Uruguayan Leftist victory


This video is a Frente Amplio song from Uruguay.

A former guerilla has won Uruguay’s presidential run-off, keeping the ruling centre-left Broad Front coalition in power for another five-year term, beginning on March 1: here.

See also here. And here.

A major uprising was launched in Uruguay on January 28, 1935 against President Gabriel Terra. The revolt led to fighting between rebel groups and government loyalists in all of the country’s 18 provinces. By January 29, a rebel militia had attacked government troops in the capital of Montevideo: here.

War, not ‘reconstruction’ in Afghanistan


This video from the USA is called Rethink Afghanistan War (Part 5): Women of Afghanistan.

By Lizzie Cocker in Britain:

Billions go to waste in Afghan rebuilding

Monday 30 November 2009

A disproportionate amount of aid in Afghanistan is being used to fight resistance to the occupation rather than being channelled into reconstruction and acute humanitarian needs, economists have revealed.

Researchers at the London School of Economics found that more than half of the US aid budget to Afghanistan was focused on the four most insecure provinces in the south of the country and that a fifth of Britain’s budget was allocated to projects in southern Helmand province where most British troops are based.

They said this “suggests that poverty reduction is not the primary criterion being used to target aid. As throughout Afghanistan‘s recent history, foreign aid has been used to leverage external security interests.”

The report also found that most of the $15 billion (£9.1bn) US aid spent between 2002 and 2008 was “wasted” and “ineffective, not least because of the exorbitant fees charged by private contractors.”

It added that “quick-impact projects” carried out by mixed civilian and military provincial reconstruction teams (PRTs) “are often ill-thought-through, unsustainable and of limited developmental value.”

The researchers wrote: “NGO workers related instances where the military hastily constructed school buildings but without first ensuring new teachers had been recruited.

“The (underlying) thinking that development projects can buy the trust of local communities who in turn will provide valuable intelligence is seriously misguided.”

They found that US-initiated PRTs put the lives of NGO workers at risk as they alternate their dress between military fatigues and civilian clothes, making it difficult for citizens to distinguish between the military and aid workers.

In addition, the engagement of PRTs in activities commonly undertaken by NGOs “has heightened divisions and distrust amongst NGOs, each accusing each other of working with the military.”

Most international NGOs said they did not and would not work with PRTs.

But the researchers also criticised NGOs for failing to recognise their political position and how they have compromised their own neutrality.

The report quoted the chairman of Afghan organisation the Foundation for Culture and Civil Society as saying: “Maybe NGOs have to work with government to meet people’s needs. So they should stop talking about being neutral. We’re not neutral in supporting a democratically elected government put in place by force.”

The report said that the implicit support by NGOs of the Afghan government “has no doubt contributed to their failure to mount a robust defence against military perspectives.”

The findings were published as [British] Defence Secretary Bob Ainsworth confirmed that an extra 500 troops will be poured into the conflict, while US President Obama was expected to announce an extra 35,000 troops.

Commenting on the report’s findings, Stop the War Coalition convener Lindsey German said: “This report exposes the government lie that the war in Afghanistan is a humanitarian intervention.

“It’s time to get the troops out and spend the billions on war improving the lives of some of the poorest in Afghanistan and in Britain,” Ms German said.

Seven insane problems outlined in the new Afghan reconstruction report. Think things are bad? You don’t know the half of it: here.

USA: Independent journalist Dahr Jamail, author of The Will to Resist: Soldiers Who Refuse to Fight in Iraq and Afghanistan, reports on allegations that the Army is purposefully obscuring the number of soldiers’ suicides: here.

100 FAMILIES SUE U.S. CONTRACTORS FOR ‘PAYING OFF TALIBAN’ More than 100 Gold Star families have sued several American defense contractors for allegedly paying protection money to the Taliban while building projects in Afghanistan. The payments, the lawsuit argues, “aided and abetted terrorism” against Americans by enabling the Taliban to continue to fight — and kill U.S. troops. [HuffPost]

British Royal Society’s 350 years


This video says about itself:

The Royal Society wrote a cease and desist letter to Exxon Mobil asking them to stop funding organisations that misrepresent the scientific consensus on climate change.

