Document 6600975
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Document 6600975
NO SPONSOR TOO RISKY TO BE REWARDED PARIS FAIRS FROM PHOTOS TO OLD MASTERS OPEN NET ISSUE FOCUS IS PUT ON ARCANE DETAILS PAGE 12 PAGE 7 PAGE 17 | SPORTS | CULTURE | BUSINESS ASIA ... MONDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2014 Deaths cast spotlight on Hong Kong’s class divide Obama takes a firm line with Putin on Ukraine HONG KONG BRISBANE, AUSTRALIA To earn extra money, some housemaids are drawn into prostitution President moves close to calling Russian actions against Kiev an invasion BY MICHAEL FORSYTHE BY MARK LANDLER The banker, Rurik George Caton Jutting, a Cambridge graduate and securities trader, came from London in 2013, one of thousands of expatriates who move to Hong Kong every year to pursue jobs in banking and burnish their resumes with Asia experience. Mostly men, they often live expense-accountsubsidized lives in luxury high-rise apartments, filling the trendy Western bars in the pricey Soho district at night and socializing at members-only tennis and yacht clubs on weekends. The women, Seneng Mujiasih and Sumarti Ningsih, also came to Hong Kong to better their lives. Leaving grinding poverty in rural Indonesia, they were among the city’s more than 300,000 foreign domestic workers, mostly women from Southeast Asia, earning as little as $530 a month cleaning houses and caring for children and elderly people, six days a week, 17 hours a day. Their worlds came together, authorities believe, in the garish neon-lit bars of Hong Kong’s red light district of Wan Chai, where Asian women, often current or former housemaids, earn extra money by selling overpriced drinks and furtive sex to foreign men. The encounters ended tragically in Mr. Jutting’s upscale apartment. Ms. Seneng, 29, was found there by police in the early morning of Nov. 1, with cuts to her throat and buttocks. Ms. Sumarti, 23, was found hours later, her decomposing body stuffed into a suitcase on the balcony. The police said she had died on Oct. 27. Mr. Jutting, 29, who had called the police, was charged with two counts of murder. He is now being evaluated to determine whether he is mentally fit to stand trial, where, if convicted, he would face life in prison. The police have released few other details. How Mr. Jutting met the women, the nature of their relationship and investigators’ theories about the motivation for the killings are not publicly known. But interviews with friends, relatives and acquaintances, as well as extensive records left online by both the suspect and the victims, yield a detailed portrait of a little-known world that pervades President Obama on Sunday said he told President Vladimir V. Putin in meetings last week that the United States and its allies would continue to impose sanctions on Russia for actions in Ukraine that he edged close to calling an invasion. The United States, Mr. Obama said, was ‘‘very firm on the need to uphold core international principles, and one of those principles is you don’t invade other countries.’’ The Russians, he said, were supplying heavy weapons and financial backing to separatists in Ukraine. Speaking at the end of a meeting here of the Group of 20 industrialized economies, Mr. Obama said leaders of European allies confirmed that Russia was still violating the terms of an agreement it signed on Ukraine. He characterized his encounters with Mr. Putin as ‘‘businesslike and blunt.’’ Mr. Obama’s wide-ranging news conference came at the end of a hectic weeklong trip to Asia that produced a landmark climate-change agreement with China, progress on a number of trade issues, and a return visit for the president to Myanmar, in which he admonished its military-dominated government to keep the reform process on track. But the trip was also shadowed by renewed fears of Russian incursions in Ukraine. Mr. Obama held a meeting here with European leaders to discuss the prospect of additional sanctions against Russia, after new reports of Russian troops operating inside the country. The bitterness of Russia’s actions spilled over into the G-20 meeting, with Mr. Putin getting a chilly reception from several leaders. Prime Minister Stephen Harper of Canada bluntly told Mr. Putin that he needed to withdraw from Ukraine. Turning to Syria, Mr. Obama said the United States would not make ‘‘common cause’’ with President Bashar alAssad in the campaign against