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World Blog provides a dynamic look at world events and trends from NBC News correspondents, producers, and bureaus around the world.
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  • 23
    Apr
    2012
    5:33am, EDT

    South Sudanese run for cover as Sudan bombs border area

    Goran Tomasevic / Reuters

    A soldier in South Sudan's SPLA army looks up at warplanes as he lies on the ground to take cover beside a road during an air strike by the Sudanese air force in Rubkona, near Bentiu, South Sudan, on April 23, 2012.

    Goran Tomasevic / Reuters

    A woman runs along a road during an air strike by the Sudanese air force in Rubkona on April 23, 2012.

     

    Goran Tomasevic / Reuters

    Smoke rises after the Sudanese air force fired a missile during an air strike in Rubkona on April 23, 2012.

    Reuters reports — Sudanese warplanes carried out air strikes on South Sudan on Monday, killing three people near a southern oil town, residents and military officials said, three days after South Sudan pulled out of a disputed oil field.

    A Reuters reporter at the scene, outside the oil town of Bentiu, said he saw a fighter aircraft drop two bombs near a river bridge between Bentiu and the neighboring town of Rubkona. 

    Sudan leader says he will teach independent South a 'final lesson by force'

    Weeks of border fighting between the two neighbors have brought the former civil war foes closer to a full-blown war than at any time since the South seceded in July. Read more.

    Video: George Clooney calls crisis in Sudan 'real disaster'

    Goran Tomasevic / Reuters

    A soldier in South Sudan's SPLA army walks in a market destroyed in an air strike by the Sudanese air force in Rubkona on April 23, 2012.

    Michael Onyiego / AP

    A South Sudanese soldier has a bullet removed from his leg in the Rubkona Military Hospital on April 22, 2012.

     

    75 comments

    What a damn shame! If South Sudan had Mega Oil, the U.S. and/or NATO would be there protecting them.

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    Explore related topics: sudan, africa, conflict, world-news, featured, south-sudan, bentiu
  • 13
    Mar
    2012
    1:33pm, EDT

    Cancer drug to be produced cheaply in India, as ruling breaks Bayer's monopoly

    Mahesh Kumar A / AP

    An Indian Pharmacologist examines the reaction of cytotoxic drugs on a mouse inside a containment facility of the Research and Development Centre of Natco Pharma Ltd. in Hyderabad, India, on March 13. India effectively ended Bayer's monopoly on a patented cancer drug Monday, licensing a much cheaper generic under a unique law aimed at keeping costs affordable. In a decision likely to upset Western pharmaceuticals, the patent office approved Natco Pharma Ltd.'s application to produce the kidney and liver cancer treatment sorefinib.

    Mahesh Kumar A / AP

    An Indian Pharmacologist removes mice from cages to study the reaction of cytotoxic drugs, inside a containment facility of the Research and Development Centre of Natco Pharma Ltd. in Hyderabad, India, on March 13.

    Reuters -- India's move to strip German drugmaker Bayer of its exclusive rights to a cancer drug has set a precedent that could extend to other treatments, including modern HIV/AIDS drugs, in a major blow to global pharmaceutical firms, experts say.

    On Monday, the Indian Patent Office effectively ended Bayer's monopoly for its Nexavar drug and issued its first-ever compulsory license allowing local generic maker Natco Pharma to make and sell the drug cheaply in India.

    It is only the second time a nation has issued a compulsory license for a cancer drug after Thailand did so on four drugs between 2006 and 2008, also on affordability grounds. Thailand also issued licenses for HIV/AIDS and heart disease treatments.

    Krishnendu Halder / Reuters

    A pharmacologist checks the toxic reaction on a swiss albino inside the bio safety cabinet at Natco Research Center in the southern Indian city of Hyderabad, on March 13. India's move to strip German drugmaker Bayer of its exclusive rights to a cancer drug has set a precedent that could extend to other treatments, including modern HIV/AIDS drugs, in a major blow to global pharmaceutical firms, experts say. On Monday, the Indian Patent Office effectively ended Bayer's monopoly for its Nexavar drug and issued its first-ever compulsory license allowing local generic maker Natco Pharma to make and sell the drug cheaply in India.

    "This could well be the first of many compulsory rulings here," said Gopakumar G. Nair, head of patent law firm Gopakumar Nair Associates and former president of the Indian Drug Manufacturers' Association.

    "Global pharmaceutical manufacturers are likely to be worried as a result ... given that the wording in India's Patent Act that had been amended from 'reasonably priced' to 'reasonably affordable priced' has come into play now."

    Read the full story.

    Mahesh Kumar A / AP

    An Indian scientist works inside a laboratory of the Research and Development Centre of Natco Pharma Ltd. in Hyderabad, India, on March 13.

     

    8 comments

    The pharmaceutical companies and many doctors in the US are in collusion to provide treatment and management, but no real cure. It's shameful how the suffering of patients is prolonged for profit. Perhaps American patients should outsource their medical care to India. Unfortunately, in a rare show o …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: india, cancer, drugs, pharmaceutical, world-news
  • 8
    Dec
    2011
    5:47am, EST

    Denied access to official data, Chinese citizens take their own pollution readings

    Andy Wong / AP

    Tan Liang, a resident of Beijing, prepares to take readings on a PM2.5 detector outside his residential compound in Beijing, China, on Dec. 3, 2011.

