Human Rights
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. ...
MoD: British soldiers breached Iraqi’s human rights
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 ...
U.S., Canada violated rights of Gitmo detainee
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 ...
In Iraq, Was I a Torturer? Asks Soldier
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; ...
Children in care to get Biometric IDs
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 - ...
Don’t extend DNA database, says minister
Thursday, March 27th, 2008
The DNA database should probably not be extended and should certainly never become universal, Home Office Minister Tony McNulty has said, writes Matthew George.
He also told the Commons Home Affairs Committee, which is inquiring into whether Britain has a surveillance society, that such fears were the "meat of myths".
He insisted the regulatory oversight of surveillance - ranging through the DNA database and CCTV cameras to automatic number ...
Firms’ biometrics records ‘can be hacked’
Thursday, March 20th, 2008
The growing use of biometrics to identify individuals is "insecure and in need of immediate attention," according to an IT systems company.
Fujitsu Siemens said biometrics is increasingly being used in the business world to verify whether individuals really are who they say. By 2013, Fujitsu Siemens predicts biometric identity technology will be so widespread in the private sector that the number of people included would rival that of the proposed ...
Police Censorship of Smash Edo film
Thursday, March 20th, 2008
Police have intervened across the country to censor 'On the Verge' an independent documentary about a campaign to shut down a Brighton weapons manufacturer. So far establishments in Southampton, Chichester and Bath and Oxford as well as Brighton have come under police pressure to cancel film showings. In Brighton police intervened to prevent a showing at the Duke of York's Cinema.
Staff at the Arthouse Community Cafe ...
Wiretapping’s true danger
Thursday, March 20th, 2008
History says we should worry less about privacy and more about political spying.
As the battle over reforms to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act rages in Congress, civil libertarians warn that legislation sought by the White House could enable spying on "ordinary Americans." Others, like Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-Utah), counter that only those with an "irrational fear of government" believe that "our country's intelligence analysts are more concerned with random innocent ...
Panel approves DNA bill testing for convicts
Thursday, March 20th, 2008
COLUMBIA - South Carolina would make DNA testing available for prisoners who claim they're innocent under a bill heading to the Senate Judiciary Committee.
The co-founder of the Innocence Project told senators today that the law could both exonerate wrongly convicted prisoners and help police find the person who committed the crime.
Barry Scheck says the Innocence Project has exonerated 214 prisoners through DNA testing since 1992. He says law enforcement used ...
Former UN chief links democracy, human rights
Thursday, March 20th, 2008
UN chief Boutros Boutros Ghali stressed here Wednesday the significance of the close relationship between democracy and defence of human rights.
Ghali was speaking to reporters on the sidelines of the 4th Seminar of Arab National Institutions on Human Rights, which kicked off here earlier Tuesday under the title "Human Rights and Development: Role of Arab National Institutions on Human Rights".
He hailed such meetings as an opportunity to bolster and ...
Israel’s airport security questioned
Thursday, March 20th, 2008
JERUSALEM - A civil rights group is challenging Israeli airport security practices. The group says Israel singles out Arabs for closer inspection, and that's racisim.
But experts say the practice, which is known as profiling, is vital to security and saves lives. They say attackers aiming at Israeli aircraft are most likely to be Arabs.
The Israeli civil rights group challenged the practice before the Israeli Supreme Court on Wednesday. Israeli-Arabs ...
Mugabe Government Dismisses Rights Report
Thursday, March 20th, 2008
Zimbabwe’s government has described as rubbish accusations that general elections scheduled for March 29 would not be free and fair. This follows a report by US-based Human Rights Watch, which suggests that supporters of incumbent President Robert Mugabe’s ZANU-PF government use violence to intimidate partisans of opposition parties. Mugabe’s government contends that significant changes have been made to ensure that this month’s elections are credible.
It adds that the country’s electoral ...
UK teachers forced to work 100-hour weeks
Wednesday, March 19th, 2008
Teachers in independent schools are being denied the most basic employment rights, with some not having written contracts and others forced to work more than 100 hours a week.
Growing competition to perform well in league tables, and pressure from parents paying fees as high as £25,000 a year, are forcing head teachers to get rid of staff for the flimsiest of reasons, the Association of Teachers and Lecturers (ATL) heard ...
Human rights activist on trial in China
Wednesday, March 19th, 2008
BEIJING - Hu Jia, a human rights activist and commentator, was tried in a Beijing court yesterday on charges of inciting subversion against the Chinese government through his writings on the Internet.
Hu's lawyer, Li Fangping, said the Beijing No. 1 Intermediate Court would probably hand down its sentence in about a week. Hu, 34, who faces up to five years in prison, pleaded not guilty.
Li said he was given only ...















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