Monday was not a good day for Hank Williams Jr. The country singer, who performs the “are you ready for some football?” lead-in on ESPN’s Monday Night Football, has been pulled from the program after comparing President Barack Obama to Adolf Hitler in an interview Monday morning. Williams told Fox News news anchors on Fox
Continue reading …Human rights activist Kouhyar Goudarzi remains missing two months after being arrested with two of his friends in Tehran Pressure is mounting on Iran to determine the fate of Kouhyar Goudarzi, an Iranian human rights activist who remains missing two months after being arrested. Officials are refusing to acknowledge the arrest of the 25-year-old member of the Committee for Human Rights Reporters (CHRR) in Iran, who is believed to have been picked up from a friend’s house in Tehran on 31 July along with two of his friends. His lawyer and family, who contacted the officials, have so far not received any information that could shed light on where or under what circumstances he is currently being kept. But Behnam Ganji, a friend and flatmate who was detained with Goudarzi and later released, is reported to have met him in Tehran’s Evin prison, where scores of political and human rights activists arrested in the aftermath of Iran’s disputed presidential elections in 2009 are being held. Concerns over Goudarzi’s situation have escalated in recent days after Ganji and another mutual friend, Nahal Sahabi, killed themselves under mysterious circumstances . Various people close to Ganji have since stepped forward, speaking to journalists on condition of anonymity, to say that he was under “intense pressure” to make forced confessions against Goudarzi. It is believed that Iranian authorities have been trying to fabricate evidence against Goudarzi by linking him to the dissident group People’s Mujahedin of Iran (MEK), a sworn enemy of the Islamic regime, which is also designated as a terrorist organisation by the US and Canada. After his release, Ganji said he had heard Goudarzi being interrogated in jail, according to Amnesty International. “Behnam Ganji Khaibari said that he too had been interrogated, every morning and afternoon, and pressured to make a ‘confession’ incriminating Kouhyar Goudarzi,” Amnesty said. Contradictory accounts have also emerged in recent days about Ganji and Sahabi and the possible motives behind the double suicides. It was initially reported that they were lovers and were both arrested along with Goudarzi. But it is now believed that a third person arrested along with Goudarzi and Ganji was not in fact Sahabi but another person. Sahabi’s father said in an interview that his 37-year-old daughter and the 22-year-old Ganji were not lovers and she had never been arrested but that Ganji’s suicide was a factor in her decision to take her own life. Her father was upset about reports calling them lovers, apparently because men and women in relationships outside marriage in Iran can smear the honour of the family. In a separate interview with Roozonline, a news website, Sahabi’s former employer said she had been deeply affected by social and political events in Iran in the past two years. It is not clear whether the two were in love but Sahabi’s latest blogposts could give the impression that they were. The CHRR website quoted unofficial reports last week that Goudarzi is now being held in solitary confinement. “[Under Iranian law], holding a prisoner in solitary confinement is considered a form of psychological torture and has been declared illegal. Nevertheless, holding political prisoners in solitary confinement has become a common method of torture in Iran,” CHRR reported. It said: “Since his arrest, Kouhyar Goudarzi has been denied the right to call his family members or meet with them.” Goudarzi’s mother, Parvin Mokhtareh, who previously highlighted her son’s plight, is also in jail in the southern city of Kerman after being accused of insulting the supreme leader, propaganda against the regime and acting against national security. Iran’s embassy in London was not immediately available on Tuesday to make comments on Goudarzi’s arrest. Iran Middle East Saeed Kamali Dehghan guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Russian prime minister proposes ‘ambitious’ union across republics based on economic interests Interactive: how the former Soviet Union countries have fared over the last 20 years One week after announcing that he will return to the presidency next year Vladimir Putin has laid out a grand vision to bring Russia’s former Soviet neighbours back into the fold. Putin proposes the formation of a “Eurasian union”, a bloc that could boost Russia’s influence on the global stage. The proposal – from the man who once dubbed the Soviet Union’s collapse “the greatest geopolitical catastrophe of the 20th century” – raises the spectre of the Russian prime minister’s imperial designs. The Eurasian union would be based on a customs union with Belarus and Kazakhstan, Putin suggests in an article published in Izvestiya newspaper on Tuesday. “We are not going to stop there, and are setting an ambitious goal before ourselves – to get to the next, even higher, level of integration – to a Eurasian union,” he has written. Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan are also expected to join, he says. Expecting critics to say he is trying to re-form the Soviet Union, Putin says: “We are not talking about recreating the USSR in one form or another. It would be naive to try to restore or copy that which remains in the past, but close integration based on new values and a political and economic foundation is imperative.” He adds: “We received a big legacy from the Soviet Union – infrastructure, current industrial specialisation, and a common linguistic, scientific and cultural space. To use this resource together for our development is in our common interest.” Putin has formed countless Moscow-led groupings aiming to maintain the power that Russia lost with the collapse of the Soviet Union. In recent years he has focused on economic integration and has pushed for former Soviet states to adopt the rouble as a regional currency. In 2009 Russia formed a customs union with Belarus and Kazakhstan which is due to become a “unified economic zone” next year, bringing down barriers to the movement of labour and capital. The Eurasian union would take that one step further, Putin says. “We propose a model of powerful, supranational union, capable of becoming one of the poles of the modern world,” he writes in the article. It will be an uphill battle. The combined GDP of the EU stood at $16 trillion last year, while the Commonwealth of Independent States, an informal grouping of former Soviet states minus the Baltics, was just $1.9tn, according to the International Monetary Fund. Putin has been at pains to describe the union as an open project into which no one would be “pushed or rushed”. He has issued, however, a thinly veiled criticism aimed at Ukraine, which has continued to seek integration with the EU rather than renew ties with Russia. “Some of our neighbours explain their reluctance to participate in advanced integration projects in the post-Soviet space by saying it allegedly contradicts their European choice,” Putin writes. “This is a false divide. The Eurasian union will be built on universal principles of integration as an integral part of greater Europe, united by common values of freedom, democracy and market laws.” The other two members of the customs union, on which the Eurasian union would be based, have been criticised for their lack of democracy, with Belarus dubbed “the last dictatorship in Europe”. The article is Putin’s first foreign policy pronouncement since he announced he would return to the presidency next year, potentially getting another 12 years in power. Fyodor Lukyanov, editor of Russia in Global Affairs, said: “It’s quite remarkable Putin would start with this. “The logic behind it is primarily economic, and in this sense it is different from previous attempts, which were political or just decorative, to show Russian leadership.” The move could also be a sign of frustration with Russia’s 18-year-long effort to join the World Trade Organisation, Lukyanov said. “The customs union was to a certain extent Putin’s response to years and years of fruitless negotiations on the WTO – if global integration is not available let’s turn to a regional one.” Vladimir Putin Russia Belarus Kazakhstan Russian presidential election 2012 Miriam Elder guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Occupy Wall Street protests reach Boston, LA, St Louis and Kansas City, and are planned in cities across US and abroad It began as the brainchild of activists across the border in Canada when an anti-consumerism magazine put out a call in July for supporters to occupy Wall Street. Now, three weeks after a few hundred people heeded that initial call and rolled out their sleeping bags in a park in New York’s financial district, they are being joined by supporters in cities across the US and beyond. Armed with Twitter, Facebook and shared Googledocs, protesters against corporate greed, unemployment and the political corruption that they say Wall Street represents have taken to the streets in Boston, Los Angeles, St Louis and Kansas City. The core group, Occupy Wall Street (OWS), claims people will take part in demonstrations in as many as 147 US cities this month, while the website occupytogether.org lists 47 US states as being involved. Around the world, protests in