WorldFailure

...where failure is documented

  • Increase font size
  • Default font size
  • Decrease font size
Attitudes
Attitudes

Attitudes (24)

But it's our culture, our tradition. Frankly, my dear...

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Rate this item
(1 Vote)

Russian airline forces gay flight attendant to marry woman or lose job
29 January 2012

MOSCOW -- LGBT activists in Russia are planning a campaign to boycott the Russian airline Aeroflot following a report that a gay flight attendant was forced by the airline to enter into a heterosexual marriage or face losing his job.

Image
Maxim Kupreev, via GayRussia.ru

According to a report by GayRussia.ru, internal sources at Aeroflot confirmed that 25-year-old flight attendant Maxim Kupreev was given the ultimatum late last year after he announced plans to establish an LGBT group within the airline in order to protect the rights of gay and lesbian employees.

AddThis Social Bookmark Button
Rate this item
(0 votes)

Tax evasion in Greece rises in 2010
18 November 2011

Image
Resentment: An estimated 50,000 protesters have converged on the centre of Athens to rally against austerity measures on October 21, 2011.

ATHENS - Tax evasion in Greece actually rose in 2010, based on tax statements submitted during that year for income earned in 2009, according to a finance ministry announcement.

In an announcement issued on Wednesday, as AMNA news agency reports, seven in 10 freelance workers declared an income lower than the 12,000-euro tax-free allowance of that year so that 273,662 freelance workers out of a total of 378,876 that submitted income tax statements during that year paid no tax at all.

AddThis Social Bookmark Button
Rate this item
(0 votes)
The video that shocked and shamed China

Two-year-old Yue Yue was hit by a van – and 18 people ignored her. Now CCTV has sparked a public debate

By Clifford Coonan
Tuesday, 18 October 2011



A two-year-old girl wanders into the middle of a busy road, failing to notice an approaching van. She is hit. The driver stops for a moment, then drives away, running the toddler over again with his back wheels. Six minutes and eighteen people go by as she lies prone in the road. The girl is hit again by another van. And only then does a passerby come to her aid.

Now Yue Yue, the child whose wellbeing seemed a matter of such indifference to those who swerved past her tiny body, is on a life support machine, described as "brain dead" by a doctor who spoke to the China Daily newspaper. And her appalling fate, which was captured on film, has shocked China into a debate about whether the country has lost its moral compass, reviving fears in China that rampant materialism and runaway economic growth is producing an unfeeling and indifferent society.

"Even pigs and dogs are better than they are!" one internet commentator wrote of the motorists, pedestrians and cyclists who passed by but did nothing to help the little girl as she lay bleeding heavily in the street.

"Money has the biggest say in this society. What's the use of law and morality," wrote Xinxin Jiayuan, while Zhujie0124 said society as a whole was growing colder." There are more people like this, more incidents. This country, Chinese people, need to learn more moral responsibility," the commentator said.

Yue Yue's mother, a migrant worker in the city, had picked her up from kindergarten last Thursday and left the toddler at home in the family hardware shop in Foshan. It is in a narrow street typical of those in the city in booming Guangdong province. When she returned from picking up laundry, the child had wandered off and her mother could not find her anywhere. Then she heard a 57-year-old rubbish collector shouting that a child had been injured, the Guangzhou Daily reported.

The harrowing clip, which was broadcast on Southern Television Guangdong (TVS), shows how nearly 20 pedestrians and passing vehicles kept going without coming to the little girl's aid. One young man walks past apparently without seeing her, but most of the others pass and look down, doing nothing. A mother hurries her daughter along, away from the terrible scene.

The doctor who described Yue Yue as brain dead said that she was unlikely to survive the incident. Her parents were with her in hospital. The drivers of both vans have since been arrested. According to some media reports, one of the drivers was talking on his mobile phone when the accident took place, and had complained about how much compensation he would have to pay if the girl survived the crash.

As the media and the public sought an explanation, the China Daily highlighted the case of an 88-year-old man who collapsed in central China and choked to death after no one came to help him. It added that social changes had made it harder to be a good Samaritan, citing another case in which a man who tried to help an elderly woman who had fallen had been accused of harming her.

Yue Yue's father was shown on news bulletins holding his wife and weeping. "What's up with people these days?" he asked. "They make so many excuses to turn a blind eye. Society is so indifferent, so heartless...I don't have any thoughts now, I just hope my child will wake up and call me dad again."

Source: The Independent UK.
AddThis Social Bookmark Button
Rate this item
(0 votes)
Fifth of girl binge drinkers have sex they regret as experts warn of generation of promiscuous teenagers
By Daniel Martin
5th August 2011

Binge drinking is creating a generation of violent and promiscuous teenage girls, a damning report has found.

A study of 15- and 16-year-olds has found that girls are more likely to have tasted alcohol than boys, putting them at risk of having unprotected sex, unplanned pregnancies and contracting sexually-transmitted diseases. One in five female teens who consume alcohol at least once a week say they have got themselves so drunk they have had sex they regret, while almost 40 per cent have been in a fight.

