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حقوق الإنسان
يوم الأربعاء, يونيو - حزيران [18ث], 2008
 ب [إفريم] [نسنغو] | [سإكست-سإكس] يحدّ [ير-ولد] [غغو] [لثيو] [نكب] في شاحنة بعيد يطوف نحو [أفوك] [شوبّينغ سنتر] في [إينسزا], [متبللند] محافظة جنوبيّة وبدايات يبتسم.
"لما يتمّ أنّ يتلقّى عربة لا ظهرت أن هوائي طويلة على هو?" هو يسأل, يظلّه أعين أن يحصل نظرة جيّدة في ال يسرع تايوتا. على يحقّق أنّ ال…
يعيّن داخل
حقوق الإنسان |
يوم الأربعاء, يونيو - حزيران [11ث], 2008
 بوالتر ويليامس? | [لت'س] أتمّت فكرة تجربة يسأل ما إذا أمريكيات ل أو ضدّ عبودية. أنت أمكن قلت, "ماذا يكون أنت [تلك بووت], ويليامس? نحن تنازعنا حرب أنّ كلّف على 600,000 حيوات إلى نهاية عبودية! "أن بدأ يحصل, نحن أمكن وجدت وصف أنّ على قبض الجوهر العبودية. جيّدة يعمل وصف: عبودية مجموعة…
يعيّن داخل
عامّة, حقوق الإنسان |
يوم الإثنين, أبريل - نيسان [7ث], 2008
عجّل واشنطن ([ريوترس]) - مرشح ديموقراطيّة رئاسيّة [هيلّري] [كلينتون] رئيس جورج [و.]. بوش في يوم الإثنين أن يقاطع بيجين لعبة أولمبيّة يفتح مراسم هذا فصل صيف ما لم الصين يحسن حقوق الإنسان.
ذكر [كلينتون], في بيان, صدامات عنيفة في تيبت والافتقار الضغطة بالصين على سودان أن يتوقّف "الإبادة جماعيّة في [درفور]. "
"في هذا وقت, و [إين ليغت وف] [رسنت فنت], يصدق أنا رئيس بوش سوفت لا يخطّط على يحضر ال…
يعيّن داخل
يكسر أخبار, حقوق الإنسان |
يوم الأحد, أبريل - نيسان [6ث], 2008
[جمي] [دوورد], بيتيّ شؤون محررة
الملاحظة,
يوم الأحد أبريل - نيسان 6 2008
اثنان من بريطانيا يقود [سفيل ليبرتي] مجموعة إلى عرض [ا]? 1,000 مكافأة للبصمات من الرئيس وزراء أو [هوم سكرتري] - حركة أنّ استطاع تركت كلا مجموعة مفتوحة إلى مقاضاة لدافع.
ال [أنتي-يد] يصنّف بطاقات [نو2يد] والحملة منظمة عزلة إرادة دوليّة هذا أسبوع أخذت خارجا خدعة "يراد"…
Posted in
Human Rights, Surveillance, Civil Liberties & Human Rights News |
Sunday, April 6th, 2008
By ERIC LICHTBLAU
WASHINGTON ? A new round of political sparring erupted Friday over the government?s wiretapping powers, as the Bush administration asserted that the lapsing of a surveillance law a week ago has already led to the loss of important intelligence information and made private phone carriers less willing to cooperate.
Democrats immediately returned fire over the suggestion that they had compromised national security. The ...
Posted in
Human Rights, Surveillance, Civil Liberties & Human Rights News |
Monday, March 31st, 2008
Meg Bernhardt
ANNAPOLIS -- A bill to allow officers to take a sample of DNA from people charged with certain violent crimes is close to passage in the Maryland General Assembly, despite fears that it could infringe on those people's rights.
Among the critics is the NAACP. In Frederick County, NAACP chapter president Guy Djoken said he is concerned.
He points to analyses of local data, including The Frederick ...
Posted in
Human Rights, Surveillance, Civil Liberties & Human Rights News |
Monday, March 31st, 2008
Richard Taylor
Britain?s police want to routinely put children as young as five on the National DNA Database (NDNAD), even when no crime has been committed.
