WWF and Green Racism
Thanks to source: GWPF

Japan Airlines from the 1st, discontinued the use of the “ladies and gentlemen” English announcement on flights and at airports and shifted to neutral terms such as “all passengers” and “everyone” and so on.
“We unconsciously used words that presuppose a distinction of sex. From now on we want to create an environment that’s easy for everyone to utilize,” JAL said.
Just after 10 a.m. on the 1st, it was at a boarding gate for international flights at Haneda Airport where a female ground crew member guided passengers to an aircraft bound for Helsinki without using the terms that had been used until now.
Open letter to UN May 2014
Assi walet Hitta, Tuareg political organizer and leader of the Azawad Women’s Association, has issued an open letter to Bert Koenders, Representative to the United Nations in Mali.
Who are the Tuareg people
The Tuareg people are Berber-speakers who trace their ancestry to the indigenous peoples of North Africa in ancient times. Continue reading Tuaregs – Orphans of the Sahara
Thanks to Source: ChurchMilitant Archives
GodSeesEverything says – and so it is written in the Word of God:
For the love of money is the root of all evil: which while some coveted after, they have erred from the faith, and pierced themselves through with many sorrows.
(1Ti 6:10)
So God created mankind in his own image, in the image of God he created them; male and female he created them (Genesis 1:27).
For a time is coming when people will no longer listen to sound and wholesome teaching. They will follow their own evil desires and will look for teachers who will tell them whatever their itching ears want to hear (2 Timothy 4:3).
Big Picture News, Informed Analysis
No matter what voters say in the upcoming US election, a coalition of Attorney Generals intends to push for ‘even more aggressive’ climate action.
the March 29th press conference
Eric Schneiderman, New York state’s Attorney General, is a climate inquisitor. Last November, he subpoenaed Exxon Mobil. He says he’s trying to determine whether the oil giant misled shareholders and the public about climate change. The overarching allegation, advanced by green activists for years, is that Exxon supposedly possessed and suppressed secret knowledge connected to carbon dioxide emissions, thereby committing crimes against humanity. (See this overwrought Bill McKibben piece, the headline of which proclaims: ‘No corporation has ever done anything this big or bad’.)
As a November editorial at BloombergView.com observed, it’s unclear what Schneiderman “hopes to discover in the stack of climate-change documents he’s ordered Exxon Mobil to produce,” since his rationale is “pretty thin.”…
View original post 632 more words
Posted by EU Times on Mar 25th, 2016 
A recent tweet from Germany’s Left Wing Party, Die Linke, shows its true colors.
“Refugees are not the problem, the Germans are”
the official Die Linke Twitter account tweeted.
They tweeted this to an account called Firoze Manji, who claims to be a director of group which “promotes diversity“. Continue reading “Refugees are not the problem, the Germans are” – Leftist Party

Originally published by GR in 2009
1. Climate has always changed, and it always will. The assumption that prior to the industrial revolution the Earth had a “stable” climate is simply wrong. The only sensible thing to do about climate change is to prepare for it.
2. Accurate temperature measurements made from weather balloons and satellites since the late 1950s show no atmospheric warming since 1958. In contrast, averaged ground-based thermometers record a warming of about 0.40 C over the same time period. Many scientists believe that the thermometer record is biased by the Urban Heat Island effect and other artefacts.
Continue reading Fallacy and lies- “Cardinal Turkson on long term impact of Laudato Si’”
07 April 2016 at 15:30pm
By: AFP
Damascus – Displaced residents of the famed Syrian city of Palmyra, recently recaptured by the army, will begin returning to their homes at the weekend, a government official told AFP on Thursday.
Syria’s armed forces recaptured Palmyra and the adjacent world-famous ruins from the Islamic State on March 27, ending nearly 10 months of jihadist rule. Continue reading Displaced residents to return to Palmyra
Let me preface this by saying I come from a science background myself, but all too often science gets hijacked and distorted for political or economic gain, or simply makes goofs which are perpetuated by arrogance! Continue reading CLIMATEGATE: A CRIME AGAINST HUMANITY
“I stand ready to send a UNESCO emergency assessment experts’ mission to map the damages at the UNESCO World Heritage site of Palmyra”, declared Irina Bokova.
