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Iraq & America's Recession
About this category: Peace, Conflict & Governance


Wow. I was out of town for a couple days and come back to find Obama taking the lead, with Hillary's campaign manager and deputy manager resigned! McCain has promised no new taxes for his entire campaign, this just as the recession is looming, and the taxes in April will bring in less revenue than in years. The sub-prime mortgage crisis was not just a poor people's phenomenon- this type of behavior, of borrowing far more than one could ever expect to pay off, pervades the highest levels of government!


I have mixed feelings about MoveOn.org, but I really admire their new campaign "Iraq/Recession". They have a nice new email action that allows you to easily and automatically write an op-ed to your local newspaper (they send it, you write it) making the tie between the American recession and the Iraq spending. (A tie that is obvious, but few people actually realize!)


Some interesting facts:

"As of today, we've spent over $495 billion in Iraq.1 With the economy in the tank, think about what that money could do here at home: Cover millions of kids who don't have insurance, or help folks who're losing their jobs and homes.

Instead, it's supporting a failed occupation in Iraq.

More and more Americans are making the connection between the billions we've spent over there and the crumbling economy here at home. In fact, a new AP poll shows that most Americans think ending the war is the best way to help the economy.2 But pundits still talk about the war and the economy as two unrelated things.

* The recession is going to force states to cut back their budgets. Most likely, the cuts are going to affect the services that working families need and depend on.3
* Meanwhile, the war is costing Americans more than $338 million a day. 4 That money could be spent to help out the folks who're hurting most now. For less than what we're spending on the war, we could pay for affordable housing for hundreds of thousands of families, health care for children, or scholarships to help folks pay for education. 5
* Gas prices are close to double what they were before the war began. The cost of oil is still hovering around $100 barrel. 6
* We're borrowing $343 million every day to finance the war in Iraq. 7 Our skyrocketing debt will be a bigger and bigger drag on the economy—slowing recovery and burdening future generations.


Write an Op-Ed

If thousands of us write, we can get the media to stop ignoring the connection between the war and the recession. The opinion pages are the most widely read pages in the newspaper, so we can also make sure voters—who are growing increasingly concerned about the economy—know that any candidate who wants to stay in Iraq has no plan for the economy."


February 19, 2008 | 1:01 PM Comments  0 comments

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jbanerjee   jbanerjee Joya Banerjee's TIGblog
Joya Banerjee's profile

Jesus' Halo

Gone are the days of boinking creatures on the head in Super Mario
Brothers. Today's popular games are all about gruesome murder and
violence.

I had the lovely experience of playing Halo, a video game which,
thankfully, I am terrible at, which involves killing people with guns,
lasers, nail-spewing killing machines, and other highly effective and
incredibly scary weapons. When you kill someone, your entire
controller shakes and vibrates much like, I imagine, a real machine
gun would do.

I can understand why this game is so popular with soldiers in Iraq and
Afghanistan. It must help them to dehumanize their colonial subjects,
and normalize the experience of killing. I can also see why it's
popular with American teens, who are inundated with graphic violence
through movies, television, and news networks. Ultimately it will lead
them to sign up, to "die for their country" and maybe kill off a few
Muslims here and there to boot.

To the point-

It seems the Church thinks this is a wonderful way to attract young
people to the church, and, in their words, to promote "fellowship."

Whatever happened to "Thou Shalt Not Kill"? Is non-violence pass??


New York Times
NATIONAL | October 7, 2007


Thou Shalt Not Kill, Except in a Popular Video Game at Church

By MATT RICHTEL
Ministers and pastors desperate to reach young congregants are
using an unusual recruiting tool: the violent video game Halo.

October 11, 2007 | 8:20 PM Comments  0 comments

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jbanerjee   jbanerjee Joya Banerjee's TIGblog
Joya Banerjee's profile

MTV- from counterculture to mainstream culture
About this category: Human Rights & Equity


[ Note- YouthAIDS has since corrected some things on the blog.........]


New York Times Article on ThinkMTV


In the world of business, a company can use another's design, approach, membership, and just about anything else, with little redress.

However in the world of non-profit, especially non-profit that seeks to eradicate poverty and embrace global activism, we work collaboratively toward common objectives.

