Monday, December 3, 2007

U.N. Official Criticizes Sudan for Resisting Peace Force in Darfur

UNITED NATIONS, Nov. 27 (NY Times) — The United Nations’ top peacekeeping official said Tuesday that obstacles created by the Sudanese government were jeopardizing the deployment of the joint African Union-United Nations force in Darfur. The force, which will ultimately number 26,000 members, is to replace a 7,000-member African Union force that has been overwhelmed by the scope of the crisis in Darfur, which has driven 2.5 million people from their land and cost the lives of at least 200,000. The new force is scheduled to start operating Jan. 1. The official, Jean-Marie Guéhenno, told the Security Council that Sudan was resisting accepting specialized troops from non-African militaries that were critical to the mission, blocking support staff and materials from the area through bureaucratic maneuvers, and withholding needed land and permissions for the assignment of helicopters.

In addition, he said, the government in Khartoum was asserting the right to close down the force’s communications when its own army was operating in the area and was refusing to give United Nations planes clearance to fly at night. “The mission has the mandate to protect civilians,” Mr. Guéhenno said, “and that responsibility does not end at sunset.” He said the actions left the United Nations with “hard choices. Do we move ahead with the deployment of a force that will not make a difference, that will not have the capability to defend itself, and that carries the risk of humiliation of the Security Council and the United Nations, and tragic failure for the people of Darfur?” he asked.

Sudan’s ambassador, Abdalmahmood Abdalhaleem Mohamad, rejected the charges, saying that his country “has carried out an intense effort to fulfill its obligations.” Outside the Council chamber, he rebuked Mr. Guéhenno for “taking technical issues and blowing them out of proportion” and continuing the peacekeeping department’s “habit of accusing Sudan for their mistakes and failures.” The non-African forces that Khartoum has refused to approve are an infantry battalion from Thailand, special forces from Nepal, and an engineering company from Norway and Sweden. They were first proposed in a letter from Secretary General Ban Ki-moon to the Sudanese on Oct. 2 that has gotten no response. The United Nations has no alternatives to the use of those units, Mr. Guéhenno said. He added that he was disturbed by reports out of Khartoum that officials were also going back on their agreement to let the force wear the blue berets that carry United Nations insignia, an essential condition, he said, for those countries that have agreed to contribute troops.

Zalmay Khalilzad, the American ambassador, said Sudan “absolutely must demonstrate through its statements and actions its intent to accept and facilitate an effective peacekeeping force in Darfur. Based on what we have heard today from Mr. Guéhenno,” he said, “it appears the government of Sudan has thus far failed to do so.” John Sawers, Britain’s ambassador, said he was convinced that a timely fielding of the force was being made “impossible” by Sudan’s “foot-dragging and obstruction.”
By WARREN HOGE
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Outbreak of Rare Ebola Virus in Uganda Worsens

KAMPALA, Uganda, Dec 2 (Reuters) - The number of Ugandans infected by a new strain of the deadly Ebola virus has risen to 58, raising fears the death toll of 18 will also increase from the outbreak in a remote area near Democratic Republic of Congo. The half dozen extra infections in recent days include some medical staff who were treating victims of the haemorrhagic fever which has swept the western Bundibugyo region since August. "Four of our medical personnel, including a doctor and three nurses, have been isolated in Bundibugyo Hospital after catching the virus," said Dr. Sam Okware, head of Uganda's national hemorrhagic fever task force. "We now have a team of experts on the ground to try and contain further spreading of the virus." Genetic analysis of samples taken from some of the victims shows it is a previously unknown type of Ebola, making it the fifth strain, U.S. and Ugandan health officials say.

Ebola can cause internal and external bleeding. Victims often die of shock, but symptoms can be vague, including fever, muscle pain and nausea. It is known to infect humans, chimpanzees and gorillas. Uganda was last hit by an epidemic of Ebola in 2000, when 425 people caught it and just over half of them died, including a doctor treating victims. An outbreak in neighbouring Congo this year infected up to 264 people, killing 187.
(Reporting by Francis Kwera, writing by Andrew Cawthorne; editing by Myra MacDonald)
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Saturday, December 1, 2007

One in Three in G7 Ignorant About AIDS

UNITED NATIONS (Reuters)Nov. 29th. - One in three adults in the world's top industrial democracies say they know little or nothing about AIDS, a disease thought to have killed more than 28 million people in the past 26 years, a poll showed on Thursday. But the survey, carried out by Ipsos for the World Vision charity, found that in the seven countries studied, 44 percent of respondents would be willing to pay more taxes to combat AIDS, including 50 percent in the United States.

More than 3,500 people in the United States, Canada, Britain, France, Germany, Italy and Japan -- the Group of Eight countries minus Russia -- were interviewed for the survey, released ahead of U.N. World AIDS Day on Saturday. Richard Stearns, president of World Vision U.S., a Christian group that says it combats poverty and injustice worldwide, told a United Nations news conference that millions were ignorant of AIDS because it was "not real" for them. "It's not personal, it is somebody else's problem and somebody else's disease, and very often in a place very, very far away and remote from their everyday lives," he said.

AIDS, which attacks the immune system and can be spread by sexual contact or blood transfusion, was first detected in the United States in 1981. World Vision says some 6,000 children a day currently lose a parent to AIDS. The Ipsos poll found that in the countries surveyed, Canadians were the most concerned about AIDS and Japanese the least. Japan was also the country where the most people -- 53 percent -- admitted to little or no knowledge of the disease. Germans said they were the most knowledgeable, with 80 percent claiming to know "some" or "a lot" about the issue. The comparable figure for the United States was 70 percent. In the countries taken together, one in four people thought the AIDS problem had been "greatly exaggerated" by the media, the survey said. Nevertheless, Stearns said he believed the citizens of the countries polled were "ahead of their governments" in their view of how much should be done to fight AIDS. "I think that goes contrary to the view in Washington," he said. "I don't think Washington realizes that that many Americans care about AIDS at that level. "So in a way it gives them the political cover to do more because ... when you have 50 percent of the country saying 'you could raise my taxes if you could use that money to do more for HIV and AIDS,' that's a message that our politicians I think are not aware of," he said.

The United Nations says some 33 million people worldwide are infected by HIV, the virus that causes AIDS, including those who have developed the illness.
By Patrick Worsnip
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Friday, November 30, 2007

Rights Advocate Fights Back

JIDDAH, Saudi Arabia, Nov. 28 (Washington Post) -- A human rights lawyer who has defended a gang-rape victim sentenced to jail time and lashes said Wednesday that he is suing the Justice Ministry for revoking his license and for defaming his client by accusing her of having an affair. Abdul-Rahman al-Lahem's license was suspended this month in the eastern town of Qatif, where his client was sentenced to six months in jail and 200 lashes on a morals charge after she and a male companion were kidnapped by seven men and raped.