Image
Helpless: Drinking among teenage girls is increasing, and many regret sexual experiences from it

Almost 88 per cent of girls aged 15 and 16 say they have consumed alcohol – compared with 80 per cent of boys. And the study found that among teens of both sexes, those who do drink consume more than the equivalent of a bottle of wine a week. It concluded that drinking was having a disastrous effect on performances at school.

The report into risky drinking, compiled by the Centre for Public Health at Liverpool John Moores University, looked at questionnaires filled in by 11,000 teenagers in the North West. It compared those who binge drink – classified as drinking five or more alcoholic drinks in a sitting – with those who do not. The authors wrote: ‘Those binge drinking three or more times a week were over five times more likely than non-binge drinkers to have had sex they regretted following alcohol.

Image
Worrying: One in five female teens who consumed alcohol once a week had sex they regret

‘Such drinking can place girls in situations where they are too drunk to properly consider whether they wish to have sex or take the appropriate precautions to prevent pregnancy and sexually-transmitted infections.’ The report found that among both sexes, 30 per cent of teenagers binge at least weekly. The consequences of this are both immediate – such as poor school performance and violence – and long-term, such as alcohol-related health problems in later life and pregnancy.’

The survey found that almost 40 per cent of girls who drink at least once a week had been involved in a fight. And more than 20 per cent said they had got so drunk they had had sex they regretted – higher than the 15 per cent of boys in the same position. The report added: ‘Compared to European neighbours, 15- and 16-year-olds are far more likely to drink alcohol and do so more frequently. While nationally the number of young people drinking has decreased in recent years, those that do drink appear to be drinking more, and more frequently.’ More than half of drinkers consumed more than ten units a week, and 7 per cent had more than 40 units. The report added: ‘Among those drinking at least weekly, 39 per cent of females and 42 per cent of males had been involved in violence.’

Image
Overload: Girls are also far more likely than they were to drink in public places ¿ up from 50 to 57 per cent.

The study found that the number of people drinking more than twice a week was increasing: among girls from 21 to 25 per cent; and among boys from 28 to 32 per cent. Girls are also far more likely than they were to drink in public places – up from 50 to 57 per cent.

The report concluded: ‘We estimate that 65.9 per cent of 15- and 16-year-olds drink at least monthly and that their total overall consumption is 83,943,726 units. This is equivalent to 44.2 bottles of wine (117 pints of beer) per year for every 15- and 16-year-old; or 67.2 bottles of wine (268.7 pints of beer) per year for all 15- and 16-year-olds that drink at least once a month.’ The study also found that a third teens said they bought alcohol themselves, despite the fact that it is against the law for shops to sell it to those under the age of 18.

Don Shenker, of Alcohol Concern, said: ‘There is clearly a link between young girls’ binge drinking and unplanned sex as well as alcohol-related violence. It’s about time ministers took a tougher stance on the causes of teen girls binge drinking.’

Source: Daily Mail UK.
AddThis Social Bookmark Button
Rate this item
(0 votes)
The rape of men

Sexual violence is one of the most horrific weapons of war, an instrument of terror used against women. Yet huge numbers of men are also victims. In this harrowing report, Will Storr travels to Uganda to meet traumatised survivors, and reveals how male rape is endemic in many of the world's conflicts

by Will Storr
Sunday 17 July 2011

Image
Dying of shame: a Congolese rape victim, currently resident in Uganda. This man’s wife has left him, as she was unable to accept what happened. He attempted suicide at the end of last year. Photograph: Will Storr for the Observer

Of all the secrets of war, there is one that is so well kept that it exists mostly as a rumour. It is usually denied by the perpetrator and his victim. Governments, aid agencies and human rights defenders at the UN barely acknowledge its possibility. Yet every now and then someone gathers the courage to tell of it. This is just what happened on an ordinary afternoon in the office of a kind and careful counsellor in Kampala, Uganda. For four years Eunice Owiny had been employed by Makerere University's Refugee Law Project (RLP) to help displaced people from all over Africa work through their traumas. This particular case, though, was a puzzle. A female client was having marital difficulties. "My husband can't have sex," she complained. "He feels very bad about this. I'm sure there's something he's keeping from me."

Owiny invited the husband in. For a while they got nowhere. Then Owiny asked the wife to leave. The man then murmured cryptically: "It happened to me." Owiny frowned. He reached into his pocket and pulled out an old sanitary pad. "Mama Eunice," he said. "I am in pain. I have to use this."

Laying the pus-covered pad on the desk in front of him, he gave up his secret. During his escape from the civil war in neighbouring Congo, he had been separated from his wife and taken by rebels. His captors raped him, three times a day, every day for three years. And he wasn't the only one. He watched as man after man was taken and raped. The wounds of one were so grievous that he died in the cell in front of him.

