Archive for January, 2005

Criminals Prey on Tsunami Victims Across the World

Monday, January 3rd, 2005

STOCKHOLM (Reuters) – Thieves, rapists, kidnappers and hoaxers are preying on tsunami survivors and families of victims in Asian refugee camps, hospitals and in the home countries of European tourists hit by the wave.

Reports and warnings came in from as far apart as Britain, Sweden, Sri Lanka, Thailand and Hong Kong on Monday of criminals taking advantage of the chaos to rape survivors in Sri Lanka or plunder the homes of European tourists reported missing.

In stark contrast to a worldwide outpouring of humanitarian aid in response to the Dec. 26 tsunami, whose death toll stood at nearly 145,000 people by Monday, a women’s group in Sri Lanka said rapists were attacking homeless survivors.

“We have received reports of incidents of rape, gang rape, molestation and physical abuse of women and girls in the course of unsupervised rescue operations and while resident in temporary shelters,” the Women and Media Collective group said.

Save the Children warned that youngsters orphaned by the tsunami were vulnerable to sexual exploitation. “The experience of earlier catastrophes is that children are especially exposed,” said its Swedish chief, Charlotte Petri Gornitzka.

In Thailand thieves disguised as police and rescue workers have looted luggage and hotel safes around Khao Lak beach, where the tsunami killed up to 3,000 people. Sweden sent seven police officers there on Monday to investigate the reported kidnap of a Swedish boy of 12 whose parents were carried off by the wave.

The United Nations also warned of the danger of pirates hindering its relief efforts off the west coast of Indonesia’s Sumatra island, which took the brunt of the tsunami.
Full Article: nytimes.com/reuters

Cuba Restores Contacts with European Embassies

Monday, January 3rd, 2005

HAVANA (Reuters) – Cuba ended a diplomatic deadlock with eight European Union nations on Monday in response to proposals by EU officials to stop inviting dissidents to National Day receptions in Havana.

Cuban Foreign Minister Felipe Perez Roque said Cuba was reopening official contacts with the embassies of France, Britain, Germany, Italy, Austria, Greece, Portugal and Sweden.

European diplomats welcomed the announcement as a major step toward normalizing relations between Cuba and the European Union, the island’s main trade and investment partner. But they said Cuba could not expect Europe to abandon the dissidents.
Full Article: nytimes.com/reuters

Mosul election staff quit en masse

Monday, January 3rd, 2005

The entire staff of Iraq’s Independent Electoral Commission in the northern city of Mosul, amounting to about 700 emplo-yees, have resigned amid growing violence in the country.

Staff members said on Thursday their resignation followed threats they received in the past few days. The withdrawal of the Iraqi Islamic Party from the election also figured in their decision, Aljazeera has learned.

In its response, however, the electoral commission has vigorously denied the report. “That’s not true. We have our staff in Mosul and al-Anbar,” Abd al-Hussain al-Hindawi, the head of Iraq’s Independent Electoral Commission, told AFP.

Al-Hindawi was also referring to the explosive province of al-Anbar, home to the strife-torn towns of Ramadi and Falluja. He declined to give staff numbers for Mosul, but said: “We have a larger staff than we did before across Iraq.”

Legal action

In a related move that could affect the 30 January elections, Shia leader Muqtada al-Sadr’s political office announced it was taking legal action against the interim Iraqi government for alleged torture and murder of its members.
Full Article: aljazeera.net

Bush Donates a Day in Iraq

Sunday, January 2nd, 2005

$100 billion is what the US spent last year fighting its war in Iraq.

Bush donated $350 million for tsunami relief. That’s about what the US spends in Iraq in a day.

Now how’s that for generosity?

Guantanamo Briton ‘in handcuff torture’

Sunday, January 2nd, 2005

A British detainee at Guantanamo Bay has told his lawyer he was tortured using the ‘strappado’, a technique common in Latin American dictatorships in which a prisoner is left suspended from a bar with handcuffs until they cut deeply into his wrists.

