Keep the faith

Charlie Whitaker – I try but I fail

Something’s coming… hang in there, folks.








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Elena Urlaeva

And let that be a lesson to you!Meet Elena Urlaeva. She is a vocal critic of Islam Karimov (president of Uzbekistan and long-time ally in the global ‘war’ on terror):

Human Rights First – What’s At Stake?: Elena Urlaeva is a human rights activist and member of the Human Rights Society of Uzbekistan who has been a vocal critic of the policies of the Uzbek government for many years. In 2001, she led efforts to defend the rights of individuals who lost their homes to a road-building project. As a result, in April 2001 she was detained and forcibly committed to a psychiatric hospital. International pressure led to her release two months later. But in late 2002, she was again subjected to four months of psychiatric treatment. Urlaeva reported that during both incidences she had been given strong psychiatric drugs. On April 17, 2003, she was arrested and threatened with commitment for a third time after demonstrating in front of the presidential offices.

Even the U.S. Department of State is aware: Authorities released human rights activists Elena Urlaeva in December 2002 and Larissa Vdovina on January 29, both of whom were detained for involuntary psychiatric treatment in 2002. The two women were detained for a number of hours on several occasions during the year in connection with their anti-government protests (see Section 2.b.). Urlaeva continued at year’s end to fight government efforts to have her declared legally incompetent. Vdovina reportedly lost her appeals and left the country. Defendants in trials often claimed that their confessions, on which the prosecution based its cases, were extracted by torture.

Isn't it insane?You might be interested to see the kind of thing that gets Elena Urlaeva arrested: Uzbek human rights activist Elena Urlaeva was detained and forcibly committed to a psychiatric institution for distributing this flyer. The cartoon mocks government corruption, portraying well-known officials suckling from a cow that represents Uzbekistan.

And guess what? She’s been detained and forcibly drugged again!

Reuters – Uzbekistan: Psychiatric Drugs Used to Punish Activist: (Tashkent, October 21, 2005) – The Uzbek authorities today subjected one of the country’s prominent human rights defenders to forcible psychiatric treatment even though Uzbek law prohibits compulsory treatment until the appeals process has expired, Human Rights Watch said today. “Using psychiatric treatment to silence Elena Urlaeva is a gross violation of medical ethics and international standards,” said Holly Cartner, Europe and Central Asia director at Human Rights Watch. “It’s shocking that the hospital began the treatment without even waiting for the courts to consider her appeal.”… Powerful antipsychotic drugs were previously forcibly administered to Urlaeva in 2001 and 2002. “Elena Urlaeva is being exposed to drugs that have a potential for serious and permanent side effects,” said Cartner. “The only reason for this treatment is to punish her and silence her for her human rights work.” The Uzbek authorities detained Urlaeva on 27 August and have kept her in forced psychiatric detention since then.

This is the kind of thing they’re trying to silence… Uzbekistan Rewrites the Story of the Andijan Massacre.

And our government is keeping Elmer Fudd about it for two reasons:

1. They like to play the ‘anyone who disagrees with us is a nutter’ game, too (though mostly through the media and without enforced drug use) and one does not like uncomfortable parallels to be drawn

2. They would much rather that Islam Karimov’s version of events won out in the end… because it would make life far, far simpler for everyone on Team Bush

Just in case you’re interested in how they’re playing it, here’s Jack Straw recently praising Uzbekistan for their empty pledge to do away with the death penalty and here’s the government response to forced psychiatric treatment in Uzbekistan via Douglas Alexander in the House of Commons (not Jack Straw, who answered the question previous to this, but a more junior minister you’ll note)… the highlighting is mine:

We made our most recent representation on 14 October. In a diplomatic note, passed by our Embassy in Tashkent to the Uzbek Ministry of Foreign Affairs, we expressed our alarm at the reported treatment of three human rights defenders. One of these was the recently arrested Mukhtabar Tojibaeva; we have requested clarification of the charges brought against her. The Other two were Elena Urlaeva and Shavkat Madumarov. We have asked the Uzbek Government to confirm that all three are being treated in a manner compliant with international standards. We will continue, both bilaterally and through international institutions such as the EU and The Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe, to *encourage* Uzbekistan to take *greater steps towards* full respect for human rights, and stand ready to provide any necessary *assistance*.

Would that asking nicely if they’re playing by the rules game be the same one you use when you outsource torture?

Will that assistance include more training for soldiers and shiny new Landrovers for them to hide behind as they shoot innocent protestors?

Is this the same government that puffs out its chest and asks why we seek to deny the Iraqis justice whenever we catch anyone on Team Bush in another crime, lie, failure or murder in Iraq?

UPDATE – Guardian – The bullet holes and bloodstains are gone, but for Uzbeks life is even worse

UPDATE – Reuters – BBC shuts Uzbek office over “intimidation”: The British Broadcasting Corporation’s World Service said on Wednesday it had closed its office in Uzbekistan and withdrawn local staff because of intimidation of its reporters by the authorities. Uzbekistan has cracked down on foreign media since government troops bloodily suppressed an uprising in the town of Andizhan in May, accusing them of inaccurately reporting the violence.








