|
Article
Otpor was formed on October 10, 1998 in response to repressive university and media laws introduced earlier that year. In the beginning, Otpor's activities were limited to University of Belgrade.In the aftermath of the NATO airstrikes against FR Yugoslavia in 1999 regarding the Kosovo War, Otpor began a political campaign against the Yugoslav president Slobodan Milošević. This resulted in nationwide police repression against Otpor activists, during which nearly 2000 were arrested, some beaten. During the presidential campaign of September 2000, Otpor launched its "Gotov je" (He's finished) campaign which would galvanize national discontent with Milošević and eventually result in his defeat. Some students who led Otpor used Serbian translations of Gene Sharp's writings on nonviolent action as a theoretical basis for their campaign.Otpor became one of the defining symbols of anti-Milošević struggle and his subsequent overthrow. By aiming their activities at the pool of youth abstinents and other disillusioned voters, Otpor contributed to one of the biggest turnouts ever for the September 24, 2000 federal presidential elections.Having succeeded in persuading a large number of the traditional electorate to abandon Milošević was another one of the areas where the smear-proof Otpor played a key role. Milošević had in the past succeeded in persuading the public that his opponents were spies and traitors, but on this occasion, it backfired, as the beatings and imprisonments during the summer of 2000 further cemented the decision to vote against the regime in many voters' minds.In the immediate months following 5th October Overthrow, Otpor members were suddenly the widely praised heroes throughout FR Yugoslavia as well as in the eyes of western governments. The clenched fist logo became the instant seal of approval, appearing everywhere. From the wide range of local celebrities and public figures seeking positive attention by wearing Otpor T-shirts, to Partizan basketball club painting an Otpor logo in the center circle for their FIBA Suproleague game, the clenched fist was omnipresent. This wide spread popularity inspired some truly bizarre episodes of opportunism as a variety of individuals tied to the former regime sought to now ingratiate themselves with new DOS authorities by praising Otpor and its activities.MTV also took notice, presenting Otpor with the Free Your Mind award at the 2000 MTV Europe Music Awards in Stockholm.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Otpor
For the past two weeks, a nearly daily mobilization has been taking place in the village of Ni'ilin, where construction of the wall has begun. The video depicts today's demonstration, in which villagers and supporters tried blocking the bulldozers and were met by harsh military violence, which included concussion grenades, teargas and rubber bullets, as well as kicks and punches. Twelve were injured during the demonstration and two, one Palestinian and one Israeli, were arrested.The wall in the area is planned to leave about 2,500 dunams (approx. 620 acres, 250 hectares), practically annexing them to the nearby settlement. The route of the wall on village's lands was planned in order to allow, amongst other things, the construction of a graveyard for the adjacent settlements. Demonstrations and the attempt to block the construction is expected to resume Sunday. http://www.awalls.org/daily_mobilizations_against_the_wall_in_niilin
Score one for the Italians. Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the thug par-excellence president of the ayatollahs’ regime in Iran, has been shunned by the Pope and the Prime Minister of Italy. In a humiliating rebuff which demonstrates Tehran’s pariah status abroad, both leaders refused to meet him in Rome, where he arrived on June 3, 2008 to attend the UN’s annual food summit.Ahmadinejad tried to grab the headlines with another bombastic attack against the United States. In a bid to shift the public relations firestorm over his visit, he told reporters shortly before his departure for Italy that the “satanic powers” of the United States will be “uprooted” and that Israel is “about to die and will soon be erased from the geographical scene.”He renewed his diatribe upon his arrival in Rome on Tuesday, saying that "Europeans have suffered the biggest damage from the Zionists and today the weight of this artificial regime, both political and economic, is on Europe's shoulders.”One thing is sure: this Qods Force Commander-turned-president thrives on being the center of attention. Controversy is how he, in a depraved manner, infuses vigor into his increasingly lackluster power base. And that is why he is eager to make these high-profile visits to western countries, such as his annul presence at the UN General Assembly.Like many demagogues, Ahmadinejad is crazy to grab headlines. He claimed he was bringing solutions to the global food problem. Iran, he says, “as an influential nation in the economy and agriculture, has clear solutions, programs and suggestions for the fair production and distribution of food supply in the world.” Never mind that his regime, despite being flush with unprecedented oil revenues, has failed economically and is directly responsible for widening poverty and hunger in Iran. “Iran can play a decisive role in today's world management.”His visit was billed as a one-man diplomatic nightmare by the Italian media, and caused an uproar among