    The Associated Press reports from BEIJING:

    Armed with a device that looks like an old transistor radio, some Beijing residents are recording pollution levels and posting them online. It's an act that borders on subversion.

    The government keeps secret all data on the fine particles that shroud China's capital in a health-threatening smog most days. But as they grow more prosperous, Chinese are demanding the right to know what the government does not tell them: just how polluted their city is.

    "If people know what their air is like, they are more likely to take action," said Wang Qiuxia, a researcher at local environment group Green Beagle, who shows interested residents how to test pollution on a locally made monitoring machine. Continue reading.

    Andy Wong / AP

    Tan Liang carries a PM2.5 detector towards a garbage-burning facility located near his residential compound in Beijing on Dec. 3, 2011.

    Andy Wong / AP

    Wang Qiuxia, right, a volunteer from an environmental group, teaches Cheng Jing, left, how to operate the PM2.5 detector in Beijing on Dec. 7, 2011.

    Related content:

    • China begins to admit 'fog' is really smog
    • A smog by any other name
    • More world news stories

    Chinese are growing more outspoken about the "fog," now accurately calling it "smog," covering cities like Beijing.

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    7 comments

    That's what it used to look like in in East LAX, you couldn't see down the street and on really bad days you couldn't see across the street back in the 70's. China needs environmental regulation and standards in its industry's, maybe they could eventually "Lift the Fog".

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    Explore related topics: china, asia, pollution, environment, beijing, world-news, smog
  • 17
    Aug
    2011
    11:17am, EDT

    One journalist's take on a neglected African tragedy

    NBC News producer Baruch Ben-Chorin just returned from Turkana, a remote region in northwestern Kenya badly hit by the drought that is afflicting parts of East Africa.  While the international community has focused largely on suffering in Somalia, relief workers say close to 40 percent of Turkana's population is suffering from hunger and malnutrition. 

    While concentrating on his main task of producing, Ben-Chorin took pictures for himself and his friends and family.

    Editor's note: These images were altered by a software application that uses filters to mimic the effects of shooting with an antique plastic film camera, even though they were taken with a modern digital phone camera.

    Baruch Ben-Chorin / NBC News

    A hut in the village of Kalapata, Turkana region, Kenya. Most of the people in Turkana live in small villages like Kalapata, depending on their herds for their livelihood. But the drought has killed most of their animals, and left them with nothing. Their traditional way of life may not survive.

     


    Baruch Ben-Chorin / NBC News

    A boy, foreground, receives food for the first time in two weeks at a Red Cross feeding point at a school. His father died in the famine in Loitanit, North Turkana. The drought over the last five years has devastated this region. In some parts the the region close to 40 percent of the people are malnourished.

    Baruch Ben-Chorin / NBC News

    A child collects maize grains from the ground.

     Ben-Chorin wrote the following upon his return from the region:

    I've used my iPhone to take pictures while on assignment or on the road for a while, and discovered the Hipstamatic application while playing around with it.  I find the low-tech, old-fashioned look appealing, and there is always a sense of mystery in the resulting picture.  This technique adds an interesting dimension that allows me to focus beyond the immediate, which a regular camera doesn’t.

    These photographs were taken during a three-day trip to the remote Turkana region, which has been badly affected by the long drought in the Horn of Africa. Because it is so remote, and to some extent ignored by the Kenyan government, there is little reporting about widespread hunger and malnutrition in Turkana. But it is bad, very bad. We visited a number of communities and witnessed these proud and beautiful people who have maintained their traditional way of life for thousands of years struggle to survive.

    Baruch Ben-Chorin / NBC News

    Turkana women waiting for food distribution in the village of Kalapata. Five people have died of hunger in this village alone over the last few months.

    Baruch Ben-Chorin / NBC News

    Turkana women. The people of Turkana are beautiful, proud and gracious, living a traditional life that dates back thousand of years.

    Baruch Ben-Chorin / NBC News

    Not far from the worst famine stricken areas, the USAID-sponsored Morulem project offers a sign of hope. The simple irrigation project has created vast green fields of maize and sorghum that feeds 3,000 households in the Lokori area. People here have a surplus of food that they can store or sell.

     

    Watch an NBC News report from Turkana:

    Rohit Kachroo reports from Turkana, in north-western Kenya, where famine is spreading deeper into the country causing many Kenyans to turn their attention away from the crisis in Somalia and work towards relieving the hunger within its own borders.