Gary Pugh, the DNA spokesman for the Association of Chief Police Officers (ACPO) and director of forensic sciences at Scotland Yard, recently told the press, ?The number of unsolved crimes says we are not sampling enough of the right people.?
According to Pugh, ...
Posted in
General, Human Rights, Surveillance, Civil Liberties & Human Rights News |
Monday, March 31st, 2008
Having failed to get rid of Brian Haw by force the Greater London Authority is trying again by legislation, their responses to the government consultation 'Managing Protest around Parliament' all seem to be aimed at getting rid of the peace camp. And the government agrees with them, SOCrAP isn't buried yet and they're already robbing its corpse.
Time for a protest outside City Hall?
"The Government received 512 responses during the 12 ...
Posted in
Activism News, Human Rights |
Monday, March 31st, 2008
Alan Travis?| The Guardian
The government's own human rights watchdog threatened last night to launch a legal challenge to Labour's plan to introduce a law that would let police detain terror suspects without charge for 42 days.
The Equality and Human Rights Commission says the key part of the counter-terrorism bill goes against human rights law and may breach the Race Relations Act.
As the ...
Posted in
Human Rights, Surveillance, Civil Liberties & Human Rights News |
Friday, March 28th, 2008
A Buddhist monk died of starvation due to a 12-day blockade of food and water to major monasteries in Lhasa by Chinese forces, Tibetans in exile reported Wednesday. Lama Thokmey died Monday in the Ramoche monastery in Lhasa, according to the Tibetan Centre for Human Rights and Democracy (TCHRD).
????
????The Chinese military have not allowed food and water into the monastery since March 14 and fires teargas into it frequently, ...
Posted in
General, Human Rights |
Thursday, March 27th, 2008
NEW YORK (AP) ? Some workers are doing it at Dunkin' Donuts, at Hilton hotels, even at Marine Corps bases.
Employees at a growing number of businesses are starting and ending their days by pressing a hand or finger to a scanner that logs the precise time of their arrival and departure?information that is automatically reflected in payroll records.
Manufacturers say these biometric devices improve efficiency and streamline payroll operations. ...
Posted in
Human Rights, Surveillance, Civil Liberties & Human Rights News |
Thursday, March 27th, 2008
British soldiers breached the human rights of an Iraqi who died while in UK custody in Basra more than four years ago, the defence secretary, Des Browne, said today.
Baha Mousa, a hotel receptionist, suffered 93 injuries and died screaming in custody, witness statements read to the high court said.
Browne said the Ministry of Defence would also admit to violating the rights of eight other Iraqi men in September 2003 at ...
Posted in
Human Rights, War & Terrorism News |
Thursday, March 27th, 2008
OTTAWA ? The U.S. is violating international norms by holding a Canadian former child soldier at Guantanamo Bay, his lawyers told Canada's high court Wednesday as they sought to force the country's intelligence service to provide details from their interviews with him.Omar Khadr's attorneys argued Canadian intelligence officers violated Canada's bill of rights by questioning him in 2003 and 2004 at the U.S. military base, where some 275 men are ...
Posted in
Breaking News, Human Rights |
Thursday, March 27th, 2008
When 27-year-old Ben Allbright returned from Iraq, he was treated like a hero. But he is haunted by the "harsh interrogations" he oversaw.
The prisons in Iraq stink. Ask any guard or interrogator and they'll tell you it's a smell they'll never forget: sweat, fear and rot. On the base where Ben Allbright served from May to September 2003, a small outfit named Tiger in western Iraq, water was especially scarce; ...
Posted in
Human Rights, War & Terrorism News |
Thursday, March 27th, 2008
Children in care should get school photos and passports, Ministers said yesterday, as they launched plans designed to give thousands of vulnerable children in care a happy and healthy childhood. Whether this will mean biometric ID cards be default for this vulnerable group remains to be seen.
Biometric IDs for disabled children of those with special educational needs are often highly difficult to generate and use, for numerous complex reasons - ...
Posted in
General, Human Rights, Surveillance, Civil Liberties & Human Rights News |
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