South Asia Security Monitor: No. 272
China and India beef up border forces;
India largest importer over five years;
Taliban forms unit to hunt CIA spies;
Than Shwe steps down, sort of;
India and Pakistan to resume talks
China and India beef up border forces;
India largest importer over five years;
Taliban forms unit to hunt CIA spies;
Than Shwe steps down, sort of;
India and Pakistan to resume talks
White paper endorses cross-strait military talks;
China-Pak cooperation concerns India  
Western banks abandon Russia;
Microsoft plants a flag at Skolkovo
Beijing harassing underground catholic churches;
Infrastructure plans in Xinjiang spark environmental concerns
These are trying times in Morocco. Over the past three months, the small North African kingdom has seen regime change roil two of its neighbors, Tunisia and Egypt, and a third—Libya—descend into civil war. The Moroccan street itself has seen its fair share of ferment; large-scale rallies calling for new social reforms and sweeping governmental changes have taken place throughout the country in recent weeks. In response, the country’s monarch, Mohammed VI, outlined a series of far-reaching constitutional reforms in early March, even going so far as to propose a diminution of royal power in favor of the country’s government and parliament. But, at least for now, the protesters do not appear to be entirely mollified.