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 Post subject: Re: World News
PostPosted: 12 Mar 08, 10:24 
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Fox hosts Rove without disclosing reported role with McCain campaign mediamatters


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 Post subject: Re: World News
PostPosted: 12 Mar 08, 10:29 
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Darfur's return to hell

Children raped. Homes looted. Villages torched. And thousands forced to flee aerial bombings– three months after UN took over peacekeeping



By Steve Bloomfield and Katherine Butler


The conflict in Darfur has entered a violent and deadly new phase. Another "scorched earth" policy is being unleashed, reminiscent of the worst waves of government-backed violence that brought the Sudanese region to world attention five years ago and led the US to declare that what was happening there constituted genocide.

Internal reports by humanitarian agencies operating in the region, and seen by The Independent, reveal that the active Sudanese government-backed military phase of the conflict, thought to have ended early in 2005, has resumed, with horrifying consequences.

The brutal new onslaught is centred on western Darfur where clusters of villages have been aerially bombed and, in co-ordinated ground attacks, homes have been looted and burnt to the ground. Hundreds of people are believed to have been killed and tens of thousands forced to flee into neighbouring Chad.

"The tactics are exactly the same as those the government pursued right at the start of this conflict: aerial bombings, followed by sending in the militias to loot, kill and rape," said one source in Sudan. "It is as ruthless as in 2003."

The village of Sileah, with a population of 20,000, is among those attacked. When UN officials reached it last week, they found just 300 people left. "These places had been scorched," said Orla Clinton, a spokeswoman for the UN's humanitarian operations. "People pleaded with us for protection. They feel like it has been five years and nothing has changed for them. They are losing hope in our ability to protect them." The UN team said health clinics, schools, water systems and aid agencies' compounds were looted or destroyed.

In another offensive, five bombs were dropped on the village of Aro Sharow and the nearby village of Korlingo. Shortly afterwards, Sudanese troops raided the villages with Janjaweed Arab militia, burning homes and looting. At the end of last week, helicopter gunships bombarded three villages close to Jebel Moon in an attack that lasted several hours.

Witnesses said girls as young as 10 were mass-raped by government soldiers and militia fighters. Families have also been split up in the chaos and countless children are missing. Of those who have fled to Chad, the internal reports noted, "Most fled with nothing and are sheltering under trees and in dry river beds".

Attacks of the kind now being unleashed have been rare since the start of 2005. "There had been occasional bombing of villages, but rarely so well co-ordinated and on such a large scale affecting so many people as now" said one senior humanitarian official.

Diplomats fear that the Sudanese government, buoyed by the "success" of its attacks in West Darfur, may try to launch fresh bombing raids against other rebel-held areas, such as the mountainous Jebel Marra region. The big worry is that it will intensify its scorched earth tactics in a bid to recover territory it had lost to rebels. "Over the past week, there has been more military build-up in the area: several hundred government army vehicles including tanks have arrived in El Geneina [capital of West Darfur]" the internal reports state.

In the five years since the Darfur conflict began, at least 200,000 people have been killed and 2,400,000 made homeless. Despite attempts by the UN and the African Union to launch a peace initiative, talks have failed to get off the ground.

And despite high-profile campaigning by celebrities including George Clooney, Mia Farrow and Steven Spielberg, the Khartoum government remains impervious to external pressure. The Chinese government, Sudan's biggest trading partner stung by the threat of Olympic boycotts, has recently joined in the criticism.

But Sudan is defying the world, and arrogantly parks its bomber aircraft on the same airstrip the new UN peacekeeping force is using at its West Darfur base. Some of the Sudanese-government Antonov aircraft which bombed villages in West Darfur last week have even been painted white, the same colour as the planes used by the UN and aid agencies for delivering food. "The openness with which the government has carried out the air strikes is worrying," one Sudan-based diplomat said.

The new UN force (Unamid) took over from the underfunded and understaffed African Union mission on1 January this year. The African Union soldiers had struggled to police Darfur, an area twice the size of the UK, with just 7,500 troops. But despite a commitment to sending 26,000 troops and civilian police, Unamid's numbers are barely higher. An Egyptian company is to arrive in South Darfur this week, but the full force is not expected to be fully deployed until 2009. The Sudanese government has tried to block deployment at every turn, vetoing non-African troops, blocking supplies and refusing to provide land for new bases. But Western leaders are also accused of failing to follow their words with actions. "We're in the hands of member states," said a Unamid spokesman, Adrian Edwards. "They need to make good their pledges of support."

