- 2007-12-01: Müyesser Günes – Turkey;
- 2007-12-02: Xiaoying Zheng – China;
- 2007-12-03: Virgelina Chará – Colombia;
- 2007-12-04: Rodrigue Tremblay – Canada;
- 2007-12-05: Zumra Nuru Mohammad – Ethiopia;
- 2007-12-06: Webster Griffin Tarpley – USA;
- 2007-12-07: Michael C. Ruppert – USA;
- 2007-12-08: Dao Thi Bich Van – Viet Nam;
- 2007-12-09: Roger Burbach – USA;
- 2007-12-10: Joan Hinton / Han Chun – China & USA;
- 2007-12-11: Simone Clara Kossianga – Central African Republic;
- 2007-12-12: David R. Smock – USA;
- 2007-12-13: Amma Sakinah – Afghanistan;
- 2007-12-14: Rosemarie Jackowski – USA;
- 2007-12-15: Guixin Yu – China;
- 2007-12-16: Guadalupe Hernández Dimas ‘Nana Lu’ – Mexico;
- 2007-12-17: Heidi Tagliavini – Switzerland;
- 2007-12-18: Harvey Franklin Wasserman – USA;
- 2007-12-19: Chea Vannath – Cambodia;
- 2007-12-20: Hilda Marina Morales Trujillo – Guatemala;
- 2007-12-21: Alkaben Jani – India;
- 2007-12-22: Lataben Sachde – India;
- 2007-12-23: Hakkuben Theba – India;
- 2007-12-24: Meghiben Samariya – India;
- 2007-12-25: Indrani Sinha – India;
- 2007-12-26: Anjali Gopalan – India;
- 2007-12-27: Raymond (Ray) McGovern – USA;
- 2007-12-28: Jihui Zhang – China;
- 2007-12-29: Meiqing Hua – China;
- 2007-12-30: Robert Reich – USA;
- 2007-12-31: Felicity Arbuthnot – England.
Mois : décembre 2007
Felicity Arbuthnot – England
Linked with John Pilger – Australia & England, with Keith McHenry – USA, and with C.T. Lawrence Butler – USA.
Felicity Arbuthnot lives in London. She has written and broadcast widely on Iraq, one of the few journalists to cover Iraq extensively even in the mid-1990’s during the sanctions. She with Denis Halliday was senior researcher for John Pilger’s Award winning documentary: Paying the Price – Killing the Children of Iraq (see its video, 03/06/2000 ITV, 75 min. runtime). She is also the author, with Nikki van der Gaag, of recently published Baghdad in the educational Great Cities of the World Series for World Almanac Library. (on Selves and Others).
See also this videos: Mumia Abu-Jamal, When War BackFires! The Message Stupid – Iraq’s Bastille Day, 6.21 min., from Suryu, by Felicity Arbuthnot, Added on August 03, 2007 … and: Iraq: The Hidden War, 05/29/06, 49 min. runtime (this video contains images that should only be viewed by a mature audience) … and: Gaza’s Reality, 5 min. runtime … and more videos, scroll down and click in the window on the wanted title …
Criminals’ literary profits, Open Letter to British Prime Minister Gordon Brown, Nov. 20, 2007.
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Felicity Arbuthnot – England
Look at the whole blog: between two rivers.
She writes: This was my 18th visit to Iraq since the Gulf War. The last four have been very close together: last October, January/February, I went back at the end of March and then again in May. Each time I am struck by the deterioration. Each time there is another horror. In March it was the daily bombing of the infrastructure. The electricity has just died. Many people can’t afford candles and use makeshift lamps. People put a wick in a bottle with oil and quite often the bottle explodes. The injuries have soared. The burns are horrendous and there is no treatment, not even cling film as an emergency measure to cover the wounds. There are no painkillers. There is no plastic surgery. There were two other things I noticed. Like with every embargo in history, there was a small amount of profiteering in money dealing. You have a fraction of the population at the top of the regime who have family abroad sending in dollars. There are restaurants springing up. You can get Christian Dior sunglasses, absolutely anything. Yet 98 percent of the population don’t have a way of sterilising burns. The other thing that struck me was the breakdown in the spirit of these very brave people. They feel that it is never, ever, going to end. Yet when I became ill on this trip, they were so concerned. I suddenly collapsed in the hotel foyer in Mosul and was virtually unconscious. My interpreter and my driver kept letting themselves into my room, touching me on the head and saying: “Are you all right? Shall we get a doctor? » They were saying, “You keep coming back here and Iraq has made you so ill ». (full long text on iraqchat.com, not dated).
Tony Blair: The Quartet’s ‘ Peace Envoy’, Discredited, Deluded, Disgraced, by Felicity Arbuthnot, July 10, 2007.
