Daily Report

Woman miscarries during deportation

Immigrant rights advocates rallied in New York and Philadelphia on Feb. 14 to protest the treatment of a Chinese woman, three months pregnant, who miscarried twins while immigration authorities tried to deport her from JFK airport in New York on Feb. 7. Zhenxing Jiang has lived in Philadelphia for 11 years; she and her husband have two US-born sons, ages four and seven.

Palestinian immigrant sues NYC

On Feb. 9, Palestinian immigrant Waheed Saleh filed a lawsuit against the city of New York in US District Court in Manhattan, charging that police reported him to immigration authorities in retaliation for his complaints about police discrimination. The lawsuit seeks unspecified damages, alleging that Saleh's constitutional rights including free speech were violated and that he suffered extreme pain and hardship as a result of his improper arrest, detention and deportation proceedings. Saleh is represented by attorney Tushar Sheth of the Asian American Legal Defense and Education Fund (AALDEF).

NYC: anti-cartoon protest peaceful

From the New York Times, emphasis added. We say it is a credit to New York's tolerant (some would say blasé) atmosphere that the city's anti-cartoon protest was peaceful and the attitude of its leaders openly humanistic—although there were, as the Times puts it, a small group of "provocateurs." In the print edition, the story was accompanied by a photo of protesters holding up printed signs. One urged "READ HISTORY TO KNOW MUHAMMAD (pbuh)," a recommendation that WW4 REPORT heartily seconds. Frustratingly, the most critical sign was cropped just above the most critical word: "RESPONSIBLE EDITORS MUST BE..." Must be what? Educated? Punished? Fired? Beheaded? If anybody was at the protest and saw this sign, please contact us and let us know!

US to fund Syria "regime change"

As we recently noted in the case of Iran, the Bush administration seems divided between Pentagon hardliners who seek a military solution and State Department pragmatists who would pursue a peaceful "regime change" scenario in Syria. But these are not mutually exclusive options, of course. In most recent cases of Washington effecting a power transfer in a targeted country—from Nicaragua in 1989 to Yugoslavia in 2000—a combination of external military pressure and internal political support was brought to bear.

Bush sees new NATO role in Darfur; Chad oil project in background

Its amazing how much the New York Times can say without directly saying it. In today's edition are twin front-page stories on Darfur and Chad. Read together they convey much more about US interests in the Sahel than either states explicitly.

While the world media have largely ignored it, readers of WW4 REPORT will be aware that since last spring NATO has been providing air support for the African Union "peacekeepers" in Darfur. Now, the Times reports, Bush is calling for an expansion of NATO's role in the conflict:

Northern Nigeria explodes

The Niger Delta, in Nigeria's south, has long been beset by ethnic struggles over distribution of the region's oil wealth. Now the north, where Muslim-Christian tensions have long simmered, is boiling over—ostensibly over the cartoon controversy, but one wonders what local Nigerian Christians have to do with Danish cartoonists.

LA County gets "Abu Ghraib"?

With the world's attention distracted by some off-color cartoons, it looks like we've got a little domestic Abu Ghraib developing in Los Angeles. The official hand-wringing about "core values" is as nauseating as it is requisite. From the LA Times, Feb. 18:

More than 100 inmates at a Los Angeles County jail were ordered to strip naked, had their mattresses taken away and were left with only blankets to cover themselves for a day as Los Angeles Sheriff's Department officials tried to quell racially charged violence that has plagued the jail system for nearly two weeks.

Indonesians see "slap in face" in corporate pollution settlement

Indonesia's Environment Ministry is evidently caught between ecologists and nationalists demanding a tougher line on foreign corporate polluters and a judiciary that seems beholden to the corporate shadow government. The New York Times noted Feb. 17 that under the terms of the $30 million out-of-court settlement (termed a "goodwill agreement"), the government will drop its $135 suit filed against Newmont Mining of Colorado after villagers near its gold mine at Buyat Bay in North Sulawesi developed tumors, rashes and other illnesses caused by mine waste. From the Jakarta Post, Feb. 18:

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