Therefore it's quite sad that MTV has morphed from its once progressive, underground, and radical youth beginnings, into just another corporate giant focused on global advertising, consumerism,
and competition. It's dishonest that they copied TakingITGlobal and even proposed to collaborate with them in order to gain information on how they operate, and then built their own new, for-profit site, ThinkMTV. (As if we need another social networking site!)

No doubt MTV, especially Staying Alive Foundation, has done great good in the world, especially regarding AIDS. However time and again we see that it's going down the road of self-serving, competitive initiatives that proliferate in the youth world.

Such groups may have a lot of money, but some know next to nothing about the issues they champion (for example, see YouthAIDS Executive Director's blog in which she claims "throughout Africa there is a 30% prevalence rate")

Kate Roberts' blog

I'm tempted to ask, what type of "civic engagement" can MTV really produce? The image I have in my mind is of superfluous paris-hilton type beauty queens who are hoping for "world peace." Is this
for-profit site going to achieve anything besides its advertising dollars?

The site is clearly geared toward US students who think it's cool to talk at the very most superficial level about global issues. To "Save" the Africans... It seems to have been written by Americans/ Westerners for Americans, yet claims to have a global scope. Their buzzwords that appear on the site are a dead giveaway- "Minority" presumably alludes to non-white populations (a.k.a. the majority of the world?) And the snippets from other sections focus on American celebrities such as Kanye West and on the health section, a feature on Jay Z.

Perhaps the most disturbing part of the site is the "Get Rewarded" section. It is an uniquely American ethos that material gain is the only incentive for looking outside of oneself. The site does little to promote sharing or community, but rather promotion of the individual in a meaningless world of interactive media overload.

October 4, 2007 | 3:59 PM Comments  0 comments

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jbanerjee   jbanerjee Joya Banerjee's TIGblog
Joya Banerjee's profile

New York rejects abstinence-only sex education programs!
About this category: Health & Wellness



Great news- New York has finally acknowledged that abstinence-only sex education may not be the best idea in a state with rising HIV infection rates, teen pregnancy, and STIs.

Why are the Catholics still saying that giving young people condoms will increase "promiscuity" when numerous studies show that comprehensive sex education actually causes young people to delay first intercourse and to use condoms when they do have sex? (1)



New York Times: New York Just Says No to Abstinence Funding

NEW YORK REGION | September 21, 2007

By JENNIFER MEDINA
The decision puts New York in line with at least 10 other states
that have decided to forgo the federal money in recent years.


Excerpt:

"Dr. Daines's announcement came the same day that the New York Civil
Liberties Union, which opposes abstinence-only education, released a
report detailing the number of such programs in the state. The report
stated that roughly half of the groups teaching abstinence in the
state were religious groups and that the state had done almost nothing
to monitor them."

(NYCLU Report: http://www.nyclu.org/files/financing_ignorance_092007.pdf)
NYCLU Article: http://www.nyclu.org/node/1395




Calling Bush's teen education program on sex a failure, New York state
will forgo $3.7 million in federal aid

By CATHLEEN F. CROWLEY, Staff writer

First published: Friday, September 21, 2007

Excerpt:

"The Bush administration's abstinence-only program is an example of a
failed national health-care policy directive, based on ideology rather
than on sound scientific-based evidence," Health Commissioner Richard
Daines said Thursday.

..


The New York Catholic Conference, which represents New York's bishops,
called the administration's decision unfortunate.

"Most people would agree that teenagers are too young to be having
sex, therefore the consistent message to them ought to be that this is
a behavior that is undesirable and you should refrain from it," said
Dennis Poust, spokesman for the conference. "The idea of so-called
comprehensive sex education sounds OK at first blush, but what the
children are being taught is instruction in condom usage which leads
to promotion of sexual activity."

Nearly half of all New York teenagers have sex before graduating high
school, according to the 2005 National Youth Risk Behavior Survey from
the U.S. Census. In Albany County, 427 girls between 15 and 19 became
pregnant in 2004 and 199 had abortions, according to state health
department statistics."


Citation:
(1) UNAIDS, 1997. "Impact of HIV and Sexual Health Education on the Sexual Behaviour of Young People: A Review."