The Justice Ministry said in a statement last week that the 20-year-old married woman had "confessed to having an affair with the man she was caught with." The statement also said she was not fully clothed when she and her male companion were seized at knifepoint. "The Justice Ministry's accusing my client of adultery, without proof, is illegal. It is a crime, and they, better than anyone else, should know that," Lahem said. "I am suing them to protect my client's honor and because no one, including the Justice Ministry, should be above the law." The Saudi National Human Rights Association, a government-financed group, has requested an explanation for the revocation of Lahem's license by the Qatif court. "We are questioning the legality of them taking his permit," said Saleh al-Khathlan, a member of the group. "We are hoping that this is not a reaction to his being so active in the field of human rights and his criticisms of the system, and that they're not trying to punish him for being so outspoken."

The victim, known only as the Girl of Qatif, her home town, was in a car with the male acquaintance, trying to retrieve old pictures of herself, when the attack occurred last year, Lahem said. The woman and her companion were originally sentenced to 90 lashes for being alone in a car, illegal in this strictly gender-segregated country because they are not related. The rapists received sentences ranging from 10 months to five years. When the sentences were appealed, a superior court increased the punishment of both victims and nearly doubled the rapists' sentences. Lashes are usually administered 50 at a time in a private room in prison. On a satellite television program Tuesday, Abdul-Mohsen al-Obaikan, a Justice Ministry consultant and former judge, said the woman was to blame for the sentences, which he described as lenient. "Nobody accepts that his wife cheats on him, and that she betrays her marital vows and sullies her marital bed," he said.
By Faiza Saleh Ambah
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US, Japan, France Get Low Aid Ranking

Nov. 29th. (Financial Times) Sweden, Norway, Denmark and the Netherlands have been ranked as the top four aid donors in providing relief for humanitarian disasters, according to a new index published on Thursday. The study, launched by Kofi Annan, the former United Nations secretary-general, ranks 23 aid donors from the Organisation of Economic Co-operation and Development according to the effectiveness and impartiality of their relief efforts in eight crisis-hit countries.

In contrast to the Scandinavian nations, major donors such as the US, Japan and France rank in the bottom half of the index, with low scores for tests such as impartiality and implementing international humanitarian laws. France is criticised for its failure to work effectively with other aid agencies. The humanitarian response index, drawn up by Dara International, a Madrid-based evaluation agency, ranks the European Commission in fifth place, in spite of frequent criticism of its bureaucratic procedures. The UK ranks ninth, Germany 13th, and the US 16th out of the 23. The bottom two countries are Italy and Greece.

2006 International Aid Donated (Official Development Assistance)
COUNTRY For each $100 earned in the country, how much
is donated in aid
Aid as % of income How close the country is to reaching the 0.7% goal
Sweden 103 cents 1.03 Already reached goal
Luxembourg 89 cents 0.89 Already reached goal
Norway 89 cents 0.89 Already reached goal
Netherlands 81 cents 0.81 Already reached goal
Denmark 80 cents 0.80 Already reached goal
Ireland 53 cents 0.53 Scheduled to reach in 2012
United Kingdom 52 cents 0.52 Scheduled to reach in 2013
Belgium 50 cents 0.50 Scheduled to reach in 2010
Austria 48 cents 0.48 Scheduled to reach in 2015
France 47 cents 0.47 Scheduled to reach in 2012
Switzerland 39 cents 0.39 No schedule yet
Finland 39 cents 0.39 Scheduled to reach in 2010
Germany 36 cents 0.36 Scheduled to reach in 2014
Spain 32 cents 0.32 Scheduled to reach in 2012
Canada 30 cents 0.30 No schedule yet
Australia 30 cents 0.30 No schedule yet
New Zealand 27 cents 0.27 No schedule yet
Japan 25 cents 0.25 No schedule yet
Portugal 21 cents 0.21 Scheduled to reach in 2015
Italy 20 cents 0.20 Scheduled to reach in 2015
United States 17 cents 0.17 No schedule yet
Greece 16 cents 0.16 Scheduled to reach in 2015
Details
Poverty keeps hungry people from buying enough food to nourish themselves. Poverty keeps sick people from receiving basic medical treatment or taking simple preventative measures. The vast majority of these preventable deaths occur among the poorest people in the poorest countries.
In September 2000, the 189 countries of the United Nations unanimously agreed to “spare no effort to free our fellow men, women and children from the abject and dehumanizing conditions of extreme poverty,” specifically hunger and the “major diseases that afflict humanity.” To accomplish this great objective would be expensive, and the price was later estimated at about $195 billion a year. It would be very difficult for this amount of money to be raised by private charities or individuals. It would require the combined efforts of governments throughout the world to do it. In the September 2002 Johannesburg Summit, these same 22 counties re-affirmed their commitment to reach the 0.7% goal. This would provide enough money to raise the $195 billion per year.
Why the 0.7% Agreement?
The countries made this agreement because they realized that it was hard for each country on its own to give a consistent, minimum level of aid each year. Despite good intentions, a country would find that the aid it wanted to give was eaten away by competing political interests, concern about budget deficits, “problems at home,” “problems abroad,” and so on. So they agreed to a minimal, flat rate that each country could afford each year regardless of its current political or economic state. The 0.7% figure may sound complicated, but it is actually quite simple. You take the total income earned by all the people in the country and then the government gives 0.7% (seven tenths of one percent) of that as aid. Or to look at it another way: for every $100 earned in the country, the country gives 70 cents in aid.
How are the countries doing?
As the chart above shows, five countries have already met the goal to give 0.7% of their income in international aid: Denmark, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Norway, and Sweden. In 2002 and 2003, five other countries set up a schedule to give 0.7%: Belgium, Ireland, Finland, France, and Spain. In July 2004, the United Kingdom set up a schedule to give 0.7%. In April 2005, Germany set up a schedule to give 0.7%. In May 2005, Austria, Greece, Italy, and Portugal set up a schedule to give 0.7%. It was not easy for many of the countries to set up a schedule to reach the 0.7% goal. In some cases, such as Britain and Germany, it took the combined effort of many thousands of citizens writing and petitioning their government to get it done.
The remaining six countries
Only six countries have not yet set up a schedule to give 0.7%. These are Australia, Canada, Japan, New Zealand, Switzerland, and the United States. To raise the $195 billion a year, these six will need to reach the goal. These six countries are all democracies. All that is necessary for them to reach the 0.7% goal is for enough of their citizens to show their support.

Sources: UN Millennium Project, United Nations Development Program (UNDP), The End of Poverty (Jeffrey D. Sachs), Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD).

International Aid ― A Solution
Quick Summary: Almost all of the deaths from hunger and disease can be stopped. The cost to do this is about $195 billion a year, according to the United Nations. Twenty-two developed countries above have pledged to work towards each giving 0.7% (a little less than 1%) of their national income in international aid, which would raise the $195 billion. Some countries are slow to meet their pledge.
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Wednesday, November 28, 2007

Ethiopia 'bogged down' in Somalia

BBC Nov. 28th: Ethiopia's Prime Minister Meles Zenawi has acknowledged that his troops cannot withdraw from the conflict in Somalia. Mr Meles said he had expected to withdraw his soldiers earlier in the year, after Islamists had been driven out of the Somali capital, Mogadishu. But he said divisions within the Somali government had left it unable to replace the Ethiopians, while not enough peacekeepers had arrived. Some 60% of Mogadishu residents have fled clashes in the city, the UN says.