the Islamic State group. But he said the United States was not weighing ways to HONG KONG, PAGE 4 URIEL SINAI FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES Rangers in Virunga National Park in the Democratic Republic of Congo. The park’s director was shot and nearly killed hours after he delivered a report on oil company activities. Oil dispute takes page from Congo’s past VIRUNGA NATIONAL PARK, DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF CONGO Bloody standoff in park pits conservation against economic development BY JEFFREY GETTLEMAN The trouble started when a British company suddenly appeared in this iconic and spectacularly beautiful national park, prospecting for oil. Villagers who opposed the project were beaten by government soldiers. A park warden, who tried to block the oil company, SOCO International, from building a cellphone tower in the park, was kidnapped and tortured. Virunga’s director, a Belgian prince, was shot and nearly killed hours after he delivered a secret report on the oil company’s activities. Much like the fight over drilling on federal lands in the United States, the struggle over oil exploration in Africa’s national parks is a classic quandary, pitting economic development against environmental preservation. But out here, the quest for oil seems to be more volatile, and the stakes are arguably higher — on both sides. While West Africa has been a major hydrocarbon producer for decades, new technology like deeper drilling has led to a bonanza of new energy discoveries here on the continent’s east side. Oil companies are now circling several African parks like this one, home to critically endangered wildlife, such as colossal silverback mountain gorillas, among the last of their kind. But development is far more than just a buzzword here. The people in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Tanzania, northern Kenya, Uganda and Mozambique — all places of recent hydrocarbon finds — are among the poorest in the world, many without electricity or clean water, their children often facing relentless illness and few prospects. African governments say they have a moral obligation to pursue anything that might lift their countries out of grinding poverty, including drilling for oil in pristine natural environments. With an unprecedented surge of oil activity in this region, environmentalists vowed to ‘‘draw the line’’ here in Virunga, Africa’s oldest national park and a Unesco World Heritage Site, pro- Video game pro gets million-dollar treatment LOS ANGELES BY CONOR DOUGHERTY Matt Haag, a professional video game player, makes close to a million dollars a year sitting in a soft chair smashing buttons. It is a fantastically sweet gig, and he will do about anything to keep it. That is why, on a recent morning, he was in a bungalow in Venice Beach, Calif., making pancakes. Not just regular pancakes, but high-protein pancakes with ingredients like flax oil and chia seeds, whose balance of carbohydrates, fat and protein was created by a dietitian hired to teach him how to eat more healthily. The pancakes were just the beginning of a monthlong training session that Red Bull, one of Mr. Haag’s sponsors, organized for him and his team, OpTic Gaming. Over the next several days, he and his fellow players gave blood while riding stationary bicycles, had their brains mapped by a computer and attended an hourlong yoga class where they learned, among other things, how to stretch their throbbing wrists. The purpose of all this: to help them get better at blowing their opponents away in video games. Three years ago, he was flipping bur- MONICA ALMEIDA/THE NEW YORK TIMES INSIDE TO DAY ’S PA P E R Militants claim another beheading The fate of 43 college students missing and presumed killed by a drug cartel has bred outrage in Mexico. WORLD NEWS, 6 The Islamic State released a video purporting to prove that they had executed an American aid worker, who disappeared in Syria last year while delivering supplies. WORLD NEWS, 4 NEWSSTAND PRICES TO SUBSCRIBE, CALL: Bali RP 28,000 (including PPN) Hong Kong HK$ 24.00 Maldives US$ 3.80 NEWSSTAND PRICES Hong Kong HK$ 24.00 Seoul Won 2,000 Vietnam US$ 4.00 Bangladesh Tk. 135.00 Indonesia RP 28,000 (PPN Incl.) E-mail: inytsubs@nytimes.com Manila Peso 100.00 China RMB 29.00 Singapore US$ 4.70 (GST Incl.)Philippines Peso 100.00 Bangkok Baht 80.00 Jakarta RP 28,000 (including PPN) Myanmar US$ 4.50 Macau 