    Related content:

    • Slideshow: Suffering spreads as Kenyan drought deepens
    • Slideshow: Famine strikes East Africa
    • More images from Kenya and Somalia on PhotoBlog
    • Story: World Bank calls Horn of Africa famine manmade
    • Story: Somalia famine aid stolen, sold at markets
    • Story: Ghana schoolboy launches $13 million drive for Somali kids
    • PhotoBlog: Using an old camera, instead of a new app, to get that vintage look
    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    2 comments

    all of the food in the world and these ;people are starving help them to grow their own food show them how to plant water and tend to gardens , growing up in school africa was a rich nation what happen to this nation

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    Explore related topics: africa, drought, kenya, world-news, famine, horn-of-africa, turkana
  • 5
    Aug
    2011
    11:50pm, EDT

    'Israeli awakening' follows model of 'Arab spring'; more protests expected Saturday

    John Ray, NBC News writes:

    So, we've all seen and heard plenty of the Arab spring, stretching now into a bloody summer in Syria and Libya.
    But maybe even more surprising is the sudden emergence of what inevitably will be called the Israeli awakening.

    Nadav Neuhaus

    Israeli Gilad Peled participates in a demonstration for socioeconomic change in Tel Aviv on Saturday, July 30. Peled is working two jobs and his wife just lost her job. They have a young girl and they can't pay all of their bills each month. Peled says he is fed up that politicians have forgotten who elected them to parliament and he says it's about time that they start working for the people and not the other way around.

    Out of almost nowhere, a grassroots campaign has sprung up to challenge the nation's leaders.

    What's more; it has nothing to do with the peace process, with Palestinians or West Bank settlements.

    In fact, it's even bringing Arabs and Jews together. They share a common enemy. The soaring cost of living.

    On Saturday, organizers are promising the 'mother or all demonstrations' to surpass the 150,000 strong protest that took to the streets last week.

    That’s a remarkable figure in a country of just 7 million.

    Nadav Neuhaus

    Two weeks into Israel's housing protest, demonstrations are sweeping the country. More than 150,000 people took part in protests nationwide calling for socioeconomic change and demanding social justice.

    Dairy farmers, army reservists, taxi drivers, even parents planning a "stroller protest" - all have played a part in demonstrations so far.

    They have a long list of demands; action on rising rent, fuel, food and power costs. Tax breaks for the less well off; free schooling and changes to health system.

    Israel is a heavily taxed nation; people are asking what they get for their money.

    Part of the answer is the huge cost of security, a fact not lost on anyone.

    "The sense here that we're living in a war zone, traumatized by terror  - it's like we're not allowed to talk about 'small' issues, day-to-day stuff," one of the organizers, Stav Shaffir, a 26-year-old masters student, told the Guardian newspaper.

    "But security also means education, health, housing. We don't want to be controlled by fear."

    With opinion polls showing 90 percent public support the protests, Israelis seem to have found something to agree on.

    Nadav Neuhaus

    A protester uses a laptop In Tel Aviv's weeks-old tent encampment.

    108 comments

    seems like israel has found a new way to ask for increase in american aid. would 6 bils a year be ok? what the heck, we can manage another downgrade of our rating, can't we?

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  • 7
    Jun
    2011
    6:13am, EDT

    After the wave: Scrapping nearly 300,000 cars for Japan's rebuilding effort

    World Blog - Japan: After the wave World Blog - Japan: After the wave World Blog - Japan: After the wave Japan: After the wave, full series

    In Japan, more than 270,000 cars were ruined in the March 11 earthquake and tsunami. For the msnbc.com team reporting on the recovery in the Kesennuma area, the sheer number of ruined vehicles has been surprising. Multimedia producer Jim Seida captured a surround image of dozens of ruined cars neatly stacked for disposal. Explore them in the panoramic image below.

    The cars will go to good use. They plan to scrap them and use the steel for rebuilding.

     Nahoko Yamada who is working with the msnbc.com team reports the following:

    The number of cars that were washed away by tsunami totals 270,000 units in three affected prefectures, Iwate, Miyagi and Fukushima, the Yomiuri newspaper reported on April 16. That's 7 percent of total registered cars in those areas. The hardest hit areas were Fukushima and Miyagi, with over 100,000 trashed cars each.

    Jim Seida / msnbc.com

    Cars are stacked atop one another in Saichi, outside Kesennuma, Japan, Monday, June 6, 2011.

     

    76 comments

    We lost over 140 lives during the storms to hit the US in the last month. My heart goes to those families who have to rebuild their homes and their lives as well and I can feel their pain. The usual comments I see here reflect a callousness and lack of compassion for the Japanese people who lost no …

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    Explore related topics: japan, earthquake, tsunami, world-news, jim-seida, after-the-wave
  • 11
    Mar
    2011
    8:48pm, EST

    Saturday morning dawns with search and rescue efforts in Japan

    By Carissa Ray

    See our slideshow of images from the earthquake, tsunami and the ensuing devastation here.

    Yasushi Kanno / The Yomiuri Shimbun via AP

    An elderly man is carried by a Self-Defense Force member in the tsunami-torn Natori city, Miyagi Prefecture, northern Japan, on Saturday morning, March 12, one day after strong earthquakes hit the area.

    Kyodo News / AP

    People wait for rescue on the rooftop of a ruined building tangled with tsunami-drifted debris in Rikuzentakada, Iwate Prefecture, Japan, on Saturday morning, March 12, after Japan's biggest recorded earthquake slammed into its eastern coast Friday.

