Menschenrechte - Human Rights

1
Sep
2005

Ethnocide and genocide against the First Peoples of the Kalahari - the Bushmen

Crack down on the Botswana overlord governance and their corporate stirrup holders wherever you find them! BOYCOTT BOYCOTT BOYCOTT and CUT BOTSWANA BUSINESS AND THEIR PRESENT GOVERNANCE OUT FROM ANYTHING AND WHEREVER YOU FIND THEM ! - Until they stop the ethnocide and genocide against the First Peoples of the Kalahari - the Bushmen!

KICK THE PRESENT BOTSWANA GOVERNANCE OUT OF THE UN, since they do not listen to the findings of the UN High Commissioner on Human Rights and his Special Rapporteur anyway!

BOTSWANA is persistently violating ILO 169! http://www.khoisanpeoples.org/indepth/ind-ilo-no-169.htm

And like in Namibia and South-Africa, European and other Northern World interests in natural resources exploitation together with massive proselytism by the churches, the overlord governance in Botswana is guilty of genocide and crimes against humanity, which must bring them and their corporate allies in crime before the International Criminal Court of Justice.

The International Criminal Court (ICC) was established in 2002 as a permanent tribunal to prosecute individuals for genocide, crimes against humanity, and war crimes, as defined by several international agreements, most prominently the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court.

see also: http://www.khoisanpeoples.org

---------

BOTSWANA: COURT IN CHAOS - GOVERNMENT LAWYER 'ARRESTED' - BUSHMAN RESERVE SEALED OFF

SURVIVAL INTERNATIONAL PRESS RELEASE
1 September 2005

The Botswana government's lead attorney in the Bushman case was today ordered to be arrested and imprisoned. In some of the most extraordinary scenes ever witnessed in any high court, attorney Sidney Pilane, refusing to allow any policeman to touch him, fled arrest in a vehicle driven by another government witness, the Assistant Director of Parks. In a separate development, the government announced the closure of the Bushmen's reserve to visitors for 'administrative reasons'.

As special advisor to the President, Pilane may be hoping that his power surpasses that of the Botswana judiciary. He repeatedly refused to stand up when the judges were speaking to him. He was warned twice that unless he did so he would be cited for contempt. He still refused to stand up, leaving the court little alternative than to commit him to prison.

The court ordered he should be arrested immediately and brought back to court on Monday morning. This was the climax of Pilane's examination of the state's star 'expert witness', American ecologist and former employee of the Botswana government, Kathleen Alexander. Pilane was questioning her on material that the judges had already ruled should not be discussed. (A minute-by-minute account of this morning's events in court is appended below.)

Alexander had already made no secret of her contempt for tribal peoples and hunter-gatherers. She wants them all out of any protected areas in order to favour the animal inhabitants. Echoing remarks made by the president, she said that they had to evolve, claiming that 'culture' had nothing to do with ancestral land and they could practise it anywhere.

Amongst her asides was her comparison of inbreeding amongst animals 'to what happened to the ruling elite in England. The Queen's people would stay together and not mix.' Although she claims to want everyone out of all protected areas, she herself lectures to American tourists - inside game reserves - who each pay US$10,000, plus tips, for their trip.

Reacting to the fact that one of the Bushman's lawyers is British and that their case is funded by donations raised internationally, Pilane last week said, 'We do not want Europe to interfere and tell us what to do or not to do. We resent their involvement in our affairs. They should leave us alone.' The Bushman case is already the longest and most costly in Botswana's history, despite being brought by the country's poorest inhabitants.

A severe crackdown on the Bushmen was revealed by Survival last week. One of those recently tortured for hunting has died, others have been arrested, their own organisation has been barred from their reserve, and so have their lawyers. Guards have been posted around the reserve to stop Bushmen returning home. The government has even changed the country's constitution, removing what Bushman protection it enshrined.