human rights and political circles in Italy. Italy’s Foreign Ministry said a meeting between Ahmadinejad and Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi would only happen if Ahmadinejad was prepared to retract his comments on Israel and his denial of the Holocaust, as well as ending his regime’s defiance of international demands relevant to Iran’s nuclear program.Meanwhile media reports from Italy indicate that Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe and Ahmadinejad were excluded from the opening dinner at the UN summit hosted by Prime Minister Berlusconi and Ban Ki-moon, the U.N. Secretary-General.This latest political humiliation for Tehran and its president comes on the heels of a damning report by the International Atomic Energy Agency released last week on Iran’s nuclear program, and more evidence of international terrorism. As always, Tehran’s outward belligerence is the flip side of its inward suppression; there were also new reports on human rights violations.On Monday, even Mohamed El Baradei, the see-no-evil, hear no-evil head of the nuclear watchdog agency, had to complain to reporters about Tehran’s continued defiance of its commitments and three UN Security Council resolutions. He said that “Iran has not yet agreed to implement all the transparency measures required to clarify this cluster of allegations and questions," adding that “Iran has not provided the agency with all the access to documents and to individuals requested ... nor provided the substantive explanations required to support its statements.”The composition of the new Parliament (Majlis) whose new speaker Ali Larijani, is a protégé of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and a former top commander of the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps, heralds a strengthening of Tehran’s hard line on the nuclear issue. In his first day on the new job, Larijani drew the regime’s nuclear “red line,” vowing the Majlis will never go along with any deals about enrichment suspension.Adding to the mix, ABC News released an exclusive report last week that “Senior U.S. officials tell ABC News that in recent months there have been secret contacts between the Iranian government and the leadership of al Qaeda.”Meanwhile executions continue unabated in Iran. On June 2, three young men, all under 18 at the time of the alleged crimes, were given death sentences. They will join at least 75 juveniles on death row, according to human rights organizations. The New York Times reported from Tehran that Iran’s judiciary has also sentenced to death a Kurdish teacher, Farzad Kamangar, and two other people for political reasons.Emboldened by the West’s talk about an “updated” incentives package, already rejected by the regime’s Supreme Leader even before its content has been made public, Tehran remains undeterred and defiantly refuses to change its behavior.The regime does, however, have an Achilles’ heel: its isolation from its own people, who desperately yearn for democratic change. Tehran is worried about the landmark ruling in early May by Britain’s Court of Appeal, ordering the UK government to promptly remove Iran’s main opposition, the People’s Mojahedin Organization (PMOI/MEK) from its blacklist of proscribed organizations. Tehran understands the wide-ranging political and diplomatic implications of this ruling in strengthening the movement for democratic change in Iran.The UK government obeyed the court ruling and last week laid before Parliament an order for the revocation of the group’s designation.The UK court ruling marks the end of an era, and Tehran is deeply concerned at the rising specter of ouster from within by the non-nuclear, secular, and democratic resistance movement.By Alireza Jafarzadeh, Fox News, 5 June 2008http://www.ncr-iran.org/content/view/5251/123/
Thousands of protesters have gathered for a huge demonstration against the expansion of Heathrow Airport.Stilt-walkers, brass bands and hundreds of people in fancy dress were among those who created a carnival-like atmosphere for the event - called the Make A Noise Carnival.Demonstrators walked from Hatton Cross to Sipson, the village that will be lost if plans for a third runway at the London airport go ahead.At Sipson, the protesters gathered in a field to form a huge "NO" that should have been visible to passing aircraft.Politicians and environmentalists addressed the crowds and bands played.A local villager and Hayes councillor, Mary O'Connor, 65, said: "I've lived here for 47 years and have been part of the protest from the very beginning."Back then there were only 10 of us marching, now look how many of us there are, thousands."It's great to see how much momentum it's gained, we're certain of victory."Greenpeace campaigner Anna Jones told Sky News: "We don't want it built because it's going to be bad for this community, it's going to be bad for London in terms of noise and air pollution."But most importantly it's going to be bad for the whole world because if we build this runway then we are putting ourselves on a path to climate change disaster."But Lord Soley, campaign director of pro-expansion group Future Heathrow, said: "Local people know that the airport is vital to the local economy and supports jobs and business."A third runway will only go ahead within environmental limits on noise and air quality."Airlines will only be able to fly more planes from Heathrow if they buy cleaner and quieter aircraft."