Canada, the UK, Germany and Sweden are also planned, they say. The speed of the leaderless movement’s growth has taken many by surprise. Occupytogether.org, one of several sites associated with the protest, has had to be rebuilt to accommodate the traffic. OWS media spokesman Patrick Bruner said: “We have on our board right now 147 US cities. I don’t know whether they are occupied or they are planning on being occupied. My guess would be over 30 cities are occupied.” The original call by the Canadian magazine Adbusters to occupy Wall Street drew hundreds of protesters on 17 September and 2,000 attended a march the following Saturday. But the movement, which organisers say has its roots in the Arab spring and in Madrid’s Puerta del Sol protests, has been galvanised by recent media attention. Last week, the Guardian reported that a NYPD police officer had been filmed spraying four women protesters with pepper spray. On Saturday, a peaceful march on Brooklyn bridge intended as a call to the other four boroughs of New York to join in resulted in 700 arrests. Some protesters claim the police trapped them. There are now two investigations, including an internal police inquiry, into the pepper spraying incident. Bruner said the protest had snowballed in the last few days: “The American people have realised that the American dream has been assassinated and the murderer is still on the loose.” A message on the occupytogether site apologises for the site rebuild and directs readers to update links. It reads: “Wow, the groups organising and occupations popping up across the country is growing exponentially by the day. So much so that, in order to have proper navigation and organisation on the site, we had to begin categorising these pages by state. Because of this, every occupation’s permalink has been changed.” Thornin Caristo, of OWS, said the movement had taken hold because it had tapped into anger at inequality, unemployment and corporate greed. He predicted it would continue to grow. Caristo said: “It was always going to be a hit or miss situation but it’s a hit and I don’t think it will be reversing. So much of the population has no hope and those people are desperate.” Other websites publicising the protests have also become hugely popular. One, named wearethe99percent, in reference to the statistic that 1% of the US population owns a third of the wealth, posts pictures of people holding handwritten messages daily. One said: “Last year, my 60-year-old mother was evicted. This year I graduated with my master’s. I am unemployed with over $120,000 in student loans. I no longer believe the American Dream is for me because … We are the 99 per cent.” Another person holds up a sign which reads: “When you’re young, you’re told you can be anything, I’m sick of being fed lies. I graduated with a BA in 2009 and I’ve been searching for a job ever since. My generation is lost, depressed, in debt, struggling. We are taking unpaid internships and temporary contracts with no health insurance in desperation. We will forever be living at our parent’s house.” Unions have have also expressed solidarity with the protests. On Monday, the Transit Workers Union said it had applied for an injunction to stop the NYPD from forcing bus drivers to carry arrested OWS demonstrators. On Tuesday the 700,000-strong Communication Workers of America endorsed OWS, describing it as an “appropriate expression of anger for all Americans, but especially for those who have been left behind by Wall Street”. In a statement, the group said: “We support the activists’ non-violent efforts to seek a more equitable and democratic society based on citizenship, not corporate greed. “The Occupy Wall Street demonstrations are spreading throughout the country. We will support them and encourage all CWA Locals to participate in the growth of this protest movement.” Today, the protesters will join a number of unions and community organisations, including the CWA, the TWU and the United Federation of Teachers in a march on City Hall. Occupy Wall Street United States New York Protest US economy Canada Europe Karen McVeigh guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Al-Shabaab claims responsibility for attack, which is biggest since al-Qaida linked group withdrew from Mogadishu Students waiting for their scholarship results were among scores killed when Somalia’s insurgents exploded a truck bomb in Mogadishu in the biggest attack since they withdrew most of their fighters from the capital in August. A truck loaded with drums of fuel blew up at a security checkpoint outside a compound housing government ministries, including the Ministry of Education, in K4 (Kilometre 4), a normally bustling neighbourhood controlled by government forces and African Union peacekeepers. “The