From British daily The Morning Star:

Royal Society celebrates its 350th

Science: Landmark moments in the history of science are being celebrated online on Monday to mark the 350th birthday of the Royal Society.

For the first time, original manuscripts of papers published by the world’s oldest scientific institution have been made available to the public via the internet.

Among the highlights from the interactive Trailblazing site are a gruesome account of a 17th century blood transfusion, Sir Isaac Newton‘s landmark research on light and colour, and Benjamin Franklin‘s famous kite-flying experiment to identify the electrical nature of lightning in 1752.

A study of the Royal Society’s archives reveals that women played a far more important role in the development and dissemination of science than had previously been thought, says Richard Holmes: here.

Basking shark beaches in the Netherlands


According to Dutch news agency ANP, 30 November 2009, a young basking shark has beached on Ameland island in the Netherlands.

The basking shark probably had been dead for weeks, and much of it had rotted away in the sea. Originally, the juvenile basking shark was probably three meter long; by now, only two meter.

Basking shark secrets unlocked by DIY kit: here.

The Battle of Seattle 10 years later


From Democracy NOW! in the USA:

The Battle of Seattle 10 Years Later: Organizers Reflect on 1999 Shutdown of WTO Talks and the Birth of a Movement

Ten years ago, on November 30, 1999, tens of thousands of people from across the country and the world shut down the World Trade Organization talks in Seattle. Police responded by firing teargas and rubber bullets. Hundreds were arrested. On this 10th anniversary, we speak with two organizers of the protests: David Solnit, co-author of “The Battle of the Story of the Battle of Seattle” and Ananda Tan, of the Global Alliance for Incinerator Alternatives.

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Save carnivorous mammals


This video is about wild cat species.

From the BBC:

Save ‘special’ carnivores plea

Matt Walker
Editor, Earth News

Giant otters, monk seals, walruses, spectacled bears, giant and red pandas and the odd-looking fossa are among the carnivores most in need of conserving.

That is according to the most-detailed study yet of the evolutionary history of carnivores and their relationships.

It examined 222 carnivore species including big cats, wolves, bears, seals, otters and their relatives.

It found that some species are so distinctive that special efforts should be made to ensure their survival.

Details of the research are published in the journal Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. …

The new study supports the split of carnivores into two main evolutionary groups: dog-like carnivores called Caniforms and cat-like carnivores called Feliforms.

But it did throw up a few surprises (see Confused carnivores), which the researchers say will need further research to resolve.

As well as unpicking the relationships between carnivores, the study enabled the team to identify those species that are unusually distinct.

Among these unique carnivores are the monk seal, giant otter and sea otter, giant and red panda , spectacled bear, Liberian mongoose, otter civet, Owston’s palm civet, the fossa of Madagascar, which looks much like a dog that climbs trees, and the binturong of south-east Asia, which is also called the Asian bearcat. …

CONFUSED CARNIVORES

The new study generally supports the traditional carnivores groups. However, it also finds that:

The kinkajou [see also here] of South America is not related to raccoons as thought

The red panda may actually be most closely related to dogs and their relatives

South American jaguars are more closely related to Asian leopards and snow leopards than other big cats …

In a separate but related effort, the Zoological Society of London runs an EDGE (Evolutionary Distinct and Globally Endangered) of Existence programme that highlights the precarious conservation status of a range of animals beyond the carnivores.

On that list is 100 of the rarest animals including the Chinese giant salamander, Bactrian camel and blue whale.

A report reveals that female giant pandas use chirp calls to inform male pandas exactly how fertile they are: here.