    Kyodo News / AP

    A man walks outside a two-story house, with its first floor structure was destroyed by tsunami, in Natori, Miyagi Prefecture, Japan on Saturday morning, March 12, after Japan's biggest recorded earthquake slammed into its eastern coast Friday.

    Kyodo News / AP

    A woman who was left inside a building is rescued Saturday, March 12, after Japan's biggest recorded earthquake slammed into its eastern coast Friday.

    Kyodo News / AP

    A local resident walks through debris in Rikuzentakata, Iwate, northern Japan on Saturday morning, March 12 after Japan's biggest recorded earthquake slammed into its eastern coast Friday.

    Kyodo / Reuters

    A man looks out over an area swept by a tsunami following an earthquake in Sendai City, northeastern Japan on March 12. Japan confronted devastation along its northeastern coast on Saturday, with fires raging and parts of some cities under water after a massive earthquake and tsunami that likely killed thousands.

    18 comments

    Although I have already seen pictures of the disaster is Japan, these are some of the most powerful images I have seen thus far. I can hardly fathom a 9.0 magnitude earthquake—Japan's worst disaster. With thousands dead and missing, the situation is nothing less than an extreme tragedy. The ey …

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    Explore related topics: japan, asia, earthquake, tsunami, disaster, natural-disaster, world-news
  • 16
    Jan
    2011
    12:05pm, EST

    Waiting for real change in Tunisia

    Paul Goldman, NBC News

    We arrived at the Tunis Carthage International airport on Saturday moments before the curfew set in. The Tunisian police have been enforcing a tough curfew at nightfall to try to prevent militias from looting shops and government buildings.

    Our luggage was late so we decided to leave it behind and make our way to our hotel in the city center. On our way out of the airport, we saw the first signs of the tension that is being felt everywhere. A big tank was parked at the airport entrance and armed Army men were standing by.

    The streets were mostly deserted and, at every interchange, Army forces stood guard. I noticed about 40 men gathered next to a new building all holding wood sticks and looking very anxious. Our driver Ahmed confirmed that some civilians have decided to work together to guard their assets from looters.

    The armed militias are made up from about 2,000 ex-Presidential guardsmen who are still angry with the protests that unfolded here last week. The Tunisian people, upset with joblessness and flagrant corruption, ousted the ruling President for the past 23 years, Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali.

    These angry militia groups operate only at night, seeking to discredit the people's revolution by causing havoc.

    Now the police and the army are on the hunt for these men. At night while trying to sleep, I could hear choppers on patrol for any signs of people disobeying the curfew.

    This morning, after returning from getting our baggage at the airport, we were stopped by the military. At gun point, we were ordered to sit on the floor, hands by our sides. It was evident these soldiers were very tense. They shouted and made clear they didn't want to hear from us. After 10 minutes that felt like an hour, an army officer showed up, checked our passports and let us go.

    Despite the nation's tense climate, people I spoke with are delighted at this new era of change. They say corruption was so pevasive that it was impossible to live a normal life.

    As we traveled through the city, we took a look at what was left at the house of a relative of the ousted president. The lavish villa overlooking the ocean had been looted and set ablaze. What remains has turned into a living monument to the corrupt way of life that the rich enjoyed, drawing nearby residents to sift through the debris.

    General elections are set to take place in 60 days amid much uncertainty over the nation's future. Tunisians seeking real change are waiting to see what happens.

    8 comments

    Islamic fundamentalism rules Tunisia, since the removal of BOURGUIBA years ago. Since then the country has been heading straight down hill. The country is nothing but a dictatorship ruled by Tunisia's government authoritarian Muslim rule. Women AGAIN lost all there rights.

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  • 14
    Jan
    2011
    2:31pm, EST

    More than 100 pilgrims die in stampede at Indian festival

    Msnbc.com and news services

    IDUKKI, India -- A stampede of pilgrims returning from one of India's most popular Hindu festivals killed more than 100 people and injured 25 others in southern India Friday night, police said.

    The stampede was set off when a group of pilgrims in a jeep drove into a crowd of worshippers walking along a narrow path ina hilly forest as they returned from offering prayers at the Sabarimala shrine in the state of Kerala, said local police official Sanjay Kumar.

    State officials said the death toll could rise.

    "Sixty-four bodies have been recovered from the accident site. Seventy-five persons have been hospitalised with injuries. Most of them are in three hospitals," Kerala Home Minister Kodiuyeri Balakrishnan told AFP news agency.

    The annual two-month festival attracts millions of worshippers to the remote temple to the Hindu deity Ayyappan. The ceremony Friday marked the end of the festival, and an estimated 150,000 devotees were thought to have taken the narrow path out of the densely forested hills where the stampede took place, the Press Trust of India reported.

    Deadly stampedes are relatively common at temples in India, where large crowds -- sometimes hundreds of thousands of people -- gather in tiny areas with no safety measures or crowd control.

