Archive for November, 2007

Saudi Arabia: Rape Victim Punished for Speaking Out

November 21, 2007

Human Rights Watch,

Court Doubles Sentence for Victim, Bans Her Lawyer From the Case

(New York, November 17, 2007) – A court in Saudi Arabia doubled its sentence of lashings for a rape victim who had spoken out in public about her case and her efforts to seek justice, Human Rights Watch said today. The court also harassed her lawyer, banning him from the case and confiscating his professional license.

“This verdict not only sends victims of sexual violence the message that they should not press charges, but in effect offers protection and impunity to the perpetrators.”

Farida Deif, researcher in the women’s rights division of Human Rights Watch

 

 

An official at the General Court of Qatif, which handed down the sentence on November 14, said the court had increased the woman’s sentence because of “her attempt to aggravate and influence the judiciary through the media.” The court sentenced the rape victim to six months in prison and 200 lashes, more than double its October 2006 sentence after its earlier verdict was reviewed by Saudi Arabia’s highest court, the Supreme Council of the Judiciary.

Human Rights Watch called on King Abdullah to immediately void the verdict and drop all charges against the rape victim and to order the court to end its harassment of her lawyer.

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Pakistan: Opposition unites as repression intensifies

November 21, 2007

 Green Left

Tony Iltis 16 November 2007

While Pakistan’s dictator General Pervez Musharraf has justified his November 3 imposition of emergency rule with the supposed threat of Islamic terrorism, the brunt of the crackdown has been felt by students, trade unionists, the left, the mainstream opposition parties, civil society and the movement of advocates (lawyers) — who have been in the forefront of resistance to the regime since March.

This was illustrated on November 4 when over 100 activists were arrested at the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan’s Lahore office while, at the same time, 25 Taliban militants were released as part of a prisoner exchange for 213 soldiers.

The state of emergency began with the pre-emptive arrest of hundreds of activists and advocates. The latter led mass protests after Musharraf sacked supreme court Chief Justice Iftikhar Chaudhry in March, due to his upholding of judicial independence. These protests saw Chaudhry reinstated in July. The likelihood that the Supreme Court would rule against Musharraf being able to run for president while remain head of the military was the most likely reason for the declaration of the state of emergency that has seen Chaudhry and other Supreme Court judges placed under house arrest.

Continued . . .

Critique of the Arab Left: On Palestine and Arab Unity

November 20, 2007

Monthly Review, November 19, 2007
by Hisham Bustani

The situation of the Arab Left is similar to “the phenomenon of the transformation of the Left” on the global scale and a reflection of it. The reason is simple: the Arab Left, as a general rule though with some exceptions, was never a “Left” in the dialectical materialist sense. It has always been a reserved, conservative entity, “reactionary” rather than proactive, “importing” theory rather than producing it, adhering to the “letter of the text” (mainly the text of the Soviet policy!) rather than being an innovative critical thinker.

Below I attempt to dissect the main weaknesses of the Arab Left, as well as the obstacles it faced, and discuss whether there really was an Arab Left at all. This is of special importance since, coming from a Marxist position itself, criticism will help in evolving a revolutionary Left again in the Arab region and the world.

Under the British and French occupation, the division of al-Mashreq al-Arabi (the Arab East, divided by colonialists into the states we know today as Syria, Lebanon, Palestine, Jordan, and Iraq) took place for many objective reasons:

Continued . . .

The Spanish monarchy’s clash with socialism

November 20, 2007
By Pablo Ouziel
Online Journal Contributing Writer

Nov 16, 2007,

On August the 1, 1969, Time magazine quoted Generalissimo Francisco Franco saying, “Conscious of my responsibility before God and history and taking into account the qualities to be found in the person of Prince Juan Carlos of Borbón, who has been perfectly trained to take up the high mission to which he might be called, I have decided to propose him to the nation as my successor.” With this statement began the formal relationship between Spain’s present king and the country’s fascist dictator.

In November 2007 at the Ibero-American Summit in Santiago de Chile, the King of Spain, Juan Carlos, pointed his finger at Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez and asked him, “Why don’t you shut up?” after Chávez had called José María Aznar, Spain’s former prime minister, a fascist, and José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, the current Spanish prime minister, was trying to defend Aznar.