A Somerset wildlife charity has taken in a record number of otters this winter as higher than normal river levels have threatened their habitat: here.

Genome mapping showing that [giant] pandas may prefer a bamboo-based diet because they can’t taste meat could unlock secrets to ensuring the survival of the endangered species: here.

Giant panda genome reveals new insights into the bear’s bamboo diet: here.

California sea otters cross over to the forbidden zone”: here.

Hawaii considers strict law to halt killing of endangered monk seals: here.

Grey wolf hunt creates bitter row in US: here.

U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service rejects Montana’s request for a wolf hunt: here.

The Saharan Conservation Trust’s ‘Saharan Carnivores project’ continues to shed new light on the amazingly diverse community of small canids and felids harboured by the Termit ecosystem of Niger. Since last August, Oxford University’s Wild-CRU researcher, Seamus Maclennan, has been capturing and collaring fennec, Rüppell’s and pale foxes to better understand their ecology so they can be properly conserved: here.

Fossas are the largest carnivores in Madagascar: here.

The ‘weird’ predatory fossa of Madagascar is threatened: here.

Risky Raccoon Roundworms Found In Pet Kinkajous: here.

Is the Ringtail a Cat? A Raccoon? Or Something Entirely Different? Here.

Raccoon dog: here.

Charismatic, vocal, unpredictable, domestic, and playful are all adjectives that aptly describe the giant river otter (Pteronura brasiliensis), one of the Amazon’s most spectacular big mammals. As its name suggest, this otter is the longest member of the weasel family: from tip of the nose to tail’s end the otter can measure 6 feet (1.8 meters) long. Living in closely-knit family groups, sporting a complex range of behavior, and displaying almost human-like capricious moods, the giant river otter has captured a number of researchers and conservationists’ hearts, including Dutch conservationist Jessica Groenendijk: here.

Weasels live alongside humans only in Cairo. Carolyn King from Waikato says the find proves Egyptian weasel is unique: here.

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Economic crisis


A report in Sunday’s New York Times, detailing the sharp rise in food stamp use, gives a much different picture of America at the end of 2009 than the complacent assurances of economic “recovery” voiced by Wall Street and the Obama administration: here.

USA: The Housing Crisis and Wall Street Shame: here.

Cartoon about the pension of the ex boss of the Royal Bank of Scotland

Bank of England governor Mervyn King has revealed for the first time that in October 2008 the Bank had lent Halifax Bank of Scotland (HBOS) and the Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) £62 billion: here.

Left-wing economists have welcomed a government decision to take control of Royal Bank of Scotland’s bonus pot but stressed that only nationalisation of the entire banking system will guarantee taxpayers’ money: here.

The European Commission has rubber-stamped the government’s restructuring plans for the Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) under a taxpayer bailout worth up to £100 billion – the biggest state aid package in European history: here.

Fred the Shred has come under fire from politicians after it emerged the former Royal Bank of Scotland boss has started a new job at an architectural firm: here.

Singer Billy Bragg has said that he is refusing to pay his taxes unless the government curbs the excessive bonuses at the Royal Bank of Scotland: here.

Part-nationalised Royal Bank of Scotland is preparing to hand out huge bonuses to investment bankers, despite expected annual losses of £7 billion, it has been reported: here.

Asia’s asset bubbles fuel global financial instability: here.

Dubai‘s main stock exchange dropped more than 7 per cent and Abu Dhabi markets slid more than 8 per cent on Monday, the first day of trading in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) since officials revealed that conglomerate Dubai World was struggling with its £36.4 billion debts: here.

British banks hit by Dubai collapse: here.

The world of international finance has been shaken by the default in Dubai. Shares have taken a tumble all over the world. Commentators have suggested that this could be the cause of the recession moving into a double dip, of a further downturn in the world economy: here.

Holocaust and warming denying nazi Griffin to Copenhagen


Nick Griffin, Führer of the British Nazi … err … “National” Party, denies Adolf Hitler‘s mass murder of six million Jews and many millions of others.