The Ethiopians intervened a year ago to oust the Union of Islamic Courts, which had taken control of much of southern Somalia. Their presence is unpopular in Mogadishu and earlier this month, insurgents dragged the bodies of Ethiopian troops through the city. "Having done the main work, we had the belief and expectations that a situation would be created for us to be able to withdraw," Mr Meles told MPs. "However, this belief and expectations could not be met according to our plan.

He has always said the Ethiopians would pull out when a peacekeeping force was deployed. But only 1,600 Ugandans have arrived, from a planned 8,000-strong African Union force. The UN is divided on plans for it take over the mission. UN chief Ban Ki-moon says it is too dangerous to send troops to Mogadishu. The UN refugee agency says one million people have fled their homes in Somalia, including 200,000 this month, following the latest clashes between insurgents and the Ethiopian-backed government. Last week, new Somali Prime Minister Nur Adde said he wanted to hold talks with the opposition. Somalia has not had a functioning national government since President Mohamed Siad Barre was overthrown in 1991.
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Sudan Continues to Obstruct Peacekeepers, U.N. Official Charges

UNITED NATIONS, Nov. 27 (Washington Post) -- Sudan's government has imposed a series of new bureaucratic obstacles that undermine the ability of a U.N.-backed peacekeeping mission in Darfur to protect civilians and its own troops there, according to the United Nations' top peacekeeping official. Jean-Marie Guéhenno, the U.N. undersecretary general for peacekeeping, told the U.N. Security Council on Tuesday that Sudan has insisted that international troops provide Sudan the authority to "temporarily disable" the mission's communications network if Sudanese forces are engaged in a military operation and to provide advance notice of all the mission's troop movements.

The latest Sudanese restrictions came to light just five weeks before a joint U.N. African Union mission of 26,000 peacekeepers is scheduled to formally replace a smaller African Union force in the Darfur region. The moves threatened to derail a U.S.-backed diplomatic effort at the United Nations to restore calm in one of Africa's deadliest regions. Abdalmahmood Abdalhaleem Mohamad, Sudan's ambassador to the United Nations, denied that his government was dragging its feet, saying that Guéhenno was blowing out of proportion a "small technical" dispute. The ambassador said the U.N. peacekeeping department has developed a habit of blaming Sudan for its own failure to meet its schedule for deploying a force in Darfur. Gu¿henno said Sudanese President Omar Hassan al-Bashir is backtracking from his commitments to support an international mission in Darfur, and the undersecretary appealed to the Security Council and influential African governments to persuade Khartoum to cooperate more fully. "A strategic decision on the part of the government of Sudan is necessary if we are to achieve our common goal: peace and security in Darfur," he said.

The violence in Darfur began in February 2003, when two Darfurian rebel groups took up arms against the country's Islamic government. A government-backed counterinsurgency campaign has driven more than 2 million civilians from their homes and led to the deaths of hundreds of thousands more. The United Nations' top political envoy, Jan Eliasson of Sweden, told the council that more than 30,000 people have been displaced by fighting between government and rebel forces over the past month. In recent weeks, Sudan has engaged in bureaucratic delays that raise concern about its commitment to the new peacekeeping mission, Guéhenno said. Khartoum has yet to grant the mission authority to conduct night flights in Darfur or to deploy six helicopters in an airfield close to its headquarters in El Fasher. The government has impounded U.N. communications equipment in the El Fasher airport for weeks and has yet to grant land for encampments in the towns of El Geneina and Zalingei. "If the government doesn't give us the land we need immediately, we will have to hold back some units," Guéhenno said. Khartoum refused to authorize the participation of non-African troops whose role is vital to the mission's success, according to Guéhenno. The new Sudanese demands, he said, "would make it impossible for the mission to operate."

Guéhenno also raised concern about new reports that two Darfurian rebel factions have threatened an advance unit of Chinese military engineers. And he faulted the U.N. membership for failing to provide the mission with trucks, as well as transport and attack helicopters. "Do we move ahead with the deployment of a force that will not make a difference," Guéhenno asked, "that will not have the capability to defend itself, and that carries the risk of humiliation of the Security Council and the United Nations and tragic failure for the people of Darfur?"
Colum Lynch"
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Sunday, November 25, 2007

Pope Creates 23 New Cardinals

VATICAN CITY (AFP) — 23 new cardinals knelt before Pope Benedict XVI on Saturday to accept their birettas -- square red hats -- during a time-honoured ceremony inducting them into the elite body that advises and elects popes. The 23 new "princes of the Church," of whom five are 80 or older and thus ineligible to vote in a papal election, fill out the ranks of the College of Cardinals to 201, including 120 cardinals who will be tasked with choosing his successor. "Dear brothers, as you enter the College of Cardinals, the Lord asks you and entrusts you with the service of love: love for God, love for his Church ... with maximum and unconditional dedication," the pope told the freshmen in Saint Peter's Basilica. Using the Latin phrase "usque ad sanguinis effusionem" (to the point of spilling blood), the pope reminded the new cardinals that their red robes signify their willingness to die for their faith.

The 80-year-old head of the Roman Catholic Church was clad in a gold embroidered cope or mantle from the 15th century and the mitre of his 19th-century predecessor Pius IX, underscoring his fondness for the liturgical splendours of the past. In his homily, Benedict singled out the elevation of the patriarch of Babylon for the Chaldeans, which he said reflected his wish to express his spiritual closeness and affection for the Iraqi people. "How can one not turn one's gaze with apprehension and affection, in this moment of joy, to the dear Christian communities in Iraq?" he asked, drawing loud applause from the prelates assembled in Saint Peter's Basilica. Emmanuel III Delly, the 80-year-old spiritual leader of Iraqi Christians, said Friday that the honour was for "all Iraqis."

The cardinals, their red robes overlaid with white surplices symbolising purity, then accepted their red birettas from the pope in the solemn ritual known as a consistory. In a brief salute to the pope on behalf of all the new cardinals, prelate Leonardo Sandri said: "We are ready to follow you when ... you teach that marriage and family are the original unit of society, that life extends from conception to its natural end." The freshmen are the second group of cardinals created by Benedict since his election in April 2005, having inducted 15 in March last year. Announced five weeks ago, the new influx does not alter the geographical balance of the College of Cardinals, which is heavily weighted in favour of Europe. Thirteen Europeans join two North Americans, four Latin Americans, two Africans and two Asians in the new group. Europe accounts for an ever-shrinking percentage of the overall Catholic population, while nearly half of the world's Catholics are in Latin America, which combined with Africa and Asia make up some two-thirds of the 1.1 billion-strong Church.