Robert Reich – USA
Robert Bernard Reich (born June 24, 1946) was the twenty-second United States Secretary of Labor, serving under President Bill Clinton from 1993 to 1997. Reich is a former Harvard University professor and the former Maurice B. Hexter Professor of Social and Economic Policy at the Heller School for Social Policy and Management at Brandeis University. He is currently a professor at the University of California, Berkeley’s Goldman School of Public Policy. Mr. Reich is also on the board of directors of Tutor.com He is a trustee of the Economists for Peace and Security. He is an occasional political commentator, notably on Hardball with Chris Matthews. (full text).
He says: « Wages are increasing for the top 5 percent [of the population]. Median wages of production workers, who comprise 80 percent of the workforce, haven’t risen in 30 years, adjusted for inflation. The reason is globalization and technological displacement. That is, employers can get cheaper labor either by going abroad or getting software to do it ». (full interview text).
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Robert B. Reich – USA
Robert Reich Looks Askance at ‘Supercapitalism’.
Hear Robert Reich, read from, and discuss the book, 47.23 min.
How did a self-described “lifelong libertarian Republican”, son of Jewish immigrants and follower of the controversial 1950s philosopher and author Ayn Rand, become the most powerful force in the American economy for most of the past two decades – including the entire duration of the Clinton administration? As Alan Greenspan reveals in his memoirs, his success was due, first, to being in the right place at the right time. He was appointed chairman of the Federal Reserve Bank, America’s central bank, at a time when Keynesianism – the belief that government could wisely stabilize the economy through spending and taxing – was becoming discredited, and when America began relying as never before on its central bank to do that job. Greenspan was also fortunate to enter government just as Republicans were in the ascendant … (full text, Dec. 19, 2007).
America needs immigrants’ ambition, Dec. 26, 2007.
Meiqing Hua – China
She is one of the 1000 women proposed for the Nobel Peace Price 2005.
Hua Meiqing is a policewoman serving at the Pingan Road Police Station of the Sifang Substation of the Qingdao Public Security Bureau. In 1993 she began to work supervising prostitutes; in 2002 she started to take on tasks aimed at tackling domestic violence. She took care of victimized women and created a way in which the police could intervene in domestic violence. She writes extensively on the subject.
She says: « As a grassroots policewoman, I work little by little, adding one drop to another, in legal advocacy work. The prevention of domestic violence is an important task ».
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Meiqing Hua – China
She works for the Qingdao Public Security Bureau.
Hua Meiqing lived in the countryside as a young girl. At the age of 17, she graduated from Shandong Police School, and began her career as a policewoman. Today, 23 years later, she is in the same job. She is now an instructor in Pingan Road Police Station of Sifang Substation, Qingdao Public Security Bureau.
She has taken on all kinds of police tasks. In 1993, she began to work at supervising prostitutes in Qingdao Detention House; in 2002, she started to take on tasks against domestic violence.
Hua Meiqing has always striven to do her work in a conscientious manner. After she read “Outline of Women’s Development”, she started to develop an interest in women’s work, and took up volunteer work for women. She also continued to read on these issues.
Hua is concerned about disadvantaged groups. In 1993, she began to get in touch with prostitutes in detention houses. At first, she was contemptuous of them. But later, an activity named “A letter to my mother” changed her mind. When she saw the letters the prostitutes had written, the feelings they had expressed, Hua was moved to tears.
Jihui Zhang – China
She is one of the 1000 women proposed for the Nobel Peace Price 2005.
Zhang Jihui is a head nurse in the general ward of the No. 1 Hospital in Guangzhou City. During the outbreak of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (Sars) in China in 2003, she accepted the assignment to work in the temporary Sars ward without hesitation. She worked 12 to 16 hours per day for 83 days without adequate supplies of oxygen and water. She served patients selflessly with love and courage. Her efforts have deeply impressed each of her patients, who come to understand what an « angel in white » really means.
She says: « Let us give others convenience, and give ourselves difficulties; give others happiness, and give ourselves sadness; give others safety, and give ourselves risks ».
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Jihui Zhang – China
She works for the no.1 People’s Hospital in Guangzhou City.
Zhang Jihui, born in 1963, is the head nurse of no.1 People’s Hospital in Guangzhou City, Guangdong Province. During the SARS period in 2003, she cared for patients without considering her own safety. Later she published a book called ‘Diaries of the Head Nurse’, which was much acclaimed by the public.
In the most critical period of SARS, Guangzhou set up a special ward for SARS patients. As an ordinary head nurse of the no.1 People’s Hospital, Zhang volunteered to work at the frontline. She worked continuously in the special ward for almost three months, days and nights.
Raymond (Ray) McGovern – USA
Linked with Fact-Based Intelligence Prevails on Nukes and Iran, with Ex-CIA: War with Iran in the offing, and with Steering Group of Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity VIPS;
Raymond (Ray) McGovern is a retired CIA officer turned political activist. He was a Federal employee under seven U.S. presidents over 27 years, presenting the morning intelligence briefings at the White House for many of them … (full text).