How was the Raj transformed from the jewel in Britain's imperial crown to the independent nations of India and Pakistan?1858: Beginning of the RajIn 1858, British Crown rule was established in India, ending a century of control by the East India Company. The life and death struggle that preceded this formalisation of British control lasted nearly two years, cost £36 million, and is variously referred to as the 'Great Rebellion', the 'Indian Mutiny' or the 'First War of Indian Independence'. Inevitably, the consequences of this bloody rupture marked the nature of political, social and economic rule that the British established in its wake. It is important to note that the Raj (in Hindi meaning 'to rule' or 'kingdom') never encompassed the entire land mass of the sub-continent. Two-fifths of the sub-continent continued to be independently governed by over 560 large and small principalities, some of whose rulers had fought the British during the 'Great Rebellion', but with whom the Raj now entered into treaties of mutual cooperation. 'The 'Great Rebellion' helped create a racial chasm between ordinary Indians and Britons.'Indeed the conservative elites of princely India and big landholders were to prove increasingly useful allies, who would lend critical monetary and military support during the two World Wars. Hyderabad for example was the size of England and Wales combined, and its ruler, the Nizam, was the richest man in the world. They would also serve as political bulwarks in the nationalist storms that gathered momentum from the late 19th century and broke with insistent ferocity over the first half of the 20th century. But the 'Great Rebellion' did more to create a racial chasm between ordinary Indians and Britons. This was a social segregation which would endure until the end of the Raj, graphically captured in EM Forster's 'A Passage to India'.While the British criticised the divisions of the Hindu caste system, they themselves lived a life ruled by precedence and class, deeply divided within itself. Rudyard Kipling reflected this position in his novels. His books also exposed the gulf between the 'white' community and the 'Anglo-Indians', whose mixed race caused them to be considered racially 'impure'. Please see: (http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/british/modern/independence1947_01.shtml) for the next seven pages.
Hendrix's popularity eventually saw him headline the Woodstock music festival on August 18, 1969. Bad weather and logistical problems caused long delays, so that Hendrix did not appear on stage until Monday morning. By this time, the audience (which had peaked at over 500,000 people) had been reduced to, at most, 180,000, many of whom merely waited to catch a glimpse of Hendrix before leaving. Festival MC Chip Monck introduced the band as "The Jimi Hendrix Experience", but Hendrix quickly corrected this to "Gypsy Sun and Rainbows" and launched into a two hour set, the longest of his career. As as well as the two percussionists, the performance notably featured Larry Lee performing three songs and Lee sometimes soloing while Hendrix played rhythm in places, most of this has been edited out of the officially released recordings, including Lee's three songs, reducing the sound to basically a three piece.The concert was relatively free of the technical difficulties that frequently plagued Hendrix's performances, although one of his guitar strings snapped while performing Red House (he kept playing regardless). The band, unused to playing large audiences and exhausted after being up all night, could not always keep up with Hendrix's pace, but in spite of this the guitarist managed to deliver a memorable performance, climaxing with his highly-regarded rendition of the The Star-Spangled Banner,[80] a solo improvisation which is now regarded as a special symbol of the 1960s era.[81]The band did not last long. After the Woodstock festival they appeared on only two more occasions. The first was a street benefit in Harlem where, in a scenario similar to the festival, most of the audience had left and only a fraction remained by the time Hendrix took the stage. Within seconds of Hendrix arriving at the site two youths had stolen his guitar from the back seat of his car, although it was later recovered. The band's only other appearance was at the Salvation club in Greenwich Village, New York. After some studio recordings, Hendrix disbanded the group. Some of this band's recordings can be heard on the MCA Records box set The Jimi Hendrix Experience and on South Saturn Delta. Their final work together was a session on 6th September[82]. Hendrix's 9th September appearance on TV's Dick Cavett Show, backed by Cox, Mitchell and Juma Sultan, was credited as the "Jimi Hendrix Experience"[83].
