mother's home.

Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve said Abaaoud "played a decisive role" in the Paris attacks and played a part in four of six terror attacks foiled since spring, with one alleged jihadist claiming Abaaoud had trained him personally.

Wednesday wasn't the first time authorities had tried to take Abaaoud down. Western intelligence agencies reportedly tried to target Abaaoud in the months prior to the Paris attacks, without success.
A key question now: Are other top ISIS operatives who may have worked with Abaaoud on the Paris plot still on the loose?

WHO: Abdelhamid Abaaoud
WHAT: the ringleader behind Paris attacks was dead
WHEN: not given
WHERE: at an apartment building in the northern Paris suburb of Saint-Denis
WHY: he masterminded the terror attacks of Paris
HOW: a dramatic raid that shook a neighborhood and collapsed an entire floor of an apartment                      building

Keywords:

1. raid (n.) (通常為一小隊為單位的)襲擊/突擊
2. mastermind (v.) 幕後操縱/策劃
3. suburb (n.) 城郊
4. ringleader (n.) 頭目/元兇
5. the outskirts (n.) 市郊/郊區
6. prosecutor (n.) 檢察官/公訴人
7. custody (n.) 照管/監護(權)
8. foil (n.) 陪襯物
9. allege (v.) (未經證實的)指控
10. operative (n.) 密探

Reference:

http://edition.cnn.com/2015/11/19/world/paris-attacks/

Silent fans remember victims of Paris attacks 1 year on

PARIS -- Players linked arms as fans stood to observe a minute's silence at Stade de France one year after the Paris attacks.

Friday's poignant silence before the World Cup qualifier between France and Sweden remembered victims of the attacks on Nov. 13 last year, which saw 130 people killed and hundreds more injured.
The Islamic State group claimed responsibility for the attacks.


The night of terror began when three suicide bombers blew themselves up outside the Stade de France, where France was playing Germany in a friendly match. One passerby was killed. At least one of the bombers tried to enter the stadium but was foiled by security guards.


Security measures were the same Friday as they have been since the attacks, with spectators patted down and their bags searched twice -- once near to the stadium and the second time close to the entry gates.


But the atmosphere was calm and relaxed. Several international rugby and soccer matches have been played at this stadium since then, including the European Championship final in July.
Players from the French and Swedish national teams stood facing each other either side of the halfway line, many with their heads bowed as they solemnly remembered the victims.
"In a way we're linked to this drama," France goalkeeper and captain Hugo Lloris said on the eve of the match. "You have to try and move forward, look ahead. Even though these events will probably stay in our memories for life."


However, it wasn't quite a perfect silence.


A few random voices -- among 80,000 fans -- shouted out sporadically, but it was otherwise impeccably observed.


Moments before the silence, France's national anthem, "La Marseillaise," was played as usual.
But this time something different happened.


Fans were already singing heartily when the accompanying music suddenly stopped halfway through, and the noise levels went up considerably as only the sound of supporters singing could be heard echoing around the stadium.


The Nov. 13 attacks started at around 9:20 p.m. outside the stadium, during the first half of France's match against Germany.


French President Francois Hollande was evacuated from the stadium, and he was in attendance again on Friday.


Following the bombings outside the stadium last year, six cafes were targeted in quick and coordinated attacks and the heaviest bloodshed of all came at the Bataclan concert hall, where 90 of the victims were killed.


WHO: victims of Paris attacks
WHAT: Friday's poignant silence before the World Cup qualifier
WHEN: on November 13th, 2015
WHERE: between France and Sweden
WHY: not given
HOW: not given


Keywords:

1. poignant (adj.) 悲傷的/劇烈的
2. random (adj.) 任意的/隨意的
3. impeccably (adv.) 完美地/無庸置疑地
4. anthem (n.) 聖歌
5. pat (v.) 輕拍
6. evacuate (v.) 疏散/撤離
7. coordinate (v.) 協調
8. bloodshed (n.) 屠殺/殺戮
9. solemnly (adv.) 莊嚴地/嚴肅地
10. claim (v.) 要求/聲稱

Reference:

http://www.chinapost.com.tw/international/europe/2016/11/13/483765/Silent-fans.htm


2016年10月17日 星期一

Malala Yousafzai’s Fight Continues



When the deputy head mistress pulled Malala Yousafzai out of high school chemistry class one morning a year ago, Malala nervously searched her mind for recent offenses.
“You usually get a bit scared if your head teacher comes, because you think you are being caught doing something,” Malala recalled. “But she told me: ‘I need to tell you something. You have won the Nobel Peace Prize.’ ”

After a brief celebration, Malala returned to class for the rest of the school day; as the world’s news organizations clamored for interviews, she wrestled with physics. She’s a champion of girls’ education worldwide, she explains, and that must include her own.