    In March, 63 people were killed when poor villagers scrambled for free food and clothing being given away at a ceremony at a temple in Uttar Pradesh. In 2008, more than 145 people died in a stampede at a remote Hindu temple at the foothills of the Himalayas.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    149 comments

    It happens here too, however for us it normally occurs at Walmart or sports events, quite pathetic!

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  • 14
    Jan
    2011
    1:11pm, EST

    Tunisia on the Web

    Msnbc.com staff

    Here’s a roundup of some of the best places to find coverage of the Tunisian crisis.

    Live blogs:

    BBC: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/9361546.stm

    The Guardian: http://www.guardian.co.uk/global/blog/2011/jan/14/tunisia-wikileaks

    Al Arabiya: http://www.alarabiya.net/articles/2011/01/14/133432.html

    Al Jazeera http://english.aljazeera.net/

    Le Monde http://www.lemonde.fr/afrique/article/2011/01/14/suivez-en-direct-la-situation-en-tunisie_1465727_3212.html#ens_id=1245377

    On Twitter

    Guardian’s Paris Correspondent http://twitter.com/#!/achrisafis

    Channel4News Jonathan Rugman http://twitter.com/#!/jrug

    NPR’s Andy Carvan http://twitter.com/#!/search/acarvin

    Al Jazeera correspondent Alan Fisher: http://twitter.com/#!/AlanFisher

    Ann Stewart from CNN: http://twitter.com/#!/annastewartCNN

    Elsewhere:

    http://twitter.com/#!/storyfulpro/tunisia

    http://twitter.com/kev667/bloggers-and-journos

    http://twitter.com/#!/search?q=%23sidibouzid

    http://twitter.com/#!/Anony_Ops

    http://nawaat.org/

    http://twitter.com/nawaat

    Slideshow: State of emergency in Tunisia

    Previous reporting from NBC's Cheryl Gould on Tunisia

    Fighting for press freedom in Tunisia

    One step closer to press freedom in Tunisia

    1 comment

    Another Major Prophecy (Spoken Through Dr.TM 4'Live' In London In Dec 2003) *Just Came To Pass! *See Today's World-News-Headlines: "Tunisia's Presidential Regime Toppled!" *This Has Been 'Live' On Website: cies/prophecies_tunisia.php For Seven Years! Its Very Very Specific...God Said HE would br …

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    Explore related topics: tunisia, world-news, riots, facebook, social-media, twitter
  • 14
    Jan
    2011
    12:13pm, EST

    Tunisia's embattled president surrenders power

    Christophe Ena / AP

    A demonstrator throws a stone at police during clashes in Tunis, Friday, Jan. 14. Tunisia's president declared a state of emergency and announced that he would fire his government as violent protests escalated Friday, with gunfire echoing in the North African country's usually calm capital and police lobbing tear gas at protesters.

    NBC News, msnbc.com staff and news services

    UPDATE: TUNIS, Tunisia -- Prime Minister Mohammed Ghannouchi said late Friday in a televised address that President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali has surrendered power and left Tunis.

    Ghannouchi said that he would serve as interim president and will meet representatives of political parties on Saturday to form a government. "Tomorrow will be a decisive day," Ghannouchi told a private Tunisian television station in a telephone interview, Reuters reported. 

    Al Arabiya said a six-member leadership council would be formed to rule the country until elections. The council will be led by the head of Parliament and will include the defense minister.

    Ben Ali had reportedly fled to Malta and was traveling under Libyan protection, Reuters reported. His exact whereabouts were unclear

    Video: Ben Ali steps down amid protests

    French President Nicolas Sarkozy has refused to give Ben Ali permission to enter France, French media reported, citing government sources.  Some members of his family have arrived in the country, the newspaper Le Monde reported. France controlled Tunisia as a protectorate until 1956.

    Later, Al Jazeera television reported Ben Ali was flying to the Gulf.

    The shakeup was certain to have repercussions in the Arab world and beyond — as a sign that massive public outrage could bring down a leader as entrenched and powerful as Ben Ali.

    He had tried vainly to hold onto power amid riots, declaring a state of emergency, dissolving the government and promising new legislative elections within six months. A day earlier, he slashed prices on key foods such as sugar, bread and milk.

    In other developments, Ben Ali's son-in-law, Sakher Materi, a prominent businessman, was in Dubai despite TV reports that he was under arrest in Tunis, an aide told Reuters.

    "He has been in Dubai since midday today," the aide, who did not want to be named, told Reuters after he said he telephoned Materi to check his whereabouts.

    Tunisia's private Nessma television station reported that Materi had been arrested along with several relatives.

    Materi's wealth and business interests have been the focus of suspicion and anger from some Ben Ali opponents, who have accused the former president of nepotism.

    President Barack Obama condemned the violence against protesters. He called on the Tunisian government to respect human rights and hold free and fair elections in the future.

    Slideshow: State of emergency in Tunisia

    -----------------------------------------------------

    Gunfire in the capital
    Earlier, gunfire was heard in the center of the Tunisian capital, as well as the popping of tear gas pistols as police fired on protesters. Police have repeatedly fired on crowds during nearly a month of riots.