It is not just soldiers that Unamid is lacking. The force requires 18 troop-carrying helicopters and six armoured attack helicopters. So far, they have none. Unamid officials say they could have responded to last month's attacks if they had the right equipment.

Darfur is home to the world's largest humanitarian operation but the growing insecurity has also made it one of the world's most dangerous places. The World Food Programme has had 45 trucks hijacked already this year, and now transports about half as much food into Darfur as it normally would.

James Smith, the chief executive of the Aegis Trust said: "Darfur is on the radar, people are talking about it, but they [Western leaders] are just not acting. All this does is give a message to Khartoum that Darfur still isn't a priority to the West."

Bombed, looted – then torched

Pictures show what remains of Abu Surouj. First Sudanese government aircraft dropped bombs on the town, and then government troops and Arab militiamen arrived to loot huts and shops and burn homes to the ground. "The helicopters hit us four times and around 20 bombs were dropped," Malik Mohamed, a resident, told Reuters. Human Rights Watch said that at least 150 died in the assault on Abu Surouj and two neighbouring districts. All are believed to have been civilians.

What is now left is a vivid illustration of the scorched-earth policy being waged by Khartoum in its zeal to clear the area of rebels from the Justice and Equality Movement. Such attacks characterised the early years of the genocide but they have been rare since 2005. Their return marks a bloody new phase in the conflict. Khartoum denies targeting civilians but thousands have fled. The almost total destruction of villages makes it impossible for refugees to return, and international aid workers have been banned from the area.



Independent


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 Post subject: Re: World News
PostPosted: 12 Mar 08, 10:31 
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Black vote helps Obama claim Mississippi




By Leonard Doyle in Jackson, Mississippi


Barack Obama rolled to an easy Mississippi victory over Hillary Clinton yesterday as the state's large black electorate injected some badly needed momentum into his campaign for the presidency.

He now enters the tough battle for the crucial Pennsylvania contest for the Democratic nomination with a psychological boost that come from winning and lots of guaranteed air time on the national media as the leader.

With over 99 per cent of precincts reporting across Mississippi, Mr Obama led Mrs Clinton by a crushing 60.32 per cent to 37 per cent. His win here has wiped out Mrs Clinton's small 11-delegate gain from her victories in Ohio and Texas last week.

But in a troubling sign that race is strongly affecting voters' choices - despite Mr Obama's attempts to be beyond race - not only did 9 of 10 Black voters support him but Mrs Clinton won more than seven in 10 of the state's white voters.

Blacks comprise 36 per cent of Mississippi's population, the highest proportion in the US.

"It's just another win in our column, and we are getting more delegates," Mr Obama, told CNN from his home in Chicago after spending the day campaigning in Mississippi and Pennsylvania. "I am grateful to the people of Mississippi for the wonderful support. What we've tried to do is steadily make sure that in each state we are making the case about the need for change in this country."

Mrs Clinton also blocked inroads he has made into her white voter base in northern states. Mrs Clinton won narrowly among white independents, who made up 14 per cent of the total electorate. Republicans who decided to cross over for Mrs Clinton - 11 per cent of the vote are now her strongest single group, handing her 85 per cent of their votes. Republicans and independents have been attracted to Mr Obama's campaign, but not in racially polarised Mississippi.

The victory has removed the sheen from Mrs Clinton's dramatic comeback as the campaign moves to the crucial Pennsylvania contest for the Democratic nomination in six weeks' time. Expecting defeat, Mrs Clinton has not campaigned in Mississippi since last week.

Mr Obama also slapped down talk from the Clinton camp that he would make a great vice-presidential running mate.

"With all due respect, I've won twice as many states as Senator Clinton," he said before the vote, calling her tactics a blatant attempt to "okeydoke, bamboozle and hoodwink" voters into supporting her for the presidency. No less a figure than the speaker of the house Nancy Pelosi has said such a ticket is now impossible since the Clinton camp have already ruled out Barack Obama as being suitable commander in chief material.

But among Democrats who left the polls yesterday, six in 10 Obama supporters said he should pick Mrs Clinton for his vice president, if he wins the nomination. Some four in 10 Clinton supporters want her to pick Mr Obama if she wins. In a CNN interview last night Mr Obama diplomatically dodged the question saying merely that Mrs Clinton "would be on anybody's short-list."