"That was hard for me to take," Owiny tells me today. "There are certain things you just don't believe can happen to a man, you get me? But I know now that sexual violence against men is a huge problem. Everybody has heard the women's stories. But nobody has heard the men's."

It's not just in East Africa that these stories remain unheard. One of the few academics to have looked into the issue in any detail is Lara Stemple, of the University of California's Health and Human Rights Law Project. Her study Male Rape and Human Rights notes incidents of male sexual violence as a weapon of wartime or political aggression in countries such as Chile, Greece, Croatia, Iran, Kuwait, the former Soviet Union and the former Yugoslavia. Twenty-one per cent of Sri Lankan males who were seen at a London torture treatment centre reported sexual abuse while in detention. In El Salvador, 76% of male political prisoners surveyed in the 1980s described at least one incidence of sexual torture. A study of 6,000 concentration-camp inmates in Sarajevo found that 80% of men reported having been raped.

I've come to Kampala to hear the stories of the few brave men who have agreed to speak to me: a rare opportunity to find out about a controversial and deeply taboo issue. In Uganda, survivors are at risk of arrest by police, as they are likely to assume that they're gay – a crime in this country and in 38 of the 53 African nations. They will probably be ostracised by friends, rejected by family and turned away by the UN and the myriad international NGOs that are equipped, trained and ready to help women. They are wounded, isolated and in danger. In the words of Owiny: "They are despised."

But they are willing to talk, thanks largely to the RLP's British director, Dr Chris Dolan. Dolan first heard of wartime sexual violence against men in the late 1990s while researching his PhD in northern Uganda, and he sensed that the problem might be dramatically underestimated. Keen to gain a fuller grasp of its depth and nature, he put up posters throughout Kampala in June 2009 announcing a "workshop" on the issue in a local school. On the day, 150 men arrived. In a burst of candour, one attendee admitted: "It's happened to all of us here." It soon became known among Uganda's 200,000-strong refugee population that the RLP were helping men who had been raped during conflict. Slowly, more victims began to come forward.

I meet Jean Paul on the hot, dusty roof of the RLP's HQ in Old Kampala. He wears a scarlet high-buttoned shirt and holds himself with his neck lowered, his eyes cast towards the ground, as if in apology for his impressive height. He has a prominent upper lip that shakes continually – a nervous condition that makes him appear as if he's on the verge of tears.

Jean Paul was at university in Congo, studying electronic engineering, when his father – a wealthy businessman – was accused by the army of aiding the enemy and shot dead. Jean Paul fled in January 2009, only to be abducted by rebels. Along with six other men and six women he was marched to a forest in the Virunga National Park.

Later that day, the rebels and their prisoners met up with their cohorts who were camped out in the woods. Small camp fires could be seen here and there between the shadowy ranks of trees. While the women were sent off to prepare food and coffee, 12 armed fighters surrounded the men. From his place on the ground, Jean Paul looked up to see the commander leaning over them. In his 50s, he was bald, fat and in military uniform. He wore a red bandana around his neck and had strings of leaves tied around his elbows.

"You are all spies," the commander said. "I will show you how we punish spies." He pointed to Jean Paul. "Remove your clothes and take a position like a Muslim man."

Jean Paul thought he was joking. He shook his head and said: "I cannot do these things."

The commander called a rebel over. Jean Paul could see that he was only about nine years old. He was told, "Beat this man and remove this clothes." The boy attacked him with his gun butt. Eventually, Jean Paul begged: "Okay, okay. I will take off my clothes." Once naked, two rebels held him in a kneeling position with his head pushed towards the earth.

At this point, Jean Paul breaks off. The shaking in his lip more pronounced than ever, he lowers his head a little further and says: "I am sorry for the things I am going to say now." The commander put his left hand on the back of his skull and used his right to beat him on the backside "like a horse". Singing a witch doctor song, and with everybody watching, the commander then began. The moment he started, Jean Paul vomited.

Eleven rebels waited in a queue and raped Jean Paul in turn. When he was too exhausted to hold himself up, the next attacker would wrap his arm under Jean Paul's hips and lift him by the stomach. He bled freely: "Many, many, many bleeding," he says, "I could feel it like water." Each of the male prisoners was raped 11 times that night and every night that followed.

On the ninth day, they were looking for firewood when Jean Paul spotted a huge tree with roots that formed a small grotto of shadows. Seizing his moment, he crawled in and watched, trembling, as the rebel guards searched for him. After five hours of watching their feet as they hunted for him, he listened as they came up with a plan: they would let off a round of gunfire and tell the commander that Jean Paul had been killed. Eventually he emerged, weak from his ordeal and his diet of only two bananas per day during his captivity. Dressed only in his underpants, he crawled through the undergrowth "slowly, slowly, slowly, slowly, like a snake" back into town.