casualties are mostly students and parents who were waiting for results of scholarships from the Ministry of Higher Education,” the government said. Mogadishu’s ambulance co-ordinator, Ali Muse, told Reuters at least 70 had been killed, with many more injured in a crumbling, hungry city that has known little but chaos and war for two decades. Television footage showed people rushing to move the dead and injured from twisted cars that were still smoking under charred trees. Bodies lay on the blackened ground, covered in bright shawls and wraps as ambulances weaved through the wreckage. Al-Shabaab, which is linked to al-Qaida, claimed responsibility. The insurgents, who are fighting the weak UN-backed transition government, threatened to carry out attacks on government installations after they withdrew from Mogadishu. “The attack shows that the danger from terrorists is not yet over and that there are obviously still people who want to derail the advances the Somali people have made towards peace,” the government said. “This is the biggest attack since al-Shabaab was defeated,” said Lieutenant Colonel Paddy Ankunda, spokesman for the AU peacekeeping force, Amisom. “This was expected because we knew they would go more into this kind of attack, including suicide attacks.” France called the bombing a “vile terrorist attack” while the UK Foreign Office minister for Africa, Henry Bellingham, said the fact that many of the victims were students and parents showed “the shocking brutality of this attack”. The UN special representative for Somalia, Augustine Mahiga, described the attack as “senseless and cowardly”. “Although the extremists have left the capital, it is very difficult to prevent these types of terrorist attacks which we have consistently warned are likely to be on the increase,” he said in a statement, calling on the international community to urgently provide more resources to AMISOM. After the al-Shabaab withdrawal, government forces and Amisom troops were able to extend their control over most of Mogadishu, but they have faced criticism for not capitalising enough on apparent weaknesses and divisions within insurgent ranks. Al-Shabaab still controls large swaths of central and southern Somalia. In recent weeks, the group, which includes foreign fighters from western nations as well as Afghanistan and Iraq, has attacked government troops and militia near the Kenyan border, prompting Kenyan security forces to beef up their presence. Kenyan officials have also blamed al-Shabaab for the kidnapping of two western tourists in the past two weeks. Somalia is also in the grip of a famine, with the UN saying tens of thousands have already died with up to 750,000 at risk of starvation. Some analysts said Tuesday’s attack might prompt some international agencies to pull out. This is not the first time al-Shabaab, which means youth in Arabic, has targeted a new generation of Somalis. The insurgents, who want to impose a harsh version of sharia across the Horn of Africa nation, have also used suicide bombs in the past to attack AMISOM and government buildings. In 2009, a suicide bomber attacked a graduation ceremony, killing 24 people, including four government ministers. Somalia is expected to hold elections for a new parliament and president by August next year. The country has become a byword for anarchy since warlords ousted military dictator Mohamed Siad Barre in 1991. Somalia Africa Global terrorism guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …At least 30 civilians have been reported killed by British forces between 2005 and last March, a Guardian investigation reveals Britain’s military police have investigated almost 100 incidents in which UK forces have been accused of killing or wounding civilians in Afghanistan , documents obtained by the Guardian reveal. The dossier shows that at least 30 Afghan civilians, including women and children, were reported to have been killed and up to 42 injured in the incidents. The information appears in a list of investigations conducted by British military police in Afghanistan between January 2005 and March this year, and comes ahead of Friday’s 10th anniversary of military operations in Afghanistan by the US-led coalition in the wake of the 11 September 2001 attacks. The documents from the British military, which has had thousands of personnel in the country in the past decade, cast a rare light on the pattern and spread of alleged attacks on civilians that have gone largely unnoticed and unreported. The list includes a series of incidents in which soldiers allegedly shot or bombed civilians. In one, they are suspected of killing a man who was praying in a field. In another, a man was shot collecting grass and rocks near a firing range. Troops from the Black