He says: « My former colleagues got really good, incontrovertible evidence that the (Iranian) program, such as it was, has been ordered stopped since 2003. The evidence was such that not even Dick Cheney could deny it. That’s why the report was not produced until three weeks ago, » McGovern said, adding that the Bush administration has been putting « spin » on their rhetoric ever since ». (full interview text).
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Raymond (Ray) McGovern – USA
See this videos: Interview with 27-Year CIA Veteran Ray McGovern, 56.29 min., January 14, 2007; Ray McGovern on the Neocons and Impeachment, 9.35 min., March 09, 2007; Ray McGovern 0wns Donald Rumsfeld, 3.15 min., May 04, 2006; Ray McGovern Confronts Rumsfeld, 9.50 min., May 5, 2006; Ray McGovern on Tucker Carlson, 1.11 min., April 30, 2007; Ray McGovern on need for independent intelligence Part 2, 8.42 min., July 27, 2007; and the rest of the 103 videos indicated by Google video-search with the key-word ‘Ray McGovern’.
He says also: « I’s actually very simple. There’s an inscription at the entrance to the CIA, chiseled into the marble there, which reads, ‘You Shall Know The Truth, And The Truth Shall Set You Free’. Not many folks realize that the primary function of the Central Intelligence Agency is to seek the truth regarding what is going on abroad and be able to report that truth without fear or favor. In other words, the CIA at its best is the one place in Washington that a President can turn to for an unvarnished truthful answer to a delicate policy problem. We didn’t have to defend State Department policies, we didn’t have to make the Soviets seem ten feet tall, as the Defense Department was inclined to do. We could tell it like it was, and it was very, very heady. We could tell it like it was and have career protection for doing that. In other words, that’s what our job was. When you come out of that ethic, when you come out of a situation where you realize the political pressures to do it otherwise ‘you’ve seen it, you’ve been there, you’ve done that’ and your senior colleagues face up to those pressures as have you yourself, and then you watch what is going on today, it is disturbing in the extreme. You ask yourself: Do I not have some kind of duty, by virtue of my experience and my knowledge of these things, do I not have some kind of duty to speak out here and tell the rest of the American people what’s going on ». (full interview text).
Former CIA Analyst: Government May Be Manufacturing Fake Terrorism: A Government openly promoting torture, A President acting like a King cannot be trusted, must be impeached.
Anjali Gopalan – India
Linked with the Naz Foundation (India) Trust.
She is one of the 1000 women proposed for the Nobel Peace Price 2005.
Anjali works with the most marginalized groups of society-women and children, and gay, lesbian, transgendered and bisexual communities. Her work on HIV/AIDS issues over the past two decades has changed the way India’s policymakers address these issues. When the Naz Foundation (India) Trust, which Anjali established in 1995, first began work, there was remarkable resistance to even acknowledging that HIV was a problem. However, through the sustained lobbying of groups working on education, health and women’s empowerment, Anjali has not only educated and trained them to incorporate HIV issues in ongoing programs, but also challenged the laws and norms that marginalize women and sexual minorities.
She says: « This work has to be a lifelong commitment ».
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Anjali Gopalan – India
She works for the Naz Foundation (India) Trust.
Anjali Gopalan was born in 1957 in Chennai. Her father was an officer in the Indian Air Force and her mother a homemaker. She studied in both India and the US, and her degree in political science, a postgraduate diploma in journalism, and a Masters in international development have helped her immeasurably in her radical work.
Anjali lived and worked in New York for nearly a decade before she returned to India to continue her work on HIV/AIDS and marginalization issues. She had begun work on HIV/AIDS and related issues in New York with undocumented migrant labor, schoolchildren, and South Asian communities.
Moving to India with this experience in hand, in 1995 she established the Naz Foundation (India) Trust, an HIV/AIDS service organization that concentrates on prevention and care. The foundation works on issues of sexuality, rights, and training, and runs an orphanage-and-home for children and women living with HIV.
Indrani Sinha – India
Linked with Sanlaap India, with Oxfam (India) Trust, New Delhi, and with Terre des Hommes, divers groupes indépendants, also with its India Programme.
She is one of the 1000 women proposed for the Nobel Peace Price 2005.
When a study on sexually abused children took Indrani Sinha (born 1950) to the brothel areas of Kolkata, the lives of the women there shook her to the core. From then on, she and Sanlaap (sanlaap means dialogue), the organization she set up, have been working to eliminate stigma, and to integrate women in prostitution and their children into mainstream society. While the setting up of safe homes and motivating government agencies have been significant victories, Indrani’s greatest triumph is the fulfilling lives that the women in and from Sanlaap’s shelter homes now lead.