Today, the government reinforced its determination to remove the Bushmen and end their way of life by announcing that no visitors would be allowed into their reserve, 'for administrative reasons', until further notice. Bushmen who have defied the government and returned to their lands after being thrown out in 2002 have been barred from using radio transmitters to talk to the outside world. From now on, whatever happens to the Bushmen in the Reserve will take place behind closed doors.

The government is clearly angered by the international media which has reported extensively on its attacks on the Bushmen. The latest journalists to go in were from the BBC TV's most prestigious news programme, 'Newsnight'.

In response to the latest developments, Survival today called for a total boycott of Botswana tourism and of its diamonds, mined and sold by the government and De Beers.

Stephen Corry, Survival's director, said today, 'History is now being written. The destruction of so many American Indians and Australian Aborigines are some of the most shameful chapters in the history of recent centuries. If the Botswana government is not brought to its senses very quickly now, our own century will see the calculated and deliberate destruction of the central Kalahari Bushmen. Unfortunately none of the signs are good. The government is already on trial in its own country. Its own lawyer has fled arrest. If the court buckles, then this trial spells more than the end of the Gana and Gwi Bushmen. The 'higher court' of world opinion is perhaps the only hope left.'

Photos and footage available. For more information contact Miriam Ross on (+44) (0)20 7687 8734 or email mr@survival-international.org

To read this press release online click visit http://survival-international.org/news.php?id=995.


Background to the ordered arrest of the government's attorney on 1 September 2005

1. In July 2005, Dr Alexander and a number of government officials entered the Central Kalahari Game Reserve to conduct an inspection.

2. The Bushmen's lawyers were given no notice of the visit and no opportunity to advise their clients whether they should cooperate with Dr Alexander and the officials.

3. They objected to the introduction of any evidence from Dr Alexander about what she had seen or done during the inspection. On Tuesday 30 August, their objection was upheld, so that Dr Alexander was not permitted to give any evidence of what she claimed to have seen in July.

4. By Thursday 1 September, Dr Alexander had been in the witness box for seven days. She was still being asked questions by Mr Pilane. Mr Pilane asked her whether she had seen diseased animals in the reserve and Dr Alexander said that she had. The Bushmen's Counsel asked Mr Pilane to clarify when it was that she claimed to have seen the diseased animals, so as to establish whether the evidence was precluded by the order which the Court had made on Tuesday.

5. When Mr Pilane declined to do so the Court itself asked Dr Alexander to clarify when it was that she claimed to have seen diseased animals. She replied, 'In July'.

6. Mr Pilane requested a five-minute adjournment, which was granted. After the adjournment, Mr Pilane did not appear in court until after the judges had already returned and resumed their positions on the bench.

7. There was then a discussion between the court and Mr Pilane in the course of which Mr Pilane sat down. When he was asked to stand up, he repeatedly declined to do so. He was offered two opportunities to explain why he should not be cited for contempt, and did not accept that he was in contempt. The court then ruled that he was in contempt, and that he should immediately be arrested and taken to prison. It directed that he should be brought back before the court at 9.30 on Monday morning, when the attorney general should also appear. After the court rose several police officers attended court to arrest Mr Pilane. He declined to accompany them and was driven from the court in a government vehicle.

We help tribal peoples defend their lives, protect their lands and determine their own futures. Click here for more: http://www.survival-international.org/news.php?id=995&PHPSESSID=9e3b24c4b3357def4c39b86be699a96c

Survival International
6 Charterhouse Buildings London EC1M 7ET UK
Tel: 020 7687 8700
Fax: 020 7687 8701 http://www.survival-international.org


From ECOTERRA Intl.

29
Aug
2005

Guess: Who Will Die First? Poor Africans hit hard by rising world oil prices

Across Africa, prices at the pump are ballooning at an alarming rate, pushing millions of people on the world's poorest continent deeper into poverty and adding to the threat to the continent's forests, the source of much of its firewood.

Date: Sun, 28 Aug 2005 15:36:26 -0600 From: Lance Olsen
Subject: CMCR: Guess -- Who Will Die First?