In November 2003, a revolution took place in Georgia - a revolution of a kind the turbulent region had never seen before. Not one person was injured, not a drop of blood was spilled. Tens of thousands of demonstrators took to the streets to protest against the flawed results of a parliamentary election. The demonstrators demanded the resignation of Eduard Shevardnadze, a man who had ruled Georgia for more than 30 years in total, as its Soviet-era Communist Party boss and its longest-serving post-independence president. Mr Shevardnadze told protesters they risked causing a civil war and he deployed hundreds of soldiers on the streets of Tbilisi. At that point, student demonstrators decided to give red roses to the soldiers. Many soldiers laid down their guns. Parliament stormed "People were kissing the police and military, it was really spectacular," said Giorgi Kandelaki, a 21-year-old student. Constitutional changes have boosted Mr Saakashvili's powers "And the roses of course which people had with them, which Misha carried with him into the parliament hall, that was the moment when people said that it was a rose revolution." Misha is Mikhail Saakashvili, the US-educated 35-year-old firebrand who, on 23 November, led the demonstrators to the parliament building. Along with thousands of his supporters he forced his way through the thick wooden doors of the parliament chamber where Mr Shevardnadze was inside, giving a speech. Mr Saakashvili held a long-stemmed red rose above his head and shouted "Resign!" He waved the rose in the face of Georgia's 75-year-old president. Mr Shevardnadze's bodyguards rushed him out of the parliament building by a back door.
That was the moment that power changed hands in Georgia. In January 2004, Mr Saakashvili was elected president. The following month, the Georgian parliament passed constitutional amendments which strengthened the presidency at the parliament's expense, and gave the country a cabinet and a prime minister for the first time. Then in March 2004, Mr Saakashvili's National Movement-Democratic Front won a landslide victory in parliamentary elections.
In the first year after the revolution, dozens of former government officials were jailed on corruption and embezzlement charges. Their assets were confiscated and their savings moved to state coffers. One of Mr Saakashvili's two main allies in the Rose Revolution, Zurab Zhvania, became prime minister. The other, Nino Burjanadze, remained in her position as speaker of the weakened parliament.
NCRI - On Saturday, 1,500 Tehran University students protesting over the bad food at the cafeteria clashed with the State Security Forces (SSF). Ambulances were rushed to the scene, according to eyewitnesses.More than 20 people were injured in clashes between the students shouting anti-regime slogans and the SSF who were forcing students to return to university campus, one eyewitness said.The protests over the bad food started on Friday but soon the event turned into an anti-government demonstration that spread to nearby streets.It was the first time since the spring of 2003 that a student protest spilled over to nearby streets. The SSF and security guards had made it impossible for the students to demonstrate outside the university campus fearing a rerun of the events in the summer of 1999.http://www.ncr-iran.org/content/view/4704/129/
In a major demonstration in Tehran on Tuesday, more than 1,000 students chanted, "Death to dictator," "Ahmadinejad is like [Augusto] Pinochet, but Iran would never be another Chile" and "Free the jailed students," on the Polytechnic (Ami Kabir) University.
Their protest came after the mullahs' judiciary announced last week that the three detained students from the school have each been sentenced to around two years in jail on charges of insulting the authorities. The protesters demanded the release of the jailed students.
The demonstrators resisted suppressive measures and threats by the regime’s agents while shouting anti-government slogans. The mullahs' regime had dispatched scores of security guards from nearby universities to help disperse the gathering.
The demonstration was so extensive that the regime could not conceal it and in a rare move the state-run media had to report it
"While chanting slogans against intelligence ministry officials, students named President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad as being responsible for corruption and discrimination. By chanting slogans against university guards, the students clashed with them," reported the semi-official news agency Fars.
