NATO keeps killing Afghan civilians


This video is called Afghan anger at government over civilian deaths – 24 Mar 09.

From Reuters:

Air strike kills Afghan civilians – provincial official

Thu Dec 31, 2009 1:48pm IST

KANDAHAR, Afghanistan – An air strike by foreign forces in Afghanistan‘s southern Helmand province on Wednesday killed civilians, although the number of victims is unknown, a spokesman for the provincial governor said. “A patrol of foreign troops came under Taliban ambush at 3 pm. After the ambush, planes came and bombed the area, which caused civilian casualties,” said Dawud Ahmadi, spokesman for the Helmand governor. He could not yet give further details.

Officials are still investigating how many people died in the attack in the outskirts of the provincial capital Lashkar Gah, he added. …

A press officer for NATO-led forces declined immediate comment on the incident.

Up to 18 Afghan civilians killed in airstrikes: here.

Salon.com blogger Glenn Greenwald discusses US foreign policy, including the escalation of the war in Afghanistan, drone strikes on Pakistan, cruise missile attacks on Yemen, operations in Somalia, the ongoing operation in Iraq, and much more: here.

A Pentagon plan to demolish its prison at Bagram, Afghanistan, amounts to destroying evidence in the cases of detainees who say they were tortured there, an attorney said Thursday: here.

2009 Deadliest Year for U.S. in Afghanistan: here.

Was the suicide bombing that killed seven CIA employees in eastern Afghanistan this week, sending shock waves through the US spy agency, masterminded by a warlord who was once one of the CIA’s key allies? Here.

At least eight protesters were killed and 13 wounded in the southern Afghanistan town of Garmsir Wednesday when security forces fired on a demonstration of several thousand people protesting against the US military. Protesters blamed the deaths on Afghan intelligence agents, backed up by US soldiers: here.

Canadian Conservative cover-up of torture scandal


This video is called Diplomat: Canada Complicit in Civilian Torture.

To prevent further parliamentary hearings into Canadian complicity in torture in Afghanistan, the minority Conservative government has shut down the national parliament for the second time in a year: here.

See also here.

Canadian press denounces Conservatives’ shutting down of parliament: here.

Demonstrations and rallies are being held in cities across Canada this Saturday to protest against the minority Conservative government’s two-month shutdown of parliament: here.

Harper’s assault on democracy: here.

War escalation in Yemen after failed bombing attempt?


This is called Video of destruction war Saada Yemen.

Five days after the unsuccessful attempt by a Nigerian student to set off a bomb aboard a Detroit-bound passenger jet, US military and intelligence officials are said to be preparing expanded military action against targets in Yemen: here.

The extraordinary scale of the supposed intelligence breakdown surrounding the attempted terror bombing of a Northwest flight on Christmas Day should not be explained away as mere negligence or a “failure to connect the dots”: here.

Excellent demolition of Dick Cheney’s shameful attack on the president in the wake of the Detroit attempted attack: here.

Chris Floyd on Detroit attempted attack: here.

Overreaction to terror plot a bad move: here.

Yemen, Somalia, and Al Qaeda: here.

US presses Yemen to fight ‘extremists’: here.

Women in Yemen fight against social injustices: here.

While the Israeli and European press has reported that an Israeli-run security agency conducted the passenger screening that failed to detect the Christmas Day bomber, the American press has said nothing: here.

Argentine ex-archbishop convicted for sexual abuse


This video from Argentina says, in Spanish, about itself:

El Ex Arzobispo Edgardo Storni fue procesado en el 2003 por presunto abuso sexual a seminaristas.

From Associated Press:

Argentine cleric gets 8 years in sex abuse case

Wednesday, December 30, 2009; 10:26 AM

BUENOS AIRES, Argentina — An Argentine judge convicted a former Roman Catholic archbishop Wednesday of sexually abusing a seminarian in 1992.

Former Santa Fe Archbishop Edgardo Storni received a sentence of eight years, the minimum for aggravated sexual abuse, defense attorney Eduardo Jauchen said.

Storni would likely serve any time under house arrest because he is over 70.

Storni resigned in 2002 amid various abuse accusations. Judges threw out most of the cases, but the one involving the seminarian moved forward.

He is the fourth Argentine cleric to be convicted of sex crimes.

In the most famous of those cases, a court sentenced Father Julio Grassi, who won fame running a foundation for poor youths, to 15 years in June for molesting a boy who participated in the program.

Argentina’s authorities order DNA tests in search for stolen babies of dirty war: here.

Ireland: The Commission of Investigation report into the Catholic Archdiocese of Dublin, known as the Murphy report, was finally published late last year: here.

Afghan students demonstrate against NATO killing civilians


This video from Afghanistan says about itself:

People of Jalalabad stage rally in support of Malalai Joya

May 25, 2007, Ariana TV report the demo staged in eastern city of Jalalabad in suppot of Joya and against warlords.

Afghan students have rallied in Jalalabad and threatened to “take up guns instead of pens and fight occupation forces” if the Karzai regime fails to stop the indiscriminate killing of civilians by occupation troops: here.

Children’s deaths spark anti-US outrage in Afghanistan: here.

As an Afghan in 2001, I thought the US and its allies would take its reconstruction duties seriously. They did not: here.

Cartoonist David Levine dies


Lyndon Johnson and the Vietnam war, cartoon by David Levine

From the New York Times in the USA:

David Levine, a painter and illustrator whose macro-headed, somberly expressive, astringently probing and hardly ever flattering caricatures of intellectuals and athletes, politicians and potentates were the visual trademark of The New York Review of Books for nearly half a century, died Tuesday morning in Manhattan. He was 83 and lived in Brooklyn.

Félix Nadar, a famous French photographer and caricaturist, died on March 21, 1910, at the age of 89: here.