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Strategies & Market Trends : World Outlook -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Don Green who wrote (1270)2/10/2003 7:31:13 PM
From: Don Green  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 48709
 
U.N. human rights chief, Mary Robinson said on Tuesday China has made small steps on human rights, such as allowing family access to labor camp prisoners, but still has a long way to gAfter five years in office and seven visits to China, Robinson said "technical cooperation" between her office and Beijing had helped spawn minimal reforms to the widely criticized "laogai" or "re-education through labour" system.

It had also spurred human rights training for police and prison officers and discussions on introducing human rights education into primary and secondary schools, she said.

But rights remained a concern as outlawed groups such as the Falun Gong spiritual movement were repressed, the death penalty was used widely, Tibet's culture was diluted and Tibetans had became a minority in the region's main city, Lhasa, she said.

The outspoken Robinson acknowledged some progress on laogai reform, a cornerstone of her China campaign, but said the government needed to abolish the system to fulfil a U.N. covenant on civil and political rights it has promised to ratify.

"We continue to bring it home to the Chinese authorities that, at the moment, re-education through labor for what they call punishment of minor crimes would not satisfy the criteria," she told reporters in reference to the covenant.

MENTAL INSTITUTIONS

China says human rights have improved dramatically under Communist rule and accuses Western critics of imposing their values on a developing and largely impoverished country.

But Robinson said she told Chinese officials of her concerns that people were incarcerated in mental institutions for political reasons, as outlined in a report by the group Human Rights Watch earlier this month.

Robinson said she had also pressed vice foreign minister Wang Guangya to release prisoners, including Uighur businesswoman Rebiya Kadeer, jailed for eight years for mailing newspaper clippings to her U.S.-based husband, and historian Tohti Tunyaz.

She said the list included four men accused of leading mass labor protests in the northeastern city of Liaoyang in March over official corruption, unpaid wages and benefits.

Robinson said she had brought up many of the cases on previous visits but to no apparent avail. Wang gave assurances the cases were being examined, she said.

"I have made it clear both to the Chinese authorities and more publicly that I'm concerned that there isn't as much progress in relation to individual cases," she said.

TAKING ROOT

However, the Communist rulers of fast-changing China were grappling to find a new value system as discontent over greed and corruption spread and they showed signs of moving toward their critics on human rights, she said.

"The international human rights standards and its application in China together with China drawing on good components of its own strengths would make a very good value system," she said.

"I think this is starting to be part of what I'm hearing from some of the Chinese interlocutors," she said.

"Even though there hasn't been as much progress as I would have liked, there has been progress in an acceptance that this (criticism) is part of the human rights agenda and will remain so."

Robinson said China had to implement political reform to deal with growing labor unrest as competition arising from recent accession to the World Trade Organization ( news - web sites) threw millions out of work.

"China should look at the need for more space to address issues of labor unrest and obviously the straightforward way of doing that is to open up to independent trade unions to allow workers to organize," she said.

"I see for human rights reasons that China needs political reform," she said without further elaboration.


uyghuramerican.org



To: Don Green who wrote (1270)2/10/2003 7:51:53 PM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 48709
 
Hello Don, <<The extreme optimism you ... reminds me of the "New Paradigm" statements so common in the glory days of the Internet Bubble.>>

You are the first one on SI to accuse me of extreme optimism, especially in context of New Paradigm iDotNet and eSlashCom.

At the time, the critical moment, the singularity of inflection, I was asked a question:

http://www.siliconinvestor.com/readmsg.aspx?msgid=12506025
To:LOGAN12 who wrote (3127)
From: Netwit Friday, Jan 7, 2000 8:50 PM
View Replies (4) | Respond to of 5685

Linda, Jay, Crew:
I have to say the last couple of days have been hard, hard, hard. This morning I woke before the market, tiptoed into the library and prepared to exit every position I own. (Fortunately, the market reversed before I could pull the plug.) Now that, my friends, is fear. Now I am trying to find some strategies to manage my portfolio in a fashion that will allow me to sleep. Jay--what timing strategies are you using? What made you get out when you did? Was it as Linda says that overly excited feeling in the pit of your stomach?


<<It almost seems that all knowledge learned throughout history about Human Nature, Anarchy, and Capitalism is being overlooked>>

:0) Yes, that and what I have been learning:

achamchen.com

... and applying at critical junctures, import event horizons, and moments of singularity, when it really counts

http://www.siliconinvestor.com/readmsg.aspx?msgid=12508191
Saturday, Jan 8, 2000 6:35 AM
... On the issue of market timing. We are all market timers. If not, we would all take out the biggest loan we can get and spec it on the market. It is our job to market time, just a matter of degree ...


I learn from folks like this one:

Message 12438115

... leading me to be quite careful, and so far, again and once more, so good;0)

Oh, I forgot, I do tend to hedge, even in the early days ...

http://www.siliconinvestor.com/readmsg.aspx?msgid=11380544
Tuesday, Sep 28, 1999 5:51 AM
My previously mentioned "meaningless" hedge in long NEM shares and short NEM January 17.5 Puts turned out to be not so meaningless last night; will sell covered calls on NEM tonight and put proceeds into either RMBS or more relevant to this board, EGRP.


Chugs, Jay



To: Don Green who wrote (1270)2/10/2003 8:15:17 PM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 48709
 
Hello Don, with all sincerity, please do join us at BBR when you have time and chat about issues concerning human insanity, chaos, anarchy and such interesting topics with folks covering 9 nations:

Message 18562642

... and I am doing a study of mania in real time:

Subject 53628

... and I keep track of the news here:

Subject 53084

Chugs, Jay