"Only three out of 53 studies that evaluated specific interventions found increases in sexual behaviour associated with sexual health education. Twenty-two reported that HIV and/or sexual health education either delayed the onset of sexual activity, reduced the number of partners, or reduced unplanned pregnancy and STD rates."

October 2, 2007 | 4:30 PM Comments  0 comments

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Shahnawaz   Shahnawaz Shahnawaz شاهنواز's TIGblog
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the FEAR near to HEARTS
Related to country: Pakistan
About this category: Human Rights & Equity


the girls are looking to scholl children at side of rural shelter less school in flood affected village, in this village female children are less allowed to join schools.

Shahn

September 18, 2007 | 11:28 PM Comments  3 comments

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cchandler   cchandler Caitlin Leigh Chandler's TIGblog
Caitlin Leigh Chandler's profile

Youth Closing Statement
Related to country: Sri Lanka
About this category: Human Rights & Equity


ICAAP YOUTH STATEMENT – August 23, 2007

Delivered at the Closing Ceremony by Ari Yuda Laksmana

Good morning ladies and gentlemen.

On behalf of the youth who participated in the youth forum, I would like to make a statement.

I would like to ask young people in the room who participated in the Youth Forum of the 8th International Congress on AIDS in Asia and the Pacific to please stand, and remain standing during my remarks.

-To the rest of you who are seated, I have a question for you. // What is it like to live in a world without AIDS? // All the people standing were born after the pandemic. We do not know a world without AIDS. //

We are already responding in our own ways to HIV/AIDS. We are running programs, educating peers, pushing for social change and uniting in this fight around the world. //

The value of our response has to be recognized as necessary, and mainstreamed.

We strongly urge you to begin viewing us as equal partners in the response to HIV/AIDS and to move beyond the rhetoric of youth participation by funding youth-led initiatives, engaging in true youth-adult partnerships and meaningfully involving young people in policy that affects our lives. //

Therefore, we have laid out concrete steps to be taken to ensure the next ICAAP, held in my country of Indonesia, builds on the process started here over the next two years and beyond. //

We call upon those present here today to work with us to achieve the following in the next two years in Bali:

1. More than double the number of youth participants;
2. Include youth voices by providing space for a youth representative at the opening and closing ceremonies, ensuring a platform for youth to address all congress delegates. Future congresses should include representation for young people, including young people living with HIV/AIDS, in the different segments of the congress programme to provide for the youth perspectives on the different issues;
3. Develop a separate scholarship selection process for young people that addresses problems that youth face when applying to conferences of this nature;
4. Provide support for a youth committee comprised of members from the previous ICAAP youth forums to create a clear process of coordination, implementation, monitoring, evaluation, and hand-over of the Youth Forum;
5. Facilitate the meeting of youth at the Congress with high-level decision makers to advocate for youth-specific policy and to seek funding for their work;
6. Have a two-day youth pre-conference to discuss youth-issues of the region, network efficiently and adequately prepare youth to get the most out of ICAAP.
7. Technically and financially support the creation of a regional network of youth-run organizations working with youth. //

Look around this room; what does that tell you about youth participation in this congress? Despite the fact that we comprise over half of all new infections, from the 19 plenary speakers at ICAAP, only ONE was a young person talking about youth issues. //

For all the youth issues in the region and around the world, we had ONE chance to meaningfully address the entire congress – me speaking to you right now. //

We were given only ONE day before the Congress to discuss, deliberate and strategize on all youth issues in all the countries that were represented here. //

We stand firmly united against being tokenized on panels, relegated to abstract sessions and poster presentations, and denied funding to carry out our initiatives.//

We hope that at the next ICAAP, we will not have to stand before you raising the same issues we are forced to raise again and again. We all know we need a great deal of CHANGE in the way we respond to AIDS in our region. Many people think SOMEONE is doing something about the needs and concerns of youth and youth involvement; I did too until I saw the reality.

Constructive ways to ensure the momentum and successes of the previous 3 ICAAP youth forums in Melbourne, Kobe and now Colombo are sustained and expanded upon have already been raised with key conference organizers.

We will do all in our power and effort to ensure that a clear structure for planning, implementing and handing over the future ICAAP youth forums and programs is actioned and supported in full partnership with ALL ICAAP stakeholders. We hope that you'll make it to the table; we will be there, waiting for you.

