A typical case of blind justice
Bob Morris @ Jul 17th 2006 17:46 - Category: Unfiled ;
No criminal case for mistaken British terror shooting.
Bob Morris @ Jul 17th 2006 17:46 - Category: Unfiled ;
No criminal case for mistaken British terror shooting.
Bob Morris @ Jul 17th 2006 09:04 - Category: Uncategorized Tags: Sri Lanka;
From DJ Mitchell
The One-Party Solution
It’s been quiet in Sri Lanka for the past few days. Some people fear it’s been too quiet. Nevertheless, things are happening.
First, the President empanelled the inaptly named All Parties Representative Committee (APRC). This is ostensibly a committee representing all the parties of Sri Lanka, which will seek “a Sri Lankan political solution… to the ethnic problem†(See http://www.dailynews.lk/ - “Priority for home grown solutionâ€Â). While a nice idea, the Committee is somewhat handicapped. First, it included only political parties, so the LTTE was left out. Second, I’ve been informed that the UNPâ€â€the major opposition partyâ€â€boycotted the Committee. So the Committee has the support of only one of the three major players. That’s not very representative.
If history is any indication, it is likely that the Committee will produce a proposed solution which the UNP will abrogate and the LTTE will reject sight-unseen. The government will declare the LTTE intransigent, and will thus create a mandate for military action. It may also declare the UNP intransigent and use this as an excuse to consolidate power. These are events that have happened before, and they are not unexpected in the current state of affairs.
Bob Morris @ Jul 17th 2006 00:15 - Category: Unfiled ;
ArticlesofImpeachment.net
Teach-ins nationwide thiss Wed., July 19,
The Center for Constitutional Rights (CCR), America’s leading group of constitutional scholarship and activism, has developed a legal case for the impeachment of George W. Bush. Now, in collaboration with Melville House Books and progressives across the U.S., they are sponsoring a “National Teach-In” to share their case, what’s at stake, and what impeachment means for every American.
Los Angeles-area teach-in
Pasadena Hilton Hotel / 168 S. Los Robles Avenue
July 19, 7:30-10 pm
Bill Paparian, Stephen Rohde
[tags]impeachment[/tags]
Bob Morris @ Jul 17th 2006 00:11 - Category: Unfiled ;
The LA Times has been running excellent, in-depth stories on the chronic problems at LAPD.
L.A. in peril of another Rampart scandal
Despite extensive reform in the seven years since the Rampart Division police corruption scandal, Los Angeles is at risk of similar crises unless the LAPD is significantly expanded and trades its “warrior policing” model for a more community- friendly problem-solving style, a city task force warned today.
Colorfully dubbed “warrior cops,” an evolving clique of aggressive LAPD officers who rely on force and intimidation has resisted 40 years of attempts to manage crime in the city differently.
Until the city ends the chronic anorexia of “thin blue line” policing  the safety-on-the-cheap model that delivers efficient public safety for neighborhoods on the right side of that line and what’s come to be called “containment-suppression” for neighborhoods that are not  citywide public safety will not happen.
[tags]LAPD[/tags]
Bob Morris @ Jul 17th 2006 00:07 - Category: Uncategorized Tags: Uzbekistan;
Murray was the British ambassador to Uzbekistan who was forced out of his job for exposing the US/British practice of sending politicial prisoners to Uzbekistan to be tortured.
From the intro to the interview
First of all, if you’ve read the accounts, you know that the Uzbek government stands accused of boiling dissidents to death, raping them with broken bottles, smashing their teeth in, pulling out their fingernails - one of the West’s principal allies in the ‘war on terror’, which is often cast as one for liberal values, has been a dictatorship that, according to Murray, is every bit as bad as Saddam’s was. This regime also happened to be one of the main suppliers of ‘intelligence’ to the West.
This was ‘intelligence’ which the CIA used and pretended was genuine. Worse, they sent prisoners to Uzbekistan to be tortured for information.
Craig Murray
“It started with me in first three weeks of arriving going to witness a dissident trial, and it was absolutely terrifying. It was like a Nazi show trial, they had dissidents signing confessions saying not only that they had been to Afghanistan, but that they actually met bin Laden – it was that obvious. And the prisoners were looking dishevelled and beaten, and they were surrounded by armed guards and the judge was screaming at them. It was an extraordinary, terrifying experience. Within a few days of that, I received photographs of one prisoner who had been boiled to death at the notorious Jaslyk prison complex.
Over time I started to get a picture of torture at an industrial level, with the common factor that if they were dissidents they were made to sign confessions indicating that they were connected with Al-Qaeda and if they weren’t dissidents, they had to name ten other people as being connected with Al Qaeda – and it was ludicrous, these were people they had never even met!
“Then I began to get CIA intelligence reports repeating these exact claims as trustworthy intelligence, and it didn’t take much to notice that connection.”
The interview concludes
He wonders, as any reader might, how we have come to a situation where “integrity in public life is now so rare that some consider me a hero just for exhibiting the most basic human decency?” In times of universal deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act. In a time of increasing reaction, even the most moderate liberalism can seem revolutionary.
Criag Murray has written a book about this, Murder in Samarkand. The British government has blocked him from publishing certain documents related to the book on his website. However these documents have widely been distributed via the blogosphere. Blogs with continuing info on Craig Murray and his battles with the government include LFCM, BlairWatch, Nether World, and Lenin’s Tomb (where the above interview appeared)
Bloggers have played an indispensable role in getting the news about Murray and Uzbekistan out to the world, as well as in circumventing the attempted censorship of the British government.