Watch battalion were also questioned for alleged murder or manslaughter after an Afghan civilian on a motorcycle was shot dead by a sniper, the documents reveal. The soldiers suspected that the man was involved in planting makeshift bombs. The list includes a catalogue of alleged assaults on civilians detained by the British army since 2005 in Afghanistan. It is damaging to a military establishment still reeling from a damning report last month into the behaviour of British troops over the death of the Basra hotel worker Baha Mousa in 2003. In an incident that resulted in the highest number of casualties of those disclosed in the dossier, seven civilians including two children were alleged to have been killed in an air strike on 30 December 2009. British forces had suspected that a group of Taliban insurgents was planting homemade bombs and firing at their base. The Ministry of Defence disclosed that the Royal Military police (RMP) had launched 99 investigations into “incidents in which Afghan civilians have allegedly been killed or wounded by British military personnel in Afghanistan”. Each of the allegations was considered by British commanders in the field to be serious enough to warrant an investigation by the RMP to determine if a criminal act had taken place. Military prosecutors will not say how many of the investigations in recent years resulted in prosecutions of soldiers, either through a court martial or at an internal hearing before their commanding officers. Defence sources say privately there have been no prosecutions of soldiers over the alleged attacks on Afghan civilians, as the incidents can be blamed on the inherent confusion of war. A total of 382 British forces personnel and MoD civilians have died since operations began in Afghanistan 10 years ago, with UK troops targeted by deadly improvised explosive devices and Taliban and al-Qaida fighters. After a delay of nine months, the MoD has released heavily censored descriptions of 50 investigations in response to a freedom of information request by the Guardian. It is believed incidents that have not been disclosed include operations involving British special forces – the SAS and the navy’s SBS. The list has been posted on the Guardian’s datablog website . Civilian casualties are a sensitive issue for the MoD, as government ministers have said one of the priorities of the military operations in Afghanistan is “protecting Afghan civilians”. Ministers are aware the number of deaths caused by the Taliban and Nato forces is at the heart of the propaganda battle to win the hearts and minds of the Afghan population. One of the most serious accusations centres on the allegation of murder or manslaughter levelled against soldiers from the Black Watch, the 3rd Battalion of the Royal Regiment of Scotland. According to the MoD’s sparse account, soldiers on a foot patrol fired warning shots at individuals suspected of tracking, or spotting, Nato forces on 11 June 2009. “A motorcycle was seen moving slowly and was suspected of either being a spotter or that he had the intention of laying [a makeshift bomb],” the account says. A sniper then shot the man twice after a warning shot. Afterwards he was discovered to be “an Afghan who had sustained a gunshot wound”. The 21 “shooting incidents” investigated by the RMP, also known as the Red Caps, include the deaths of an Afghan man who was praying in a field on 2 May 2009 and another who was collecting rocks and grass in the area of Kabul military training centre ranges on 2 January 2009. The catalogue of allegations includes 16 of assaulting Afghans who had been captured and detained by British forces. The Afghans allege they were punched in the face, kicked in the stomach, kneed in the hips and strangled until they blacked out. According to one allegation which was investigated, a group of British servicemen entered the dining room at Kandahar airfield, but were asked to wait outside as it had not opened. “An altercation occurred and the Afghan manager was hit in the face by one of the individuals from the RAF regiment”, according to the MoD. In March last year, an Afghan who had been detained alleged that during the early hours of the morning he had been woken by a British soldier who slapped his face and kicked him in the stomach. Reacting to the documents, Labour MP Paul Flynn said: “It is part of the self-serving myth behind this mission that you can win hearts and minds through bombs and bullets. Hundreds of civilians have died or been wounded in very dubious circumstances. There must be meticulous and thorough investigations into these incidents if we are to find out who is responsible, and if they are to blame, to be brought to book.” Colonel Richard Kemp, a former commander of British troops in Helmand, pointed