That is not the only thing that he is in denial about.

This is a video about oil corporation Exxon bankrolling global warming denialists.

From British daily The Morning Star:

Griffin to represent EU at Copenhagen summit

Sunday 29 November 2009

by Paddy McGuffin

The leader of the fascist BNP Nick Griffin is to represent the European Parliament at the Copenhagen climate change talks, it has been announced.

The BNP claimed that Mr Griffin‘s attendance at the summit would be a major coup, but others insisted that his role would be minimal.

Climate Change Secretary Ed Miliband said that the views held by Mr Griffin, who has claimed that climate change is a “Marxist mantra” and has disputed the evidence, were both irresponsible and in error.

Mr Miliband said:”Nick Griffin cannot and does not represent the views of the people of the UK or of Europe.”

“His views on climate change are irresponsible and wrong.

“He will not be part of the formal Copenhagen negotiations and, rightly, he will not be listened to by anyone with any credibility who is part of these negotiations.”

Liberal Democrat home affairs spokesman and former MEP Chris Huhne said: “Nick Griffin was always going to get some role in the European Parliament, because jobs are divvied up fairly.

“The crying shame is that he is representing Europe at a key summit for the future of humanity when he does not even concede that man-made climate change exists.”

The subject of this video is The Marshall Institute is a key player in the climate change denial industry.

A new report, America’s Hottest Species, highlights a variety of American wildlife that is currently threatened by climate change from a small bird to a coral reef to the world’s largest marine turtle: here.

Group promoting climate skepticism has extensive ties to Exxon-Mobil: here.

Birds and climate change: indicators of a changing world: here.

Global Cooling? Tell It to the Jellyfish: here.

A former British National Party member was jailed for 11 years last week for hiding a large cache of weapons in his mother’s house: here.

UNDER the headline “‘Neo-Nazi gran’ hired as aide to BNP member on London Assembly”, the London Evening Standard has exposed the fact that the notorious far-right activist Tess Culnane is working at City Hall as a PA to Richard Barnbrook. There is also good coverage of the case by Adam Bienkov at Liberal Conspiracy. It is however worth examining Culnane’s political record in more detail, since the employment of such an individual in the office of the BNP’s most prominent London politician tells us a lot about the BNP’s claim that it is now a mainstream party that has put its neo-Nazi past behind it: here.

Malalai Joya on occupied ‘new’ Afghanistan


This video says about itself:

Afghan Member of Parliament [then, in 2006, still; before she was expelled] Malalai Joya speaks about the troubling and declining status of women’s rights in Afghanistan.

Book review by Phil Shannon in Australia:

Malalai Joya: her struggle is our struggle

2 December 2009

Raising My Voice: The Extraordinary Story of the Afghan Woman Who Dares to Speak Out By Malalai Joya Macmillan, 2009 278 pages, $34.99 (pb)

When Malalai Joya described some members of the Afghan parliament in 2007 as belonging in a “zoo or a stable” in 2007, the howls and screeches from its fundamentalist and warlord members was predictable. They seized on her comments as a pretext for a plot to have the feminist parliamentarian permanently suspended for “insulting the institution of parliament”.

In her autobiography, Raising My Voice, Joya notes the irony that the leaders of the countries with troops in Afghanistan never commented on her illegal suspension “even through they say their militaries are in Afghanistan to help build democracy”.

Joya’s book recounts many other examples of the undemocratic new Afghanistan ruled by pro-US religious extremists and warlords.

After 16 years in exile, Joya courageously returned to an Afghanistan ruled by the “depraved and medieval” Taliban, which had emerged victorious in 1996 during the vicious civil war among the US-funded mujahideen following their ousting of the Soviet Union in 1989 and the overthrow of the pro-Soviet People’s Democratic Party of Afghanistan government in 1992.