    Tunisia's official news agency said that Ben Ali had declared a state of emergency as riots escalated in his North African nation.

    The government also imposed an overnight curfew and banned gatherings of more than three people state television reported. "Arms will be used" if Tunisians refuse to heed the orders, the state media reports said.

    Ben Ali announced earlier in the day that he would dismiss his government and call new legislative elections after thousands of protesters marched through the capital to demand his ouster.

    Protesters mobbed the capital of Tunis on Friday, fueled by pent-up anger at high unemployment and at a leadership many see as controlling and corrupt. Marching through the city, they demanded Ben Ali's resignation and some even climbed onto the roof of the Interior Ministry — a symbol of his repressive regime, which has been criticized as having enriched Ben Ali's family.

    Many shouted "Ben Ali, out!" and "Ben Ali, assassin!" Another poster read "We won't forget," a reference to the rioters killed, many by police bullets.

    Ben Ali promised that the early elections would take place within six months, the official TAP news agency reported. He made no reference, however, to any resignation of his own.

    Helmeted police were seen kicking and clubbing unarmed protesters — one of whom cowered on the ground, covering his face. A few youths were spotted throwing stones at police.

    Protesters shout slogans during a protest against Tunisian President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali , in Tunis, Tunisia, on Friday.

    'The people rose up'
    The demonstrators were of all ages and from all walks of life.

    "A month ago, we didn't believe this uprising was possible," said Beya Mannai, a geology professor at the University of Tunis. "But the people rose up."

    The new unrest came just a day after Ben Ali tried to quell the uproar by going on television to promise lower food prices and new freedoms for Tunisians.


     

    Ben Ali, 74, had maintained an iron grip on Tunisia since grabbing power in 1987 in a bloodless coup, repressing any challenges. He had locked up many opposition figures, clamped down on dissent and kept tight control over the media but had not been able to resolve the country's rising unemployment, officially at nearly 14 percent, but higher for educated youths.

    The unrest began after an educated but jobless 26-year-old committed suicide in mid-December when police confiscated the fruits and vegetables he was selling without a permit. His desperate act hit a nerve, sparked copycat suicides and focused generalized anger against the regime into a widespread, outright revolt.

    The official death toll in the riots is 23, but opposition leaders put the figure at three times that, and medical workers on Friday reported another 13 new deaths and over 50 injuries from late Thursday alone. Police have repeatedly fired on crowds with bullets.
    U.S. diplomatic cables released by WikiLeaks have calledTunisia a "police state" and described the corruption there, and social networks like Facebook have helped spread the comments. Many ordinary Tunisians who have complained for years felt vindicated to see the U.S. diplomatic cables.

    Fethi Belaid / AFP - Getty Images

    Tunisian demonstors gather in front of the interior ministry in Tunis demanding President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali to resign on Friday. Thousands of protesters demanded President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali resign in marches across the country on January 14, emboldened by his dramatic pledge to step down in 2014 in a bid to quell weeks of unrest. "No to Ben Ali, the uprising continues," hundreds shouted in a march down the main boulevard in central Tunis while thousands more took to the streets in other towns shouting "Ben Ali Out!".

    Foundations 'sinking into the sand'
    In a speech on Thursday, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton warned countries across the Middle East to shake up corrupt institutions and reinvigorate stagnant political systems or risk losing the future to Islamic militants.

    Wrapping up a four-nation tour of U.S. allies in the Persian Gulf with unusually blunt remarks to a regional development conference in the Qatari capital of Doha, Clinton said economic and political space must be opened up for the Arab world's exploding youth population, women and minorities.

    Without that, respect for human rights, improved business climates and an end to pervasive corruption, she said young people and others will increasingly turn to radicalism and violence that will bleed outside the region, threatening not only Middle Eastern stability and security but the rest of the world.

    "In too many places, in too many ways, the region's foundations are sinking into the sand," she told officials at the Forum for the Future conference. "The new and dynamic Middle East ... needs firmer ground if it is to take root and grow everywhere."

    Clinton made her comments after visiting the United Arab Emirates, Oman, Yemen and Qatar. During her trip, civil unrest continued unabated in Tunisia and Algeria, Egypt remained tense after disputed elections and a political crisis hit Lebanon, underscoring what Clinton said where deep concerns about trends in the Middle East.

    "While some countries have made great strides in governance, in many others, people have grown tired of corrupt institutions and a stagnant political order," she said. She appealed for leaders to heed calls to rein in rampant graft and offer all of their people a better way of life.

    "Those who cling to the status quo may be able to hold back the full impact of their countries' problems for a little while, but not forever," Clinton said. "If leaders don't offer a positive vision and give young people meaningful ways to contribute, others will fill the vacuum."

    "Extremist elements, terrorist groups and others who would prey on desperation and poverty are already out there appealing for allegiance and competing for influence," she said. "This is a critical moment and this is a test of leadership for all of us."

    WikiLeaks: 'Chorus of complaints is rising'
    U.S. diplomatic cables released by WikiLeakshave described the corruption in Tunisia, and social networks like Facebook have helped spread the comments. Many ordinary Tunisians who have complained of corruption for years felt vindicated to see the U.S. cables.

