Daily Report
Eritrea: reporters "died in custody"?
From IRIN, Nov. 16:
NAIROBI - Three Eritrean reporters who have been in detention in a remote northeastern jail for five years are believed to have died in unclear circumstances, a global media freedom watchdog reported.
State of emergency in Chad
From Somalia's Garowe Online, Nov. 15:
Chad has imposed a 12-day curfew in its capital to counter growing tension between Arab tribes and local inhabitants.
So, what was up with that "macaca" jive anyway?
It is a real sign of hope that there is more to be lost than gained from overt racism (at least) in American politics, even in Dixieland. Former senator George Allen's foot-in-mouth routine brought to light a particularly anachronistic epithet. India's IBN shed some light, Nov. 9—although we caught a small inaccuracy:
Fear of music in Eritrea
No surer sign of creeping (or galloping) totalitarianism. From AP, Nov. 5:
ASMARA, Eritrea -- Gospel singer Helen Berhane, who belonged to a banned evangelical church in Eritrea, has been released after more than two years in detention, a human rights group said.
Rwanda probes French link to genocide
From The New Times, Kigali, Nov. 12 via AllAfrica:
An unprecedented public inquiry into France's role in the 1994 Genocide in Rwanda held hearings in Kigali last week, where the French army was accused of complicity in the massacre of Tutsi and modreate Hutu.
Aussie mining company implicated in Congo massacre
The election results from the Democratic Republic of Congo are in—and predictably contested. The incumbent Joseph Kabila (and son of the late Laurent Kabila, leader of the 1996 revolution) has been declared victor, while supporters of contender Jean-Pierre Bemba, a "former rebel warlord," pledge "the people will resist this fraud." (The Guardian, Nov. 16) Rarely do media accounts explore how Western powers and corporate interests have exploited, fueled and manipulated Congo's chaotic and incessant wars over the past ten years since the Mobutu dictatorship was overthrown. Here's a relevant nugget from Left-Green Weekly Nov. 9 via Toward Freedom:
Next: Iran-al-Qaeda link?
It was inevitable, but that doesn't make it any more probable. How can the GWOT propagandists buy this thesis while Tehran's agents and al-Qaeda's local franchise are locked in a death struggle for control of Iraq? Maybe it's because they're too dumb to tell Sunnis from Shi'ites—or think we are. From The Telegraph, Nov. 15:
Iran 'is training the next al-Qa'eda leaders'
Iran is seeking to take control of Osama bin Laden's al-Qa'eda terror network by encouraging it to promote officials known to be friendly to Teheran, The Daily Telegraph can reveal.
War crimes charges filed against Rumsfeld
From UPI, Nov. 14, links added:
WASHINGTON -- A Pentagon spokesman dismissed as "frivolous" a lawsuit alleging war crimes filed in Germany Tuesday against Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld.
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