| Publisher | Human Rights Watch |
| Publication Date | 1 January 1995 |
| Cite as | Human Rights Watch, Human Rights Watch World Report 1995 – Bosnia-Hercegovina, 1 January 1995, available at: http://www.refworld.org/docid/467fcaab7.html %5Baccessed 11 March 2016] |
| Disclaimer | This is not a UNHCR publication. UNHCR is not responsible for, nor does it necessarily endorse, its content. Any views expressed are solely those of the author or publisher and do not necessarily reflect those of UNHCR, the United Nations or its Member States. |
Events of 1994
Abuses against Bosnia’s three ethnic groups – Muslims, Serbs, and Croats – continued in late 1993 and early 1994 but the overwhelming majority continued to be perpetrated by Bosnian Serbs. Most of these abuses were associated with “ethnic cleansing,” whose main objective is the removal of an ethnic group from a given area through murder, population exchanges, forced displacement, and terrorization. Non-Serbs in northern Bosnia continued to be “cleansed” from their homes by Bosnian Serb authorities, while abuses between Bosnia’s Muslims and Croats noticeably decreased after the two groups ended their year-old war. Despite a lull in the fighting in Sarajevo, the city remained under siege by Bosnian Serb forces for much of 1994.
On February 5, a Bosnian Serb mortar attack killed sixty-three people in Sarajevo’s open market. By late February, a NATO ultimatum forced Bosnian Serb forces to pull back their weaponry around Sarajevo or place it under U.N. supervision and a weapons exclusion zone was established around the city. As a result, shelling in Sarajevo decreased and a general cease-fire remained in place until mid-year, although snipers continued to kill civilians in the city. By July, however, shelling and sniping increased in Sarajevo, and roads on Mount Igman, which had been open for commercial traffic since February, were once again too treacherous to transit.
In April, the Bosnian Serb army used indiscriminate and disproportionate force in retaliation against Bosnian army provocation in the Gorazde enclave, which had been designated as a “safe area” by the U.N. in 1993. Bosnian Serb forces eventually captured part of the Gorazde enclave and then prevented journalists and some U.N. personnel from entering the area to assess the material damage and loss of civilian life. In response to the Bosnian Serb attack, Muslim forces within Gorazde expelled some Serbs and placed under house arrest others who remained in the enclave. Bosnian Serb forces restricted access to the area throughout the year.
In October, a Bosnian army commando unit killed twenty Bosnian Serb soldiers and military medical personnel on Mount Igman, an area which had been declared a demilitarized zone by the U.N. in 1993. Soon after the attack, Bosnian Serb forces opened fire on a trolley car in Sarajevo, wounding eight civilians. The Bosnian army refused U.N. demands that it withdraw from Mount Igman, saying it would do so only if the U.N. guaranteed the opening of a road through which commercial traffic could enter Sarajevo. As of mid-November, a tunnel under the airport was Sarajevo’s primary link with the outside world.
Bosnian Serb forces were responsible for most of the attacks on humanitarian aid convoys throughout 1994. In October, they attacked a U.N. convoy and killed a U.N. driver near Gorazde. Bosnian Serb forces cut utilities to the Bosnian capital in mid-September and prevented opening of the Sarajevo airport in late September by refusing to guarantee the safety of U.N. relief flights.
“Ethnic cleansing” in Bosnian Serb-held areas continued during the early part of 1994 but decreased following international condemnation. However, in July, non-Serbs from the Bosanska Krajina and Bijeljina regions were once again expelled in large numbers and those who remained behind in Serbian-occupied territory were conscripted into work gangs and used as forced labor. Between July and October, more than 10,600 non-Serbs were expelled from northern Bosnia.
The war that raged between the mostly Muslim forces of the Bosnian army and the Bosnian Croat militia (HVO) after mid-1993 ended in late February 1994. On February 28 and March 1, the Bosnian Croats and the Bosnian government reconciled and formed a federation. At the same time, Bosnia and the Republic of Croatia, which supported the Bosnian Croats, also agreed to form a confederation. Following the formation of the federation, human rights abuses in central and southwestern Bosnia-Hercegovina decreased substantially. Despite the arrival of administrators from the European Union in mid-1994, abuses in the Croat-held part of Mostar continued, albeit to a lesser degree than in 1993. More than one-hundred Muslim families were evicted from Mostar after the signing of the Muslim-Croat federation. In an apparent assassination attempt on September 11, HVO soldiers launched a rocket-propelled grenade into the bedroom of Hans Koschnik, the E.U. administrator of Mostar. The Croatian authorities arrested four soldiers and removed the local police chief after the incident, but tensions between Muslims and Croats in the city remained high. Moreover, an ombudsman and court established by the federation to monitor human rights had not begun work as of early November. Repatriation of the displaced had not begun either, because minority populations in parts of the federation were not guaranteed safety.
