Not looking good in Darfur…
KHARTOUM, Sept. 24 (Xinhua) — The United Nations and the African Union in Darfur (UNAMID) expressed Thursday its concern over the humanitarian situations at Korma area of north Darfur State in western Sudan.
Not looking good in Darfur…
KHARTOUM, Sept. 24 (Xinhua) — The United Nations and the African Union in Darfur (UNAMID) expressed Thursday its concern over the humanitarian situations at Korma area of north Darfur State in western Sudan.
Israel’s PM also has strong words for Ahmadinejad…
Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu on Thursday spoke before the United Nations General Assembly, calling to task the nations of the world on the international body’s responsibility and criticizing them for not standing up to it.
“The UN was founded after the carnage of World War II,” Netanyahu said, adding that the organization was “charged with preventing the reoccurrence of such horrendous events.
“Nothing has impeded” the work of the UN, he said, “more than the systematic assault on the truth.
“Yesterday the president of Iran stood at this podium spewing anti-Semitic rants… Just a few days earlier he claimed the Holocaust is a lie.
“Last month I went to a villa in a suburb of Berlin called Wannsee,” Netanyahu recalled a visit to the pastoral villa, where over just a few hours on January 20 1942 the Nazis devised the Final Solution – the decision to exterminate the Jews from Europe.
Netanyahu then dramatically showed a facsimile copy of Final Solution documents drafted in Wannsee.
“Is this protocol a lie?” he asked. “Is the German government lying?”
“The day before I was in Wannsee,” Netanyahu continued, “I was given in Berlin the original construction plans for the Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp.
“These plans I now hold in my hand,” he said, as he was showing the worn-out blueprints to the assembly. “They contain a signature by Heinrich Himmler, Hitler’s deputy.
“Are these plans of the camp where one million Jews were murdered a lie too?” he asked.
Netanyahu then turned to attacking Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, saying “Yesterday, the man who called the Holocaust a lie spoke from this podium. For those who refused to come, and those who left in protest – I commend you, you stood up for moral clarity.
“But for those who stayed – I say on behalf of the Jewish people, my people and decent people everywhere – have you no shame? No decency? What a disgrace, what a mockery of the charter of the UN.”
Netanyahu then told the assembly “perhaps some of you think that this man and his regime threaten only the Jews – well, if you think that – you’re wrong, dead wrong.
“In the past 30 years, this fanaticism spread across the globe with a murderous violence that knows no bounds,” he said, noting that Islamic terrorism hurt Muslims, Christian and Hindus as well as Jews.
“Wherever they can,” the prime minister said of Islamic fanatics, “they enforce a backward system of government.” He called the struggle between the modern world and extremist Islamism a struggle between “the 21st Century and the 9th Century.”
But, he noted, “Ultimately, the past cannot triumph over the future. And our future promises magnificent bounties of hope.”
Naming some of the technological achievements of the last hundred years, Netanyahu finished “We will find an alternative to fossil fuel, and yes, we will clean up the planet. But if the most primitive fanaticism can acquire the most deadly weapons, the march of history can be reversed” for a lengthy period of time, he warned.
“This is why the greatest threat facing the world today is the marriage between religious fanaticism and weapons of mass destruction.”
“Is the UN up to that?” Netanyahu asked. “Will the international community stand up to the despotism of a government against its own people?” he asked, referring to the recent elections in Iran. “The jury is still out on the UN. Recent signs are not encouraging.”
The prime minister then went on to criticize the recently published UN-commissioned report claiming both Israel and Hamas committed war crimes during Operation Cast Lead in the Gaza Strip in January.
“Not one UN resolution was passed condemning Hamas rocket attacks on Israel,” Netanyahu said, “We heard nothing, absolutely nothing from the UN Human Rights Council.”
Netanyahu went on to describe the disengagement from the Gaza Strip, telling the UN General Assembly that “Israel unilaterally withdrew from every inch of Gaza, uprooting over 8,000 Israelis from their homes… because many in Israel believed that this would get peace.”
But Israel didn’t get peace, Netanyahu said, “Instead we got an Iranian-backed terror base 50 miles from Tel Aviv, and life in the Israeli towns and cities near Gaza became nothing less than a nightmare. Hamas attacks increased ten-fold after we withdrew, and again, the UN was silent, absolutely silent.”
The prime minister told the assembly that “after eight years of unremitting assault Israel was forced to respond,” and said the only other example in history was the German bombing of British cities in WWII, to which the allies responded by leveling German cities, causing hundreds of thousands of casualties.
“I’m not passing judgment,” Netanyahu stressed, “I’m stating a fact that is the product of decisions of just and great leaders fighting an evil enemy,” he said.
“Faced with an enemy committing double war crimes – firing at civilians while hiding behind civilians – Israel sought to carry out surgical attacks on terrorists, not an easy task when fighting squads in a densely populated area,” he said.
“Israel tried to minimize civilian casualties…We dropped countless flyers over Gazans’ homes, sent text messages to Palestinian residents, made cellular phone calls urging them to vacate, to leave,” the prime minister said, stating that “never has a country gone to such length to remove the enemy’s civilian population away from harm’s way.”