Vatican expert John Allen of the National Catholic Reporter noted after the nominations were announced last month: "Unconsciously (the pope) is perpetuating a situation in which the electoral college of the Church is increasingly unrepresentative of the people at the grassroots." Some three-quarters of the cardinals are the heads of the Church's largest archdioceses, while most of the rest head departments of the Vatican administration known as congregations. The new cardinals include seven Vatican prelates and 11 archbishops of key cities including Paris, Spain's Valencia and Barcelona, Sao Paulo in Brazil, Mumbai in India and Dakar in Senegal. From Africa there is also Nairobi Archbishop John Njue.

The new cardinals were to receive the gold ring of their high office during a mass on Sunday. On Friday, Benedict held a closed-door meeting with all the cardinals to discuss the Church's relations with other Christian faiths. The participants noted a "thaw" in ties with the Russian Orthodox Church but continuing difficulties with Protestant churches because of differences over "ethical questions," according to a Vatican communique. The cardinals hailed recent "encouraging signs" in the Holy See's relations with Islam, notably with an appeal for dialogue by 138 Muslim leaders, and Pope Benedict's meeting at the Vatican earlier this month with Saudi King Abdullah, the statement said.
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Saturday, November 24, 2007

We Must Invest in What Unites Us

Remarks by Peter D. Sutherland SC, Special Representative of the Secretary General of the United Nations for Migration & Development.
Dunboyne, Ireland: Nov. 23rd. Thank you for inviting me to speak here today. When I was appointed by Kofi Annan to be his Special Representative on Migration and Development in late 2005 I thought that my role would end following the High Level Dialogue to take place in the General Assembly in Sept. 2007. However, my term has been extended twice and the new Secretary-General Ban Ki Moon asked me to stay on until after the Conference scheduled for Manila in November 2008. I have done so because the subject seems to me to be one of the three or four great issues of our time and one that has a particular resonance here because of our history and the realities of the challenges we now face. This small and formerly homogenous place has to adapt to a world where we are no longer a country of origin for migrants but one of destination. I was driven to do this because as I looked around, it seemed that in many parts of the world policy was being made by anecdote—or policy wasn’t being made at all, because it was too dangerous politically. To date, we have had two conferences and many intervening meetings at intergovernmental level and I am pleased to acknowledge that the Irish Government has played a proactive role financially and through its participation.

But even though my responsibilities are at an international level, the migration debate always returns to intensely personal & local concerns. What people read about in the papers is not, as much as I might like it to be, the success of the Global Forum. The stories, instead, are about how immigration is affecting our daily lives. Does it help or hurt our economy? Can our schools & hospitals handle our growing populations? Should the veil be worn in schools? How do we confront such troubling, but not illegal, cultural traditions as arranged marriages? And, at heart, underlying so many of these articles, and the conversations we have amongst ourselves, is the question: Can we all get along? We are worried about how people with very different traditions and cultures can find a way of sharing the same space. In recent years, in Ireland and in much of the West, this concern has crystallized around the question of whether multicultural policies have failed. Those who would like to bury such policies argue that we have sacrificed national identity and social cohesion at the altar of cultural correctness. Instead, they say, we should promote policies that favour assimilation. In much of Europe, as well as in Canada & Australia where multicultural policies were born—the tide has shifted: Instead of a multicultural ethic of asking what we can do for immigrants, we are now asking what newcomers must do to fit in. Integration courses & exams for residency and citizenship—often with disturbingly subjective elements that test for values & character—are proliferating throughout Europe. In France, under Mr. Sarkozy, there is now a Ministry of National Identity. The urge to recognize & parade national identity has become due to the pressures of globalization & the threat of international terrorism. Muscular monoculturalism is no longer the purview of the right—it is becoming a mainstream ideology. All these concerns lead to very difficult questions about public policy: Is the level of immigration right? Has multiculturalism helped or hindered integration? Is our sense of national identity weaker than it once was & if so, is this because of immigration or of other forces & should we be worried about this? It is this debate—what is really more of a muddle about multiculturalism, identity, assimilation, and integration—that I would like to reflect on today.

Before I go any further, I should point out that there is a great deal of confusion when we discuss multiculturalism. If you’ll allow me, I’d like to set a few terms for the debate that I believe can help us think about the issues more clearly. Firstly, What does multiculturalism mean when it comes to public policy? There are many, often competing definitions, but let me propose this one: A multicultural approach argues for policies that abet cultural recognition and thus enable the integration of ethnic minorities. Note that this isn’t the most widely accepted definition; it is simply the one that I favour. Defining multiculturalism accurately & well, is at least half the battle in peacefully settling this debate. Second, we do not have to choose between multiculturalism & integration—it is not an either or choice. As in Canada, society can create space for religious & cultural recognition, while also investing in activities that help immigrants feel & act a lot more like natives—teaching them the language, for instance & allowing them to vote in local elections. Third, multiculturalism is not necessarily an end in itself, but a means to an end. Encouraging ethnic institutions like media & native-language classes could be seen as one step in a process that leads, over a generation or two, to full integration. Fourth, we should not look to countries that—by failing to invest in any kind of immigrant-oriented policies at all—have seen separatism & ethnic ghettoes dominate their landscapes. This is not multiculturalism: this is neglect. Many western European states made little or no effort to properly integrate the first wave of immigrants who arrived in the years after the 2nd. World War, so most of these people congregated together into ghettos that were later fed by new arrivals. They are now living parallel lives supported by parallel institutions. Finally, it is vital to remember that, in thinking about multiculturalism & integration, we are not merely seeking to change immigrants—we are trying to change society as a whole. Multiculturalism can be one tool that helps to speed integration, which we should see as a convergence of all members of society in the public space, according to agreed principles.

Allow me, to make a point about integration that I will return to at the end of my remarks: The politicians who have led the backlash against multiculturalism elsewhere have, for the most part, advocated loudly for a revival of national identity—of what it means to be British or French. But I don’t believe this is really what is on the minds of most people. We do not expect all immigrants here in Ireland to dance an Irish jig or to attend Sunday mass. It is not the weakening of identity that troubles most of us. In Canada as in the UK, Germany, the Netherlands, the public outcry is against behaviour that offends democratic & civic norms that almost all Western nations have in common. If people come to our land it is entirely appropriate to insist that they adhere to our values & conform to our beliefs in human rights but this does not mean that they should not express their cultural differences in other respects.