Huge crowds turned out to see Mr Obama speak in the state capital Jackson. At Buck's diner yesterday morning he ordered a Southern breakfast of eggs, sausage, toast and grits as he chatted with early morning voters. "You all keep me in your prayers, now," he said, promising to return to the impoverished Delta if he is elected to the White House.

The Illinois senator's strategy has been to target small states like this one that typically vote Republican in presidential elections. But there are only 33 delegates at stake in Mississippi, which has not voted Democrat since Jimmy Carter's election to the White House in 1976, and any bump he gets will be tiny.

As voters went to the polls yesterday both Hillary Clinton and Mr Obama had already moved on to campaign in Pennsylvania where 158 delegates are at stake in what is set to be a much tougher and drawn-out battle. But the trick the candidates need to pull off in the coming 41 days is to persuade wavering superdelegates – the Democratic Party members who hold the casting vote at the August nominating convention – to declare their support.

Mr Obama has been using an aggressive new tone against his rival in Mississippi putting to one side his "kumbayah" style of avoiding negative politicking. He attacked her as part of the old corrupt Washington establishment, telling a huge rally in Jackson that they did not need "the same old folks doing the same old things, talking the same old stuff".

He accused Mrs Clinton and her campaign of duplicity and dirty tricks, saying they leaked a photograph of him in a traditional Somali turban and tribal dress that was "straight out of the Republican playbook". He added: "That's not real change."

The Obama campaign also attacked remarks by Geraldine Ferraro, a Clinton supporter, saying they were "outrageous and offensive". Ms Ferraro had said that the US and the "sexist media" had been caught up with the Obama campaign. "If Obama was a white man, he would not be in this position," she said. "And if he was a woman of any colour he would not be in this position. He happens to be very lucky to be who he is. And the country is caught up in the concept."

Ms Ferraro ran unsuccessfully with Walter Mondale in the 1984 race for the White House. Although she is a fund-raiser and on the finance committee of the Clinton campaign, her remarks were disavowed yesterday. "We disagree with her," a campaign official said curtly.

A little later Ms Ferraro was at it again saying "I really think they're attacking me because I'm white."

Whether authorised of not by the Clinton campaign, Ms Ferraro's remarks have caused race to bubble up again - and send a message directed straight at the large white working class electorate that Mrs Clinton is appealing to in Pennsylvania.

The stalemate in the race for the nomination has turned attention to the disputed contests in Michigan and Florida. Mrs Clinton won both races at the end of January, but the Democratic national committee stripped the states of their delegates because they broke party rules by moving up the date of the contests ahead of Super Tuesday.

The prospect of two important states having no voice in picking the Democratic nominee fills party officials with dread. Although Mr Obama says he wants a compromise that will allow the delegates to be seated - is a way that is not unfair to either candidate - there is no sign of a solution to date.

The latest plan is for a new postal ballot that would enable voters to have their say once again. But a short-notice postal ballot is fraught with difficulty because of the danger of voting fraud and the cost of organising the vote.

In addition, the Obama campaign does not want to run two new contests in states which are likely to go to Mrs Clinton. "The Democratic Party is going to run a mail-in election and they're going to police it … I think it's a nightmare," a senior Obama strategist, David Axelrod, said this week. He pointed out that Oregon took 10 years to develop a fraud-proof statewide postal election.

"Does anyone really believe we're going to get this right? And does anyone really want another screwed-up election in Florida?" said Allan Katz, a member of the Democratic National Committee and Obama supporter.

For the Republican side, there was no real contest and Arizona senator John McCain of Arizona has already clinched his party's nomination.

For rolling comment on the US election visit: independent.co.uk/campaign08


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 Post subject: Re: World News
PostPosted: 12 Mar 08, 10:32 
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'Consensus grows' for Bhutto widower to become premier




By Omar Waraichin Islamabad and Andrew Buncombe


The widower of Benazir Bhutto – believed by many Pakistanis to be guilty of corruption – appears poised for a dramatic return to the prime minister's mansion on the back of a growing consensus within his party that he himself should become premier.

Less than three months after Mrs Bhutto was assassinated, sources within the Pakistan People's Party (PPP) say growing numbers of MPs and senior officials have thrown their support behind Asif Ali Zardari to become prime minister.

The propulsion of Mr Zardari to the premiership would represent a remarkable transition for the man known as "Mr 10 Per Cent" for his alleged involvement in kickback schemes when his wife was running Pakistan, and for which he spent a number of years in jail. Last week almost all of the outstanding corruption charges against him in Pakistan were dropped.