The reason, the prisoner says, was that he was caught reciting the Koran at a time when talking was banned.

He says he has also been repeatedly shaved against his will. In one such incident, a guard told him: ‘This is the part that really gets to you Muslims, isn’t it?’

The strappado allegation was one among many made about treatment at both Guantanamo and the US base at Bagram in Afghanistan made to the British lawyer Clive Stafford Smith when he visited his clients Moazzam Begg and Richard Belmar at the Cuban prison six weeks ago, having tried for the previous 14 months to obtain the necessary security clearance.

But it is clear the disturbing claim is only the tip of the iceberg. Under the rules the United States military has imposed for defence lawyers who visit Guantanamo, Stafford Smith has not been allowed to keep his notes of meetings with prisoners, and will not be able to read them again until they have been examined and de-classified by a government censor.
Full Article: guardian.co.uk

Cambodia Saved from Tsunami by Astrologer – Sihanouk

Sunday, January 2nd, 2005

PHNOM PENH (Reuters) – Former Cambodian king Norodom Sihanouk says an astrologer warned him that an “ultra-catastrophic cataclysm” would strike, but that his country would be spared if proper rituals were conducted.

“My wife and I decided to spend several thousand dollars to organize these ceremonies so our country and our people could be spared such a catastrophe,” Sihanouk, who abdicated last year, wrote on his Web site at www.sihanouknorodom.info.

Cambodia was unscathed by the 10-meter (30-foot) tsunami waves generated by a magnitude-9.0 earthquake under the sea off Indonesia’s Sumatra island on Dec.26. The waves rolled through the Indian Ocean, devastating coastal communities and killing more than 126,000 people.

Sihanouk offered his deepest condolences to the families of the dead and said he would give “a very humble and extremely modest” contribution of $15,000 to international relief efforts for each of the stricken countries.
Full Article: nytimes.com

A Troubled Haiti Struggles to Gain Its Political Balance

Sunday, January 2nd, 2005

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti – Jacques Rafael stood in front of the Moderne Store in downtown Port-au-Prince where his boss, a 52-year-old woman, was recently shot to death by members of the gangs who control this city’s slums.

“They say the former government was no good,” he said, referring to the government of Jean-Bertrand Aristide, overthrown in February. “But when Aristide was here, we could stay open until 10 p.m. Now we can’t even stay open until 4 in the afternoon.”

Around the corner, at the nearby school, Lycée Pétion, the students were headed home at 9 a.m. The police recently wounded three students there during a shootout with gang members, and the fearful teachers had stayed home, as they do many days now.

“We’re the ones paying for what is going on,” said Franzo Caryce, 19. “We expected more from Latortue.”

Nine months after taking office, the interim government of Prime Minister Gérard Latortue is besieged by mounting criticism from every sector of society. Recent street fighting, some of it involving gangs that supported Mr. Aristide, has claimed an estimated 200 lives and left much of Port-au-Prince’s business district deserted. Many business owners are in hiding after a wave of kidnappings, and rebels control large swaths of the country.

“Latortue is not serious about the security situation,” said a member of a government panel who insisted on anonymity. “The civil wars in Somalia and Lebanon started like this and that’s where we are heading.”

Many politicians and experts said in recent interviews that the election scheduled for next November to restore democracy here was in danger of being compromised or canceled.

“Latortue may or may not survive as prime minister – that’s almost beside the point,” said Henry Carey, a professor and Haiti scholar at the University of Georgia. “He shows no credible signs of holding elections. He doesn’t have an election commission that is working.”

Outside the country, there is also growing alarm. “Haiti is on the verge of becoming a permanently failed state hemorrhaging instability throughout the Caribbean in the form of refugees, violence and drugs,” said a report in November from the International Crisis Group.