to the difficulties and dilemmas the troops faced. “If the soldiers shoot and kill civilians, the Taliban have scored a strategic victory. If the soldiers hold fire, they [the Taliban] live to fight another day,” he said. An MoD spokesman said: “The protection of the Afghan civilian population is at the core of our military strategy. The International Security Assistance Forces (Isaf) have worked extremely hard to reduce civilian casualties, introducing new rules to govern the use of force. And we have had considerable success. However, the vast majority of civilian casualties are caused by the Taliban. When we are made aware of an incident or alleged incident, the UK follows the robust Isaf process to investigate it.” The Service Prosecuting Authority, the independent agency responsible since January 2009 for prosecuting military personnel, has refused to say how many prosecutions have been mounted against troops alleged to have killed or wounded civilians. When asked by the Guardian to provide this information, the authority’s deputy director, Brigadier Philip McEvoy, said: “I am afraid that our dealings with your newspaper do not fill us with the confidence that our response will be fairly represented. The SPA is also anxious to remain detached from the controversy created by media stories that rarely give a full picture.” Military Afghanistan Rob Evans Richard Norton-Taylor guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …This is encouraging news . It looks like the unions who have promised to support Occupy Wall Street are going to do more than march — the TWU is doing whatever they can to obstruct a police crackdown on protestors. There will be a massive march Wednesday with participating unions and Moveon.org taking part in the event: In support of the ongoing “Occupy Wall Street” protest, the Transport Workers Union is going to court to stop its drivers from being required to transport arrested demonstrators. Local 100 is seeking a restraining order against the police department and the Metropolitan Transportation Authority. Union leaders say drivers’ rights were violated when they were forced to bus arrested demonstrators from the Brooklyn Bridge on Saturday. They also say the NYPD commandeered several MTA buses, and in at least one case, passengers were booted from the bus so demonstrators could be loaded up. “Our operators are not there to transport folks that are arrested, particularly innocent folks that are arrested. That’s particularly appalling to Local 100,” said John Samuelsen, president of Local 100. In response, MTA officials said the authority has a long history of cooperating with the police department and other law enforcement agencies when they have transportation needs. Meanwhile, Occupy Wall Street demonstrators took their fight to City Hall Monday. Hundreds began what they called a “march of the zombie bankers” to protest greed and express their outrage over the mass arrests this weekend. Protestors were joined by film producer Amy Goodman, who just settled a suit with Minneapolis St. Paul Police and the Secret Service over her 2008 arrest during the Republican National Convention. “It is these kinds of public protests, these shows of public dissent where so often the police crackdown, as we have seen with one of the largest mass arrests of protesters in the history of this country just this past weekend,” said Goodman. EDITOR’S NOTE: What I love about this clip is Samuelsen has an Amato accent. Solidarity!
Continue reading …enlarge To understand the attack on public education in Pennsylvania, begin with Rachel Tabachnik’s comprehensive report on the partnership between far right-wing funders like the DeVos family with Michelle Rhee’s national StudentsFirst organization, and the Pennsylvania StudentsFirst organization, which shares the same name as Rhee’s group, but has very different people running it. The Pennsylvania Students First organization is actually an affiliate of American Federation for Children (AFC), chaired by Betsy DeVos, as it states on the website. A donation to Students First PAC was received from Joel Greenberg, a board member of AFC, on the date the PAC was formed. Approximately 5 million dollars from Greenberg, a co-founder of Susquehanna Investment Group (SIG), and two of the other SIG co-founders, Jeffrey Yass and Arthur Dantchik, would follow between March 10 and May 11, 2010. Most of this money was, in turn, contributed to the campaign of Democratic gubernatorial candidate Anthony H. Williams. Graphic at right is the AFC board of directors. It would be simple enough to dismiss the Pennsylvania organization as a cynical effort to piggyback onto the national Rhee organization, which still seems to meet with the approval of liberals who aren’t paying