Despite its past support for the Bosnian Serbs, Serbia closed its border with its Bosnian surrogates in September, following the Bosnian Serbs’ refusal to accept an internationally brokered peace plan. One hundred and thirty-five international observers were stationed along the Bosnia-Serbia border and, by mid-October, the Bosnian Serbs generally were denied fuel and military support from Serbia. As of this writing, no violations of international law by either Bosnian army or HVO forces during their latest offensives in the Bihac, Sarajevo or Kupres areas had been reported. However, thousands of Serbs fled the offensive and sought refuge in Serbian-held areas of Croatia and other parts of Bosnian Serb-held territory.
The Bosnian government and Bosnian Croat officials generally did not impede human rights monitoring by domestic and international organizations, but the Bosnian Croats continue to reject U.N. efforts to rectify the eviction of Muslims from their homes in west Mostar.
By contrast, human rights monitoring was severely restricted in Bosnian Serb-held areas. International monitors and much of the international press were banned from entering, or their movements were severely restricted within, Bosnian Serb territory. In August, a Human Rights Watch/Helsinki researcher attempted to interview Serbs who had left or been forced to leave Bosnian government-controlled areas of Sarajevo. Upon her arrival on August 26 in Pale, the headquarters of the Bosnian Serb authorities, the researcher was told by the “state security forces” to leave on the next bus. An advisor to Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic overruled this order and advised her to stay. The next day, she was again ordered by a plainclothes police officer to leave; the officer also threatened and insulted the researcher and accused her of espionage. Hours later, the officer told her that she was welcome to stay. Finally, forty-eight hours after she had arrived in Pale, the researcher was placed under armed guard in a car and not told where she was being taken. Finally, at 1:00 A.M. she was brought to the border with Serbia and expelled from Bosnian Serb territory.
With the notable exception of brokering a peace between Bosnia’s Muslims and Croats, the Clinton administration’s policy toward Bosnia was marked by indecision and policy reversals. Having distanced itself from the Bosnia crisis in late 1993, the U.S. reluctantly joined its allies in January 1994 calling on the NATO command to prevent the strangulation of Sarajevo and other U.N.-declared safe areas in Bosnia.
The Clinton administration’s major accomplishment in Bosnia during 1994 was the brokering of a peace agreement between Bosnian Croats and Muslims. In late September, the Clinton administration pledged $20 million in non-humanitarian aid to the federation. The aid was intended to rehabilitate housing and infrastructure primarily in central Bosnia. In late October, the U.S. announced that it would send approximately fifteen U.S. military officers to Bosnia to integrate the military alliance between Bosnian government forces and the HVO.
On March 30, Madeline Albright, U.S. representative to the U.N., and Gen. John Shalikashvili, chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, visited Sarajevo in a show of support for the Bosnian government. In a speech there, Ambassador Albright supported the sovereignty of Bosnia and announced that the U.S. would donate $10 million to the reconstruction of Sarajevo. The following day, however, the U.S. blocked passage of a U.N. Security Council resolution authorizing the deployment of 10,000 more peacekeeping troops to Bosnia, citing the financial strain of the U.N. field mission and the potential unwillingness of the U.S. Congress to approve the U.S. share of the bill. The U.S. sponsored instead a compromise resolution which approved an initial deployment of 3,500 peacekeepers and left the deployment of further troops for a later date.
The Clinton administration’s vacillations in the face of the Gorazde crisis in April were emblematic of U.S. policy toward Bosnia more generally. As Bosnian Serb forces began a new and vigorous offensive against the Bosnian government-controlled enclave of Gorazde, a U.N.-declared safe area, the Clinton administration faced the familiar situation of attempting to avoid military intervention while, at the same time, risking a potential loss of credibility as further Bosnian Serb abuses went unpunished. On April 3, following the start of the offensive against the encircled Bosnian town, U.S. Secretary of Defense William Perry stated that the U.S. would not use military power to prevent the fall of Gorazde. Perry’s statements seemed to jeopardize U.S. peace efforts in Bosnia by sending a “green light” to Bosnian Serb forces to do as they pleased. An embarrassed U.S. tried to provide a different impression of its intentions on April 7, when National Security Adviser Anthony Lake claimed that “neither the president nor any of his senior advisers rules out the use of NATO air power to help stop attacks such as those against Gorazde.”
On April 10, as Bosnian Serb troops stood on the verge of overrunning Gorazde, two U.S. jets flying a NATO mission attacked a Serbian command post outside the besieged town. The attack represented not simply the first NATO air strike of the Bosnian war, but the first air strike in NATO history. Bosnian Serb forces briefly halted their offensive, but by the next day they advanced once again. U.S. jets carried out a second mission, this time destroying a Bosnian Serb tank. On the same day, President Clinton announced that NATO would continue to use air power until the advancing forces withdrew from the Gorazde area.