The world is in the early stages of two grand -- and intimately linked -- trends.

We have come to the end of cheap oil, and to the end of the habitable climate of the past 10,000 years.

The end of cheap oil or the end of the prevailing climate would have plausibly staggering impact, even if it were acting alone.

Together, they already pack a powerful punch, even at these early stages of change. Together, they will be posing plausibly gargantuan challenges even for the well-off.

Of earth's 6,000 million people, some 4,000 million will likely take the hardest hits, and not at some distant point in the future.

Lance Olsen


Reuters August 26, 2005

Poor Africans hit hard by rising world oil prices

By David Mageria

NAIROBI (Reuters) - Africans are struggling to cope with stubbornly high global oil prices which are forcing many to walk long distances to work or schools, go hungry as food prices skyrocket, and depend on candles to light their homes.

Crude oil prices surged to a record $68 a barrel this week on supply concerns, raising fears of further fuel hikes in Africa where burdened families were already reeling from rises.

"If they are increased again, I will be left with no food to feed my orphans because (food) prices will go up because of transport costs," said Mai Wisiki, a grandmother with four orphans in Malawi's Chiradzulu district.

Across Africa, prices at the pump are ballooning at an alarming rate, pushing millions of people on the world's poorest continent deeper into poverty and adding to the threat to the continent's forests, the source of much of its firewood.

Many rural homes in Africa do not have electricity and depend on kerosene to light their small lamps and cooking stoves in the evenings. But the price of kerosene is becoming unaffordable for many.

"Nowadays I cannot afford to buy kerosene for my children to study, I can only afford to buy candles," said Margaret Njuki, a single mother of three and a tea farmer in central Kenya.

The need for an affordable alternative source of power is also putting pressure on forests.

"Every day things are going from bad to worse. Because of the increase in the price of cooking gas, I have reverted to using firewood and charcoal," said Melanie Ndoh, a civil servant and housewife in Cameroon, where the government last week raised prices for fuel products by 8 CFA francs per litre.

With transport cost rising daily, many motorists have been forced to change their lifestyles and are now trekking to their work places. Others have opted to ride bicyles while small traders hire handcarts to save on transport costs.

"I have a car that I have now parked. I cannot afford fuel because I have other needs such as paying school fees for my children, rent and food," said John Shiundu, a shopkeeper outside Nairobi's city centre.

Students have not been spared.

"I have to walk for eight km to school and another eight km back home just to save some money," said Lewis Nyirenda, a college student in the Zambian capital Lusaka.

"GARGANTUAN OIL PRICE"

Although Africa's powerhouse South Africa has said it expects strong economic growth despite high oil prices, many on the continent say the rises pose a threat to economic goals due to soaring inflation and weakened local currencies.

"The recent gargantuan oil price increases could be disastrous for African economies," Augustin Fosu, the director of economics and social policy division at the U.N. Economic Commission for Africa told Reuters.

"Although a handful of countries that are oil-producing should benefit, the vast majority of African countries are non-oil producing and their economies will be significantly hurt by these negative supply shocks."

He said global growth is likely to be reduced which will cut export demand for African goods. Many African countries could also be forced to reallocate funds in their budgets away from crucial development projects to meet with a high oil budget.

High oil prices are also raising social tensions and some governments are grappling with protests.

In the west African country of Guinea, the government increased oil prices in May to 3,800 Guinean francs from 2,500 francs prompting a group of armed youths to attack several lorries carrying rice, the country's staple food, to deter the government from further hikes.

Some African governments like Ethiopia, Mauritius and tiny Seychelles are yet to raise petrol prices, but not for too long.

In Mauritius, the government's Automatic Price Mechanism committe is scheduled to review petrol prices in October. Analysts say prices will go only one way -- up.

"If the price of petrol is adjusted as it should, the first effect will be a further deterioration of the trade deficit", said Mahmood Cheeroo, the director of the Mauritius Chamber of Commerce and Industry.