While there has yet to be a formal announcement about the PPP's preferred choice for prime minister, freshly elected parliamentarians yesterday emerged from a series of meetings with Mr Zardari, who is currently the party's co-chairman, to say "a consensus was emerging" in his favour.

"Inside the meeting, we told Mr Zardari: 'We have been pleasantly surprised by [your] ability to lead the party. We repose our confidence in you'," said Ahmed Mukhtar, a former commerce minister.

Farahnaz Ispahani, a party spokesman, said that in meetings Mr Zardari had asked party members who they wished to see as prime minister. She added: "Most people have said, 'Mr Co-Chairman, we give you the prerogative. It's up to you'. Wave after wave, people have started saying that a consensus has built up that they would prefer someone who is strong and has leadership qualities."

It is possible that Mr Zardari's apparent thrust towards the premiership is the result of spin from his supporters, and in recent days there has certainly been evidence of intense fighting within the party.

Makhdoom Amin Fahim, once considered an obvious PPP candidate for prime minister, appears to have been sidelined by the party leadership and their coalition allies in former prime minister Nawaz Sharif's party. Mr Fahim angrily denounced the decision to not invite him to a major meeting at the weekend.

As Mr Zardari did not stand for a parliamentary seat in last month's elections, he would only be eligible to stand for prime minister after a by-election in three months' time. There are suggestions a minor party may stand in for him during the interim.

But Mr Zardari may encounter a legal hurdle. A law introduced by President Pervez Musharraf requires all members of parliament to be graduates. Mr Zardari has said that he received a "B.Ed" from the London School of Business Studies. But an administrator at the institute said they did not offer any degree courses. "We are a private college, not a university," he said.

News of the party's apparent backing for Mr Zardari came as two suicide bombers killed at least 24 people in huge explosions in Lahore. More than 200 people were injured by the blasts, which occurred within 15 minutes of each other yesterday morning.

The first blast happened at the building of the Federal Investigation Agency as staff were arriving for work. Police said an explosives-laden car was driven into an adjoining car-park before it was detonated. At least 21 people died, including a three-year-old girl.

The second explosion took place at the office of an advertising agency in a residential part of the city, around 15 miles away. Police investigator Tasaddaq Hussain said two children and the wife of the office's gardener were killed.
Independent


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 Post subject: Re: World News
PostPosted: 12 Mar 08, 10:34 
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Gay teenager faces return to Iran after Dutch ruling




A gay teenager who claims he faces the death penalty in Iran after his boyfriend was executed there two years ago has spoken of his anger and disappointment at losing his legal battle against deportation.

Mehdi Kazemi, 19, who sought sanctuary in Britain in 2005 when he discovered that his partner had been hanged in Tehran for engaging in homosexual acts, is expected to be returned to Iran in the next few weeks.

Mr Kazemi fled to Holland from Britain last year after the Home Office rejected his claim for asylum. But yesterday, a Dutch court ruled that he should be sent back to Britain after refusing to consider his claim for asylum.

Speaking from an immigration detention centre in Rotterdam, Mr Kazemi told his uncle, a British citizen, that he was "very, very angry" at the decision, which will see him returned to Britain within 72 hours.

He believed he would have had a much better chance of protection from deportation to Iran in Holland, according to his uncle. But yesterday, Holland's highest administrative court rejected his lawyers' arguments that the UK asylum and immigration system did not take proper account of international conventions that uphold the rights of refugees.

Mr Kazemi arrived in London as a student in 2004, after which his boyfriend was arrested by Iranian police, charged with sodomy and hanged. In a telephone conversation with his father in Tehran, Mr Kazemi was told that, before the execution in April 2006, his boyfriend had been questioned about sexual relations he had with other men and under interrogation had named Mr Kazemi as his partner.

Fearing for his life if he returned to Iran, Mr Kazemi claimed asylum in Britain. But in 2007 his case was refused. Terror-stricken at the prospect of being sent home, the young Iranian made a desperate attempt to evade deportation and fled to Holland.

"There is no doubt that Mehdi will be arrested and probably executed if he is sent back there," said his 51-year-old uncle, a salesman from Hampshire. "The police have issued a warrant for his arrest. He will be in terrible danger if he goes back."

Mr Kazemi's father has also told him that if the state doesn't kill him, he will. "His father is very angry but his mother still loves him. She is extremely worried for him but she is in a very difficult position. In Iran, mothers don't stop loving their children because they are gay."

