Friday, November 9, 2007

Negativity on Islam 'fuels tension'

London Nov. 9th (Press Association): The UK must be careful how it tackles terrorism and treats Islamic culture if it is to avoid recreating a society reminiscent of Nazi Germany, the head of the Muslim Council of Britain has warned. Muhammad Abdul Bari, in an interview with the Daily Telegraph, criticised the Government for fuelling tensions in the Muslim community rather than dissipating them.

He told the paper: "There is a disproportionate amount of discussion surrounding us. The air is thick with suspicion and unease. It is not good for the Muslim community, it is not good for society." The Muslim leader continued: "Every society has to be really careful so that situation does not lead us to a time when people's minds can be poisoned as they were in the 1930s. "If your community is perceived in a very negative manner and poll after poll says that we are alienated then Muslims begin to feel very vulnerable. "We are seen as creating problems, not as bringing anything, and that is not good for society."

The Government's foreign policy and particularly the Iraq war, which he described as a "disaster", had been used by criminals as a weapon to encourage young people into extremism, he said. Dr Bari also criticised the head of MI5, Jonathan Evans, for painting a bleak picture of the terrorist threat the night before the Queen's Speech this week. He said: "I don't think it was a good thing to share information in this way, I think it is creating a scare in the community and wider society. It probably helps some people who try to recruit the young to terrorism." The leader believes integration should be a two-way process and that the emphasis should be on the positive aspects of Muslim culture instead of the threat of al Qaida.

Muslim principles - including stricter attitudes to drinking, sex, marriage, abortion and dress - could improve the country as a whole and add more morality, he argues. Dr Bari said: "Marriage should not be forced on people but parents can be a catalyst... Young people are emotional, they want idealism. Older people have gone through all sorts of things and become a bit more experienced."
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Oprah Case Highlights Abuse in South Africa

Alleged sexual assault at Oprah Winfrey's new girls' school sparks fresh discussion about the widespread problem.

Johannesburg
Christian Science Monitor) Nov. 8th. The allegations were far from unusual: Physical and sexual abuse of young teenage girls. In Sth Africa, where sexual assault rates are among the world's highest, the news would normally surprise few. But over the past month, ever since Oprah Winfrey says students at her new $40 million Leadership Academy for Girls reported that a dorm matron was sexually abusing a classmate, the response has been anything but typical. Ms. Winfrey suspended the suspected staffer, put other school officials on leave and brought in counselors to talk to students. Within weeks, police identified seven alleged victims, arrested 27-year-old Tiny Makopo and charged her with 13 counts of abuse. "This has been one of the most devastating, if not the most devastating, experiences of my life," Winfrey said Monday in an emotional but forceful video address in which she detailed her response to the allegations.

It was a marked change from what children's advocates say they normally see after sexual abuse here: some combination of silence, inaction, and shame. And because of this, they hope that the alleged abuse at Winfrey's school – presented in US media this week as a "scandal" – will help bring attention to what observers call an epidemic of sexual abuse in this country. "It's phenomenal," says Rachel Jewkes, a specialist on sexual violence with South Africa's Medical Research Council, of Winfrey's talk. "I think the message that is sent by this, that [sexual abuse] is utterly unacceptable, is a really powerful one. We never get a message that's so unequivocal about how these acts should be judged. Wouldn't it be wonderful if these acts would always be taken so seriously?"

Even with rape and sexual assault considered underreported crimes in South Africa, the numbers here are staggering: 54,926 reported rapes in 2006 for a country of 47 million, according to the South African Police Force. In the US, whose population is more than six times as large, there were less than double the number of reported rapes that same year – 92,455. For girls, abuse often happens at school, studies show. The 2005 National Youth Victimization Survey, conducted by a team of academics, found that 23 percent of teens between the ages of 12 and 17 had been threatened or harassed at school, and 24 percent had been sexually assaulted at school. In a 1998 health survey, which Dr. Jewkes helped conduct, more than half the women who said they were raped before they turned 15 identified the perpetrator as a teacher. "It's not just these big, high-profile incidents; child sexual abuse is a significant problem, and it has been around for a long time," says Andy Dawes, research director of the Human Sciences Research Council in Cape Town. "[The Winfrey school case] can help put attention to services that children get.... The problem with some of these [media] events, is that there is only a short-time flurry of activity. It's about sustaining the response to this kind of events."