attention, except that Michelle Rhee is bear-hugging projects of that organization and gracing them with her appearance and support. For example: Rhee visited Lincoln Charter in June of 2011 , with Gov. Corbett, Ed. Sec. Roy Tomalis, and Jeffrey E. Piccola. The school choice bill in Pennsylvania is Piccola’s number one priority , and Governor Corbett is in lockstep with that goal. DeVos’ StudentsFirst PAC donated $50,000 to Piccola, so it’s reasonable to conclude they’re expecting some results for that donation. Rhee spoke to teachers at the Mastery Academy charter school in Philadelphia on Sept. 22. Dawn Chavous, a board member at a Mastery School, is also an employee at the DeVos-funded StudentsFirst PAC . Finally, there is the now-infamous appearance with Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker at the gala sponsored by American Federation for Children, the DeVos organization which spawned Pennsylvania’s StudentsFirst organization. From this evidence alone, it would be easy enough to conclude that Rhee is either amoral or Republican. Take your pick, but I’m leaning toward Republican with her latest new hire. With the Pennsylvania school choice bill still stuck in the ever-grinding gears of legislative activity, Rhee has decided she needs a lobbyist to give it a jumpstart, and that lobbyist is a Republican strategist by the name of Ray Zaborney , former campaign manager for Lynn Swann’s gubernatorial bid . Zaborney is also currently advising Republican Tim Burns’ bid to unseat Senator Bob Casey in 2012. It wasn’t immediately clear that Zaborney’s registration applied to the Rhee organization, rather than the DeVos organization. But a check of the mailing address for StudentsFirst.org — 406 7th Street NW 2nd Floor, Washington, DC 20004 confirms that it is the Rhee organization’s Washington, DC mailing address. Zaborney gave testimony at the Pennsylvania House Education Committee hearings about the efficacy of charter schools and how best to expand them. He was to appear alongside Dawn Chavous, of the DeVos StudentsFirst.org group, according to this published agenda: 12:30-1:15 Lunch 1:15-1:45 Unite PA-Sharon Cherubin and Don Adams 1:45-2:15 Philadelphia Archdiocese-Sister Edward Quinn, IHM and Mr. Jason M. Budd 2:15-2:45 Freedom Works 2:45-3:30 Students First Dawn Chavous, Raymond Zaborney However, transcripts indicate he did not, in fact appear at those hearings. It appears that Zaborney is keeping a low profile on whatever education activities he is undertaking on behalf of Michelle Rhee. But his prior public statements are anything but ambivalent: He is a full supporter of vouchers, ending teacher tenure and other hot-button issues Rhee advocates. There is no question school reforms are needed. What isn’t needed is private schools run by fundamentalist religious groups with more of an eye to conversion than education. For Michelle Rhee to continue to present herself as some sort of non-partisan crusader for reform without acknowledging who her partners are and what their agendas are is a dangerous thing. Pennsylvania’s tea partiers are pretty angry about stalled school reform. It was one of their top-ticket items, and they’re expecting action. It looks like Rhee is there to help them deliver.
Continue reading …Furious archbishop warns ruling ANC to ‘watch out’ after Tibetan spiritual leader is denied visa to attend birthday party Archbishop Desmond Tutu, visibly shaking with anger, compared the South African government unfavourably with the apartheid regime and threatened to pray for the downfall of the African National Congress (ANC) yesterday after the Dalai Lama said he was forced to pull out of Tutu’s 80th birthday celebrations because he had not been granted an entry visa. “Our government is worse than the apartheid government because at least you would expect it with the apartheid government,” Tutu told a press conference in Cape Town. “Our government we expect to be sensitive to the sentiments of our constitution.” In a tirade that stunned South African journalists, he went on: “Let the ANC know they have a large majority. Well, Mubarak had a large majority, Gaddafi had a large majority. I am warning you: watch out. Watch out. “Our government – representing me! – says it will not support Tibetans being viciously oppressed by China. You, president Zuma and your government, do not represent me. I am warning you, as I warned the [pro-apartheid] nationalists, one day we will pray for the defeat of the ANC government.” Tutu had invited his fellow Nobel peace laureate to deliver a lecture to mark his milestone birthday in Cape Town on Friday. Officials from the archbishop emeritus’s office started the visa application processin June but met a series of bureaucratic delays . On Tuesday the Dalai