It is worth taking a quick look back on the origins of multiculturalism. Canada, Australia, both of which are settler societies, were the pioneers in this realm. Canada, of course, was a multicultural mix of British & French settlers & aboriginals from its birth as a self-governing nation in 1867. But it was in 1971, when Pierre Trudeau declared Canada “bilingual & multicultural,” that it became self-consciously so; & in 1988, with its Canadian Multiculturalism Act, Canada became the 1st. country in the world to pass a national law of this kind. The essence of Canada’s approach is that diversity is not only tolerated but encouraged. This is reflected in policies that cover education, broadcasting, housing, health care and a myriad of other areas. The children of immigrants are given tuition in their parents' mother tongue, for example, and the city of Toronto translates all official documents into 12 languages. Broadcast media in minority languages are heavily subsidized. The policies are backed up by anti-discrimination laws that are vigorously enforced. But while Canada creates a space for minority cultures to thrive, it also affirms a core set of values and invests heavily in integration—by which I mean that it gives immigrants the tools to become fully vested members of society. The Dept. of Canadian Heritage & Multiculturalism & the Dept. of Citizenship & Immigration, fund organizations that help immigrants from the moment they arrive on Canadian soil—from finding housing to providing interpretation to job searching. All adult immigrants have access to language instruction in English or French. Meanwhile, legislation makes clear core values such as gender rights cannot be overridden in the name of cultural diversity. But, in recent years especially, there has been a backlash in Canada against its multicultural policies. This is driven in large part by a concern about national identity and whether this has been put at risk by segregated communities that have little contact with each other. A similar narrative is unfolding in Australia, which officially adopted a policy of multiculturalism in 1973. Australia, went even further than Canada by initially imagining multiculturalism as a national identity for all Australians—not just as a policy for ethnic minorities. Its multicultural policy has stood, together with a Dept. of immigration & multicultural affairs, until very recently. But the tide began to turn Down Under in the late 1990s: The Howard Government has changed the name of the government department from immigration & multicultural affairs to Immigration & Citizenship, & is emphasizing the responsibilities of migrants, including the responsibility to learn English. The government now stresses the need for shared Australian values & insists that “Australian citizenship is a privilege, not a right.” Last month, it announced it would spend A$120 million to introduce a formal citizenship test. [Though, if Rudd wins this weekend’s Australian elections, he has said he will use an almost equal amount of money to pay for adult migrant language course and job training.] In Europe, it was the UK and the Netherlands that were the first and went the furthest with multicultural policies. Here, too, the backlash has been significant. So too have the problems. More so than in the settler societies, minorities in Europe have retreated into sometimes tribal identities, demanding attention & resources for their particular patch. This is understandable for, whatever the reality & its complexity, Europeans generally believe in the fact that they live in societies that are both homogenous and in some way distinctive.

So it is clear that multiculturalism is in retreat across most of the West. But before a stake is driven into it, we should have a reckoning about the good things it has wrought. For newcomers, multicultural policies responded to an essential human need—to maintain a sense of continuity, at a moment of extreme disruption & vulnerability, by nurturing familiar institutions like media in a native language & places of worship. There are many other gains as well: Through our multicultural policies in places like the UK, Canada, & the Netherlands, we have developed, above all, the tools to fight discrimination. Our courts recognize and punish racial offence; employers think twice before rejecting minority applicants out of hand. In many places, like the UK, multicultural policies have helped create societies that are largely at ease with different races, religions & cultures. Monocultures have become cosmopolitan nations. Our attitudes towards ethnic minorities have changed and continue to do so: In the UK, a recent MORI poll found that only 25% of Britons prefer to live in an all-white area, a ratio that exceeds 40% in many European countries. Only 12% of whites would mind if a close relative married a black or Asian person; just five years ago, that figure was 33%. Our social institutions have begun to mirror the societies around us—though not nearly enough. There are more minorities in town councils, even in Parliament & in the media. Meanwhile, the integration components of multicultural policies have helped teach newcomers the native language, created schools that lead to better outcomes for the children of immigrants & eased access for them to the job market, among many other benefits. Above all, let’s remember this: Multicultural policies arose because our societies & our economies, needed immigration. So their goal was to create societies that were attractive to immigrants. If this was true in the 1970s and 1980s, it is even more true today. What we see is that countries that have espoused multiculturalism are the ones to which immigrants want to go. As the global competition for talent hots up, this will become ever more crucial.

But there also have been costs associated with our multicultural policies. Among the most troubling pitfalls of multicultural policies is that they have, in many cases, deepened geographic & cultural segregation & increased economic inequality. To put it another way, they have been more about division than diversity. Also, there is a gnawing, growing fear that our very openness, our willingness to welcome difference, is being used against us—even to harm us. Multicultural policies have been blamed by some for enabling radicalization & violent fundamentalism. But perhaps the greatest drawback of multiculturalism is that it de-emphasized the individual in favour of the group. An immigrant doctor who played the piano, volunteered to mentor teenagers & was the father of three—a man of multiple identities—instead became merely a Nigerian or a Greek or an Indian. By emphasizing ethnicity, multiculturalism tends to favour group identity. Anthony Appiah, whose book Cosmopolitanism is essential reading, wrote: “If we want to preserve a wide range of human conditions because it allows free people the best chance to make their own lives, we can't enforce diversity by trapping people within differences they long to escape. This can be especially pernicious when combined with the security concerns that have come to dominate public policy after 9/11 & 7/7. 10 yrs. ago in Europe, we thought of Egyptians & Pakistanis, Turks & Moroccans—today, we group them all as Muslims. In doing so, we also reinforce this identity. In a similar vein, while multiculturalism did an excellent job of creating space for religious & cultural expression, it did not do a good job of building bridges between these spaces of different religious & ethnic groups & thus defining a common set of standards of civility & pluralistic civic engagement. "A multicultural Canada is a great idea in principle," wrote Michael Ignatieff, "but in reality it is more like a tacit contract of mutual indifference. Communities share political & geographic space, but not necessarily religious, social or moral space.

As we try to make sense of the debate around multiculturalism, it is worth considering another vital fact: The multicultural policies that we are critiquing were designed, in most cases, for times that were very different from our own. They were also designed for a specific purpose—to help make immigrants part of our societies. The changes of the past 2 decades have been dizzying & have profound consequences for policy. Allow me to name just a few: Globalization & free trade have radically altered the structure of our economies, creating enormous wealth & opportunity—the Celtic Tiger economy owes a great deal to globalization. But globalization also places new demands on society. It asks that they become more responsive to market trends and quicker in adapting, but also making people feel less secure in their jobs. Security concerns now have pride of place in public policy, following the terrorist attacks in New York, London, Madrid. Technology Revolution: The revolution in technology has changed the way we all live, and it also has transformed how immigrants build their self-identity & relate to their countries of origin: Satellite television & the internet, as well as inexpensive air travel, allow immigrants & their families to maintain far closer ties to their original homes than ever before. Diversity: Migration flows also have changed: The number of migrants has grown of course—from about 160 million 10 years ago to well over 200 million today. But their makeup is different as well. For instance, in the UK, we have a form of super-diversification: Until recently in London, there were 10 or so ethnic groups with 10,000 or more members; today there are now 40 such groups. Small-City Migration: As important, immigrants are no longer alighting in magnet cities like London, New York, Melbourne, Los Angeles, Berlin, or Dublin. Governance: Our governance structures have also been transformed, nowhere more so than in the EU. The Union’s approach to shared sovereignty & to building a common policy infrastructure has generated enormous benefits for Member States, but it also has left many citizens feeling that their identity has been diluted & that they are less in control of their own futures. The reason I pause to consider all these changes is that we have a tendency, I believe, to lay the blame at the feet of immigrants for many problems that would have existed in the absence of immigration & that might even have been without immigration. So in the context of changing nations & a globalizing world, we have to look at our society as a whole, first, before focusing on immigrants. Globalization is not going away & we need to reinvent our social institutions to become & remain competitive.

