Monday, March 24, 2014

Mystery of Malaysia Flight MH370


After a torturously long wait, families received a message of some finality today when the Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak announced that new information revealed with certainty there was a crash in the remote area of the southern Indian Ocean and that it could be conclusively stated there are no survivors.

The details of what may have led to the crash are still unknown.

Why do you need to know?

This loss is tragic and shared. Aboard the flight were people from many countries, including America.

The crash also brings our technology into question. How is it possible we can spot a fire hydrant on Google Earth, but lose a Boeing 777-200 and 239 people?

Personally, as someone with faith in research, I am disheartened as I read the “expert” speculation of what may have happened before the March 8 disappearance of the flight from radars. Everything from suicide or sabotage to electrical fire or malfunction has been suggested.

As the world awaits more causal information, here’s some background:

A Boeing 777-200 is about 200 feet wide at the winds and almost 210 feet long from tip to tail. It’s also been rated as one of the safest aircrafts in the world.

Malaysia is in southeastern Asia. It is mountainous and forested.



Sources: Infoplease.comCNN.comForbes.com

Thursday, December 12, 2013

Back to Blogging!

A longstanding issue with my Blogger account not allowing me to edit anything and this semester's schedule have kept me from devoting attention to my news blog. But time for the news is always easy to find (thank you, Internet!) and I haven't missed a beat with the top stories over the past few months.

After graduation on Wednesday, I look forward to getting back to the KNEWS. Check back for stories soon!

-Madison

Monday, September 16, 2013

French Roots


Conflict and Syria have been synonymous for quite some time now, although the first time you heard the words together on the news a few months back may have you thinking otherwise.

Major events brought the country to its current state and to the center of international news spotlight. Understanding this history puts everything you read about and hear today into context, which makes the bigger picture more clear.

Because Syria is home to one of the oldest cities ever, I'll fast-forward this history lesson a few millennia to the year 1920.

The San Remo Conference was held April 1920
  • A joint decision was made my Britain and France
  • France was granted a mandate for Syria and Lebanon
  • Britain was granted a mandate for Palestine and Iraq

As we all know, countries go 




over some



The leader of Syria at the time was Faysal. He was torn between appeasing his very upset and angered Arab nationalists and submitting to France, whose power he knew was no match for Syria. Nationalists are patriotic people who desire independence for their country.


France seized Syria. They overthrew Faysal and occupied the capital of Damascus.

But one year later, Faysal, who was exiled, sat on the throne of Iraq!

Britain believed Faysal "had learned the limits of Arab nationalism and of Europe's superior strength.

Why is this important?

For France's rule over Syria to be successful, they knew they had to weaken this nationalist force, these energetic native people who want nothing more than to unite Syria and give France the boot. So, France divided areas of the country administratively.

"United we stand, divided we fall." The saying follows age-old logic. These divided sects had trouble uniting for a cause: their independence and national identity as Syrians.

Over time, the groups within these geographical divides cultivated their own diverse and distinct cultures. But also "some of Syria's religious and ethnic minorities, such as Kurds, Armenians, Jews and various Christian sects, were widely dispersed and did not have a geographical base to give rise to political unity."

More legal documents were drawn and some forms of governmental structure were put into place. In 1936, France agreed to Syrian independence but signed an agreement maintaining France's military and economic dominance.

Meaning: Syria still was not truly independent and by 1940 was still a pretty choppy country, rather than a unified group of people under their own nation.


Momentum picks up tremendously with Assad rule, the theme of my next post.

*Three posts leading up to what is most current isn't ideal, but these are my first posts. However, it is my view that we regurgitate the news we hear often without knowing what we are saying. So, to do these stories justice I really find it important to dig a little deeper into background and history.





Saturday, September 14, 2013

Basics on Syria


Syria is a Middle Eastern country that is nestled between Turkey, which lies just above it, then Iraq, Jordan, Israel and Lebanon, moving clockwise. The western part of Syria is considered the Mediterranean Sea’s eastern shore.


It’s just a bit bigger than North Dakota.


The population is about 22,457,336. (Imagine that many people in ND--that's pretty dense!) Millions are younger in age, rather than older, and the male to female ratio remains about even across each age bracket. Syrians aged 0-24 years make up 54.7% of the population, and those 55 and older comprise 8.5%. (Compare that to the United States where citizens aged 0-24 represent 33.7% and citizens 55+ represent 26.2%.)

Ninety percent of the population is Muslim and Arabic is the official language.

Damascus is the capital, which is considered to be “one of the world’s oldest continuously inhabited cities,” according to the Central Intelligence Agency’s The World Factbook. Like Jerusalem, Damascus holds a lot of religious and historical significance for many people.

“Civilization in Syria goes back thousands of years, but the country as it exists today is very young.” (Quote from this Washington Post article.This is because of huge structural shifts in the government, which I’ll go into more in the next post.

Syria map adapted from MapMaker at National Geographic. "Map courtesy National Geographic. National Geographic does not review or endorse content added to this map by others."

Other sources: CIA World Factbook, cited Washington Post article