The U.S.’s newfound resolve quickly dissipated. Faced with Russian criticism and dissension within U.N. ranks, NATO did not follow up on its first round of air strikes, even as Serb forces continued their offensive. Finally, on April 17, the Clinton administration announced that it would seek no new air strikes against Serb forces in Bosnia. Three days later, however, the administration endorsed a plan by which NATO would use air power to protect all six U.N.-declared safe areas in Bosnia as weapons-exclusion zones, which NATO had previously established in the Sarajevo area. A version of this plan became NATO policy on April 22.
In a major policy shift, U.S. officials signaled at the same time that they were ready to entertain European proposals gradually to phase out U.N.-imposed sanctions against Serbia in exchange for Serb cooperation in Bosnian talks. Previously, the Clinton administration had opposed any loosening of sanctions against Serbia and its surrogates in Bosnia and Croatia until, among other things, they demonstrated cooperation with the international tribunal established to adjudicate war crimes and crimes against humanity in the former Yugoslavia. Given the continuing assault on Gorazde, the apparent involvement of Yugoslav army troops from Serbia in that attack, and the Serbs’ unwillingness to accept the legitimacy of the tribunal, the Clinton administration’s new position on easing of sanctions against Serbia was particularly ill-timed.
On April 25, U.S., Russian, and British officials announced the establishment of a “contact group,” consisting of representatives from the U.S, the United Kingdom, Russia, Germany, and France, that would seek to broker an end to the Bosnian war. The contact group presented a map giving the Muslim-Croat federation control of 51 percent of Bosnia, and both the Bosnian government and the Bosnian Croats eventually accepted the proposal. Bosnian Serbs rejected the plan because it decreased their control of Bosnia from 70 percent to 49 percent. In light of Bosnian Serb rejection of the plan, Bosnian President Alija Izetbegovic withdrew his government’s support for the plan in late July. U.S. support for the contact group’s plan marked a departure from its long-articulated support for the territorial integrity of Bosnia. However, Viktor Jakovich, the U.S. Ambassador to Bosnia-Hercegovina, promised U.S. support for “an undivided Sarajevo and for a free and democratic Bosnia-Hercegovina within its internationally recognized borders” at the July 4 opening of the U.S. Embassy in Sarajevo.
The proposed plan focused solely on the territorial division of Bosnia; it offered no protection to minorities, particularly non-Serbs who continued to be persecuted in Bosnian Serb-held areas, nor was the right to repatriation mentioned. Though the contact group repeatedly threatened to adopt severe punitive measures against any party that refused to accept the proposed map, its members were far from united in their desire to punish the Bosnian Serb forces for their rejection of the plan. Indeed, in October, members of the contact group began considering new concessions to the Bosnian Serbs in exchange for their accession to the peace plan. In particular, Russia argued that the plan should be amended to allow the Bosnian Serbs to form a confederation with Serbia proper, as the Bosnians had done earlier in the year with Croatia.
For much of the year, the Clinton administration faced strong pressure from Congress to lift the arms embargo against the Bosnian government and confronted opposition to such action by the E.U. and Russia. Although President Clinton’s rhetoric signified his support for lifting the embargo, his public dithering on the issue and his vigorous campaign against Congressional initiatives showed that he was unwilling to differ with the European allies on the issue for much of the year.
On August 11, President Clinton declared that he would urge the U.N. Security Council to lift the arms embargo against the Bosnian government if the Bosnian Serbs failed to accept the contact group’s proposal by October 15. Despite E.U. rejection of such a proposal, the U.S. renewed calls for lifting the arms embargo in mid-October, this time saying it would consider lifting the arms embargo unilaterally.
Reportedly under pressure by the U.S., and in light of French and British threats to pull out their troops in Bosnia, Bosnian President Izetbegovic accepted a six-month postponement for lifting the arms embargo. Izetbegovic’s statement, made before the U.N. General Assembly on September 27, spared President Clinton the need to confront both the E.U. and the U.S. Congress. In late October, the Clinton administration introduced a resolution at the U.N. to lift the embargo in six months’ time unless the Bosnian Serbs accepted the contact group’s peace proposal by then. Then, in a decision bound to strain relations with NATO allies, the Clinton administration announced on November 10 that it had directed the U.S. military to stop enforcing the arms embargo against the Bosnian government as of November 12.