Working through the Organisation for Promoting Afghan Women’s Capabilities (OPAWC), Joya’s aim was to educate girls and women. Teaching was literally underground (in sympathisers’ basements) where she found the compulsory burqua (“a symbol of women’s oppression, like a shroud for the living”) useful for “hiding books and other forbidden objects”.

Joya risked kidnap, rape, torture and murder on a daily basis. She survived thanks to the quiet resistance, instinctive solidarity and human kindness of strangers. Afghan men, for example, at risk of their own lives, would step to claim to be a close male relative of lone women stopped by Taliban patrols for moving about the streets unaccompanied.

When the Taliban fled in 2001 after the US invasion, many Afghans were sympathetic to the Americans. This support soon collapsed as the US and allied military continued to kill civilians and installed a corrupt government of warlords and fundamentalists.

Joya, as a feminist and democrat, needed (and still needs) an armed bodyguard, a network of safe houses and the burqua to hide her identity. She remains in the sights of the CIA-backed Northern Alliance made up of “ruthless men with a dark past” who now dominate the US-approved government of President Hamid Karzai.

These were the same thugs and terrorists that pillaged Afghanistan during the post-Soviet civil war between 1992 and 1996. They were eager to resume their power and self-enrichment in a post-Taliban Afghanistan under US protection. Women were again the first victims of the pro-US Karzai regime — as they were in the anti-Soviet and Taliban regimes that preceded it.

Joya took the fight up to the new rulers as well, first against the local officials appointed by warlords in Joya’s province of Farah who were hostile to the free medical clinic and orphanage run by Joya and the OPAWC.

Joya then raised the political level by standing, successfully, in UN-supervised elections in 2003 to the Loya Jirga (constituent assembly) to approve the new constitution.

Joya used her three-minute speech to parliament to attack the warlords at the gathering. Halfway through, however, her microphone was cut as accusations (“communist!”, “prostitute!”, “infidel!”) and death threats were rained on her.

Joya was the youngest member of parliament elected in the 2005 elections. The physical and verbal attacks on her continued inside and outside parliament, culminating in the plot to suspend her. This, she says, was because she “spoke the truth about the warlords and criminals in the puppet government of Karzai”.

Human Rights Watch said about 60% of the members of the 2005 parliament were warlords or their allies who got elected through fraud, intimidation or US-financed bribery.

At the head of the current regime is the “impeccably mannered” Karzai whose “own hands”, says Joya, are “stained with the blood of the innocent people of Afghanistan because he had put so many warlords and criminals into positions of power”.

Under Karzai’s watch, corruption and nest-feathering has been raised to a fine art. Misogynist laws were introduced and the war criminals in parliament, in the name of “reconciliation”, granted themselves amnesty for all war crimes committed during the past three decades.

The claim that the US and its allies have brought justice, democracy and women’s rights to Afghanistan “is all a lie, dust in the eyes of the world”, says Joya. Afghanistan is still ruled by “women-hating criminals” — in most places it is still not safe for women to appear in public uncovered or to walk on the street without a male relative.

Girls are still sold into marriage. Rape, in and out of marriage, goes unpunished. Life expectancy is less than 45 years and 70% of the population lives on less than $2 a day. Half of all men and 80% of women are illiterate. The US alone spends $100 million a day on the war but total international aid for reconstruction is a mere fraction of this and mostly falls into corrupt hands.

The Afghan people, says Joya, are sandwiched between two enemies — the anti-US terrorists of the Taliban and the pro-US terrorists (originally armed and financed by US proxy efforts against the Soviets in Afghanistan) that came back to power with the Northern Alliance in the 2001 invasion.

US President Barak Obama, she says, continues the same failed policies as his predecessor. That is, more troops and support of corrupt, violent pro-US rulers in the pursuit of US military, regional, economic and strategic interests in the Central Asia region.