Fairouz Nagia-Luddy, the project coordinator for the domestic violence project of the Western Cape-based Gender Advocacy Programme, says that many girls never report sexual abuse because of cultural pressures. "The problem is the silence around it," she says. Until Oprah, she says, few famous figures have addressed sexual abuse publicly. "It's important to create awareness at all levels," she says. "Role models coming up and speaking about it is one way of doing it. "Students abused by teachers are often loath to report the crimes for fear of retaliation, advocates say. In addition to the problem of girls being afraid to report abuse, a 2001 Human Rights Watch report documented widespread incompetence when it came to following up on girls' complaints. The report found "a great deal of confusion over responsibility for resolving problems and repeatedly encountered breaks in the chain of communication between school officials, police, and prosecutors, with all actors shifting responsibility and sexually abused girls getting lost in the shuffle."

In a new study that Jewkes is working on, she says a close review of thousands of police rape files also shows consistent investigative lapses – investigators losing track of a victim because they never asked for her phone number or address, for instance. "The patterns of failures of policing are incredible and they are repetitive," she says. "A lot of cases fall down because very basic things aren't done." These won't be issues in the Leadership Academy case, Winfrey says. "It is one of my goals in life to put child abusers, whether they be in my home, whether they be in my workplace, or, in this case, in the Academy, to put them where they belong," she said. "And that is behind bars." Earlier this week Makopo appeared in the Sebokeng Magistrate's court south of Johannesburg and heard the charges against her – indecent assault, common assault, soliciting a minor to perform indecent acts, and verbal abuse. She told the court she intended to plead not guilty.
By Stephanie Hanes Scott Baldauf contributed to this report.
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Thursday, November 8, 2007

Bhutto Gives Musharraf Ultimatum

ISLAMABAD (Reuters) Nov. 7th. Former Pakistan prime minister Benazir Bhutto threatened on Wednesday to lead a mass protest march to the capital unless President Gen. Pervez Musharraf quits as army chief, holds elections and restores the constitution. Ms. Bhutto, leader of the largest opposition party and the politician most capable of mobilizing street power, gave Gen. Musharraf until Friday to comply.

Government officials have said national elections due in January will be held on time and a member of Gen. Musharraf's inner circle said emergency rule was likely to be lifted within 2 or 3 weeks. But Gen. Musharraf, who took power in a 1999 coup and imposed emergency rule last Saturday citing a hostile judiciary and rising militancy, has not yet personally confirmed either. "We can't work for dictatorship. We can work for democracy," Ms. Bhutto told a news conference in Islamabad after meeting members of her Pakistan People's Party and smaller opposition parties. "General Musharraf can open the door for negotiations only if he revives the constitution, retires as chief of army staff and sticks to the schedule of holding elections." She said her supporters would begin to march on Nov. 13 from the eastern city of Lahore, capital of Punjab province and the nation's political nerve-centre, to Islamabad to stage a sit-in. "The ball is now in government's court," said Ms. Bhutto. Her party is also due to hold a public protest rally in the garrison town of Rawalpindi, next to Islamabad, on Nov. 9 — which police said would be blocked.

Ms. Bhutto, with Gen. Musharraf's blessing, returned to Pakistan from almost eight years of self-imposed exile on Oct. 18, amid speculation that she could end up sharing power with him after elections, forging a partnership favoured by the United States. Police have arrested hundreds of lawyers and opposition figures and supporters since Saturday, and courts remained virtually deserted across Pakistan on Wednesday in a boycott by lawyers angry at the crackdown. The main reason for imposing emergency rule and suspending the constitution appears to have been the removal of judges who appeared hostile to the government, analysts say. The Supreme Court had been hearing challenges to the legality of Gen. Musharraf's Oct. 6 re-election by parliament while still army chief, and fears the decision could have gone against the general were believed to have been the main motive for his move. The only public protests of any size so far have been led by lawyers, outraged by the dismissal of independent-minded judges such as ousted chief justice Iftikhar Chaudhry, who is being held incommunicado at his residence in Islamabad.

