Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Lawyer in Iran stoning case 'missing,' woman still faces execution for adultery

"Rights group Amnesty International has accused Iran of persecuting a lawyer involved in the high profile case of a woman sentenced to death by stoning.

  • Mohammad Mostafaei, who is defending the woman, was called in on Saturday for questioning at Tehran's Evin prison. Amnesty says
  • he appears to have gone missing after his release.

The authorities have since detained his wife and brother-in-law, it says.

  • Mr Mostafaei is a known critic of Iran's judicial system.

He has defended many juvenile offenders, political prisoners and others sentenced to stoning.

  • Among his most high-profile clients is Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani, who was sentenced to death by stoning following a conviction for adultery.

Although that threat was lifted earlier this month, she still faces execution by hanging.

  • The case has prompted outrage all over the world, and protests were held in a number of countries at the weekend.

In a statement, Malcolm Smart, Amnesty International's Middle East and North Africa director, said: "Mohammad Mostafaei is a thorn in the side of the Iranian authorities and we fear that he is being persecuted in an attempt to stop him carrying out his professional activities," said

  • The Iranian authorities have clearly been angered by the international campaign to save Ashtiani, says the BBC's Jon Leyne in Cairo.

The government has also put pressure on another lawyer involved in the case, as well as Ashtiani's son, who has been campaigning hard for her release, our correspondent says.

  • An extended report on state television blamed exiled opposition groups for using the issue to stir up demonstrations against Iran, and now

the Iranian government appears to be trying to silence her lawyers, he adds."

Sunday, July 18, 2010

US taxpayers have paid ClimateGate salaries for decades-Times UK

7/18/10, "US Halts funds for climate unit," Sunday Times UK, Jonathan Leake
  • "The American government has suspended its funding of the University of East Anglia’s climate research unit (CRU), citing the scientific doubts raised by last November’s leak of hundreds of stolen emails.

The US Department of Energy (DoE) was one of the unit’s main sources of funding for its work assembling a database of global temperatures.

This should have been renewed automatically in April, but the department has suspended all payments since May pending a scientific peer review of the unit’s work.

  • The leaked emails caused a global furore. They appeared to suggest that CRU scientists were using “tricks” to strengthen the case for man-made climate change and suppressing dissent.

A spokesman for the DoE said: “The renewal application was placed on hold pending the conclusion of the inquiry into scientific misconduct by Sir Alastair Muir Russell.”

  • Muir Russell published his report earlier this month. It said that the rigour and honesty of the CRU scientists were not in doubt but criticised them for “a consistent pattern of failing to display the proper degree of openness”.

The DoE peer review panel will now sift through the report and decide

A spokesman for the university said:

  • has been successful and would not comment or speculate in the meantime.”"

Saturday, July 17, 2010

AP complains about Obama blocking media access to oil spill, Obama blows them off!

6/16/10, "Spill coverage barriers remain despite promises"AP, Tamara Lush, Jacksonville.com
  • In response to AP's letters of concern to Obama and Gibbs, they were told to address any concerns to the "joint information center run by the federal government and BP in Houma, La.."...
Journalists covering the Gulf of Mexico oil spill have been yelled at, kicked off public beaches and islands and threatened with arrest in the nearly three weeks since the government promised improved media access.
  • Adm. Thad Allen, the federal government's point person for the response, issued a May 31 directive to BP PLC and federal officials ensuring media access to key sites along the coast. BP Chief Operating Officer Doug Suttles followed up with a letter to news organizations, saying the company "fully supports and defends all individuals' rights to share their personal thoughts and experiences with journalists if they so choose."

Those efforts have done little to curtail the obstacles, harassment and intimidation tactics journalists are facing by federal officials and local police, as well as BP employees and contractors, while covering the worst environmental catastrophe in U.S. history.

  • "We think a lot of the restrictions are way tighter than they need to be," said Michael Oreskes, an AP senior managing editor. "So far, I think the government has done a better job of controlling the flow of information than of controlling the flow of oil in the Gulf."

Oreskes wrote to White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs on Wednesday demanding that President Barack Obama's administration improve media access. Gibbs did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

  • Among the limitations AP is protesting is a Federal Aviation Administration rule barring aircraft from flying low enough to observe and photograph coastal impact and cleanup.

The limit is set at 3,000 feet for planes, and appears to have recently been lowered to 1,500 feet for helicopters. Before the restriction was imposed, aircraft carrying members of the media routinely flew between 500 and 1,000 feet without incident.

The letter points out that while Allen's letter promised more transparency, several incidents since then have violated his order:

— On June 5, sheriff's deputies in Grand Isle, La., threatened an AP photographer with arrest for criminal trespassing after he spoke to BP employees and took pictures of cleanup workers on a public beach.

— On June 6, an AP reporter was in a boat near an island in Barataria Bay, off the Louisiana coast, when a man in another boat identifying himself as a

  • U.S. Fish and Wildlife employee ordered the reporter to leave the area.