Allow me to give you two examples of what I mean by this: First, we have to rethink our education system. If we fail to provide appropriate education & retraining, then we will face opposition to immigration—not because immigrants are taking native jobs—but because natives won’t be qualified to do jobs that our economy needs. Meanwhile, we need to make our public institutions look a lot more like the communities that they serve. We can be proud, I think, here in Ireland that our police force, An Garda Siochana, has changed its entry requirements to accept non-nationals—there are now trainees from China, Poland, Canada, Romania, and Denmark. I don’t believe any other police force in the world has done this. Brian Lenihan recently said that the Garda “must be broadly representative of the community it serves.” Our other public institutions, especially those whose employees directly serve the public, must undergo a similar transformation—our schools, our hospitals, our prisons. The public sector must lead by example.

But no matter how agile we are in adapting to the 21st century world in every other way, there is little doubt that we also must develop a new approach to, & policies for, welcoming migrants into our societies. The simple fact is migration is here to stay. Let me say, first, that in thinking about our future we need to know what is not attainable. Cultural homogeneity is no longer possible—we should not be tilting at that windmill. This is not because of immigration alone—or even primarily—but because of the revolutions in communications, transportation & commerce. Nor does it mean that our culture will weaken—in fact, the internet & globalization are tools to strengthen & spread cultures. But it does mean that, in our local communities, we cannot expect any longer to live in splendid cultural isolation. The philosopher Anthony Appiah has these reassuring words to say about this: “Cultures are made of continuities & changes and the identity of a society can survive through these changes. Societies without change aren't authentic; they're just dead.” While not being overly nostalgic about the past, we also must be unwavering in knowing what we must not give up. Multiculturalism should never be read as a theory of relativism (a subject more generally often addressed by Pope Benedict). All practices & all norms are not equal. We live in liberal democracies, which allow us unprecedented freedoms to live as we wish—this is our underlying unity. The rules that support these freedoms are sacrosanct. Practices & norms that contravene this cannot be accepted. If we lose moral consensus, as Rabbi Jonathan Sacks wrote last month, “Morality is reduced to taste…merely the good and bad about which we are free to disagree. But if there is no agreed moral truth, we cannot reason together. Lacking a shared language, we attack the arguer, not the argument.” This, I submit, would be a return to darkness. But multiculturalism, properly understood, must be part of the policy mix. Because if we rush to discard multiculturalism and replace it with a muscular sense of national identity—forcing a repressive assimilation on newcomers—we will tear our societies apart. Amartya Sen recently reminded us that the early success of multiculturalism has been linked with its attempt to integrate, not separate. The current focus on separatism is not a contribution to multicultural freedoms, but just the opposite.

As we go forward, we have to rebalance multiculturalism with vigorous policies that draw all residents of our communities—newcomers & old-timers alike—into society. The parts of multicultural policy that we should protect are those that allow & encourage all citizens to express their cultural & religious identities as equals. In the few minutes that remain, I’ll try to lay down some ideas that could guide our thinking about multiculturalism & integration: If I were to leave you with only one unifying thought, it would be this: In thinking about our future, we should pour our energy into creating shared experiences: Simply put, we cannot expect people to integrate into our societies if we are all strangers to one another. We have had a breakdown in the institutions that once brought us together—attendance at our churches has plummeted, the member rolls of labour unions have dwindled, military conscription is no longer the norm. Our media, have fragmented to the point where we inhabit our own individual media worlds—symbolized by the sight of people walking down our streets imprisoned in their iPods. One neighbour watches al-Jazeera, the other BBC or Sky or, in the US, Fox —and they develop 2 very different, often dueling, views of the world. The new technologies might unite people globally, but they risk dividing us locally. The ethnic polarization in schools throughout Europe, meanwhile, is dramatic. Where once school populations more or less represented the communities around them, now they tend to be polarized. Why should we care? The evidence shows us that greater segregation leads to lower employment, lower earnings, lower education participation. Different schools for different groups also usually leads to different quality—and so those who go to lesser schools have their prospects defined not by their own ambitions or skills, but by their ethnicity. Studies also have shown that when children don’t mix at elementary level, it becomes more difficult for them to make friendships across racial divides as they get older. The resulting tribalization is bad for our societies. So in thinking about creating shared experiences, we must start by looking at our schools—at their make-up, at their quality & at their curriculum. All of these dimensions must be suited for a diverse society. We have schools in which minorities make up the majority of students—this is the case in certain Dublin school districts; in parts of Berlin, minority representation exceeds 80 percent. Solving this might be the most vexing riddle we face, since it is tied to segregation in housing & to economic inequality, which is widening. But there are parts of the school experience that we can shape more easily. Let me point to four: Early schooling: We need to ensure access to schooling for all residents as early as age 3. Research around the world is telling us that perhaps the single most important factor in leveling the playing field for the children of newcomers is to provide language tuition at a very early age. Curriculum That Reflects Diversity: We need to make sure the curriculum, especially in social studies, reflects the diversity of our societies. Unless everyone has the same level of understanding about everyone else’s lives, we will not be able to get along in the long run. As the head of the UK Equality & Human Rights Commission, Trevor Phillips, once memorably noted, merely attending cultural festivals is not multiculturalism—it is domestic tourism. We need to rethink how we teach civics and citizenship in our schools. We can no longer approach this task passively. We have to train children not only in how their societies are run, but also how to think freely. Democrats are made, not born. Finally, we must eliminate any & all forms of bias in entry to higher education. Throughout much of the West, ethnic minorities are underrepresented—and this underrepresentation is not the result of ability.