Malala, now a high school junior, was in New York this past week to address the United Nations, attend the premiere of a full-length documentary movie about her life and hound world leaders to pay attention to girls’ education.

She hopes the movie, “He Named Me Malala,” will galvanize a push to provide 12 years of quality education to all children worldwide.

The movie relates Malala’s extraordinary story: How she grew up in rural Pakistan, became an advocate for girls’ education and spoke out against the Taliban. Then when she was 15 years old, Taliban gunmen retaliated: They stopped her school bus and shot her in the head.

As she hovered between life and death, supporters held candlelight vigils, and a plane rushed her to a hospital in Birmingham, England, that specializes in brain injuries. Today the left side of her face is still partly paralyzed, and she is somewhat deaf in that ear, but she’s as outspoken as ever. And the Taliban is still determined to kill her, so she and her family remain in Birmingham.

The movie offers a revealing portrait of a global icon — who’s also a teenager giggling about sports heroes, worrying about acceptance by peers and rolling her eyes at siblings.“People think she is, like, very kind, and she speaks for people’s rights,” her younger brother Khushal grumbles at the breakfast table, needling her. “But that’s not true, I think. At home she is so violent!”

Malala squeals with outrage. “I’m not violent!”

It’s clearly awkward to be a teenager and have your sibling rivalries, your skirt length (long) and your boyfriend history (none) explored on the big screen, along with your painstaking physical therapy to recover from brain damage. But Malala embraces the film as a way to highlight the transformative power of education.

Her own mother is deeply conservative — she has discouraged Malala from shaking hands with men or looking them in the eye — but is moderating her views and now also learning to read for the first time. The mother also takes the global fuss about her daughter in stride, and has no problem ordering a Nobel laureate to clean up her room.

Malala’s main message is that all children should get 12 years of free, safe, quality education, and that girls are too often left behind. Some 63 million girls between the age of 6 and 15 are not in school.

Millions of others attend but sit in classes of 100 students, taught in a language they don’t understand, without so much as a pencil, and learn nothing. Teachers often don’t show up (the big truancy problem in the developing world is with teachers), and when teachers do show up, they sometimes prey on girls.

A 2007 U.N. study in Pakistan found that 24 percent of primary schools don’t have any textbooks for students, and 46 percent lack desks for them.

Yet education is still the best hope to transform countries as well as individuals. Malala’s father, Ziauddin, told me that when he was a teenager he was brainwashed into praying for war between Muslims and non-Muslims, hoping to become a martyr. The antidote to such extremism, he says, is education.

Malala is determined not to be used as window dressing by world leaders, and her advice to presidents and prime ministers is to focus not on elementary school or middle school but on 12 full years of education. “Your dreams were too small,” she tells U.N. members. “Your achievements are too small. Now it is time that you dream bigger.”

She scolded Nigeria’s president at the time for not helping girls abducted by Boko Haram. She told President Obama at the White House that drones were counterproductive and that he should invest in education. Just eight days of global military spending, she notes, would pay to get all remaining kids in school worldwide.

“No world leader would want nine years of education for their children,” she told me. “Every world leader wants quality education for their children. They need to think of the rest of the world’s children as their own children.”

WHO: Malala Yousafzai
WHAT: someone will film her life story
WHEN: on September 26th last year
WHERE: in New York City
WHY: not given
HOW: not given


Keywords:

1. clamor (v.) 喧嚷/大聲要求 
2. wrestle (v.) 鬥爭
3. premiere (n.) 初次公演
4. hound (v.) 激勵/煽動
5. galvanize (v.) 刺激/激勵
6. advocate (n.) 提倡者
7. retaliate (v.) 反擊/報復
8. paralyze (v.) 使癱瘓/使麻痺
9. sibling (n.) 兄弟姊妹
10. squeal (v.) 發出驚叫聲/激烈抗議(俚語)

Reference:

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/09/27/opinion/sunday/nicholas-kristof-malala-yousafzais-fight-continues.html?rref=collection%2Ftimestopic%2FYousafzai%2C%20Malala