Image
"The organisations working on sexual violence don't talk about it:" Chris Dolan, director of the Refugee Law Project. Photograph: Will Storr for the Observer

Today, despite his hospital treatment, Jean Paul still bleeds when he walks. Like many victims, the wounds are such that he's supposed to restrict his diet to soft foods such as bananas, which are expensive, and Jean Paul can only afford maize and millet. His brother keeps asking what's wrong with him. "I don't want to tell him," says Jean Paul. "I fear he will say: 'Now, my brother is not a man.'"

It is for this reason that both perpetrator and victim enter a conspiracy of silence and why male survivors often find, once their story is discovered, that they lose the support and comfort of those around them. In the patriarchal societies found in many developing countries, gender roles are strictly defined.

"In Africa no man is allowed to be vulnerable," says RLP's gender officer Salome Atim. "You have to be masculine, strong. You should never break down or cry. A man must be a leader and provide for the whole family. When he fails to reach that set standard, society perceives that there is something wrong."

Often, she says, wives who discover their husbands have been raped decide to leave them. "They ask me: 'So now how am I going to live with him? As what? Is this still a husband? Is it a wife?' They ask, 'If he can be raped, who is protecting me?' There's one family I have been working closely with in which the husband has been raped twice. When his wife discovered this, she went home, packed her belongings, picked up their child and left. Of course that brought down this man's heart."

Back at RLP I'm told about the other ways in which their clients have been made to suffer. Men aren't simply raped, they are forced to penetrate holes in banana trees that run with acidic sap, to sit with their genitals over a fire, to drag rocks tied to their penis, to give oral sex to queues of soldiers, to be penetrated with screwdrivers and sticks. Atim has now seen so many male survivors that, frequently, she can spot them the moment they sit down. "They tend to lean forward and will often sit on one buttock," she tells me. "When they cough, they grab their lower regions. At times, they will stand up and there's blood on the chair. And they often have some kind of smell."

Because there has been so little research into the rape of men during war, it's not possible to say with any certainty why it happens or even how common it is – although a rare 2010 survey, published in the Journal of the American Medical Association, found that 22% of men and 30% of women in Eastern Congo reported conflict-related sexual violence. As for Atim, she says: "Our staff are overwhelmed by the cases we've got, but in terms of actual numbers? This is the tip of the iceberg."

Later on I speak with Dr Angella Ntinda, who treats referrals from the RLP. She tells me: "Eight out of 10 patients from RLP will be talking about some sort of sexual abuse."

"Eight out of 10 men?" I clarify.

"No. Men and women," she says.

"What about men?"

"I think all the men."

I am aghast.

"All of them?" I say.

"Yes," she says. "All the men."

The research by Lara Stemple at the University of California doesn't only show that male sexual violence is a component of wars all over the world, it also suggests that international aid organisations are failing male victims. Her study cites a review of 4,076 NGOs that have addressed wartime sexual violence. Only 3% of them mentioned the experience of men in their literature. "Typically," Stemple says, "as a passing reference."

Image
“One man was told: ‘We have a programme for vulnerable women but not men”: a Congolese rape victim. Photograph: Will Storr for the Observer

On my last night I arrive at the house of Chris Dolan. We're high on a hill, watching the sun go down over the neighbourhoods of Salama Road and Luwafu, with Lake Victoria in the far distance. As the air turns from blue to mauve to black, a muddled galaxy of white, green and orange bulbs flickers on; a pointillist accident spilled over distant valleys and hills. A magnificent hubbub rises from it all. Babies screaming, children playing, cicadas, chickens, songbirds, cows, televisions and, floating above it all, the call to prayer at a distant mosque.

Stemple's findings on the failure of aid agencies is no surprise to Dolan. "The organisations working on sexual and gender-based violence don't talk about it," he says. "It's systematically silenced. If you're very, very lucky they'll give it a tangential mention at the end of a report. You might get five seconds of: 'Oh and men can also be the victims of sexual violence.' But there's no data, no discussion."

As part of an attempt to correct this, the RLP produced a documentary in 2010 called Gender Against Men. When it was screened, Dolan says that attempts were made to stop him. "Were these attempts by people in well-known, international aid agencies?" I ask.

"Yes," he replies. "There's a fear among them that this is a zero-sum game; that there's a pre-defined cake and if you start talking about men, you're going to somehow eat a chunk of this cake that's taken them a long time to bake." Dolan points to a November 2006 UN report that followed an international conference on sexual violence in this area of East Africa.

"I know for a fact that the people behind the report insisted the definition of rape be restricted to women," he says, adding that one of the RLP's donors, Dutch Oxfam, refused to provide any more funding unless he'd promise that 70% of his client base was female. He also recalls a man whose case was "particularly bad" and was referred to the UN's refugee agency, the UNHCR. "They told him: 'We have a programme for vulnerable women, but not men.'"

It reminds me of a scene described by Eunice Owiny: "There is a married couple," she said. "The man has been raped, the woman has been raped. Disclosure is easy for the woman. She gets the medical treatment, she gets the attention, she's supported by so many organisations. But the man is inside, dying."