By lauding the Polytechnic University students for their protest, the Iranian Resistance calls on other students and youth in Tehran to support their move. It also calls on all international human rights organizations especially student unions to condemn suppressive policies of the mullahs' regime against Iranian students. http://www.ncr-iran.org/content/view/5132/1/
Thousands demonstrated in southern Iraqi cities, near Baghdad and the border towns to Iran, toprotest Ahmadinejads visit to Iraq.They shouted,'You snapfired and killed Irainian prisoners,who are you going to kill in Iraq?','Iraq is for Iraqis, leave Iraq alone you terrorist'...they demanded a change in theMaleki government and denounced its affiliation with the Iranian regime.
A group of 15 Palestinian, Israeli and international activists have blocked the entrance to Karmei Zur Settlement today.
The entrance to the Karmei Tzur settlement, which is built on the lands of the Palestinian villages Halhul and Beit Umar, was blocked by a group of about 15 Palestinian, Israeli and international activists. To block the road activists chose to symbolically use razor wire that was taken from the fence that circles the settlement, and prevents Palestinians from accessing their land.
A sign reading "Mortal Danger-Military Zone. Any person who passes or damages the fence endangers his life", which was taken from the wall in the area, was hung on the razor wire
Flyers that were left on the road, reminded settlers that while their freedom of movement is being shortly and symbolically interrupted, the daily Palestinian reality, greatly to settlers convenience, is such of checkpoints, roadblocks, fences, apartheid roads and military occupation. http://www.awalls.org/the_entrance_to_karmei_tzur_settlement_blocked_with_razor_wire
One person was killed and another 16 injured in a protest against the Israeli blockade of the Karni cargo crossing.
<object classid='clsid:D27CDB6E-AE6D-11cf-96B8-444553540000' id='seyretpl' name='seyretpl' width='350' height='290' > <param name='allowscriptaccess' value='always' /> <param name='wmode' value='transparent' /> <param name='allowfullscreen' value='true' /> <param name='movie' value='http://canvasopedia.mediaworks.rs/components/com_seyret/localplayer/player.swf' /> <param name='flashvars' value='width=350&height=290&enablejs=true&file=http://canvasopedia.mediaworks.rs/seyretfiles/cache/pro/localfile/36f203a7a2f32413d1b067b7381d6c4d.xml?random=f5k9u&image=http://canvasopedia.mediaworks.rs/seyretfiles/uploads/thumbnails/user_73/user_73_t6hn0fse8p1qy5_4.jpg&autostart=false&logo=http://canvasopedia.mediaworks.rs/components/com_seyret/localplayer/logo.png&skin=http://canvasopedia.mediaworks.rs/components/com_seyret/localplayer/skins/nacht.swf&repeat=false&fullscreen=true' /> <embed id='seyretp' name='seyretp' src='http://canvasopedia.mediaworks.rs/components/com_seyret/localplayer/player.swf' flashvars='width=350&height=290&enablejs=true&file=http://canvasopedia.mediaworks.rs/seyretfiles/cache/pro/localfile/36f203a7a2f32413d1b067b7381d6c4d.xml?random=f5k9u&image=http://canvasopedia.mediaworks.rs/seyretfiles/uploads/thumbnails/user_73/user_73_t6hn0fse8p1qy5_4.jpg&autostart=false&logo=http://canvasopedia.mediaworks.rs/components/com_seyret/localplayer/logo.png&skin=http://canvasopedia.mediaworks.rs/components/com_seyret/localplayer/skins/nacht.swf&repeat=false&fullscreen=true' width=350 height=290 allowfullscreen='true' allowscriptaccess='always' wmode='transparent' type='application/x-shockwave-flash' /></object> <object classid='clsid:D27CDB6E-AE6D-11cf-96B8-444553540000' id='seyretpl' name='seyretpl' width='350' height='290' > <param name='allowscriptaccess' value='always' /> <param name='wmode' value='transparent' /> <param name='allowfullscreen' value='true' /> <param name='movie' value='http://canvasopedia.mediaworks.rs/components/com_seyret/localplayer/player.swf' /> <param name='flashvars' value='width=350&height=290&enablejs=true&file=http://canvasopedia.mediaworks.rs/seyretfiles/cache/pro/localfile/b9eac9c58ee04fe2149e869435b34198.xml?random=crg18&image=http://canvasopedia.mediaworks.rs/seyretfiles/uploads/thumbnails/user_73/user_73_tpgz52bjfl9onx_5.jpg&autostart=false&logo=http://canvasopedia.mediaworks.rs/components/com_seyret/localplayer/logo.png&skin=http://canvasopedia.mediaworks.rs/components/com_seyret/localplayer/skins/nacht.swf&repeat=false&fullscreen=true' /> <embed