It is our hope that one day when we ask the youth of the room to rise, they will be the ones who have known a world without AIDS.

See you in Bali.


-Statement composed by youth from Sri Lanka, Indonesia, India, Australia, PNG, Japan and from the Global Youth Coalition on HIV/AIDS



###



For press inquires:

Guruparan Kumaravadivel Ari Yuda Laksmana

rkguruparan@gmail.com ari@youthaidscoalition.org

(c)0773 704 178

August 29, 2007 | 4:44 PM Comments  0 comments

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imranlaghari   imranlaghari imran khan laghari's TIGblog
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Provincial Decrees Jeopardizing Rights of Migrant Workers in Thailand‎
Related to country: Thailand
About this category: Human Rights & Equity


Dear Friends,

Migrant workers in Thailand need your support!

Under the Provincial Decree on Migrant Workers from Burma, Cambodia and Lao, migrant workers are not allowed to use mobile phones, ride motorbikes, or leave the worksite at night between the hours of 8:00pm and 6:00am. Further, a ban has been placed on assemblies of more than five persons. Please sign for the withdrawal of the discriminatory Decree upon migrant workers.



http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/support_thai_migrant_workers


Thank you for your support!

In solidarity,

Imran
Thailand

August 23, 2007 | 3:21 AM Comments  0 comments

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cchandler   cchandler Caitlin Leigh Chandler's TIGblog
Caitlin Leigh Chandler's profile

Lunch with Michel Kazatchki
About this category: Health & Wellness


Michel Kazatchi, Director of the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB and Malaria, participated in a "Meet the Leaders" lunch at ICAAP's Asia Pacific Village.

Kazatchki spoke candidly in a lengthy Q & A session with audience members about how the Global Fund functions. Notable statements he made in response to questions included:

-Acknowledging the need to disseminate information about the Global Fund to communities, so more people can become involved and participate in Country Coordinating Mechanisms (CCMs).

-Agreeing with an audience member that the grant guidelines are incredibly complex and should be simplified.

-Said he was "very concerned" about indications that the UN's World Food Programme(WFP) plans to pull-out support later this year for several of their HIV/AIDS projects; urged people to lobby and call the WFP.

-Hoped that the Global Fund will eventually have dual track funding, so money goes to governments and NGOs when they receive a Global Fund grant (currently, most of it goes directly to governments).

-Urged people to participate in their country's CCM process, to ensure their voice is heard and the Global Fund money reaches those most in need. If all attempts at becoming involved with the CCM fail, then it is possible to apply for money outside the CCM (but this should be in an exceptional situation).

-When the Global Fund suspends money from a country, it is only after seeing hard evidence that something has gone horribly wrong with the grant, ie corruption; "If we let dysfunction enter the world of the Global Fund, then the Global Fund will be looked at suspiciously be everyone," he said, "And the opportunity we have for universal access will...be lost."

I asked if the Global Fund made an effort to pressure countries to meaningfully involve young people in their CCMS, and he replied that they were now looking at unheard voices and considering new guidelines for representation on the CCMS.


August 20, 2007 | 7:29 AM Comments  0 comments

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cchandler   cchandler Caitlin Leigh Chandler's TIGblog
Caitlin Leigh Chandler's profile

8th ICAAP Kicks off in Colombo
Related to country: Sri Lanka
About this category: Human Rights & Equity


Dear GYCA members -

I will be writing as frequently as possible about the 8th International Conference on AIDS in Asia and the Pacific. I arrived in Colombo Saturday afternoon (after flying all night from Karachi to Dubai to Colombo) and went straight to the Youth Forum. The YF was a one-day pre-conference organized by the Youth Committee of ICAAP.

ICAAP held its opening cermonies last night with much pomp and circumstance. Although we had planned to have a GYCA meeting before the opening cermony, we were unable to do so due to the high security in the conference center which prevented us from accessing a meeting room. The high security was apparently due to the imminent arrival of Sri Lanka's President, Mahinda Rajapaksa.

Rajapaksa made a bizarre speech at the cermony, in which he emphasized that drugs and alcohol were stepping stones to other drugs and thus to HIV infection. It wasn't clear if he was talking about alcohol abuse or consumption in general, but either way it's incredible that public leaders are still permitted to make such misleading statements surrounding HIV/AIDS!