"In a nutshell, that's exactly what happens," Dolan agrees. "Part of the activism around women's rights is: 'Let's prove that women are as good as men.' But the other side is you should look at the fact that men can be weak and vulnerable."

Margot Wallström, the UN special representative of the secretary-general for sexual violence in conflict, insists in a statement that the UNHCR extends its services to refugees of both genders. But she concedes that the "great stigma" men face suggests that the real number of survivors is higher than that reported. Wallström says the focus remains on women because they are "overwhelmingly" the victims. Nevertheless, she adds, "we do know of many cases of men and boys being raped."

But when I contact Stemple by email, she describes a "constant drum beat that women are the rape victims" and a milieu in which men are treated as a "monolithic perpetrator class".

"International human rights law leaves out men in nearly all instruments designed to address sexual violence," she continues. "The UN Security Council Resolution 1325 in 2000 treats wartime sexual violence as something that only impacts on women and girls… Secretary of State Hillary Clinton recently announced $44m to implement this resolution. Because of its entirely exclusive focus on female victims, it seems unlikely that any of these new funds will reach the thousands of men and boys who suffer from this kind of abuse. Ignoring male rape not only neglects men, it also harms women by reinforcing a viewpoint that equates 'female' with 'victim', thus hampering our ability to see women as strong and empowered. In the same way, silence about male victims reinforces unhealthy expectations about men and their supposed invulnerability."

Considering Dolan's finding that "female rape is significantly underreported and male rape almost never", I ask Stemple if, following her research, she believes it might be a hitherto unimagined part of all wars. "No one knows, but I do think it's safe to say that it's likely that it's been a part of many wars throughout history and that taboo has played a part in the silence."

As I leave Uganda, there's a detail of a story that I can't forget. Before receiving help from the RLP, one man went to see his local doctor. He told him he had been raped four times, that he was injured and depressed and his wife had threatened to leave him. The doctor gave him a Panadol.

Survivors' names have been changed and identities hidden for their protection. The Refugee Law Project is a partner organisation of Christian Aid (christianaid.org.uk)

Source: Guardian UK.
AddThis Social Bookmark Button
Rate this item
(0 votes)
Report: Nearly Half Of Detroiters Can’t Read
May 4, 2011

Image
(credit: istock.com)

DETROIT (WWJ) – According to a new report, 47 percent of Detroiters are ”functionally illiterate.” The alarming new statistics were released by the Detroit Regional Workforce Fund on Wednesday.

WWJ Newsradio 950 spoke with the Fund’s Director, Karen Tyler-Ruiz, who explained exactly what this means. “Not able to fill out basic forms, for getting a job — those types of basic everyday (things). Reading a prescription; what’s on the bottle, how many you should take… just your basic everyday tasks,” she said. “I don’t really know how they get by, but they do. Are they getting by well? Well, that’s another question,” Tyler-Ruiz said.

Some of the Detroit suburbs also have high numbers of functionally illiterate: 34 percent in Pontiac and 24 percent in Southfield. “For other major urban areas, we are a little bit on the high side… We compare, slightly higher, to Washington D.C.’s urban population, in certain ZIP codes in Washington D.C. and in Cleveland,” she said. Tyler-Ruiz said only 10 percent of those who can’t read have gotten any help to resolve it.

The report will be used to provide better training for local workers.

Source: CBS Detroit.
AddThis Social Bookmark Button
Rate this item
(0 votes)
Indians say code name offensive but not surprising
4 May 2011
By SUSAN MONTOYA BRYAN

Image
This 1887 file photo provided by the National Archives shows the famed Indian warrior Geronimo, a Chiricahua Apache, posing with a rifle.

Geronimo was known as a legendary Apache warrior whose ability to walk without leaving footprints allowed him to evade thousands of Mexican and U.S. soldiers, much like Osama bin Laden evaded capture for the past decade.

But for Native Americans, there's an important difference: Geronimo was a hero—not a terrorist. So to them, the U.S. military's use of the revered leader's moniker as a code name for bin Laden was appalling—a slap in the face that prompted statements of disapproval from tribal leaders, a flurry of angry comments on social network sites and a letter from the leader of Geronimo's tribe asking President Barack Obama to apologize.

Many Native Americans also say that while they are angered, they are not surprised. They say the code name is yet another insult in a long, tumultuous history with the federal government. "We've been oppressed for so long, it just doesn't matter anymore," said Leon Curley, a Navajo and Marine veteran from Gallup, N.M. "The government does what it wants when it wants. The name calling is going to stay around forever. But when you think about it, this is an insult."

Even Jeff Houser, chairman of Geronimo's Fort Sill Apache Tribe, noted in his letter to Obama that the decision behind the code name stemmed from an ongoing cultural disconnect, not malice. But the damage is the same. "We are quite certain that the use of the name Geronimo as a code for Osama bin Laden was based on misunderstood and misconceived historical perspectives of Geronimo and his armed struggle against the United States and Mexican governments," Houser wrote. "However, to equate Geronimo or any other Native American figure with Osama bin Laden, a mass murderer and cowardly terrorist, is painful and offensive to our Tribe and to all Native Americans."