id='seyretp' name='seyretp' src='http://canvasopedia.mediaworks.rs/components/com_seyret/localplayer/player.swf' flashvars='width=350&height=290&enablejs=true&file=http://canvasopedia.mediaworks.rs/seyretfiles/cache/pro/localfile/b9eac9c58ee04fe2149e869435b34198.xml?random=crg18&image=http://canvasopedia.mediaworks.rs/seyretfiles/uploads/thumbnails/user_73/user_73_tpgz52bjfl9onx_5.jpg&autostart=false&logo=http://canvasopedia.mediaworks.rs/components/com_seyret/localplayer/logo.png&skin=http://canvasopedia.mediaworks.rs/components/com_seyret/localplayer/skins/nacht.swf&repeat=false&fullscreen=true' width=350 height=290 allowfullscreen='true' allowscriptaccess='always' wmode='transparent' type='application/x-shockwave-flash' /></object> <object classid='clsid:D27CDB6E-AE6D-11cf-96B8-444553540000' id='seyretpl' name='seyretpl' width='350' height='290' > <param name='allowscriptaccess' value='always' /> <param name='wmode' value='transparent' /> <param name='allowfullscreen' value='true' /> <param name='movie' value='http://canvasopedia.mediaworks.rs/components/com_seyret/localplayer/player.swf' /> <param name='flashvars' value='width=350&height=290&enablejs=true&file=http://canvasopedia.mediaworks.rs/seyretfiles/cache/pro/localfile/5363967d6ad40984e97e96eb1928fb90.xml?random=dr1cw&image=http://canvasopedia.mediaworks.rs/seyretfiles/uploads/thumbnails/user_73/user_73_tk9hwemul34bog_4.jpg&autostart=false&logo=http://canvasopedia.mediaworks.rs/components/com_seyret/localplayer/logo.png&skin=http://canvasopedia.mediaworks.rs/components/com_seyret/localplayer/skins/nacht.swf&repeat=false&fullscreen=true' /> <embed id='seyretp' name='seyretp' src='http://canvasopedia.mediaworks.rs/components/com_seyret/localplayer/player.swf' flashvars='width=350&height=290&enablejs=true&file=http://canvasopedia.mediaworks.rs/seyretfiles/cache/pro/localfile/5363967d6ad40984e97e96eb1928fb90.xml?random=dr1cw&image=http://canvasopedia.mediaworks.rs/seyretfiles/uploads/thumbnails/user_73/user_73_tk9hwemul34bog_4.jpg&autostart=false&logo=http://canvasopedia.mediaworks.rs/components/com_seyret/localplayer/logo.png&skin=http://canvasopedia.mediaworks.rs/components/com_seyret/localplayer/skins/nacht.swf&repeat=false&fullscreen=true' width=350 height=290 allowfullscreen='true' allowscriptaccess='always' wmode='transparent' type='application/x-shockwave-flash' /></object> <object classid='clsid:D27CDB6E-AE6D-11cf-96B8-444553540000' id='seyretpl' name='seyretpl' width='350' height='290' > <param name='allowscriptaccess' value='always' /> <param name='wmode' value='transparent' /> <param name='allowfullscreen' value='true' /> <param name='movie' value='http://canvasopedia.mediaworks.rs/components/com_seyret/localplayer/player.swf' /> <param name='flashvars' value='width=350&height=290&enablejs=true&file=http://canvasopedia.mediaworks.rs/seyretfiles/cache/pro/localfile/06c3c9e904019bbbb498c3ca8eb2dec0.xml?random=wtxk6&image=http://canvasopedia.mediaworks.rs/seyretfiles/uploads/thumbnails/user_73/user_73_tjy72l1irkzdsh_1.jpg&autostart=false&logo=http://canvasopedia.mediaworks.rs/components/com_seyret/localplayer/logo.png&skin=http://canvasopedia.mediaworks.rs/components/com_seyret/localplayer/skins/nacht.swf&repeat=false&fullscreen=true' /> <embed id='seyretp' name='seyretp' src='http://canvasopedia.mediaworks.rs/components/com_seyret/localplayer/player.swf' flashvars='width=350&height=290&enablejs=true&file=http://canvasopedia.mediaworks.rs/seyretfiles/cache/pro/localfile/06c3c9e904019bbbb498c3ca8eb2dec0.xml?random=wtxk6&image=http://canvasopedia.mediaworks.rs/seyretfiles/uploads/thumbnails/user_73/user_73_tjy72l1irkzdsh_1.jpg&autostart=false&logo=http://canvasopedia.mediaworks.rs/components/com_seyret/localplayer/logo.png&skin=http://canvasopedia.mediaworks.rs/components/com_seyret/localplayer/skins/nacht.swf&repeat=false&fullscreen=true' width=350 height=290 