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The Wire

French Court Upholds Soros' Conviction

France's highest court upheld George Soros' conviction for insider trading Wednesday in a case dating back nearly 20 years, and the billionaire investor vowed to fight the ruling at the European Court of Human Rights.

Syrian Writer to Spend 6 Months in Prison

A Syrian military court ruled that a dissident writer must serve six months in prison after convicting him on charges that include insulting the president, a human rights group said Wednesday.

Rights Monitor Makes Statement on Cruelty

The government human rights organization said Monday Egyptian police and security forces should reassess "excessively cruel security measures" used against protesters in recent demonstrations in Cairo.

Peru Candidates Struggle on Human Rights

A tangle of past atrocities has risen to the forefront of Peru's presidential election, leaving voters with a dispiriting question: Which alleged human rights violator do you least want for president?

Ivory Coast Abuse Threatens Elections

Unchecked civilian abuse by Ivory Coast military and rebels — ranging from robbery to killings — threatens to derail elections planned for later this year, an international monitoring group said Thursday.

Amnesty Urges U.S. on Iraq Contractors

The United States is riding roughshod over human rights by outsourcing key anti-terror work in Iraq to private contractors, who operate beyond Iraqi law and outside the military chain of command, Amnesty International said Tuesday.

Amnesty: Human Rights Traded for Security

Amnesty International said in a report released Tuesday that the relentless pursuit of security by the world's powerful nations had undermined human rights, draining energy and attention from crises afflicting the poor and underprivileged.

Human Rights Watch: Mexico More Open

President Vicente Fox has brought openness to government during his tenure but has failed to resolve lingering human rights problems, an international rights group said Wednesday.

Syrian Detains Prominent Rights Lawyer

Syrian police arrested the country's leading rights lawyer and five other activists Wednesday, bringing to nine the number of people detained this week in what a rights group described as the largest roundup of democracy campaigners in years.

Cuba, Saudis, China on Rights Council

Cuba, Saudi Arabia, China and Russia won seats on the new U.N. Human Rights Council on Tuesday despite their poor human rights records, but two rights abusers — Iran and Venezuela — were defeated.

Groups Hail New U.N. Human Rights Council

Human rights groups say they know the new U.N. Human Rights Council will not be made up entirely of countries with stellar records — among the 64 candidates are Cuba, Iran, Saudi Arabia, and Pakistan. But it will definitely be better than its discredited predecessor.

Bush Urged to Press Hu on Human Rights

The agenda is lengthy, the time is short, and U.S. leaders long have felt they have had limited success in moving China to respect the rights of its citizens.

U.S. Declines Seat on U.N. Rights Council

The United States decided to forgo a seat on the new U.N. Human Rights Council this year rather than risk a losing battle for a panel it considers deeply flawed. But 42 countries announced their candidacy, including Cuba and Iran.

Syria Draws Fire Over Rights Activists

Amnesty International criticized Syria on Tuesday for arresting political and human rights activists, calling the crackdown another "blot" on the country's poor human rights record.

21 Nations Seek U.N. Rights Council

Twenty-one countries have declared their candidacy to be members of the new U.N. Human Rights Council including Algeria, Pakistan, Ukraine, Peru, Nicaragua and Switzerland, U.N. officials and diplomats said Monday.

Cambodian Prime Minister Wants Envoy Out

Cambodia's prime minister said Wednesday that a U.N. human rights representative was no longer welcome in the Southeast Asian nation after the envoy criticized the government's crackdown on dissent.

Cambodia Demands New Human Rights Envoy

Cambodia's prime minister said Wednesday that a U.N. human rights representative is no longer welcome in the Southeast Asian nation after the envoy criticized the government's crackdown on dissent.

U.N. Replaces Discredited Rights Panel

The discredited U.N. Human Rights Commission held its last meeting Monday before being replaced by a new body, ending a 60-year history in which some of the world's worst offenders often used their membership to protect one another from condemnation.

U.N. Clears Way to Abolish Rights Panel

The U.N. gave a green light Wednesday night to abolish the discredited Human Rights Commission on June 16, clearing the way for the new Human Rights Council to become the U.N.'s main rights watchdog.

U.N. Human Rights Council at a Glance

Key elements of the new U.N. Human Rights Council approved Wednesday by the U.N. General Assembly:

Rights Council to Get First Test in May

The new U.N. Human Rights Council will face its first test when members are elected on May 9, with supporters and opponents watching to see if countries that are major offenders win seats — and whether the United States will even be a candidate.

U.S. to Vote Against New Rights Council

The United States will vote against a proposal to create a new panel at the United Nations to replace the discredited Human Rights Commission, Washington's U.N. ambassador said.

Eliasson Wants Accord on Rights Council

The top U.N. negotiator for a proposed Human Rights Council said he would put off seeking final approval for the body in a last bid to overcome U.S. objections.

Russia Criticizes U.S. Human Rights Report

Russia lashed out at a State Department report that criticized its human rights record, accusing the United States of a double standard.

'Small' Schools Aim to Improve Students

When 10th-graders at the School for Human Rights debated in a recent class whether Crips co-founder Stanley Tookie Williams should be executed, they knew the question was moot.

The Wire

Pascua Lama Gold Mine, a Threat to Sustainability

Source: ipsnews.net

The Pascua Lama Gold Mine is a project of the Barrick Gold Corporation that seeks to extract gold, silver, and copper from beneath three Andean glaciers in Chile.