The White House referred questions on the matter to the U.S. Defense Department, which said no disrespect was meant to Native Americans. The department wouldn't elaborate on the use of Geronimo's name but said code names typically are chosen randomly and allow those working on a mission to communicate without divulging information to adversaries.

The U.S. military has a long tradition of naming weapons and helicopters after American Indian tribes, chiefs and artifacts, a policy that became official with a 1969 Army regulation. The rule was later rescinded, but a 2009 Army Times article said the practice continues today "as a way to honor America's war fighter heritage." The military also has a history with the word Geronimo; American paratroopers in World War II started using it as a war cry in the early 1940s. It's possible they picked up the term from the Paramount Pictures movie "Geronimo!"—about a West Point graduate and his Army regiment's attempt to capture the warrior—which was released around the same time.

The reason behind the name's use in the bin Laden raid has been the subject of much speculation. Some think it's because the al-Qaida leader, like Geronimo, was able to elude capture for so many years. Others say it's because the government considered both men terrorists, and some have suggested the guerrilla-style raid on bin Laden's compound was reflective of the Apache's fighting techniques.

Louis Maynahonah, a Navy veteran and chairman of the Apache Tribe of Oklahoma, said he doesn't believe the code name was meant to be derogatory. He pointed to the name's use as a paratrooper war cry and to the fleets of military aircraft named after Indian tribes, including the Apache helicopter. "It's symbolic to me of the Army at the time trying to capture Geronimo," he said of the code name. "They had a heck of time because he used to slip back across the Mexican border. This bin Laden has been slipping from us for 10 years."

Whatever the reason behind it, many in Indian Country say the code name was simply a bad choice that reopened old wounds. "The name Geronimo is arguably the most recognized Native American name in the world, and this comparison only serves to perpetuate negative stereotypes about our peoples," the Onondaga Nation Council of Chiefs said in a statement issued Tuesday. "The U.S. military leadership should have known better," said the council, from the Onondaga Nation near Syracuse, N.Y.

Image
This undated file photo shows the Chiricahua Apache Geronimo, late in his life.

Morning Star Gali, a member of the Pit River Tribe in California, agreed. Part of Gali's family is descended from Geronimo's tribe, and she has made it a point to share that history with her three young children. "We definitely try to instill who our heroes were and who Geronimo was and what he represented to our people and the sacrifices and struggles that they made for us to be here today," said Gali, a community liaison coordinator with the International Indian Treaty Council.

Navajo Nation President Ben Shelly said he would like to see the Obama administration and the Pentagon change the code name "so that U.S. history books will not continue to portray negative stereotypes of Native Americans and that America's youth will remember Geronimo as one of our greatest war heroes." Geronimo is a legend among Apaches and other tribes for the fierce fighting he brought on during the 19th century as he tried to protect his land, his people and their way of life from encroachment by U.S. and Mexican armies. Stories have been passed down about the Apache leader's ability to walk without leaving footprints, which helped him evade the thousands of soldiers and scouts who spent years looking for him throughout the Southwest.

After the families of Geronimo and other warriors were captured and sent to Florida, he and 35 warriors surrendered to Gen. Nelson A. Miles near the Arizona-New Mexico border in 1886. Geronimo eventually was sent to Fort Sill in Oklahoma, where he died of pneumonia in 1909. Some Indian leaders say the attention should not be placed on bin Laden but rather on the men and women—including the many Native Americans—who are serving in the armed forces in the Middle East. The Onondaga Nation chiefs and the Navajos described the military record of Native Americans as exemplary. They pointed to the sheer number of American Indian soldiers as well as the code talkers who used their Native languages to develop an unbreakable code during World War II.

Jefferson Keel, an Army veteran and president of the National Congress of American Indians, said that since 2001, 61 American Indians and Alaskan Natives have died fighting in Afghanistan and Iraq and more than 400 have been wounded. "Let's be very clear about what is important here," Keel said in a statement. "The successful removal of Osama bin Laden as a threat to the United States honors the sacrifice these Native warriors made for the United States and their people." He added it was his understanding that bin Laden's code name was "Jackpot," while the operation was called Geronimo. Regardless, associating a Native warrior with bin Laden "undermines the military service of Native people," he said.

The U.S. Senate Indian Affairs Committee is expected to discuss the code name issue at its oversight hearing Thursday on the impact of racial stereotypes. Gali hopes the panel presses for remedies, including an apology from the government. "There are a number of steps that can be taken," she said. "Racism is very ingrained, and there's a long way to go to be able to make it right."

Associated Press researcher Rhonda Shafner in New York contributed to this report.
Source: Breitbart.
AddThis Social Bookmark Button
Rate this item
(0 votes)
Demanding cheaper oil is disastrous

The most popular cry in politics today is a pledge to deny reality and cut petrol prices. Give us our fix! Make it cheap! Make it now!