Joya’s book is valuable for dispelling the fluff that passes for most analysis and reporting on the West’s war in Afghanistan. It’s also valuable for her clear perspective that neither the Taliban, nor the corrupt, warlord-riddled government of President Karzai, nor the Western occupation troops, offer anything but a diet of terrorism, misogyny, economic deprivation and censorship. She does not rule out armed struggle.

Joya’s analysis is enriched by the stories of her personal experiences with the people of Afghanistan and their enemies. She puts faces and names to what it means when US-protected warlords are running society and brings the “poor and forgotten” people of Afghanistan, their traumas and humanity, out from the shadows of Western media stereotypes.

Afghans, she shows, are not backward people mired in Islamic fundamentalism. This does not stop her from having “hard discussions with men who thought that they could treat women and girls like property”.

Joya says the struggle for Afghanistan’s people is “hard and risky” but there is no other option. She says, quoting Bertholt Brecht — “those who do struggle often fail, but those who do not struggle have already failed”.

Despite the personal dangers (Joya has survived five assassination attempts and uncounted plots), she feels “proud that even though I have no private army, no money and no world powers behind me, these brutal despots are afraid of me and scheme to eliminate me”. Her outspoken stance for equality and democracy has won her many friends and protectors, and her grassroots support is both enormous and enthusiastic, especially among young Afghans.

International support, she writes, is very important in the struggle — messages of support are invaluable for keeping up the spirit of democratic activists and showing the people of Afghanistan that they are not alone. Joya’s struggle is our struggle.

No explicit provision in the Afghan penal code that criminalises rape: here.

The official excuse of the US Bush administration for the Afghan war was that it was in order to catch Osama bin Laden. Well, after after all those years, they still have not caught him. Did they try seriously?

According to DNA news in India:

Washington: Al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden was cornered by US forces in the Afghan mountains of Tora Bora just months after 9/11 and could have been killed or captured, but the military top brass decided not to attack him with the massive force at their disposal, a Senate report says.

Afghanistan: Harsh Treatment Reported In Secret American Prison: here.

Recent reports reveal that the US military continues to carry on torture and illegal detention in Afghanistan at a dungeon known to inmates as “the black prison”: here.

An Open Letter to President Obama from Michael Moore: here.

DynCorp mercenaries’ corruption scandal


This video from the USA about Afghanistan is called DynCorp, US tax funds child prostitution – Operation Leakspin.

From the War Street Wall Street Journal in the USA:

US: DynCorp Fires Executive Counsel

by August Cole

November 28th, 2009

DynCorp International Inc. said it has terminated one of its top lawyers, a move that comes on the heels of the government contractor’s disclosure that some of its subcontractors may have broken U.S. law in trying to speed up getting licenses and visas overseas.

The lawyer, Curtis Schehr, was a senior vice president, executive counsel and the firm’s chief compliance officer, a position created earlier this year. He joined DynCorp in 2006 as general counsel.

The company disclosed the “termination without cause” in a filing Wednesday with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The move was effective Monday, according to the filing. …

DynCorp’s business in overseas hot spots is growing. In Afghanistan, the Falls Church, Va., company recently won a major Defense Department contract worth billions of dollars to build bases and supply U.S. forces.

Yet the company has grappled with a series of setbacks that have put it on the defensive over its oversight and management of government contracts.

The most recent issue was revealed in a Nov. 9 filing with the SEC. DynCorp said subcontractors may have spent as much as $300,000 to “expedite the issuance of a limited number of visas and licenses from foreign government agencies,” which may have violated the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act. …

There have been other issues at DynCorp recently. Following Iraq‘s decision to oust Blackwater Worldwide [which calls itself Xe by now] from Iraq, DynCorp was supposed to move quickly provide helicopters for U.S. diplomats in Baghdad. But that has been delayed well into next year as DynCorp’s aircraft weren’t suited to the job.

In March, a DynCorp contractor in Afghanistan was found dead after an apparent drug overdose.