Netanyahu went on to slam the Goldstone report, saying that “the UN Human Rights Council decided to condemn Israel, we were morally hanged, given an unfair trial to boot… What a perversion of truth and justice.”
A day after Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s anti-Israeli speech at the UN General Assembly, President Shimon Peres said Thursday that the hard-line leader was the antithesis of moral.
Speaking to 1,000 students at the Kfar Hayarok school in central Israel, Peres said, “If there’s anyone who is the antithesis of moral and of the Jewish people it’s the Iranian leader Ahmadinejad.”
So one president calls another the most evil person in the universe. And it still doesn’t get as much attention as Obama calling Kanye a jackass. Wow.
“The New York Times” began their report on the latest in the Sudan with this: “More than 100 people were killed when tribesmen raided a village in the south, burning buildings and attacking churchgoers, officials said Monday.” The beginning of the article does not, however, specifically mention the Sudan. This is only mentioned in the “Times” headline: “Sudan: 100 Dead in Raid on Village.” Their version of the story is brief and buried in the world news section.
“Arab News” gets more specific and detailed in its report. Their lead is “JUBA, Sudan: More than 100 people were killed when tribesmen raided a south Sudan village, burning buildings and attacking churchgoers, officials said on Monday, in a further escalation of violence in the oil-producing region.” Their version is one of the top world news stories. The Sudan story means more to this paper’s audience, given the role of Muslims in the conflict. Their longer version of the story even mentions this: “Around two million people died in the 1983-2005 war between Sudan’s Muslim north and mostly Christian south.”
Looks like progress is being made toward justice in this atrocity…
Police have matched DNA from a Yale research technician to evidence found at the crime scene on the Ivy League campus where graduate student Annie Le was found murdered this week, police sources reportedly said late Wednesday.
According to the New Haven Register, police have obtained, or are now in the process of obtaining, an arrest warrant against Raymond Clark III, 24, who had been named a “person of interest” in the case.
New Haven police spokesman Joe Avery said early Thursday that an arrest was expected “soon.”
Across the country, motorists are being greeted by signs advertising President Obama’s $787 billion stimulus bill, and Republicans aren’t happy about it.
The large green-and-white highway signs declare, “Project Funded by the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act.” Sen. Judd Gregg, R-N.H describes them as the “signs to nowhere” and tried in vain Wednesday to stop the advertising.
Democrats were nearly unanimous in voting to defeat an amendment by Greg that would have prohibited the use of stimulus funds for signs that advertise taxpayer spending on stimulus projects.
Signs to nowhere? Not really. At least they’re letting us know where our money’s going. It’s not like these signs say, “Hey, look! The recession’s over!” You know…what Obama’s been spending the last few days trying to get us to believe.
More violence in Africa…
MOGADISHU (Reuters) – Two big explosions rocked an African Union (AU) peacekeeping base in the Somali capital Mogadishu on Thursday, wounding several troops, witnesses said.
More death in Darfur…
KHARTOUM (Reuters) – Insurgents killed three Sudanese policemen in an ambush in the country’s Darfur region, a police chief said on Wednesday.
The Founding Fathers created a new kind of democracy, one that has impacted regimes all around the world since the US Constitution became law. But since then the very word “democracy” has acquired both a positive connotation and multiple definitions. The standard definition is rule by the people, whether direct as in a town hall-style government or the representative republic the Founding Fathers espoused. But George Orwell makes provocative statements about the further meaning of that word in his essay “Politics and the English Language”:
In the case of a word like democracy, not only is there no agreed definition, but the attempt to make one is resisted from all sides. It is almost universally felt that when we call a country democratic we are praising it: consequently the defenders of every kind of regime claim that it is a democracy, and fear that they might have to stop using that word if it were tied down to any one meaning.
The dictionary at answers.com has some surprising definitions, in addition to “rule by the people”:
• The common people, considered as the primary source of political power.
• Majority rule.
• The principles of social equality and respect for the individual within a community.
These meanings go a bit beyond “rule by the people” and explore what that rule theoretically leads to: social equality, respect, majority rule…hence the word’s positive connotation. But perhaps Orwell’s most provocative statement is that the defenders of all regimes take advantage of democracy’s meaning.
The question now is: when is a regime truly a democracy? Or in the case of the United States, how much of the actions of elected representatives are truly representative of the majority’s interest? Is South Carolina a democratic state if its governor uses taxpayer money to go to Argentina? Certainly that was more in his personal interest than in that of South Carolina’s majority.
Ben
Good to see that some are aware of what’s happening in the Sudan, and are getting a message out.
Isaac Leju-Loding was 18 when he emigrated from Kajo Keji, in southern Sudan, to Florida in 1989.
It was hot in Florida. It was too much like home, he said. The snow he saw on television fascinated him, so he eventually moved to Pittsburgh to experience winter.
Now president of the Sudanese Community in Pittsburgh, Leju-Loding works to fight the violence occurring in his home country. There, his people protest the destabilization and genocide that’s occuring — for religious and economic reasons — in southern Sudan and Darfur.
He and about 100 others — including members from Pitt’s chapter of Students Taking Action Now: Darfur — held a “Solemn Walk” Downtown yesterday to rally international attention to the genocide in Darfur. It was part of their preparation for the G-20 Summit, which will be held in Pittsburgh Sept. 24-25.