Two recent studies prepared by experts on Haiti for the United States Southern Command of the United States Army refer to “the now-discredited Latortue government” and recommend consideration of a plan to turn the country into an international protectorate, an idea openly debated in the Haitian media.
Full Article: nytimes.com

In Death, Imperialism Lives on For the Western Media

Saturday, January 1st, 2005

It is Clear That a Tourists’ Tragedy is More Important Than That of the ‘Locals’
by Jeremy Seabrook reprinted from The Guardian(UK)
The number of fishing boats from Sumatra, Sri Lanka and Tamil Nadu at sea when the Boxing Day tsunami hit will never be known. There is scarcely any population tally of the crowded coasts. Nameless people are consigned to unmarked graves; in mosques and temples, makeshift mortuaries, people pull aside a cloth, a piece of sacking, to see if those they loved lie beneath. As in all natural disasters, the victims are overwhelmingly the poorest.

This time there was something different. The tsunami struck resorts where westerners were on holiday. For the western media, it was clear that their lives have a different order of importance from those that have died in thousands, but have no known biography, and, apparently, no intelligible tongue in which to express their feelings. This is not to diminish the trauma of loss of life, whether of tourist or fisherman. But when we distinguish between “locals” who have died and westerners, “locals” all too easily becomes a euphemism for what were once referred to as natives. Whatever tourism’s merits, it risks reinforcing the imperial sensibility.

For this sensibility has already been reawakened by all the human-made, preventable catastrophes. The ruins of Galle and Bandar Aceh called forth images of Falluja, Mosul and Gaza. Imperial powers, it seems, anticipate the destructive capacity of nature. A report on ITN news made this explicit, by referring to “nature’s shock and awe”. But while the tsunami death toll rises in anonymous thousands, in Iraq disdainful American authorities don’t do body counts.

One of the most poignant sights of the past few days was that of westerners overcome with gratitude that they had been helped by the grace and mercy of those who had lost everything, but still regarded them as guests. When these same people appear in the west, they become the interloper, the unwanted migrant, the asylum seeker, who should go back to where they belong. A globalisation that permits the wealthy to pass effortlessly through borders confines the poor to eroded subsistence, overfished waters and an impoverishment that seems to have no end. People rarely say that poor countries are swamped by visitors, even though their money power pre-empts the best produce, the clean water and amenities unknown to the indigenous population.

In death, there should be no hierarchy. But even as Sri Lankans wandered in numb disbelief through the corpses, British TV viewers were being warned that scenes they were about to witness might distress them. Poor people have no consoling elsewhere to which they can be repatriated. The annals of the poor remain short and simple, and can be effaced without inquiry as to how they contrive an existence on these fragile coasts. What are the daily visitations of grief and loss in places where people earn less in a year than the price that privilege pays for a night’s stay in a five-star hotel?

Western governments, which can disburse so lavishly in the art of war, offer a few million as if it were exceptional largesse. Fortunately the people are wiser; and the spontaneous outpourings of humanity have been as unstoppable as the waves that broke on south Asia’s coasts; donations rapidly exceeded the amount offered by government. Selflessness and sacrifice, people working away at rubble with bare hands, suggest immediate human solidarities.

But these are undermined by the structures of inequality. Promises solemnly made at times of immediate sorrow are overtaken by other urgencies; money donated for the Orissa cyclone, for hurricane Mitch in Central America, the floods in Bangladesh, the Bam earthquake – as for the reconstruction of Afghanistan and Iraq – turns out to be a fraction of what is pledged.

Such events remind us of the sameness of our human destiny, the fragility of our existence. They place in perspective the meaning of security. Life is always at the mercy of nature – whether from such overwhelming events as this, or the natural processes that exempt no one from paying back to earth the life it gave us. Yet we inhabit systems of social and economic injustice that exacerbate the insecurity of the poor, while the west is prepared to lay waste distant towns and cities in the name of a security that, in the end, eludes us all.

Assertions of our common humanity occur only at times of great loss. To retrieve and hold on to it at all other times – that would be something of worth to salvage from these scenes of desolation.

Jeremy Seabrook is the author of The No-Nonsense Guide to World Poverty
commondreamd.org