Lama’s office finally gave up on the application for the 76-year-old. “His holiness was to depart for South Africa on 6 October, but visas have not been granted yet,” a spokesperson for the office said. “We are, therefore, now convinced that, for whatever reason or reasons, the South African government finds it inconvenient to issue a visa to … the Dalai Lama.” Tutu said he was still struggling to make sense of what had happened. “I have to say I can’t believe it, I really can’t believe it,” he exclaimed. “Wake me up and tell me this is actually happening here. It’s quite unbelievable. The discourtesy they have shown to the Dalai Lama. The Dalai Lama! “The Dalai Lama, anywhere in the world, they have problems finding a venue that can contain the people who want him. He goes to New York and Central Park is overflowing. The discourtesy is mindblowing.” Asked if he felt the Tibetan spiritual leader had in effect been banned from the country, Tutu replied: “To all intents and purposes, yes. This is the Dalai Lama. Incredible. “Many, many people are appalled in many parts of the world, especially people who supported us during the struggle. They are weeping and saying, ‘South Africa? It can’t be.’” Tutu’s daughter, Mpho, said the government’s actions had not matched “what we dreamed we would be, who we hoped we would become as a country and as a people”. Clearly overcome with emotion, she added: “It is with great sadness that we sit here.” A candlelit vigil outside the South African parliament in Cape Town on Monday drew about 250 people demanding the Tibetan spiritual leader be allowed into the country. There was bitter disappointment on Tuesday morning when it was announced that the eight-day trip had been called off. Civil rights activists blamed the government. Ela Gandhi , who planned to present the Dalai Lama with a peace prize in the name of her grandfather, Mahatma Gandhi, said: “I’m very disappointed. We were looking forward to him coming and to presenting the award. I really feel the whole situation has been handled so badly. It’s discourteous for a person of his stature to be told to wait for so long. For a person of peace to be treated like this is wrong.” She added: “Everybody thinks this is because of pressure from China. It’s very sad another country is allowed to dictate terms to our government. It’s going back to apartheid times. I am ashamed of my own country.” South African foreign ministry officials have consistently denied accusations they have been bowing to pressure from Beijing. Asked for his reaction to the Dalai Lama’s decision, a spokesman, Clayson Monyela, said: “We don’t have a reaction. He’s cancelled his trip and that’s it. We have not said no. We’ve not refused him a visa; the visa was still being processed. It’s only on 20 September that he submitted his full paperwork. In some countries a visa can take two months. I don’t know why people are criticising the government.” The Dalai Lama visited South Africa in 1996, meeting Nelson Mandela, but was prevented from attending a Nobel laureates’ conference in the country two years ago , when the government said his visit would distract from World Cup preparations. At the time, Tutu called the decision disgraceful, and accused the authorities of bowing to pressure from China. South Africa’s official opposition has added its voice to the criticism of the stalled visa. Stevens Mokgalapa, shadow deputy foreign minister for the Democratic Alliance, said: “The inescapable conclusion is that the South African government has predictably strung the Dalai Lama along to make it impossible for him to plan his trip. That way it could avoid making a decision that would either upset the Chinese or upset millions of peace-loving South Africans and citizens around the globe. “But by delaying [the visa decision] the government made its choice: it allowed China to dictate foreign policy. This is a sad day for those of us who believe in a sovereign foreign policy based on ubuntu [a humanist philosophy] and human rights. It is not acceptable that the government has allowed a breach of this sovereignty by bowing to pressure from a foreign power.” While the Dalai Lama is excluded, other leading international activists will join three days of birthday events. The U2 singer Bono is expected to speak at the launch of a biography, Tutu: The Authorised Portrait, in Cape Town on Thursday. Bono has also reportedly been invited to join former the US president Jimmy Carter, the former UN secretary general Kofi Annan, and the British businessman Richard Branson at a picnic at a vineyard on Friday. A public church commemoration will be held earlier that day. South Africa Africa Tibet Dalai Lama David Smith guardian.co.uk
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