[41257] in Discussion of MIT-community interests
Digitize your old 16mm and 8mm films also your old videos - Great!
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (i Memories)
Thu Apr 30 20:12:46 2015
To: <mit-talk-mtg@charon.mit.edu>
Date: Thu, 30 Apr 2015 17:12:43 -0700
From: "i Memories" <iMemories@gassine.work>
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against possible allegations of rape, indicating it was an administrative order
and not an individual decision.Because the military is also acting as a
police force, "it is the duty of the armed forces when carrying
out these duties to abide by the law and not violate its
provisions when dealing with citizens," the court ruling said.The ruling "is incredibly
important not only because it comes after scenes of sexual assault and
battery of women by military troops," said Heba Morayef, an Egypt researcher
with Human Rights Watch. "It is also important because it is the
first time a civilian court acknowledged and criticized abuse by the military."At
first the military denied administering virginity tests. Then last week, the military
prosecutor said one army doctor is on trial for abuse. On Tuesday,
after the court decision, military prosecutor Adel el-Morsi said the tests are
not condoned by the military, calling the abuse "an individual behavior" that
is befo
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re courts.Rights groups have said some officers have explained the tests as
a way to clear their names of possible charges of abuse by
the protesters. Women protesters said they were threatened with prostitution charges before
they were subjected to the tests.Hossam Bahgat, a human rights activist who
was involved in the case, said the court ruling restores some justice
to the abused women and is a first step toward holding military
officials accountable."It is also very symbolically important because it is a crack
in the wall of impunity the (military rulers) have built around their
personnel and their conduct" against protesters and women in particular, he said.He
said the lawyers will try to upgrade the charges against the army
doctor to sexual assault instead of the current indecent act.Ibrahim, who covers
her hair in the style of conservative Muslims, told a private TV
station Monday that she filed the suits because she wanted to spare
others what she wen
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a second train to keep moving on the same track and
slam into it.Among those singled out for blame was former Minister of
Railways Liu Zhijun, who was the public face of efforts to build
the bullet train and was detained in February amid a graft investigation.
The Cabinet also cited the general manager of the company that manufactured
the signal, who died of a heart attack while talking to investigators
in August.
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APDec. 27, 2011: Samira Ibrahim, 25, flashes the victory sign during a
rally supporting women's rights in Cairo, Egypt. An Egyptian court has ordered
the country's military rulers to stop the use of "virginity tests" on
female detainees, a practice that has caused an uproar among activists and
rights. Ibrahim filed a lawsuit after being subjected to a forced 'test."CAIRO
An Egyptian court on Tuesday ordered the country's military rulers to
stop the use of "virginity tests" on female detainees, in a rare
condemnation by a civilian tribunal of a military practice that has caused
an uproar among activists and rights groups.The virginity test allegations first surfaced
after a March 9 rally in Cairo's Tahrir Square that turned violent
when men in plainclothes attacked protesters, and the army cleared the square
by force. The rights group Human Rights Watch said seven women were
subjected to the tests.The ban came a week after public outrage over
scenes of soldier
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ished in 2010 in the same journal, politely citing a multitude of
problems with the study's methodology. The Indian researchers responded a month later
with their own two-paragraph letter defending the methodology and calling for a
larger study to establish the superiority of antibiotic treatment over surgery.There's no
word whether that larger study is pending, but the journal's editors retracted
the original article for reasons of alleged plagiarism, stating that "significant portions
of the article were published earlier" by other researchers in 2000 and
1995.#2: Litter breeds crime and discrimination.It sounded so reasonable: Graffiti and litter
in urban settings can trigger changes in the brain that can lead
to crime, hatred and discrimination. Alas, the senior author of this April
2011 paper in Science, Dutch social psychologist Diederik Stapel, might have fabricated
much of the data.The journal Science retracted the paper in November upon
realization that
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ng his coffin passed. Some struggled to get past police holding back
the crowd."How can the sky not cry?" a weeping soldier standing in
the snow said to state TV. "The people ... are all crying
tears of blood."The dramatic scenes of grief showed how effectively North Korea
built a personality cult around Kim Jong Il despite chronic food shortages
and decades of economic hardship.A large challenge for North Korea's propaganda apparatus
will be "to counter the public's perception that the new leader is
a spoiled child of privilege," said Brian Myers, an expert on North
Korean propaganda at Dongseo University in Busan, South Korea."Having Kim Jong Un
trudge mournfully next to the hearse in terrible weather was a very
clever move," Myers said.Even as North Koreans mourned the loss of the
second leader the nation has known, the transition of power to Kim
Jong Un was well under way. The young man, who is in
late 20s, is already being hailed by state media as the "su
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