When the reporter asked to see identification, the man refused, saying "My name doesn't matter, you need to go."

— According to a June 10 CNN video, one of the network's news crews was told by a bird rescue worker that he signed a contract with BP stating that he would not talk to the media. The crew was also turned away by BP contractors working at a bird triage area —

  • despite having permission from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to enter the facility.

— On June 11 and 12, private security guards patrolling in the Grand Isle area attempted repeatedly to

  • prevent a crew from New Orleans television station WDSU from walking on a public beach and speaking with cleanup workers.

On June 13, a charter helicopter pilot carrying an AP photographer was contacted by the Federal Aviation Administration, which told the pilot he had violated the temporary flight restriction by flying below 3,000 feet. Both the pilot and photographer contend the helicopter never flew below 3,000 feet. However, the federal government now says helicopters in the restricted area are allowed to fly as low as 1,500 feet.

  • About Grand Isle, Jefferson Parish Sheriff's Office spokesman John Fortunato said Tuesday that the media does not have access to some designated areas.

"We are the senior law enforcement agency in Jefferson Parish, so we are assisting the police on Grand Isle with enforcing that," Fortunato said. "Any area that is designated unsafe, or a hot zone is closed to the media."

  • He said reporters would be warned, but if they continued to violate the area they
  • would be arrested.

In the WDSU case, station News Director Jonathan Shelley said the resistance from the private security guards was especially puzzling, especially since it came shortly after Suttles' letter.

  • "Our frustration was that no sooner had this letter been sent out, that we were rebuffed twice," Shelley said.

Some other news organizations said access has improved since Allen's May directive.

  • "Generally the situation is better than it was a couple of weeks ago," said Peter Kovacs, managing editor of The Times-Picayune of New Orleans.

But USA Today published an editorial Monday about media access to the affected areas, citing instances where reporters were shunned.

  • "BP maintains these are anomalies. But every such attempt deepens the impression that BP, having caused the worst environmental disaster in U.S. history, is trying to manipulate what the public sees about it," the editorial said.

The AP's letter Wednesday is the latest correspondence between the news organization and the White House about oil spill access.

  • AP first contacted Obama on June 5, outlining its concerns in a letter from President and CEO Tom Curley. Gibbs followed up with a call to AP editors and a written response. If journalists have concerns, Gibbs said, they can call to report their experiences
  • with a joint information center run by the federal government and BP in Houma, La.

Oreskes said he called the number from his office in New York on Tuesday and left a message.

  • "I'm still waiting for them to call me back," he said."


Tuesday, July 6, 2010

Michael Steele was right. Afghanistan isn't a war, it's organized crime and the political class is complicit.

"THE "blizzard of banknotes" leaving Kabul airport is worse than originally feared, The Scotsman has learned, with at least $4.2 billion (around £2.8 billion) exported in cash over the last three-and-a-half years.
  • Congressmen in the United States voted to suspend $4bn in aid to the Afghan government last week, after media reports showed $3bn in cash has been flown out of the country since 2007.
US and British fraud investigators fear that most of the money leaving Kabul has been siphoned-off from international aid contracts, or made from the country's rapidly expanding opium trade.
  • Documents seen by The Scotsman show that the Afghan Ministry of Finance puts the real figure at $4.2bn - at least $1.2 billion higher than previously feared.
"Our records show that $4.2bn has been transferred in cash through Kabul International Airport alone during the last three-and-a-half years," Afghanistan's finance minister, Dr Omar Zakhilwal, wrote in a letter
  • to US Congresswoman Nita Lowey.
Ms. Lowey chairwoman of the aid appropriations sub-committee in Congress, has vowed not to send another dime to Afghanistan until she was confident "that US taxpayer money is not being abused to line the pockets of corrupt Afghan government officials, drug lords and terrorists".
  • Dr Zakhilwal's letter acknowledges allegations that Afghan president Hamid Karzai's government is "assisting or partaking in this fraud" but the minister hits back by pointing out that most of the money America spends in Afghanistan circumvents the Afghan government.
"Only 20 per cent of aid in Afghanistan (5 per cent of the whole US government's assistance) is spent through the government budget.
  • The rest is going to development and security projects outside our systems and outside our control," he wrote.
"In particular, while during the last three years $19.6bn of aid has been delivered to Afghanistan, (the Afghan] government has had full discretion and control only over $1bn."...
  • An investigation titled "Warlords Inc" warned the military was inadvertently funding the insurgency through private security companies who pay-off local power brokers to drive supplies through their territory. It said a $2.16 billion logistics contract was fuelling "warlordism, extortion, and corruption."
Afghanistan relies on a cash economy and there is no limit to how much money can be exported, as long as it is declared to customs. Official records show most of the money that was declared leaving Kabul since 2007 formed part of the
  • traditional Islamic hawala system, in transfers to Dubai. The often informal nature of the hawala contracts, based on trust, honour and lender's reputation, make the transactions almost impossible for financial investigators to track. "....
via MichaelSavage.com