Article found at : http://www.energybulletin.net/newswire.php?id=8378

Original article:
http://za.today.reuters.com/news/NewsArticle.aspx?type=topNews&storyID=2005-08-26T090109Z_01_ALL632366_RTRIDST_0_OZATP-AFRICA-OIL-20050826.XML

Peace! *STRIDER*

28
Aug
2005

21
Aug
2005

Das Lagersystem für Flüchtlinge

Der Trend geht dahin, Lager im Ausland einzurichten; Menschenrechtsorganisationen und Flüchtlinge protestieren gegen Lagerunterbringung.

http://www.telepolis.de/tp/r4/artikel/20/20764/1.html

19
Aug
2005

Alive Today, Desperate Tomorrow

by Jeffrey D. Sachs, TomPaine.com

The actions of the richest countries -- despite grand G8 promises -- have only intensified the hunger crisis in Africa.

http://www.tompaine.com/articles/20050819/alive_today_desperate_tomorrow.php

10
Aug
2005

"Pro Asyl": Das Vorgehen gegenüber Flüchtlingen wird immer brutaler

Abschiebungshaft: "Das Vorgehen gegenüber Flüchtlingen wird immer brutaler" (10.08.05)

Nach Auffassung der Menschenrechtsorganisation "Pro Asyl" wird das Vorgehen gegenüber Flüchtlingen immer brutaler. Im Fall einer schwer traumatisierten Flüchtlingsfrau aus Tschetschenien werde der Suizidversuch dieser Frau als Argument "missbraucht", sie in Abschiebungshaft zu nehmen. Den zuständigen Gerichten werden rechtswidrige Entscheidungen vorgeworfen.

Die ganze Nachricht im Internet: http://www.ngo-online.de/ganze_nachricht.php?Nr=11593

Ordnungsrecht vor Menschenrecht

Bundesinnenminister Schily feiert eine Großrazzia gegen drei illegale Einwanderer.

http://www.telepolis.de/tp/r4/artikel/20/20692/1.html

28
Jun
2005

Schily-Pläne werden realisiert: Käfighaltung in Libyen

„Schily-Pläne werden realisiert: Flüchtlingslager in Nordafrika im Aufbau. Auswahl billiger Arbeitskräfte für EU angestrebt. Schnellboote und High-Tech-Gerät zur Überwachung aus der BRD. Die libysche Grenzpolizei wird einem EU-Kommando unter deutscher Beteiligung zugeordnet und soll afrikanische Migranten im Mittelmeer abfangen…“

Junge Welt-Bericht vom 25.06.2005
http://www.jungewelt.de/2005/06-25/014.php

Die Meldung in der jungen Welt bezieht sich auf einen ausführlicheren, deutschsprachigen Bericht von „German Foreign Policy“ vom 24.06.2005

http://www.german-foreign-policy.com/de/news/art/2005/54189.php


Aus: LabourNet Nachrichtensammlung, Band 26, Eintrag 17

27
Jun
2005

Gold soll nicht aus Ausbeutung kommen

Menschenrechte: Gold soll nicht aus Ausbeutung kommen (27.06.05)

Menschenrechtler fordern, Schmuck ohne Ausbeutung herzustellen. Anlass ist der Fall einer US-amerikanischen Goldmine in Guatemala, bei deren Betrieb gegen die Rechte von Indigenen verstoßen werde, so die Menschenrechtsorganisation FIAN (Food First Informations-und Aktions- Netzwerk). Mitfinanziert werde diese zudem durch Teile der Weltbank. Personen und Organisationen, die die Arbeiter unterstützen, erhielten Morddrohungen, hieß es. FIAN forderte den Stopp der öffentlichen Förderung und den Schutz der Menschenrechtsaktivisten.

Die ganze Nachricht im Internet:
http://www.ngo-online.de/ganze_nachricht.php?Nr=11306

18
Jun
2005

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