Friday, 11 March 2011
by Johann Hari

Image

My name is Johann Hari, and I am an addict. If you restrict the supply of my drug, as has happened over the past month, I become panicky and angry. If you cut it off entirely, my life will fall apart. I want my fix, I want it cheap, and I want it now. My drug is called oil. I eat it: my food is driven to me. I wear it: my clothing is shipped and flown to me. I travel with it: on every bus, train and plane. But if I don't go to rehab soon, this addiction is going to ruin me. This is the inaugural meeting of Petroleum Anonymous. We're all going to need it now. There are four major symptoms to my addiction and yours, and in 2011 they are all getting worse.

Symptom one: unpredictable convulsions.
There is a revolution happening all around the world's biggest oil-fields, and it is getting closer to the deepest pools every day. For 60 years our governments have armed, funded and fuelled tyrants in return for them pointing the petrol pump in our direction. Just as junkies will rob their mothers and mug their grannies, we have abandoned the most basic values of our societies in pursuit of cheap oil. Initially, this created the virus of jihadism. Now some of the local populations are finally rising up in a democratic spirit against their tyrants. They are being shot at by soldiers trained at Sandhurst and with weapons stamped Made in America.

Nobody knows where this revolution will stop, but today is a declared "day of rage" in Saudi Arabia. The angriest part of the population, the marginalised and abused Shia, happen to live on top of the biggest oil-fields on Earth, and can stare across a thin patch of water to see their fellow Shia rising up in Bahrain. Sixty per cent of the Saudi population is under the age of 25, yet they are governed by an 86-year-old and half-dead "King" who bans women from driving and has rape victims whipped. It seems unlikely they can be bribed, beaten and shot into submission forever.

Even a small and brief disruption in the oil supply can cause this symptom in us. Since 1973, there have been five oil price shocks – and every single one has been followed rapidly by a global recession. A Saudi uprising would be the biggest disruption yet, triggering $200-a-barrel oil and beyond. It would be like having the 1973 oil price shock just after the 1929 Great Crash – and change all our lives.

Symptom two: fever.
In the century-long party since a pair of brothers first struck oil big-time in Texas, human beings have burned up 900 billion barrels of the black gloop. Each one of them has released gases into the atmosphere that have trapped more and more of the sun's heat here on Earth. The result is that, according to Nasa, 2010 was globally the hottest year ever recorded, tied with 2005. Don't be fooled by local snow: the last time it was this hot was three million years ago, when the sea level was 25 metres higher. Yes, we have a planetary fever. If we burn up all the oil that remains, we will push it way beyond current levels – or any ever seen by human beings.

Symptom three: hunger.
The Nobel Prize-winning economist Paul Krugman says food is soaring in price across the world as a result of this man-made fever. Last year Russia's wheat crop dried out and burned down in wildfires nobody had ever seen before. It caused the global price of wheat to double, and President Dmitri Medvedev to renounce his global warming denialism.

Similarly strange things are happening across the world's most important agricultural areas. All this, in turn, helped cause the Arab revolutions. These crop failures rendered many of the Arab people unable to meet their food bills – and made them rise up in desperation.

Image

Symptom four: denial.
Petrol is finite. It takes millions of years to form under the ground: it can't be grown, or made in factories. We all know that, sooner or later, it is going to run out. But when? The last year in which humans found more oil than we burned was the year I was born: 1979. Since then, it's been a downward graph. But it may be plunging much faster than we think. The WikiLeaks cables revealed that the US suspects the Saudis have 40 per cent less oil than they claim, and that the country's supply could peak as soon as next year.

There is a shrinking pool of oil in the world – and more and more people chasing it. In China, three quarters of city-dwellers understandably say they plan to buy a car in the next five years. There is not enough for everyone.

We are going to have to make the transition to fuelling our societies by the mighty power of the sun, the wind and the waves sooner or later. The technology exists today. It can be done without us regressing to caves, or any of the other ludicrous myths pumped out by the oil lobby. George Monbiot's book Heat is a detailed roadmap of how to do it, step by step. Far from killing our economies, the work needed to build a new energy infrastructure would be a vast source of new jobs – at precisely the moment when we need a huge economic stimulus.

Every time the oil price spikes, our politicians mouth platitudes about the need to kick oil, but the change never comes. It's worth going back to the last serious proposal because it offers a tantalising "what if?".

On 18 April 1977, President Jimmy Carter delivered a televised address from the Oval Office. He said: "Tonight I want to have an unpleasant talk with you about a problem unprecedented in our history. With the exception of preventing war, this is the greatest challenge our country will face during our lifetimes. The energy crisis has not yet overwhelmed us, but it will if we do not act quickly." He said the West must wean itself off oil or "the alternative may be a national catastrophe... This difficult effort will be the moral equivalent of war – except that we will be uniting our efforts to build and not destroy."