This scene from the Ibero-American Summit has now travelled the globe through every mainstream news media channel, however it has been used once again as an opportunity to attack Hugo Chavez for his rudeness and out of line commentary, when in fact not only is it a fairly accurate statement, but it also should be used as an opportunity by political analysts worldwide to bring out the extent to which fascist factions are still very much alive in Spain’s political reality.

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Invaders and Allies Ignore Iraq’s Humanitarian Crisis

November 20, 2007

 

by Haroon Siddiqui

Those who were most gung-ho about the invasion and occupation of Iraq have been the least helpful in mopping up the mess there. Those least enthusiastic have ended up bearing the greatest burden.

The United States and Britain have accepted only a handful of the 4.2 million displaced Iraqis. Ditto Kuwait, which was the most bellicose of America’s pro-war Arab allies. Ditto Saudi Arabia, that other staunch American ally. It has shut its border with Iraq, and plans to fortify it with a $2 billion fence.

Stephen Harper, who as leader of the opposition agitated for Canada to join the war, has been silent as prime minister about admitting Iraqi refugees to Canada.

On the other hand, Syria and Jordan, which strongly opposed the war, have accepted 2 million Iraqi refugees, and done so gracefully.

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Puppet judges reject challenge to Pervez Musharraf

November 20, 2007

From

November 20, 2007
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Pakistan’s neutered Supreme Court dismissed the main challenges to the reelection of Pervez Musharraf as President yesterday, taking him a step closer to quitting as army chief and restoring civilian rule.

Stripped of hostile judges by General Musharraf under a state of emergency, because he feared that it would rule he was ineligible for another five-year term, the new-look court took just over two hours to throw out the cases.

General Musharraf has promised to hang up his uniform, one of the key demands of the opposition and the international community, as soon as his victory in last month’s presidential election is validated. The final legal challenge is expected to be considered, and dismissed, on Thursday.

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The U.S. Game Plan in Pakistan

November 19, 2007

Counterpunch, November 19, 2007

Hang the Judges and Lawyers Out to Dry

By CHINA HAND

The United States has been oddly silent on the central, precipitating factor in Pakistan’s crisis: Musharraf’s use of the State of Emergency to move against the Supreme Court that was poised to disallow his election to another term as president.

The most likely interpretation is that the U.S. will disregard the illegality of Musharraf’s bid for another term as president if he takes office as a civilian and lifts the State of Emergency prior to parliamentary elections.

It looks like that’s what’s going on. And that probably means the judiciary gets hung out to dry.

In John Negroponte’s statement before leaving Pakistan there wasn’t a word about restoring the Supreme Court, releasing the lawyers and judges from jail, or maintaining an independent judiciary.

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America gives wide berth to Mush, ‘the visionary’

November 19, 2007

The Times of India, 19 Nov 2007

Chidanand Rajghatta

WASHINGTON: The Bush administration has given Pakistan’s military dictator Pervez Musharraf a wide berth despite a “tough” public stance against the imposition of Emergency.

US Special Envoy John Negroponte was all praise for Musharraf as he left Islamabad in the face of the dictator’s defiant stand in rejecting calls to lift Emergency, broadly sticking to Washington’s game plan of a introducing a quasi-civilian government.

In short, there appears to be no change in the US masterplan of inducting a Musharraf-Benazir government, notwithstanding the dictators crackdown on democracy and the acrimonious drama between the two principals.

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Pentagon Cover Up: 15,000 or More US Deaths in Iraq War?

November 19, 2007

Global Research, November 18, 2007

Uruknet – 2007-11-17

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The Pentagon has been concealing the true number of American casualties in the Iraq War. The real number exceeds 15,000 and CBS News can prove it.

CBS’s Investigative Unit wanted to do a report on the number of suicides in the military and “submitted a Freedom of Information Act request to the Department of Defense”. After 4 months they received a document which showed–that between 1995 and 2007– there were 2,200 suicides among “active duty” soldiers.

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Lest We Forget

November 19, 2007

Information Clearing House

By John Pilger

11/15/07 “ICH” — — On Remembrance Day 2007 – Veterans Day in America – the great and the good bowed their heads at the Cenotaph. Generals, politicians, newsreaders, football managers and stock-market traders wore their poppies. Hypocrisy was a presence. No one mentioned Iraq. No one uttered the slightest remorse for the fallen of that country. No one read the forbidden list.

The forbidden list documents, without favor, the part the British state and its court have played in the destruction of Iraq. Here it is:

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