Amnesty International today revealed how irresponsible military aid and arms supplies to Nepal from countries including the United States, India and the United Kingdom, have facilitated the killing, torture and abduction or "disappearance" of thousands of civilians. The organisation called on these governments and others -- including Belgium and South Africa which have recently supplied military assistance and France, which supplies crucial components for helicopters assembled and delivered by India -- not to resume military assistance or arms supplies destined for Nepal until the security forces can demonstrate that they will uphold human rights. A new report from the organization outlines the case for the suspension of all transfers of arms and related logistical and security supplies to Nepal that can be used to commit grave human rights violations. ... http://southasia.oneworld.net censor News |
Editor - 18:39:00 02-23-06 |
Food Bank Network Served Over 25M in '05 |
More than 25 million Americans turned to the nation's largest network of food banks, soup kitchens and shelters for meals last year, up 9 percent from 2001.Those seeking food included 9 million children and nearly 3 million senior citizens, says a report from America's Second Harvest."The face of hunger doesn't have a particular color, and it doesn't come from a particular neighborhood," said Ertharin Cousin, executive vice president of the group. "They are your neighbors, they are working Americans, they are senior citizens who have worked their entire lives, and they are children."... http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/02/23/AR2006022300062_pf.html
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Editor - 18:34:00 02-23-06 |
IT Jobs Going Rural, Not Overseas |
In a crook of Clinch Valley in Lebanon, Va., there are no counterculture coffeehouses, no art museums, and the "ginger" salad dressing at the town's only Japanese restaurant is really Thousand Island. Despite its country couture, Lebanon (pop. 3,300), once betrothed to King Coal, is on the cutting edge of a new business trend. The farmshoring phenomenon, in which high-tech companies choose to open offices in rural America as opposed to India, China, or Mexico, is coming to this mid-Appalachian plateau. Late last year, two major IT firms, CGI-AMS and Northrop-Grumman, announced they were bringing more than 700 technology jobs to Lebanon that pay around $50,000 a year. These positions are in the same class as the 112,000 IT jobs nationwide that were lost to overseas outsourcing in 2003, according to Global Insight in Boston. ... http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2006/02/23/tech/main1340912.shtml
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Editor - 16:04:00 02-23-06 |
School Pig Castration Sparks Protests |
A teacher who castrated a live pig in front of her high school class is the target of protests by animal rights activists throughout the country.The protests began after People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals posted information about the incident at Rosamond High School on its Web site last month. The posting does not say when the castration occurred."We're concerned not only because animals suffer during these routine castrations but also because of the message it sends to students who are still forming opinions about treatment of animals in our society," said Stephanie Bell, a PETA cruelty case worker.Rod Van Norman, superintendent of the Southern Kern Unified School District school in the Mojave Desert about 70 miles north of Los Angeles, said animal castrations often occur in agriculture classes and are an important skill for students to learn."I don't know why they're picking on a little school district," he said.... http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2006/02/22/ap/strange/mainD8FUDQ1OE.shtml
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Editor - 16:02:00 02-23-06 |
Japan in surprise trade deficit |
Japan has posted its first monthly trade deficit in five years, and its biggest in 23 years. The trade balance fell to a 348.9bn yen ($2.95bn; £1.7bn) deficit in January against surpluses of 911.9bn yen in December and 193.9bn yen a year before. Announcing the figures, the government said soaring oil prices and revived domestic spending had boosted imports. The Japanese deficit was the largest since January 1983 and only the third in two decades. But analysts and government officials said there were positives to be taken from the figures, as they show strong domestic demand. Data also showed that exports continue to rise. While imports expanded 27% to 5.36 trillion yen, exports in January also rose strongly, by 13.5% to 5.01 trillion yen. ... http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/4742582.stm
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Editor - 14:23:00 02-23-06 |
Lawyer group criticizes new bankruptcy law |
A new law making it harder to erase debts in bankruptcy has failed to stop abuses and has stymied people who have legitimate reasons to file, a group representing bankruptcy attorneys contended Wednesday.A report released by the National Association of Consumer Bankruptcy Attorneys was based on an analysis of 61,335 people who have gone to credit counseling agencies, the required first step before filing bankruptcy under the law that took effect on Oct. 17.Of the 61,335, 97 percent were unable to repay any debts and 79 percent had gotten into financial trouble because of job loss, huge medical expenses or the death of a spouse, the report said.... http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/B/BANKRUPTCY_LAW?SITE=ININS&SECTION=US&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT&CTIME=2006-02-22-20-16-55
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Editor - 14:19:00 02-23-06 |
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