allowfullscreen='true' allowscriptaccess='always' wmode='transparent' type='application/x-shockwave-flash' /></object> Direct Action against the Wall performed by israeli anarchist group in Beit Umar, Palestine. Beograd - The political situation in Serbia has not changed much yet. There has been passed a special law in the Serbian parliament about accepting the results of election - which was the main cause for beginning the protests. Now the opposition and the people are waiting to see if the law will be promptly implemented, in the meantime : Huge crowds are on the streets of Belgrade, celebrating what appears to be the overthrow of President Milosevic after a day of mass protests.The new political situation appeared to be confirmed shortly before midnight local time (2200 GMT) when Vojislav Kostunica appeared on state television described as the new president.
What happened in the nine days for the students of Tarbiatmoalem University who took sanctuary in an inviolable place?The refuge of the students of Tarbiatmoallem University goes on to its ninth day. What has happened during this time? More than 125 persons are on hunger strike, an increase from the original 50 who began their hunger strikes. As students begin their ninth day of refuge:
What happened in the nine days for the students of Tarbiatmoalem University who took sanctuary in an inviolable place?The refuge of the students of Tarbiatmoallem University goes on to its ninth day. What has happened during this time? More than 125 persons are on hunger strike, an increase from the original 50 who began their hunger strikes. As students begin their ninth day of refuge:1- For two days water has been denied to them.2- The students are forbidden from having any communication with those outside.3- Students’ families have been threatened with jail.4- Students have been accused of rioting and provoking hostility.5- Those students who are in bad health conditions have only one type of medicine to use and they cannot leave the university. Even a young girl who was unconscious could not go to the hospital.6- Authorities are trying to frighten these students with noises and alarms in the night.7- Lastly, security forces have blocked off the university.What the students who have taken sanctuary want is: 1- Dismissal of the deputy of student affairs for actions that disrespected the student body.2- Dismissal of the deputy of cultural affairs, who is a member of the traditional clergy, and should be in the seminary school rather than the university for his the extremist approach to certain issues. Some of his actions in the university so far have been:a. Prohibition of musical performance of any kindb. Ban of any mix-gender trips or activities, whether academic or social, except for basij members on pilgrimage3- Reopening the central portion of the library that student used to be able to utilize for reading and studying, but where these are now forbidden4- Improvement of food and sanitation conditions. (Female students say that the bad quality of food in the university has led to stomach aches and other kinds of illness).5- Improvement of the conditions of student dormitories. (has not the first things for living)6- Written apologies by the chiefs of the university to the families who insulted and harassed.7- Cease summoning students involved in these protests to the disciplinary committee (komite enzebati ). The president of the university is trying to put pressure on the students and discourage them from their activities by summoning them to and punishing them in this committee.Some of the slogans of these students protest against the university authorities, demand their resignations and call upon them to stop summoning students to the disciplinary committee.Around noon of the 6th day of these protests, a disciplinary committee employee presented an order that punished two students with suspension of their studies for 2 terms, but did so at a time when the disciplinary committee was not in session and presented this in the absence of these students.Iranian Human Rights Voice, http://www.ihrv.org/inf/?p=296 (accessed 10 June 2008)
a
|
|
|
| ||||
| ||||
| ||||
| ||||
| ||||
| ||||
| ||||
| ||||
| ||||
| ||||