GYCA members Frika Iskandar and Rachel Ong read a statement at the Opening Ceremony which had been prepared earlier that day in the Community Forum. They emphasized the need for govt's and institutions to work with community-based organizations, youth, injection drug users, men who have sex with men, sex workers and other marginalized groups to effect change.

Deborah Landey, Deputy Executive Director of UNAIDS, read a statement prepared by Peter Piot to the plenary that called for a shift in focus from short-term crisis mangement about the pandemic to a more sustainable, long-term response.

Michel Kazatchkine, head of the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB and Malaria, and Jokapeci Tuberi Cati from the Fiji Network for People Living with HIV, also delivered keynote addresses.


August 20, 2007 | 7:11 AM Comments  1 comments

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jbanerjee   jbanerjee Joya Banerjee's TIGblog
Joya Banerjee's profile

Bush vs. Science- the death march continues

Yet again forcing the Surgeon General of the United States to be the mouthpiece for the Bush Administration's lies, a report calling for action on global health was suppressed by the administration because Carmona kept it a-political.

Steiger, with absolutely no qualifications in global health whatsoever, pulled the report because it did not laud the United States for its action against global health crises such as AIDS, TB and Malaria.

What is there to laud? The United States, the wealthiest country in the world, ranks last in the amount of money it spends on global health from among industrialized nations as a percentage of its GNP/ wealth. (Citation: USAID)

Congratulations to Carmona for speaking out about how his freedom of speech has been curtailed.



Bush Aide Blocked Report
Global Health Draft In 2006 Rejected for Not Being Political

By Christopher Lee and Marc Kaufman
Washington Post Staff Writers
Sunday, July 29, 2007; Page A01

A surgeon general's report in 2006 that called on Americans to help tackle global health problems has been kept from the public by a Bush political appointee without any background or expertise in medicine or public health, chiefly because the report did not promote the administration's policy accomplishments, according to current and former public health officials.

The report described the link between poverty and poor health, urged the U.S. government to help combat widespread diseases as a key aim of its foreign policy, and called on corporations to help improve health conditions in the countries where they operate. A copy of the report was obtained by The Washington Post.

Three people directly involved in its preparation said its publication was blocked by William R. Steiger, a specialist in education and a scholar of Latin American history whose family has long ties to President Bush and Vice President Cheney. Since 2001, Steiger has run the Office of Global Health Affairs in the Department of Health and Human Services.

July 30, 2007 | 4:10 PM Comments  2 comments

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Shahnawaz   Shahnawaz Shahnawaz شاهنواز's TIGblog
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HELP the Flood Victims of Sindh & Balochistan in PAKISTAN
About this category: Human Rights & Equity


A deadly cyclone which swept through Pakistan last week (26th of June) has so far killed more than 380 people, injured 1,100 and affected the lives of a further 2 million. The south-western Pakistani province of Baluchistan bore the brunt of the cyclone, with heavy monsoon rains and winds lashing through its towns. Many residents have been without drinking water and food for days, different Government and non-Government agencies are involved in their rehabilitation and relief we the Mathini Women Development Organization.


Most seriously affected areas In Sindh are District Kamber Shahdadkot and District, where thousands of people lost their every thing. A large number of cattle in this largely rural area perished, and parts of raw paths roadway are under water, making it difficult to reach those needing assistance.


Mathini is contributing its help to flood victims in suffered areas of Sindh Province, through June 1st, in the form Health Education, assistance in medical services, supply of food packages, to the target beneficiaries. Mathini seeks to assist more the affected people by the flooding by providing them, emergency shelter, food items, and drinking water to families in affected areas by flash flood.

Most urgently needed items remain tents, food Medicines, in this regards we request you to help the flood sufferers by paying Cash, Check, Tents, Food Items, Medicine, & any thing else useful for them and possible to deliver.

Join our campaign. Your donation will help bring about urgent help for flood sufferers in Sindh Pakistan.



FOR DONATIONS

From Pakistan

Deposit your amount in any branch of PICIC Commercial bank in 3901-8273-10 account of Larkana Bank Square Branch or send your cross check to below address.



