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Politics : Bush Administration's Media Manipulation--MediaGate? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Peter Dierks who wrote (6161)3/9/2006 12:24:26 PM
From: Proud_Infidel  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 9838
 
US report on human rights blasts Arabs
ASSOCIATED PRESS AND JPOST ^ | Mar. 9, 2006

The annual US State Department report on human rights detailed Israeli transgressions, citing discrimination, violence, and corruption, while still maintaining that the Israeli government respects the rights of its citizens.

The report said discrimination was directed mostly at the disabled, women, and foreign workers, as well as at Israeli-Arabs.

Security prison facilities are in poor condition, and a small minority of security workers harass Palestinian prisoners, the report stated.

The government also discriminates against non-Orthodox Israeli Jews, the US State Department claimed.

In the Palestinian Authority, there is a lack of proper supervision over security forces, allowing excessive violence to be employed by its members.

The State Department called the human rights records of key Arab allies poor or problematic on Wednesday, citing flawed elections and torture of prisoners in Egypt, beatings, arbitrary arrests and a lack of religious freedom in Saudi Arabia, and flogging as punishment for adultery or drug abuse in the United Arab Emirates.

Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice visited all three last month and called each a strategic partner or stalwart ally that wields regional influence or helps in such areas as anti-terror investigations.



To: Peter Dierks who wrote (6161)3/9/2006 12:24:54 PM
From: Proud_Infidel  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 9838
 
Cuban on hunger strike for Internet access
CNET ^ | 03/09/2006 | Reuters

A Cuban dissident who has been on a hunger strike for 36 days to demand unfettered Internet access is refusing medication and his health is deteriorating rapidly, fellow dissidents said on Wednesday.

Guillermo Farinas, a 41-year-old psychologist, went on a hunger strike on Jan. 31 to press Cuba's Communist authorities to respect his right to freedom of information and allow him Internet access, which is controlled by the government.

Farinas was moved to a hospital in his hometown of Santa Clara, in central Cuba, where he is being kept on an IV drip.

"The hunger strike continues. He has been isolated in intensive care since Thursday," said Niurbis Diaz, who worked with Farinas as an independent reporter. "He is refusing pills and injections," she told Reuters by telephone.

Cuba, like China, controls access to the Internet. Direct access to the World Wide Web is generally available only to government-approved individuals, but passwords can be purchased on the black market.

The postal service offers an e-mail service, but users can surf only Cuban Web sites. International Web sites run by exile groups are routinely blocked by Cuba's state-run servers.

The U.S. State Department, in its 2005 human rights report published on Wednesday, said Cuba was a "totalitarian state" that represses dissents, has jailed 333 people for political reasons and severely curbs freedom of speech and information.

In other news: Special coverage: Fancy footwork for Intel Now playing: Cable TV price war? Microsoft's massive Vista marketing blitz News.com Extra: Porn billing leak exposes buyers "The government controlled all access to the Internet and took steps to censor all electronic mail, disallowing any attachments," the report said.

Cuban President Fidel Castro's government says Internet access is restricted in Cuba due to the limited bandwidth available.

They blame that on U.S. economic sanctions that bar Cuba from hooking up to submarine fiber optic cables and force the country to use satellite communications for Internet traffic.

Farina's hunger strike has alarmed other opposition activists. Cuban dissident Oswaldo Paya urged him on Wednesday to end his protest.

"We call on authorities to respect his rights, agree to his petition immediately, and save his life," Paya said.