    Many Tunisians respect Ben Ali, but many also have grievances with him and members of his family, some of whom have prominent roles in business and public life.

    The U.S. ambassador to Tunisia at the time, Robert Godec, wrote about the president in a July 2009 cable published by the WikiLeaks website: "He and his regime have lost touch with the Tunisian people."

    "Corruption in the inner circle is growing. Even average Tunisians are now keenly aware of it, and the chorus of complaints is rising," the cable said.

    Tunisia's style of government, say some analysts, sits uneasily with the growing sophistication of its people. Tunisia has a large middle class, people are well-educated, and many have close ties to Europe.

    "In Tunisia, the educated middle class is exasperated. Hence the involvement of lawyers and academics in the protests," said Benjamin Stora, a leading French historian of the Maghreb region that includes Tunisia. "This (the wave of unrest) looks like a real
    social movement to try to unlock the system."

    And social media has played an impotant role: For example, Facebook users make up 18.6 percent of the population, according to Internet marketing consultancy socialbakers, a higher penetration than in Germany.

    "The whole story would not have been the same without Facebook and Twitter and other new media," said Ahmed Mansoor, a UAE-based rights activist and blogger. "It played a vital role in bringing what's going on there [in Tunisia] to the world."

    'Clearly something going on'
    The unprecedented riots that have shaken Tunisia have been closely followed on regional satellite television channels and the Internet across the Middle East where high unemployment, bulging young populations, sky-rocketing inflation and a widening gap between rich and poor are increasingly of concern.

    "There is a danger in ... getting a bit too comfortable with the 'Arab state will muddle through' argument," said Stephen Cook of the U.S. Council on Foreign Relations in a blog this week. "It may not be the last days of Ben Ali or (Egypt's President Hosni) Mubarak or any other Middle Eastern strongman.

    "But there is clearly something going on in the region."

    "This could happen anywhere," said Imane, a restaurant owner in Egypt who did not want to give her full name. "The satellite and Internet images we can see nowadays mean people who would normally be subdued can now see others getting what they want."
    While in recent decades democracy has supplanted despotism in regions once plagued by dictators, governments in the Arab world are almost uniformly autocratic and heavily policed.

    Yet some think the concessions wrung from Ben Ali, as well as efforts in Algeria to appease anger over price increases, have punctured the fear factor that has long kept discontent in check across the region.

    "Perhaps all the Arab governments are monitoring with eyes wide open what is happening in Tunisia and Algeria," columnist Abdelrahman al-Rashed wrote in Asharq al-Awsat newspaper.

    "Much of what prevents protest and civil disobedience is simply the psychological barrier," he said. "Tunisia's president has promised all he can to stop the trouble and Algeria reversed price decisions, but the psychological barrier is broken."

    Travel alerts
    In Tunisia, the demonstrations started in mid-December after an educated but jobless 26-year-old committed suicide when police confiscated the fruits and vegetables he was selling without a permit.

    The riots this week reached Tunis, the capital of this North African tourist haven on the Mediterranean.
    The unrest was taking a heavy toll on the key tourism industry there, which is known for its wide sandy beaches, desert landscape, ancient ruins and bustling bazaars.

    British tour operator Thomas Cook said it was asking its roughly 3,800 British, Irish, and German customers in Tunisia to leave the country, while some 200 Dutch tourists were repatriated Thursday night via a chartered flight.

    U.S. and European governments have issued a series of travel alerts warning citizens away from nonessential travel to Tunisia.
    The unrest was having diplomatic consequences as well.

    Tunisia's ambassador to the U.N. cultural and educational agency resigned amid the deadly riots. Mezri Haddad, ambassador to Paris-based UNESCO, said on France's BFM television Friday, "I am resigning today."

    He said he is resigning because he doesn't want to contribute to something that "is the opposite of my convictions and my conscience."

    202 comments

    And here come the completely irrelevant comparisons to the Obama Administration....

    Show more
    Explore related topics: protest, tunisia, demonstration, government, world-news, featured
  • 11
    Jan
    2011
    3:55am, EST

    Assange case: Has feminism gone too far?

    AFP - Getty Images file

    Sweden is seeking Julian Assange's extradition from Britain.

    By F. Brinley Bruton, msnbc.com

    LONDON - Polemical filmmaker Michael Moore seems in no doubt that dark forces are behind the rape and sexual molestation accusations leveled against WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange in Sweden.

    “Governments and corporations go after individuals … they go after people with this kind of lie and smear,” Moore told MSNBC’s Countdown with Keith Olbermann. “This is all a bunch of hooey as far as I’m concerned.”

    But while many WikiLeaks supporters contend that powerful international interests are misusing Sweden’s sterling feminist credentials to stifle the man at the helm of the organization, the debate in the country has taken a dramatically different direction.

    Many in Sweden reject claims that Assange, who appeared in a London court Tuesday, is the victim of a U.S.-led conspiracy. Instead, the country has been gripped by a very public and often explicit discussion about intimate behavior and relationships. The case has even made some question whether feminism has been taken too far in this supposed bastion of gender equality.