She says: « When I started in 1989, I did not have any role models from whom I could learn. Therefore, I learnt from the women in red-light areas through listening to their needs ».
Drawing a parallel with another form of violence, the use of child labor, Indrani says, « Would we advocate that child labor be legalized just because it exists? A form of violence cannot be accepted merely because it is there and has been for centuries; the basis of its existence needs to be challenged ».
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Indrani Sinha – India
She works for Sanlaap.
Indrani Sinha was born in Calcutta (now Kolkata) in West Bengal on 15 March 1950, and grew up in Patna, Bihar. She completed her graduation in English literature from Kolkata’s Jadavpur University. Indrani’s life, as a young woman, was tough: when she was only 17, her father’s retirement meant that she had to manage both her work and studies, and shoulder the financial responsibilities at home.
She was married in 1973, but soon realized that she was in a dysfunctional marriage; nonetheless, she waited for their son to grow up before she left it. She married a friend who respects her work in 1985, and has two daughters now.
Although Indrani’s career began with teaching English, in 1973-76, in a well-known Hindi-medium school in Calcutta, she soon realized that her interest lay in the development sector.
In 1982, she joined Terre des Hommes (see the India Programme), « a network of ten national organizations working for the rights of children and to promote equitable development without racial, religious, political, cultural or gender-based discrimination » (see also on wikipedia), and then moved on to the Oxfam India Trust, where she worked for five years in women’s empowerment.
Meghiben Samariya – India
She is one of the 1000 women proposed for the Nobel Peace Price 2005.
Meghiben has inspired some 2500 women in the entire Pachcham area to take up the cause of human rights, empowerment, and justice for women. She has successfully combated the stigma associated with her status as a divorcee. For the past ten years, she has been working to strengthen women’s grassroots collectives and women’s involvement in the socioeconomic arena in her village and district. Her work with legal aid has been crucial to women’s lives in the area. Most innovative of all her efforts, though, is the printing of a newsletter for neoliterates, encouraging them to express themselves in print and thus making a public space available to women.
She says: « I am interested in seeing women sell the products that they are producing or value-adding in a fair price market. Not only that, I would also like to see them control the resources thus generated, resulting in complete socio-economic empowerment of rural women ».
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Meghiben Samariya – India
She works for Ujjas Mahila Sangathan UMS.
Meghiben Samariya was born in 1966 in village Habay, Bhuj district, as one of four children. Married off at 16, she stayed with her husband for a year. During that time, she worked in the salt pans and developed a skin rash, which gave her in-laws the opportunity to abuse her as a « leper » and evict her. She was only 17 years old. She sought legal redress, but it was seven years before she was awarded a compensation of Rs 10,000.
Meghiben is now divorced and lives with her parents. Although not formally educated, her keen mind and instinctive grasp of situations has helped her building herself into a force to reckon with.
When members of the Kutch Mahila Vikas Sangathan (KMVS) began working in her area, Meghiben took an active part in their activities. She started out aiming to support herself, and then gradually became part of the core team that took on the responsibility of building the capacities of the grassroots women’s collectives.
Hakkuben Theba – India
Linked with Kutch Mahila Vikas Sangathan – KMVS.
She is one of the 1000 women proposed for the Nobel Peace Price 2005.
Hakkuben Theba was born in 1966 into a poor farming family from the highly conservative Theba community in Gujarat. Her journey, from a destitute widow to a community leader and a trainer of leaders, was arduous. In the past 15 years, this woman has inspired more than 3000 women to become active members of a women’s collective. Gradually, Hakkuben and her colleagues have changed the nature of the village through women’s empowerment, generating alternative sources of income during drought, and ecological regeneration.
She says: « I would like to create a platform for the next generation of women so that they can learn from our experience and their life becomes easier ».
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Hakkuben Theba – India
She works for Saiyerejo Sangathan (not on the internet).
Hakkuben Theba (born 1966), from Dador in Gujarat, is a rural farmer from a marginalized family involved in dry farming (rain-dependent and prone to crop failure) and animal husbandry.
Dry farming is characteristic of the region, which is both drought-prone and suffers from high groundwater salinity. She belongs to the Theba, a small, conservative Muslim community. They marry their daughters within the community, are very proud of their culture and heritage, and do not encourage or practice dowry. This is one of the many reasons why there is absolutely no case of domestic violence, another being that people from the community do not drink alcohol. They are close-knit, usually frowning upon women and girls working outside the home.
Hakkuben was a farmer herself before her parents married her off at the age of 14. Since then, she has given birth to three boys and a girl, of whom only a boy and the girl survive. She was widowed in 1998, and her brother-in-law and his wife encouraged her to make an effort to be financially independent. This is when she came into contact with, and joined, the Kutch Mahila Vikas Sangathan KMVS, which had been working in the area since 1991–92.