Posted in Uzbekistan | 2 Comments

Torture? No-one mentioned torture! (note: this trick also works with napalm)

Chicken Yoghurt – The euphemistic road to freedom: Manningham-Buller says she doesn’t think the Algerian government would tell her how they get people to tell them things. There’s a way of getting people to tell you things when they don’t want to, apparently. It’s called Detainee Reporting. Couldn’t we just kidnap Algeria, take it to, I don’t know, Egypt or Jordan, and get them to put electrodes on Algeria’s genitals until it tells us how it obtains its information?








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Roll up, sign up

“I will pledge 10 pounds to a fund to buy a peerage from Tony Blair but only if 50,000 other people will too.”: Upon reaching the magic figure of 500,000 pounds, a lottery will be held of the names of all those who pledged. The winner will then take a cheque for 500,000 pounds to New Labour headquarters and exhange it for a peerage. That person will agree to be all the other pledgers’ representative in the House of Lords.

Incidentally, the reward for fingering Blair stands at 710 squid.








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Rove & Campbell = Cockroaches

Observer – Geek gets it: Like FDR, Rove and Bush have sought to fundamentally change the way Americans think about the role of government. They have brought religion into political life like never before. They have merged the interests of the administration with those of big business, especially oil. They have cut taxes for the rich. They have abandoned any pretence of isolationism in foreign policy for a doctrine of pre-emptive war. They have mastered the art of attacking a political opponent and cowed the media.

DailyKosWhen Did The President Know And When Did He Start Lying?

Washington Monthly – Life Without Karl

Please let this week be the week that reality and accountability finally start to creep back into politics.

*sigh*

I can’t help but think of evil twin Alastair Campbell, who quietly ‘retired’ when the heat was on… but returned to work with even greater stealth a few months later.

Rove and Campbell are cockroaches… they scatter when the light is turned on, but persistence and determination is required to finish them off. Does anyone have a hefty slipper handy?

UPDATE – New York Times – Cheney Told Aide of C.I.A. Officer, Lawyers Report

More here.








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Matthew Parris shows his ignorance

Last night on Question Time (click video link and go to 33:30), Matthew Parris (opinion writer for the Times) pondered on the funny nature of predicted disasters and how they never seemed to happen. He spoke of the millennium bug and planes not falling from the sky, made a groan-worthy joke or two about Bird Flu (Bird Lemsip, Bird Kleenex)… and he also had this to say on the recent hurricane activity in the States:

“We didn’t predict the disaster in New Orleans, however the predicted disaster from Hurricane Katrina didn’t happen.”

Hurricane Katrina – brought devastation
Hurricane Rita – wrought fear

This is why they give them girlie names, people! To make them easier to re-mem-ber! (And, of course, to taunt them into submission).

No matter. A simple mix-up. Could happen to anyone under those bright studio lights. Johnny-on-the-spot and all.

But what are we to make of the declaration – based, one would think, on a level of certainty – that no-one predicted the disaster in New Orleans?

In truth, the disaster was predicted by many people.

National Geographic have this article from October 2004 that borders on the prophetic.

Also widely reported is this: In 2002, the New Orleans Times Picayune published a five-part series on “The Big One” examining what might happen if they did. It predicted that 200,000 people or more would be unwilling or unable to heed evacuation orders and thousands would die, that people would be housed in the Superdome, that aid workers would find it difficult to gain access to the city as roads became impassable, as well as many other of the consequences that actually unfolded after Katrina hit this week.

Not enough? How about this article from 2001?

Before the disaster, there were all sorts of serious conversations going on that ranged from the environment to budgets, and even – occasionally – to basic preparedness for dangers that do *not* wear towels on their heads.

The ‘no-one could have predicted it’ message was one of many designed to shield the Bush administration from criticism when Hurricane Katrina (or Deidre, or Marjorie, or whatever) revealed the true cost of recent moral bankruptcy.

Matthew Parris is a man who forms opinions based not on facts, but on propaganda… propaganda that just happens to generated, enhanced and/or transmitted verbatim primarily by his boss.

For some reason, that makes me slightly wary of his opinion.








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Tom DeLay’s mugshot

My, my… don’t we look chipper?








Posted in George W. Bush | Comments Off on Tom DeLay’s mugshot

Fun to watch

A great post ‘live’ from the 2nd Tory leadership vote. More will be posted here if you’re quick (or *was* posted there, if you’re not).








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Taliban Lady Boys

God told them to do it.

(Link via Toby.)








Posted in It's War! It's Legal! It's Lovely! | Comments Off on Taliban Lady Boys

Well, there’s a shock

FT – Cheney ‘cabal’ hijacked US foreign policy: Vice-President Dick Cheney and a handful of others had hijacked the government’s foreign policy apparatus, deciding in secret to carry out policies that had left the US weaker and more isolated in the world, the top aide to former Secretary of State Colin Powell claimed on Wednesday.

See: The Power of Nightmares








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