Israeli Human Rights Organizations: End Killing of Civilians

Source: btselem.org

Five Israeli human rights organizations demanded today in an urgent appeal to the Prime Minister and the Minister of Defense that they take immediate action to end the killing of Palestinian civilians in the Occupied Territories, and to eradicate the factors contributing to these …

Postmark Guantánamo -- Why is the Pentagon keeping prisoners’ mail from their lawyers?

Source: inthesetimes.com

Paracha, 58, decided to write a letter to 98 U.S. senators describing his plight. The senators haven’t responded, though it’s hard to blame them. They don’t know the letters exist. The Department of Defense won’t release them for delivery.

Revealed: the shrapnel evidence that points to Israel's guilt

Source: news.independent.co.uk

Israel has dismissed continuing calls for an independent international inquiry into the beachfront explosion which killed seven members of a Palestinian family in Gaza last Friday after its own internal military investigation decided it was not responsible for the blast.

Pentagon Orders U.S. Reporters to Exit Guantanamo

Source: editorandpublisher.com

In the aftermath of the three suicides at the notorious Guantanamo prison facility in Cuba last Saturday, reporters with the Los Angeles Times and the Miami Herald were ordered by the office of Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld to leave the island today.

We're trying, but you're not helping!

Source:

See, if people over here were supporting, rather than boycotting and slagging off the Church of England, then it might be able to have more influence over the appalling crimes against human rights that its African cousins are endorsing.

Israeli soldiers kill unarmed Palestinian mother

Source: Guardian comment is free

Sharen Green reports the tragic shooting of an unarmed Palestinian mother by Israeli soldiers in Tulkarem in the Occupied Palestinian Territories; comment: Israel continues to violate the Geneva Conventions re Occupiers

US rendition & torture of German citizen

Source: Washington Monthly

Khaled El-Masri took bus to Macedonia, was wrongly arrested (mistaken ID), handed to the CIA, renditioned to Afghanistan, TORTURED for weeks, released & then DENIED justice in US courts by the Bush Administration.

Nation States pt4.2 Iran; Where Ahmadinejad Fears to Tread.

Even the huge Revolutionary Army of Iran fears to go to Sistan-va-Baluchistan .

Hicks subjected to most extreme CIA torture, expert says

Source: abc.net.au

Hicks was subjected to 244 days of sensory disorientation, was left in a dark cell and denied sunlight and his only contact was a weekly visit by the military chaplain.

Welfarism a Vaccine Against Fascism

This article is written in response to the article The Coming American Civil War written by a Newsvine member with the pen name Behind My Screen. It is a very well written article.

US under pressure over Guantanamo

Source: news.bbc.co.uk

The European Parliament has voted overwhelmingly in favour of a motion calling on the US to close the Guantanamo Bay detention camp.

Guantanamo Suicides an act of war against US

Source: www9.sbs.com.au

"To characterise the suicides as an act of warfare to me is offensive, and really shows a disregard for human life and for humanity which is rampant in Guantanamo," said Gitanjali Gutierrez, a lawyer for the Centre for Constitutional Rights, a human rights group aiding some deta …

Palestinian Factions Clash

Source: www9.sbs.com.au

Palestinian factional rivalry has erupted into unprecedented violence as followers of president Mahmud Abbas set fire to the parliament and West Bank cabinet offices while supporters of the Hamas government tried to storm a security compound in Gaza.

US backs away from Guantanamo 'PR stunt' remark

Source: abc.net.au

The United States is seeking to distance itself from remarks made by a senior diplomat who described a triple suicide by inmates at the Guantanamo detention camp as "a good PR move". Lawyers for Guantanamo Bay inmates have accused the US Government of showing a rampant disregard …

UN report accuses Afghan MPs of torture and massacres

Source: guardian.co.uk

A controversial UN report that has been shelved for 18 months names and shames leading Afghan politicians and officials accused of orchestrating massacres, torture, mass rape and other war crimes.

Muslim women focus of Cairo summit

Source: english.aljazeera.net

Images, as materialization of thoughts and sentiments, are the smallest micro-units in the dynamic system called geopolitics.

Suu Kyi well, under house arrest: Myanmar authorities

Source: netindia123.com

Yangon | June 11, 2006 11:15:07 AM IST Myanmar authorities have denied that Aung San Suu Kyi had been hospitalised for severe stomach pain, saying that the opposition leader was still at her Yangon home, where she has been under house arrest for the past three years, official …

The fax that reveals the US is flying terror suspects to Europe’s secret jails

Source: sundayherald.com

The fax was sent by the Egyptian foreign minister, Ahmed Aboul Gheit, in Cairo, to his ambassador in London.

Guantánamo suicides a 'PR move'

Source: news.bbc.co.uk

A top US official has described the suicides of three detainees at the US base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, as a "good PR move to draw attention".

200.000 Maoists force Nepal to suspend parliament

Source: dnaindia.com

Red communist flags could be seen fluttering from hundreds of locations throughout the city.

Drive to give 'human' rights to apes leaves Spanish divided

Source: telegraph.co.uk

Spain could soon become the first country in the world to give chimpanzees, gorillas, orangutans and other great apes some of the fundamental rights granted to human beings under a law being proposed by members of the ruling Socialist coalition.

Israel Regrets Shelling Deaths

Source: www9.sbs.com.au

Chief of General Staff Lieutenant General Dan Halutz said there was an ongoing investigation into the artillery shelling of the beach, where Palestinian families were relaxing.

Detainee 'raped in front of her toddler'

Source: The Australian Newspaper

A WOMAN held at the nation's second-biggest immigration detention centre was allegedly raped repeatedly in front of her toddler because she could not lock the door to her room. The claim -- and reports of widespread drug abuse among detainees -- will be at the centre of an inve …

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