As arrests have mounted lawyers' protests have become smaller and more subdued. Fewer than a dozen men wearing black waistcoats over their shalwar kameez marched toward the High Court in Lahore on Wednesday chanting "Go Musharraf Go", before being pummelled and detained by plain clothes security officials. Announcing the emergency and suspension of the constitution, the general said he was being hampered by a hostile judiciary while fighting rising militancy and asked in vain for Western allies' understanding. The United States and Britain were joined by the 27-nation European Union in urging Gen. Musharraf to release all political detainees, including members of the judiciary, relax media curbs, and seek reconciliation with political opponents. The EU said Gen. Musharraf should stick to a pledge to step down as army chief this month and hold elections in January. The Commonwealth, a 53-nation group of mainly former British colonies, called a special ministerial meeting in London next week to discuss the state of emergency in Pakistan.

However the Karachi stock market, which fell 4.6 per cent on Monday, has since stabilized thanks to perceived low prices and a boost to oil stocks from international crude prices. The market is still up around 34 per cent since the start of the year, but has come off around 10 per cent amid deepening political uncertainty since scaling historic highs on Oct. 22. Washington has said it will review aid to Pakistan, which has reached nearly $10 billion since the Sept. 11 attacks. But it has yet to come up with a clear stance for dealing with a nuclear-armed country which is on the front line in the battle against al Qaeda and the Taliban. A White House spokeswoman said President George W. Bush had not telephoned Gen. Musharraf since he imposed emergency rule and described the general's act as "a mistake". Critics of Gen. Musharraf's decision to declare emergency rule say he may have made Pakistan more unstable.
ZEESHAN HAIDER
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Tuesday, November 6, 2007

Aung San Suu Kyi Set for Talks with UN Envoy

November 6th: (Guardian) The detained Burmese democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi is set to meet the UN envoy to the country today. The move is another attempt to resolve the country's political crisis amid reports that she is being treated for an unknown illness.

Ibrahim Gambari has returned to Burma earlier than scheduled to discuss the fallout from the brutal crackdown of anti-government protests in September. He has been holding talks with the senior figures in the ruling military junta in their remote new capital, Naypyitaw, and is hoping to again to persuade the generals to talk to opposition leaders. Mr Gambari is expected to travel to the former capital, Rangoon, to meet Ms Suu Kyi, who is under house arrest. Her party, the National League for Democracy, told the Irrawaddy - a website run by exiled Burmese journalist in Thailand - that doctors had been visiting her home. "We do not know yet whether she is suffering from a serious illness or not," the site's spokesman, Nyan Win, said.

Ms Suu Kyi, who is 62, appeared in public for the first time in several years in September when protesting monks gathered outside her home. Pictures of her holding previous talks with Mr Gambari also appeared. She is known to have suffered back pains and problems with her teeth in the past. Mark Farmaner, the acting director of the Burma Campaign UK, said: "She did not look at all well in the pictures with Gambari. She has always been thin, but she looked unusually thin and uncomfortable, and she is normally quite vibrant." He said reports of the democracy leader's failing health could provide added impetus to resolve the crisis, and urged Mr Gambari to take a tougher stance with the generals.

"The UN needs to stop tiptoeing around and start showing some muscle," he added. "The softly softly approach of the UN has got nowhere and has allowed the regime to keep delaying any reform or dialogue. If Mr Gambari can't get negotiations going this time, he will have failed, and the UN director general himself should take over negotiations because the regime shows no respect for UN envoys."

Burma's leading general, Than Shwe, again kept the UN envoy waiting during the current visit. He has refused to talk to him since he arrived on Saturday. On his last trip, Mr Gambari eventually met Gen Shwe after four days of negotiations. After the visit, the general said he would only meet Ms Suu Kyi if she dropped demands for human rights in Burma and calls for sanctions against the regime. The National League for Democracy rejected the demands. Last Friday, the junta announced it would expel the top UN official in the country, Charles Petrie.

It accused him of going beyond his duties by issuing a statement criticising the generals' failure to meet the economic and humanitarian needs of the people and saying this had been the cause of September's protests. The military brutally cracked down on September's protests, firing into crowds and arresting thousands of demonstrators. There have been only two open demonstrations since.
Matthew Weaver and agencies
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