Category Archives: human rights

Jail the protesters: it’s where we belong

An Indian government attempt to head off a political crisis by arresting a key anti-corruption activist appeared to backfire Tuesday when parliament walked out and demonstrations broke out across the country.

Approximately 20 plainclothes police surrounded activist Anna Hazare, 73, early Tuesday morning as he left his house to begin a hunger strike against alleged widespread corruption, reportedly forbidding him from leaving the premises. When he defied them, they took him into custody on peremptory charges of “breach of peace.”

via Indian police arrest anti-corruption activist sparking peaceful demonstrations throughout the country – latimes.com.

 

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Filed under colonialism, human rights, protest

Big bank takes little bank: blocking cell reception of protesters in SF

SAN FRANCISCO — Transit officials blocked cellphone reception in San Francisco train stations for three hours to disrupt planned demonstrations over a police shooting.

Officials with the Bay Area Rapid Transit system, better known as BART, said Friday that they turned off electricity to cellular towers in four stations from 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. Thursday. The move was made after BART learned that protesters planned to use mobile devices to coordinate a demonstration on train platforms.

The tactic drew comparisons to those used by the former president of Egypt to squelch protests demanding an end to his authoritarian rule.

via San Francisco Transit Blocks Cellphones To Hinder Protest.

If you want to know what cops have learned since Oscar Grant.  Perhaps “Game recognize game” would have been a better articulation.

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Filed under communication, human rights, media, protest

Tuskeegee updated: Afghanistan

Yet this month, the Obama administration admitted that the Central Intelligence Agency had staged a fake vaccination campaign in Pakistan as American intelligence closed in on Osama Bin Laden. Health care workers were used on a clandestine mission—not in the paranoid imagination of America-hating fanatics but as part of the deliberate policy of the United States government.

As atrocities go, delivering inadequate vaccines under false pretenses isn’t obviously worse than, say, systematically kidnapping people and torturing them.

via The CIA’s fake vaccination program in Pakistan reveals the moral bankruptcy of American spooks. – By Tom Scocca – Slate Magazine.

What?  Really?

REALLY?!!?

“If there’s Hell below, we’re all gonna go.”

* How about the kids who got only the first of three doses because the health worker was moved to spy on Bin Laden?  I’ve asked students in the past which evil they think is worse:  the people who injected syphilis into African-American citizens, or the doctors who lied to the sickening people and told them they were getting treatment while they injected placebos and watched people die.

Both are pretty evil, but there is something absolutely wrong about watching people suffer and pretending to help them.

After our CIA vaccine bait-and-switch Pakistan considered cancelling their vaccination program.

The Afghani blood on American hands is going to be there for a long time.

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Squatting vertically in Venezuela

I’m impressed.

The takeover of Torre de David began four years ago when 300 people forced their way into the derelict building. “The night we came in, I was scared, but I was also excited to finally have my own home,” says Jhonny Jimenez, 31, a member of the founding group and now one of the tower’s main co-ordinators. “We organised people according to their needs: the elderly who can’t go up flights of stairs would go in the lower floors and large families would get more space.”

via Tallest squat in the world becomes emblem of Venezuela housing crisis | World news | The Guardian.

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Jasiri X: Jordan Miles

For real.  I lived in Pittsburgh and the cops are out of control.  Jasiri X has the most recent tragedy articulated through the rhymes.

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Filed under art, hip hop, human rights, race

Talking blues about predator drones

Brilliant critique of the predator drones.  Bring it funky uncle.

America launched Predator drones against a sixth country recently — Somalia. The pilotless killer aircraft have now been used in Pakistan (by Bush something like 40 times in eight years, by Obama several hundred times in two and a half years!) as well as in Afghanistan, Iraq, Yemen, Libya, and now Somalia. (Funny — I don’t recall a declaration of war in any of those conflicts.) The Predator has to be the most cowardly, disgusting, and counterproductive (because of the additional enemies it makes for America) weapon in the history of warfare. I predicted many years ago that violent video games were just training and not-so-subtle indoctrination for the real thing, and now we have it — operators sit in comfort somewhere in the continental USA, fondle their obscene joy sticks, and people (innocent? guilty? terrorists? civilians?) die thousands of miles away. Predator operators are not heroes — they are cowardly ignorant nauseating scum, and Obama has proven himself to be a rabid war criminal. The American people will suffer the payback for these crimes for generations. We are not at war with Pakistan or Yemen or Somalia. No one in this country really knows who is being killed. This is just old-fashioned murder, not war, except that it is the most cowardly method of murder ever devised. Obama will retire into well-protected comfort, while you and I and other relatively innocent Americans have been made into legitimate targets wherever we go in the world.

via What A Wonderful World It Could Be « Talkin’ Blues About The News.

 

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Empowerment to stop female genital surgery

Some of the most significant news stories that center on African women in recent years have been about female genital mutilation or FGM.  (Interesting footnote, I’ve noticed that the choice of language between ‘female genital surgery” and “female genital mutilation” is treated as a bright-line for the writer’s politics about the issue itself.  What is interesting to me is how many of those who choose ‘mutilation’ quickly shorten the phrase to the acronym FGM, arguably obscuring the linguistic elevation of the act from ‘surgery’ to ‘mutilation’).

Rather than forcing readers to guess about my politics from my choice of language, I’ll be clear: I think the practice of FGM is terrible.