Mr Kazemi's only hope now is that the Home Secretary Jacqui Smith will exercise her discretion and intervene in his case, or that either the European Court of Human Rights or the European Court of Justice agree to consider the wider implications of gay Iranian asylum-seekers. Mr Kazemi's case is be debated by the European Parliament tomorrow.

Last night, his case was taken up by Chris Huhne, the Liberal Democrat home affairs spokesman, who wrote to Ms Smith to urge the Government to end the return of all gay asylum-seekers to Iran. "It seems absolutely clear that any gay or lesbian person sent back to Iran is at risk of their lives," he said. "Such returns must be stopped."

Jean Lambert, a Green Party MEP for London, who has signed an appeal to the European Commission and the prime ministers of the UK and the Netherlands regarding the Kazemi case, said: "The law is clear that no one should be returned to a country where their life would be in danger and it seems that Mr Kazemi has a very strong case for asylum."

Omar Kuddus of Gay Asylum UK added: "This is a bitter defeat and the deportation back to Iran must be stopped at any cost."

A Home Office spokeswoman confirmed Mr Kazemi had exhausted all his domestic avenues of appeal and could expect to be detained pending his deportation. But she added: "Any further representations will be considered on their merits taking into account all the circumstances."
Independent


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 Post subject: Re: World News
PostPosted: 12 Mar 08, 20:45 
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U.S. Denies U.N. Torture Chief Iraq Access cbsnews


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 Post subject: Re: World News
PostPosted: 12 Mar 08, 20:54 
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Disillusioned with the US, Navratilova defects again Independent


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 Post subject: Re: World News
PostPosted: 13 Mar 08, 0:09 
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MIDDLE EAST: Fallon’s fall highlights debate over U.S. policy on Iran
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 Post subject: Re: World News
PostPosted: 13 Mar 08, 17:20 
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McCain's Spiritual Guide: Destroy Islam motherjones


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 Post subject: Re: World News
PostPosted: 15 Mar 08, 23:46 
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Seeing double: Indian baby born with four eyes, two mouths and two faces
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 Post subject: Re: World News
PostPosted: 16 Mar 08, 23:42 
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Iranian elections: 'We have no hopes for the future'

Anne Penketh in Tehran meets students who have no faith in democracy.

Erfand caught sight of me, notebook in hand, talking to Iranian voters outside the polling station on Tehran's Vanak square on Friday. "Hey, why don't you talk to somebody who didn't vote?" he called out in impeccable English. "We hate this regime and our crazy president," he went on as he offered me a share of his cake.

Erfand is a student at Tehran's Shahid Beheshti university. If the Islamic police had heard him, he would have been hauled off to jail before he had finished his snack. And to challenge the Islamic system means possible execution. For Erfand and his middle-class friends, their future in the Islamic republic promises only disillusion and despair. He plans to emigrate.

"We don't vote because it won't make any difference," he said. "It's like this: if you don't vote, [President Mahmoud] Ahmadinejad's friends will come to power. But if we vote, other countries will look at the turnout and think that we support the government."

Mohamed, a 22-year-old student, said: "The situation is difficult, but you can't do anything about it. It's not just me, but any young person. You can't do anything, you can't demonstrate, there are no rallies, they would arrest you. I voted in the last election, but not again. When the people I wanted didn't get in, I thought: what's the point? I was 100 per cent disappointed."

His girlfriend, Sepideh, an accountancy student, joined in. "We have no hopes for the future," she said. "Our parents can't afford a house – so how can we?" For Sepideh, the fear of the Morality Police is real. Over 2 million people, both men and women, have been detained in the last two years of the government's fashion crackdown against youths with "inappropriate" hairstyles and women whose headscarves reveal too much hair.

One confrontation ended up on YouTube. A girl was arrested for "bad hijab" and some boys stepped in to support her against the police. Then a lot of people gathered and started to chant anti-Islamic slogans."We have no security," said Sepideh. "We are afraid of being arrested by the police. What can we do? Nothing. They say we have to obey."

Negar, a sociology student, said: "A friend of mine was arrested because her trousers were too short, and she wasn't wearing socks. They treated her like a prisoner. They put a number on her. Last summer it got much worse.