In France, active recruitment in minority neighbourhoods & less culturally biased application procedures have made a remarkable difference in driving up minority enrolment. Meanwhile, shared experiences in education need not only happen in schoolhouses during the school year. We should invest in experiments that bring children together in camps during the summertime. While schooling is the sine qua non of creating a cohesive society, politics is almost equally important. It is through politics that a society’s laws, norms, and traditions evolve; unless newcomers are drawn with relative speed into the political arena, our norms & traditions will not evolve to reflect today’s society—and newcomers will feel increasingly alienated. So it is vital that we find ways to give immigrants a political voice. Already, 9 EU countries offer the vote in local elections to non-citizens. There are more immediate ways as well to bring immigrants into the political process—political parties could, for instance, actively seek members in ethnic neighbourhoods. Here in Ireland, Rotimi Adebari’s election as mayor of Portlaoise in June marked a real watershed. But we should not underestimate how difficult this will be: Even in cities considered to be immigration success stories, political hurdles are hard to clear. In Toronto, where almost half the population is foreign born, only 3 of 44 councillors belong to an ethnic minority. Political incorporation will take a conscious effort on the part of immigrants as well; they will have to make a pro-active choice to become Irish or Italian or French. I think, though, that one columnist in a Canadian paper put it best: “We have been too concerned about making Canada than about making Canadians. But please stop blaming the immigrants. We are ready to become Canadian citizens, just tell us what to do.” The 3rd pillar of cohesion is the job market. There is nothing more subversive to a person’s sense of self-worth than long-term unemployment. Having too many newcomers on social security, meanwhile, is one of the main drivers of anti-immigrant sentiment. Outside of school, the workplace is where social relationships across racial, religious & ethnic boundaries are most likely to be formed. So we must invest heavily in ensuring fair & equal access to employment for immigrants & their families as soon after they arrive as possible. At the moment, as far as I know, this is not a substantial problem here but that may be because we have virtually full employment. Fourth, we must strive to ensure that, once we decide to welcome newcomers on a permanent basis, that we give them a clear path to citizenship. We should certainly expect them to meet a reasonable set of responsibilities in common with all other citizens before they are naturalized. But we should not ask them to clear hurdles that are either too subjective or biased. There is much else we must consider as we move forward. One vexing issue is for us to be able to gauge the capacity of our societies to integrate immigrants & if we are exceeding it with the current rate of migration flows. We must be smart in calibrating the two; otherwise, the speed of change will sow discontent throughout society. Also, we must not budge on the question of our laws—religious & cultural practices that infringe on our laws have no place in a liberal democracy. At the same, we must continue to be relentless in enforcing anti-discrimination legislation. The multicultural policies of the past worked—in their time and in their places. Where they were pursued & properly financed, they led to societies that generally are more just, more attractive to newcomers & better able to compete in the modern world. Our experience with multiculturalism over the past 35 years is certainly not a failure, as some argue. But the times & the world have changed. So we need to create a new balance, a golden mean between monocultural assimilation & a multiculturalism that rejects a common culture. Above all, we must emphasize & invest in, what unites us. And while we must insist that all newcomers respect our laws & civic norms, we also must fiercely defend their right to express themselves. National identity is a dynamic process for which we should set the rules of the game by which norms evolve, rather than to try to establish fixed values. We cannot say that a country’s identity is X, & will forever remain so. We have to learn that our identity has to be adapted to recognize that we are becoming, and will be, a society with others in it. It is a big challenge. And no amount of talking about the undoubted economic benefits to us, as well as to migrants, can overcome this fact. We have a challenge to change people's mentality. It's a European challenge. Eratosthenes of Cyrene composed in his old age a philosophical treatise, of which only a few fragments remain.

In closing, I would like to share one that is particularly relevant to our debate: “The author,” Eratosthenes writes, “rejects the principle of a twofold division of the human race between Greeks & Barbarians & disapproves of the advice given to Alexander, that he treat all Greeks as friends & all Barbarians as enemies. It is better, he writes, to employ as a division criteria the qualities of virtue and dishonesty. Many Greeks are dishonest & many Barbarians enjoy a refined civilization, such as the people of India or the Aryans, or the Romans & the Carthaginians.” The great contribution of Christianity to our identity as Europeans is grounded upon the essential principles of the dignity of man & the equality of man. These remain the essential cornerstones for our responses to this particular issue.
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No responsibility or liability shall attach itself to either myself or to the blogspot ‘Mozlink’ for any or all of the articles/images placed here. The placing of an article does not necessarily imply that I agree or accept the contents of the article as being necessarily factual in theology, dogma or otherwise.
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Friday, November 23, 2007

The Secret GM Invasion

New Statesman (UK), Nov 20th. A Soil Association study has found that many supermarkets are selling products from animals fed on GM crops, despite having 'non-GM' policies. For over a decade, the public has rejected GM foods. Intuitive concerns had been reinforced by the highly publicised findings of the first Government sponsored animal trials, in which strange lesions were found in the guts of GM-fed rats. To their credit, the supermarkets adopted non-GM policies and, by October 2002, they were using no GM (genetically modified) ingredients in their own-brand products. Yet, for some years the Soil Association and other organisations have been concerned about the use of GM animal feed. Due to a legal loop-hole, although foods or animal feeds that directly contain GM ingredients must be labelled as ‘GM’, there is no such requirement for meat and dairy foods produced from animals fed on GM crops.

Any use of GM animal feed could thus be kept hidden from consumers. Last year, in noticeably evasive replies to letters from our supporters, the supermarkets admitted that their non-GM policies did not cover animal feed. The Soil Association decided to conduct an in-depth investigation. Our findings - presented in our report, Silent invasion: the hidden use of GM crops in livestock feed - are deeply concerning. By testing animal feeds and reviewing the industry’s sourcing policies, we have found that high levels of GM animal feed are being used. 73% of the feeds we tested contained some GM soya and 75% were labelled as “GM”. Based on our findings, around 60% of the maize and 30% of the soya in the dairy and pig sectors are GM.

What this means is that nearly all non-organic milk, dairy products (such as cheese and yoghurt) and pork products sold in UK shops and restaurants are produced from GM-fed animals. So, most consumers are unwittingly eating foods produced from GM crops every day. We also reviewed progress on the science of the safety of GM crops, since the early days of the debate when there was little to go on. The Food Standards Agency had been assuring consumers that they would not be exposed to GM material by eating foods from GM-fed animals. However, four studies by different scientific teams have now found that small amounts of GM DNA can be detected in milk and tissues from GM-fed animals. It also turns out that the first animal feeding trials were not flukes. Very many of the animal trials carried out since then have found deeply worrying effects. These include toxic effects in body organs, allergic reactions, unexplained deaths and stunted growth in the offspring. This raises serious questions about how GM-fed animals can be considered suitable for producing human food.

In the view of the Soil Association, there has been a failure of both the market and the scientific advisory process. The biotechnology industry has managed to persuade many normally clear-minded people, sadly including many scientists, that they should support GM crops if they are 'pro-science'. The important fact that the science has actually emerged against GM crops has gone unnoticed. Perhaps it would help to point out that genetic engineering is not a science, it is only a technique. Rejection of GM does not mean a rejection of science. Until the scientific community come to terms with the research and supports a responsible - and genuinely science-based - approach, the Soil Association strongly recommends that people try to avoid foods produced from GM-fed animals. Among the supermarkets, Marks-and-Spencer is far ahead of the others, with all of their milk and fresh meat produced from non-GM feed. We urge other supermarkets and catering companies to follow their lead and to meanwhile to label any products from GM-fed animals so that at least people can choose.
By Gundula Azeez.
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No responsibility or liability shall attach itself to either myself or to the blogspot ‘Mozlink’ for any or all of the articles/images placed here. The placing of an article does not necessarily imply that I agree or accept the contents of the article as being necessarily factual in theology, dogma or otherwise.
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Thursday, November 22, 2007

Ensure That No One Will Ever Be Hungry Again

VATICAN CITY, Nov 22nd. (VIS) - At midday today, the Pope received participants in the 34th general conference of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), which has its headquarters in Rome. In his English-language talk to the delegates, the Pope indicated that "all forms of discrimination, and particularly those that thwart agricultural development, must be rejected since they constitute a violation of the basic right of every person to be 'free from hunger.' These convictions are in fact demanded by the very nature of your work on behalf of the common good of humanity." Benedict XVI highlighted the paradox of "the relentless spread of poverty in a world that is also experiencing unprecedented prosperity, not only in the economic sphere but also in the rapidly developing fields of science and technology."