Female genital surgery is terrible and the stories about it are often recounted by westerners as a means of distancing, otherizing, and even animalizing African families are also toxic.   The approach to simply wield the tragedy as a moral panic — implying that somehow parents in Africa don’t love their kids doesn’t help change genital surgery.

Tostan does.  Tostan is an African NGO that has a lengthy track-record of respectfully engaging with communities about the importance of strong women and girls.  Tostan runs 30-month community empowerment projects, one of which, in Gambia, has resulted in 117 communities declaring their abandonment of FGM and child marriage.

Mr. Alagie F. Jallow said the day is a historic one as the participating communities have registered their achievements and positive social transformations. He said over one hundred and seventeen communities in Basse, Jimara, Tumana, Kantora, Wuli and Sandu districts, including the adopted communities, have come together to openly declare their abandonment of female genital cutting, early and forceful marriage in URR.

He said this historic moment came about after the participating communities have undergone an intensive three year holistic community empowerment programme led by facilitators through social mobilisation and sensitisation activities by the team, CMC members and the communities. He said the training was centred around issues affecting the health and well being of women and girls as violations of fundamental human rights as enshrined in the Universals Declaration of Human Rights, Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC), the Convention on the Elimination of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) and the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights amongst others to which the Gambia is a signatory.

He said these human rights are also part of the Kobi one modules of the Tostan Community Empowerment Programme (CEP). He said the CEP is not only focusing on harmful traditional practices but a holistic approach to community led sustainable development covering themes on democracy and good governance, human rights and responsibilities, problem solving process, health and hygiene, literacy and management skills as well as feasibility study and introduction to small micro project implementation.

via allAfrica.com: Gambia: 117 Communities Publicly Declare Abandonment of FGC, Early And Forced Marriage in Urr.

If you have some spare change, and you think this is as awesome as I do, celebrate by sending a couple of bucks to Tostan.

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Cancel Dilbert

I assume that most of you have encountered the recent exchanges between Dilbert author Scott Adams and journalists from Salon and the Jezebel.  If not, basically, the Dilbert-dude said that rape was an inevitable part of men’s sexuality.  He agreed to some email exchanges, some of which make crystal clear Scott Adam’s privilege.

Here is my favorite quote:

The actual point of the earlier blog post you mentioned was that men don’t argue in situations where the cost of doing so is greater than the gain. The world is watching you make that true for me right now. This debate will probably reduce my income by a third, as feminist forces have already mobilized and started to ask newspapers to drop Dilbert. That’s the sort of risk that men don’t have when they engage in a debate with other men.

via Scott Adams takes on Salon – Scott Adams – Salon.com.

It’s nice that he explicitly outlines the team-behavior expected of other men under patriarchy.  Hey Scott dude, this is another dude guy, telling you that you are an idiot.  I’m also sending an email to my local paper requesting that your comic be dropped from the newspaper.

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Hacktivism against Arizona

On Thursday evening LulzSec released what it said were hundreds of internal documents from the Arizona Department of Public Safety, including material related to border patrol and counterterrorism operations. It said it was taking aim at the agency because of Arizona’s anti-immigrant policies.

via Arrest Puts Spotlight on Brazen Hacking Group LulzSec – NYTimes.com.

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Overpopulation fear-mongering, Structural adjustment and Peru

The simplistic blame-game associated with over-population is ridiculous.  The dynamics of what happens when people have children are more complicated than the traditional privileged environmentalists articulate in their ‘more babies mean more trees get cut down.’

Consumption of things that are made out of trees is why trees are cut down.

I almost always credit Betsy Hartmann whose insights have helped me to better understand population and consumption issues.  Here is Betsy explaining the distinction:

Don’t get me wrong. I support the provision of contraception and abortion as a fundamental reproductive right and as part of comprehensive health services. What I’m against is turning family planning into a tool of top-down social engineering. There’s a long and sordid history of population control programs violating women’s rights and harming their health. That’s why feminist reformers in the international family planning field have fought hard to make programs responsive to women’s — and men’s — real reproductive and sexual health needs. A world of difference exists between services that treat women as population targets, and those based on a feminist model of respectful, holistic, high-quality care.

via On The Issues Magazine: Fall 2009: The ‘New’ Population Control Craze: Retro, Racist, Wrong Way to Go by Betsy Hartmann.

Of course, the enthusiasm for reducing population translated into devistating programs of sterilization around the world.  Most recently this history of sterilization is impacting the election in Peru.  Paid for with United States Agency for International development money, the Peruvian dictator Fujimori sterilized almost 300,000 women against their will.

The sterilisation program came about as a poverty reduction strategy. In the early 90s Peru had, under Fujimori, put in practice one of the most aggressive structural adjustment policies ever implemented. It was so forceful that even the World Bank advised the Peruvian government to slow down. As a result of prolonged economic crisis and neoliberal reform, 50% of Peruvians lived under the poverty line and population control was an ideal to aspire to. The UN population conference in Cairo in 1994 and the women’s Beijing conference of 1995 provided Fujimori with inspiration, and his government received funding from USAid to undertake the ambitious project.

via Peru’s sterilisation victims still await compensation and justice | Natalia Sobrevilla Perea | Comment is free | guardian.co.uk.

That’s right.  We have to lay some of the responsibility for this systemic violence against women at the feet of the United Nations and the leaders of first world nations.   The forced structural adjustment policies, and the US-funded United nations overpopulation projects also deserve blame.

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