"The basic problem for young Iranians is that they don't get enough sex. Where can they go? It's illegal to hold hands with a man who is not in your family, and you can't kiss. Parents disapprove if you go home, so some people make out in cars. If the police see them, they are flogged. In some cafés, they pay the police to turn a blind eye to boys putting their arms round girls, or to girls who take off their headscarves.

"What about Ahmadinejad? He's terrible, but don't tell him. He doesn't pay attention to the people in Tehran, just those who live in small towns."

Independent


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 Post subject: Re: World News
PostPosted: 19 Mar 08, 20:45 
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Savage: Obama was "hand-picked by some very powerful forces ... to drag this country into a hell that it has not seen since the Civil War" mediamatters


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 Post subject: Re: World News
PostPosted: 21 Mar 08, 16:34 
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Will Rush Limbaugh Be Indicted for Voter Fraud? alternet


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 Post subject: Re: World News
PostPosted: 23 Mar 08, 16:00 
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A free Tibet or cheap fridge? It's no contest


By Suzanne Moore

Nancy Pelosi, speaker of the US House of Representatives, has said that "the situation in Tibet is a challenge to the conscience of the world".

The conscience of the world is certainly over-pricked these days but does anyone really doubt that China will brutally suppress the current protests in Tibet?

The imagery of shaven-headed Buddhist monks against such military might is powerful enough to affect those who are not usually interested in politics.

Indeed the struggle for Tibet has always attracted those who don't normally concern themselves with such matters.

Partly this is because of the extraordinary persona of the Dalai Lama, Tibet's spiritual and political leader in exile.

He has kept alive the cause of Tibet through his pragmatic amiability and his genuine commitment to non-violence.

His offer to meet the Chinese leadership is more evidence of that commitment.

So far, the international community has done little more than "urge restraint" on China.

Vague boycotts of the Olympics are mentioned but no one believes this is going to happen.

Although implicit in China's bid for the Olympics was the promise that its success would hasten the development of human rights, it is difficult to see how these can ever be won unless the Chinese people themselves demand them.

At the moment, what they want is more stuff – fridges, cars, air-conditioning, designer bags. The same stuff we already have.

China is a mystifying place because it maintains its totalitarian practices (the removal of journalists from Tibet, the censorship of the internet) at the same time as pursuing ultracapitalism.

Our simple faith that capitalism goes hand in hand with a democratic system has been overturned by the actuality of China, which is what remains so "foreign" about it.

There is a reluctance to criticise China's treatment of Tibet because no one wants to upset this massive producer of consumer goods or relinquish the growing market there.

Some of the Left refuses to do so because it still romanticises communism. Equally, though, the romanticising of Tibet does not address the current situation.

It is no Shangri-La. And, in truth, if it were independent tomorrow it still wouldn't be.

It is a theocracy.

Many monks are not monks because of any spiritualspiritual calling but because they are given no choice.

It is ruled by a largely hereditary elite.

The Dalai Lama may be a giggly, charming chap but the reality is that the Tibetans themselves have suppressed many monks who have wanted a more democratic Tibet.

What is happening in Lhasa is part of what is happening all over China.

The rural poor are neglected.

Economic progress is not filtering down to those who need it most.

As Gabriel Lafitte, adviser to the Tibetan government in exile, writes: "Contemporary Chinese capitalist modernity is as problematic for Tibetans as past state violence and repression."

Where there were prayer flags and temples, there are now office blocks, discos and shopping malls from which many Tibetans are socially excluded.

The recent protests, he argues, are about making Tibet Tibetan once more.

This explains the looting of toilet rolls, which are unfurled over power lines to make them look like the long white scarves with which Tibetans greet each other.

China may not be able to stop this spirit any more than ultimately, in this day and age, it can block footage of Bjork yelling "Tibet, Tibet" at the end of her concert.

But it knows the West cannot even contemplate humanitarian intervention.

The only boycotts that would matter would have to come from the Games' multinational sponsors such as Adidas, Coca-Cola and McDonald's.

Such companies, though, are keen to exploit this new market.

Yet again we are reminded that the whole "clash of civilizations" theory, which centres on Islam, has meant we have ignored so much of what will really shape our future.

One consequence of this is that, whatever our conscience tells us about maroon-draped monks, we will do little to help them.

Free Tibet? Sorry it's been sold down the line for some cheap Chinese gear.
Mailonsunday


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 Post subject: Re: World News
PostPosted: 23 Mar 08, 16:07 
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How war hero John McCain betrayed the Vietnamese peasant who saved his life Mailonsunday


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