    Assange is wanted in Sweden for questioning after two women accused him of rape, sexual molestation and unlawful coercion. Stockholm is seeking his extradition from Britain although he has not been charged with any crime.

    Feminism is a mainstream concept in Sweden and the country has among the toughest sex crime laws in the world. In fact, lawyers have been known to joke that a man must get written permission before having sex.

    “WikiLeaks has vocal supporters (in Sweden), who by the way I am one,” says prominent feminist and journalist Johanna Koljonen, whose blog posts helped kick-off a fervent discussion when she revealed in intimate detail an experience that echoed the allegations against Assange.

    But her support for the organization has nothing to do with whether Assange is guilty or not under Swedish law, she added. However, his case has reminded her of an encounter that left her uncomfortable.

    “I woke up in a sexual situation with a partner with whom I has just a few hours earlier had consensual sex on the condition that we use a condom,” she wrote.

    “It is often very clear what a rape is and what has happened, but even then we know it’s difficult for the parties to get a fair hearing in court,” Koljonen added. “Then there are the situations in which acts have been performed which may or may not be illegal, depending on the parties’ negotiation of consent. This principle makes legal situations complicated, but it is of vital importance: we should not and cannot legislate acceptable sexual practice.”

    Koljonen’s blog post fed a growing discussion and soon Prata om det (#prataomdet on Twitter), or “Talk about It”, was born. The website has received more than 226,000 page views with the average user staying for seven minutes.

    'Honest conversation'
    The site encourages users to discuss negative sexual experiences and reveal times when “boundaries were violated.”

    “Initiating an honest conversation about sex and consent is scary,” the site says. “Reactions can be cold or even hostile towards those who try. Because of this, many people hold their tongue and put a lid on their thoughts – but that doesn’t make the thoughts go away.”

    In a post entitled “I’m a nice guy,” one male user posted that despite his best efforts he has not always behaved in a way he is proud of.

    “I have the notion that I have a very enlightened and equal view on sex,” he wrote. “Sadly, my feelings and practical application isn’t as evolved and that hurts both myself and others close to me.”

    In Sweden, the word "tjatsex" - defined by Koljonen as "nagging sex ... sex that you talked someone into having even when they didn’t feel like it" - has even entered the mainsteam.

    Journalist Sonja Schwarzenberger, who has been involved with the website since the beginning, says it is a forum for women and men to safely discuss negative sexual experiences.

    “Our idea was, how not to make it black and white is to say, 'here it is, this is my experience.'”

    Fair trials difficult?
    For weeks, the debate has dominated the airwaves and newspapers in Sweden.

    But while many view the ability to discuss the ambiguous intimate issues as a positive thing, the gray area often referred to and the country’s relatively broad definition of rape alarms others.

    Pelle Billing, a M.D. who lectures and writes on gender and men's issues, worries that Sweden’s rape and domestic violence laws make it difficult for men to get a fair trial.

    He cites a quote by the lawyer for Assange’s accusers, who went to the police for advice before deciding to file charges.

    “Women who are assaulted don't always define it as that,” said lawyer Claes Borgstrom, who is the Swedish Social Democratic Party’s spokesman on gender equality. “It's a big problem in our society and it can be difficult to assess what has happened if you are not a lawyer."

    “So how is man supposed to know what the boundaries are if the women don’t know?” Billing asks. According to him, feminism in Sweden has stopped being about equal rights and has begun to infringe on men’s rights.

    So Billing spends little time worrying whether the case against Assange is the result of U.S. pressure on Sweden and instead focuses on whether Swedish courts uphold the presumption of innocence for men accused of rape and domestic violence.

    Billing was excoriated in public for discussing his beliefs and the Assange case on a leading current affairs program.

    'Without shame'
    Even some Swedes who call themselves feminists concede that sexual violence and rape laws are sometimes applied unfairly.

    “It is important in this Julian Assange case to understand the situation,” says Per Samuelson, a defense lawyer who focuses on defending men accused of rape. “Everyone (around the world) is shouting that Julian Assange is innocent (but) people in Sweden think otherwise because they tend to believe the women in over 90 percent of the cases.”

    Comments like these no doubt trouble Assange and his defense team. But they are in stark contrast to the views espoused by vocal WikiLeaks supporters such as prominent Canadian feminist Naomi Klein.

    “Rape is being used in the Assange prosecution in the same way that women's freedom was used to invade Afghanistan. Wake up!" she said of the case against him.

    But for many in Sweden, the Assange case has crystallized important issues around personal boundaries, sexuality and the law.

    As journalist Koljonen says: “How can judges and juries and the media be expected to speak honestly and think coolly about things we can’t even say to ourselves without shame?”

    388 comments

    If one has to ask if feminism has gone to far..one has been living under the rock it dropped on all the kids without dads and men in jail for crazy laws that protect woman at the expense of men. Many social problems can be traced to the double standards feminism creates.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: sweden, laws, rape, world-news, feminism, sexual-assault, wikileaks, julian-assange
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