Such obstacles as "armed conflicts, outbreaks of disease, adverse atmospheric and environmental conditions and the massive forced displacement of peoples," said the Pope, "should serve as a motivation to redouble our efforts to provide each person with his or her daily bread. "For her part, the Church is convinced that the quest for more effective technical solutions in an ever-changing and expanding world calls for far-sighted programs embodying enduring values grounded in the inalienable dignity and rights of the human person," he added. "The united effort of the international community to eliminate malnutrition and promote genuine development necessarily calls for clear structures of management and supervision, and a realistic assessment of the resources needed to address a wide range of different situations. It requires the contribution of every member of society - individuals, volunteer organizations, businesses, and local and national governments - always with due regard for those ethical and moral principles which are the common patrimony of all people and the foundation of all social life."

Benedict XVI continued his talk by saying that "today more than ever, the human family needs to find the tools and strategies capable of overcoming the conflicts caused by social differences, ethnic rivalries, and the gross disparity in levels of economic development. Religion, as a potent spiritual force for healing the wounds of conflict and division, has its own distinctive contribution to make in this regard, especially through the work of forming minds and hearts in accordance with a vision of the human person. Technical progress, important as it is, is not everything," the Pope told the FAO delegates. "Progress must be placed within the wider context of the integral good of the human person. It must constantly draw nourishment from the common patrimony of values which can inspire concrete initiatives aimed at a more equitable distribution of spiritual and material goods. This principle," he explained, "has a special application to the world of agriculture, in which the work of those who are often considered the 'lowliest' members of society should be duly acknowledged and esteemed."

In conclusion the Holy Father recalled how "FAO's outstanding activity on behalf of development and food security clearly points to the correlation between the spread of poverty and the denial of basic human rights, beginning with the fundamental right to adequate nutrition. Peace, prosperity, and respect for human rights are inseparably linked. The time has come to ensure, for the sake of peace, that no man, woman and child will ever be hungry again!"

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No responsibility or liability shall attach itself to either myself or to the blogspot ‘Mozlink’ for any or all of the articles/images placed here. The placing of an article does not necessarily imply that I agree or accept the contents of the article as being necessarily factual in theology, dogma or otherwise.
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Web Prostitution Racket Exposed

Ireland, Nov. 20th. (Independant) This was 'not the first career choice' of the women, who had travelled to Ireland to 'make money for Christmas' GARDAI have uncovered a prostitution racket being operated on the internet by criminal gangs who are flying 'escorts' in from Eastern Europe and South America. Over recent months, a number of foreign prostitutes have appeared before Limerick district court after intensive garda investigations. At the weekend, two Estonian prostitutes returned home after they were arrested in a Limerick city brothel. They arrived in the country last Thursday with the aim of making some cash for Christmas.

Kristin Pukk (26), and Mare Koller (30), appeared before a special sitting of Limerick District Court after they were arrested in an apartment on William Street in the city on Friday. Detective Garda Dave Bourke, of Roxboro garda station, said each of the accused was arrested following a surveillance operation lasting a number of weeks. "The premises was searched under warrant and they were engaged with a client at the time," Det Bourke said. Judge Aeneas McCarthy also heard that €400 in cash was recovered by gardai at the premises.

Gardai became aware of the brothel through a website which was the "first point of contact". This website is being operated by Limerick and Dublin criminals. Det Bourke said "the operation is operating through an internet phone service which was directed to the brothel". The website in question, which was not named in court, offers a "totally confidential and discreet Limerick escort service". According to the site, "luxury incalls and discreet outcalls are available 24 hours a day, seven days a week". Clients can choose their escort in advance from specially selected images. The escorts were advertised as being from Brazil, Spain and the Czech Republic. Both Ms Pukk and Ms Koller pleaded guilty to permitting the premises on William Street to be used as a brothel.

Defence solicitor John Herbert said his clients were just working on the premises and there were "bigger, darker forces behind the operation". Mr Herbert said this was "not the first career choice" of the women, who had travelled to Ireland to "make some money for Christmas". Inspector Seamus Gallagher said they had travelled here "under their own free will" and added that it was not a human trafficking case. After being given undertakings that the defendants would return to Estonia immediately, Judge McCarthy imposed the probation act. He also ordered that €300 of the money seized should be forfeited and that the remainder should be returned to Ms Pukk and Ms Koller to "tide them over".
- Barry Duggan
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Mugabe Grabs Platinum and Diamonds

Shock at Saudi Rape Victim's Sentence

WASHINGTON Nov. 21st. (AP) - The State Department expressed astonishment yesterday about a Saudi court's sentence of six months in jail and 200 lashes for a woman who was gang raped. Department spokesman Sean McCormack stopped short of stronger language against its close ally in the Middle East. On Monday, Canada said it would lodge a complaint and called the sentence barbaric. "I think when you look at the crime and the fact that now the victim is punished, I think that causes a fair degree of surprise and astonishment," McCormack said. "But it is within the power of the Saudi government to take a look at the verdict and change it."

The sentencing came as the United States is trying to get Saudi Arabia to co-sponsor a US-organized conference next week in the United States to work toward a peace deal between Israel and the Palestinians. President Bush telephoned Saudi King Abdullah yesterday about the conference. The decision by the Qatif General Court more than doubled the woman's sentence after she was convicted of being in the car of a man who was not a relative.

The woman initially had been sentenced to 90 lashes after she was convicted of violating rigid laws on the segregation of the sexes. The Saudi court said the woman's punishment was increased because of "her attempt to aggravate and influence the judiciary through the media." The Saudi Ministry of Justice stood by the verdict yesterday, saying that "charges were proven" against the woman. Under Saudi Arabia's strict interpretation of Islamic Sharia law, women are not allowed in public in the company of men other than relatives. The seven men convicted of raping the woman were given prison sentences of two years to nine years. The woman has said the 2006 attack occurred as she tried to retrieve her picture from a male friend. While in the car with the friend, two men climbed into the vehicle and drove to a secluded area. She said she was raped by seven men, three of whom also attacked her friend.

The New York-based Human Rights Watch said the verdict "not only sends victims of sexual violence the message that they should not press charges, but in effect offers protection and impunity to the perpetrators."
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