International Donations

Please send your Cross checks on below address or send your donations by any standard money transfer service.

In case of material support like tents, food items or any thing else please feel free to contact us

In case of any information or inquiries please contact us…





Mathini Women Development Organization
Bungalow# 1658/C, Shaikh Muhala Larkana, Sindh, Pakistan
Phone: 0092 074 4059242, 4053247,
Email mathini.lrk@gmail.com

July 17, 2007 | 5:34 AM Comments  0 comments

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cchandler   cchandler Caitlin Leigh Chandler's TIGblog
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...

Stay tuned!

July 12, 2007 | 2:57 PM Comments  0 comments

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jbanerjee   jbanerjee Joya Banerjee's TIGblog
Joya Banerjee's profile

Bush Pardons Scooter Libby for Doing His Dirty Work!!

This is absolutely unbelievable! Bush pardoned Scooter Libby! Just look at the grin on his face- Justice evaded, one more time........

What is the lesson learned? Even if you're a diplomat and you question the Bush Adminstration's lies (by writing an op-ed that Iraq did not buy enriched Uranium from Niger), you and your family will be punished by the government. (They leaked the name of his wife, Valerie Wilson, for being an undercover CIA agent).

Bush is not pardoning Scooter, he's pardoning himself. With 18 months left in office, he can do whatever he wants pretty much, with no repercussion whatsoever.

Jesus now we've got the likes of Scooter Libby and Paris Hilton roaming free on the streets of America. Talk about dictatorships!


WASHINGTON | July 3, 2007

July 3, 2007 | 12:55 PM Comments  0 comments

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jbanerjee   jbanerjee Joya Banerjee's TIGblog
Joya Banerjee's profile

America's Concentration Camps for Immigrants
About this category: Human Rights & Equity


The great part of the new immigration bill that they are not mentioning- the lockup and die bit.

I thought after we put Japanese people in concentration camps in America in the 40s and 50s, we'd said goodbye to Nazi-style death camps? I guess not.



New Scrutiny as Immigrants Die in Custody

New York Times
By NINA BERNSTEIN
Published: June 26, 2007


[Excerpts:]

Sandra M. Kenley was returning home from her native Barbados in 2005 when she was swept into the United States’ fastest-growing form of incarceration, immigration detention.

...
Seven weeks later, Ms. Kenley died in a rural Virginia jail, where she had complained of not receiving medicine for high blood pressure. She was one of 62 immigrants to die in administrative custody since 2004, according to a new tally by Immigration and Customs Enforcement that counted many more deaths than the 20 previously known.
...
In the case of Ms. Kenley, a legal permanent resident of the United States for more than 30 years, detention interrupted her medical care for high blood pressure, a fibroid tumor and uterine bleeding. An autopsy attributed her death to an enlarged heart from chronic hypertensive disease. But a report by emergency medical services said that she had fallen from a top bunk, and that a cellmate had pounded on the door for 20 minutes before guards responded.
........

The inspector general in the Department of Homeland Security recently announced a “special review” of two deaths, including that of a Korean woman at a privately run detention center in Albuquerque. Fellow detainees told a lawyer that the woman, Young Sook Kim, had pleaded for medical care for weeks, but received scant attention until her eyes yellowed and she stopped eating.

Ms. Kim died of pancreatic cancer in federal custody on Sept. 11, 2005, a day after she was taken to a hospital.

“We spend $98 million annually to provide medical care for people in our custody,” Ms. Zuieback said. “Anybody who violates our national immigration law is going to get the same treatment by I.C.E. regardless of their medical condition.” (Jamie Zuieback, a spokeswoman for the Department of Homeland Security)

June 26, 2007 | 3:36 PM Comments  0 comments

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imranlaghari   imranlaghari imran khan laghari's TIGblog
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Words of appreciation (I GOT Scholarship)

Dear All

I want to share really a good news about me. I got scholarship for my Masters At Mahidol University Thailand in International Human Rights. For that first of all, I am Thankful to Almighty Allah, due that it happend. I am also thankful to my friends and TIG becasue they always give me moral support and encouragement to reahed upto this achivement.
Thank you Taking it global. I will leave for Thailand on 16 June 2007 to join the course.


June 11, 2007 | 3:15 AM Comments  2 comments

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