What would the world be like today if Jimmy Carter had been listened to by the Western world, instead of being booted out of office as a "whiner"? With the US no longer backing Arab petro-tyrannies and occupying Arab territories, there would probably have been no 9/11. There would have been no Iraq war. There would have been no BP oil spill. We would not be facing an oil price shock today that could cripple our economies and leave us backing some of the worst dictators in the world.

The Copenhagen climate summit could well have established a path to dealing with global warming, rather than burying it. If we pursue Drilling As Usual, what unnecessary disasters will they curse us for 30 years from now?

Yet the most popular cry in politics today is a pledge to deny all this reality and cut petrol prices. Give us our fix! Make it cheap! Make it now! In truth we don't have a choice about whether we join Petroleum Anonymous. Our only choice is: do we do it today, or do we do it 20 or 30 years from now, on a much hotter planet, after squabbling and fighting and killing for the last pathetic dregs of petroleum.

Source: The Independent UK.
AddThis Social Bookmark Button
Rate this item
(0 votes)
Campaign launched to halt so-called corrective rape in Africa

A campaign has been launched to fight against the so-called corrective rape of lesbians in South Africa.

by Catriona McGale
28 January 2011

The campaign was launched following the case of 30-year-old Millicent Gaika, who claims she was raped and beaten for five hours in order to “cure” her of her lesbianism. The trial against her attacker has been delayed until February.

Unfortunately, Gaika’s case is not a one-off. Alarmingly, 'corrective' rape is a recurrent crime in South Africa. In Cape Town alone there has been more than one corrective rape reported to support group Luleki Sizwe per day, yet no one has ever been convicted of the offence. Corrective rape refers to the notion that lesbians can, and should, be raped in order to be heterosexual and is not classed as a hate crime in South Africa.

It is often poor, black women who fall victim to corrective rape however in 2008 a former star player of the women’s national football team, Eudy Simelane, was gang raped and killed. Now, a group of activists are trying to u-turn the issue. Their appeal to the Minister of Justice has gained huge support with 140,000 signatures being added to their petition.

The massive response has forced him to respond on national television. He stated that 'corrective rape' was “something that we are definitely concerned about” and that he is prepared to contact the South African Law Reform Commission “in order to look at this issue much further” – but no action has yet been taken.

The campaign has gained backing from around the globe and Kelly Osbourne this week posted a link to the campaign on her Twitter page. To show your support, sign the petition using the link below.

http://www.avaaz.org/en/stop_corrective ... 083f245dfe

Source: PinkPaper.
AddThis Social Bookmark Button
Rate this item
(0 votes)
Elton John's baby involved in US cover-up

Supermarket boss censors magazine cover carrying picture of smiling family

by Ed Pilkington in New York
Thursday 27 January 2011

Image
US grocery chain Harps has reversed a decision by one of its stores to conceal the cover of US Weekly. Photograph: Plixi/WENN.com

You can just see the rim of Elton John's black glasses, his bushy eyebrows behind them and a mop of excellently dyed strawberry blond hair. Beside him is the dark receding hairline of his partner David Furnish and behind them the masthead of the magazine US Weekly.

And that's all you're allowed to see. The rest is obscured by a slap of grey plastic with the words: "Family shield. To protect young Harp shoppers." That's life in the small town of Mountain Home, in northern Arkansas. The manager of the Harps supermarket decided the image was offensive and applied the store's censorship policy normally reserved for the likes of Playboy or other pornographic magazines.

What the cover shows, when the shield is removed, is John and Furnish grinning rather woodenly, fully clothed, as they hold their new surrogate son - Zachary Jackson Levon Furnish-John. "Elton's baby! At home with Elton John, David Furnish and baby Zachary," is the cover line, and it doesn't get any more obscene than that.

The censorship was brought to the world's attention by Jennifer Huddleston, a local shopper, who took a cell-phone photograph. Then she posted the picture on her Twitter feed with the words "This was taken at my local grocery store. I was shocked and horrified. Can you help bring attention to this?"

The tweet was passed around, first locally and then more widely, until it was picked up by gay and lesbian campaign groups and the media. In later tweets, Huddleston made clear that she was an Arkansas patriot. "I love Arkansas. I hate to see this sort of thing happen here or anywhere," she wrote. For good measure, she also added the phone number of the Harps store, which was swamped with protest calls.

For once, this is a story with a happy ending. By this morning Harps headquarters in Springdale, Arkansas, which runs 65 stores, had told the Mountain Home outlet to remove the shield and free John and Furnish from censorship. The president issued a statement in which he announced that the shield had been removed and that said the company did not want to offend anybody.

Last April the courts in Arkansas struck down as unconstitutional a referendum of voters that banned adoptions by unmarried couples. Still, it seems that a photograph of two adult men holding a baby is too outrageous for some people to tolerate.

Source: Guardian UK.
AddThis Social Bookmark Button
  • «
  •  Start 
  •  Prev 
  •  1 
  •  2 
  •  Next 
  •  End 
  • »
Page 1 of 2

search

whosonline

We have 62 guests online

free counters