24.00 Sydney A$P8.25 (GST Incl.) Taiwan NT 115.00 Brunei B$ 8.00 Japan Yen 210 (Tax included.) Nepal NRs 19.50 Taipei NT 115.00 Printed by Superflag Printing and Cambodia US$ 3.00 Macau P 24.00 Pakistan RS 20.00 China RMB 29.00 Malaysia RM 7.50 &:HJKLNC=UVVUUV:?l@b@l@h@b OBAMA, PAGE 5 More U.S. agencies using undercover operations BY ERIC LICHTBLAU AND WILLIAM M. ARKIN Matt Haag, a professional player of the game Call of Duty, and his teammates undergoing training organized by Red Bull, a sponsor. (852) 2922 1171 CONGO, PAGE 5 WASHINGTON GAMES, PAGE 15 A familiar anger boils in Mexico tected for its ‘‘outstanding universal value’’ to all humankind. The World Wildlife Fund swung into action, signing up hundreds of thousands of supporters in a global campaign. In June, it made a triumphant announcement: ‘‘Major Conservation Win: Oil Company Backs Off Oil Exploration in Africa’s Oldest National Park.’’ It looked like a happy ending for the gorillas and the trees. There’s just one problem: It might not be true. In a private letter sent the same day the environmentalists were savoring their victory, SOCO International reassured the Congolese government that it was continuing to evaluate seismic data so that ‘‘the D.R.C. government can take all appropriate measures to pur- Communication Taiwan NT 115.00 Limited, 1/F., 8 Chun Ying Street, Tseung Kwan O Industrial Estate, Philippines Peso 100.00 Thailand 80.00O, New Territories, Hong Kong. TseungBaht Kwan IN THIS ISSUE No. 40,957 Books 7 Business 14 Crossword 13 Culture 7 Opinion 8 Sports 11 Convincing ride in virtual reality For decades, virtual reality was a complete flop. But now with the nausea-free Oculus Rift headset, it may be a total win in producing an immersive and convincing audiovisual illusion. BUSINESS, 14 In India, growth breeds waste Indians are getting dirtier as they get richer, and we can no longer keep up: There’s too much stuff being made now, thanks to the backwash of globalization, Jerry Pinto writes. OPINION, 8 The federal government has significantly expanded undercover operations in recent years, with officers from at least 40 agencies posing as business people, welfare recipients, political protesters and even doctors or ministers to ferret out wrongdoing, records and interviews show. At the Supreme Court, small teams of undercover officers dress as students at large demonstrations outside the courthouse and join the protests to look for suspicious activity, according to officials familiar with the practice. At the Internal Revenue Service, dozens of undercover agents chase suspected tax evaders worldwide, by posing as tax preparers, accountants, drug dealers or yacht buyers and more, court records show. At the Agriculture Department, more than 100 undercover agents pose as food stamp recipients at thousands of neighborhood stores to spot suspicious vendors and fraud, officials said. Undercover work, inherently invas- ive and sometimes dangerous, was once largely the domain of the F.B.I. and a few other law enforcement agencies at the federal level. But outside public view, changes in policies and tactics over the last decade have resulted in undercover teams run by agencies in virtually every corner of the federal gov- UNDERCOVER, PAGE 6 Sitting out a shopping holiday ONLINE AT INY T.COM Last year, more retailers decided to stay open on Thanksgiving in the United States, but this year many others are promoting their decision to remain closed on the holiday. Challenge to Malaysia sedition law The colonial-era Sedition Act is being used against politicians, activists and students. But a professor is challenging its constitutionality. nytimes.com/asia nytimes.com/business Moment resonates, but quietly Is quantum entanglement real? Einstein thought it was not, but experiments suggest that tiny particles, such as electrons, can still affect each other even after they have moved apart. nytimes.com/review GABRIELLA DEMCZUK/THE NEW YORK TIMES Protests at the Supreme Court over issues such as abortion draw undercover officers. RUTH FREMSON/THE NEW YORK TIMES Noelle Ahl and her son in Sweet Home, Ore., a town where the logging jobs have vanished. nytimes.com/us LOOKING FOR GROWTH Derrick Gordon, the first openly gay player in Division 1 men’s college basketball, is happy to find his coming out barely caused a ripple at his university. nytimes.com/ncaabasketball
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