In 1994, the U.S. was forthcoming with humanitarian aid for victims of the war in Bosnia. In addition to the $10 million pledged for Sarajevo’s resconstruction and $20 million to support the Muslim-Croat federation, the U.S. gave a total of $387 million for humanitarian efforts in Bosnia-Hercegovina in the 1994 fiscal year.
In 1994, U.N. and NATO officials disagreed on their approach to Bosnian Serb violations of U.N. resolutions and NATO ultimatums: while NATO was generally willing to penalize Bosnian Serb violations, U.N. officials sought to accommodate Bosnian Serb demands.
Though existing Security Council resolutions mandated the use of force to protect peacekeepers and to ensure the delivery of humanitarian aid, military and civilian authorities of the U.N. Protection Force (UNPROFOR) were reluctant to exercise this option. This inaction drew criticism from two commanders of U.N. forces in Bosnia, one of whom was removed and the other resigned. On the occasions that the U.N. did use force, the action was typically marked by short-sightedness and lack of a broad-reaching strategy or goal. As a result, the U.N. suffered a devastating lack of credibility.
On January 19, a week after the NATO alliance had reasserted its willingness to carry out U.N.-requested air strikes, U.N. Secretary-General Bourtros Boutros-Ghali formally announced his opposition to air strikes in Bosnia, arguing that they would endanger the U.N. peacekeeping mission. Around the same time, the international press announced that both Britain and France were seriously considering withdrawing their troops from the U.N. mission in Bosnia.
Following the highly publicized February 5 marketplace massacre in Sarajevo, the international community responded to intense pressure to make good on its previous threats. On February 9, the NATO allies issued an ultimatum to the Bosnian Serb forces, demanding that by February 21 they either withdraw their heavy weaponry at least twenty kilometers from Sarajevo and place it under U.N. control, or face NATO air strikes. The ultimatum represented a bold new step in Western policy toward Bosnia, and, because the threat of military action seemed credible, Bosnian Serb troops complied with NATO’s demands.
By May 18, however, the U.N. was admitting to the presence of at least four Serb tanks and ten other heavy weapons within the NATO-declared weapons exclusion zone. Because NATO and the U.N. refused to enforce compliance with the weapons exclusion zone, Bosnian Serb leaders grew increasingly confident in their ability to test the world community’s resolve and resumed the siege of Sarajevo by mid-year.
On March 2, two U.S. aircraft under NATO command shot down four Serb jets near Banja Luka in northwestern Bosnia. Though an April 1993 U.N. resolution authorized the enforcement of a “no-fly zone” over Bosnia, the downing of the Serb jet represented the first enforcement after nearly 1,400 reported violations.
According to an April 22 NATO ultimatum, Bosnian Serb forces were ordered to immediately halt their attack on Gorazde, allow the free passage of displaced persons and relief personnel, and withdraw all troops from the town’s center. NATO threatened air strikes against Bosnian Serb heavy weaponry and other military targets found within a 12.4-mile radius of Gorazde’s center, and later extended the ultimatum to include the remaining U.N.-declared safe areas of Bihac, Srebrenica, Tuzla, and Zepa.
On April 24, when it appeared that Bosnian Serb forces were not complying with NATO demands, then-NATO Secretary-General Manfred Werner asked that the alliance begin conducting air strikes. After the U.N. extended their deadline, the Bosnian Serbs made significant strides in withdrawing its troops from the 1.9-mile zone, and both NATO and U.N. authorities stated that air strikes would not be necessary. NATO and U.N. leaders expressed satisfaction with the withdrawal, but a number of Serbian forces remained within the exclusion zone in violation of NATO’s demands.
In July, UNPROFOR forces found themselves under increasing attack by Bosnian Serb militias. On August 5, two U.S. war planes under NATO command bombed a Bosnian Serb antitank vehicle near Sarajevo after Serbian soldiers sneaked into a U.N. weapons collection point and removed heavy guns. In the fourth NATO attack in 1994, NATO war planes strafed and bombed an vacant Bosnian Serb tank near Sarajevo in retaliation for a Serb attack on French U.N. peacekeepers.
In October, Bosnian Serbs attacked a U.N. convoy and killed a U.N. driver, forcing British U.N. soldiers to return fire. The attack lasted two hours, but senior U.N. officials decided not to call for a NATO air strike for logistical reasons.
Throughout 1994, NATO and the U.N. were at odds over the use of force in Bosnia. NATO was more willing to use force when U.N. troops or safe areas were attacked, while the Russians and Lt. Gen. Sir Michael Rose, the commander of U.N. forces in Bosnia, were opposed to expanding the use of force or the role of NATO in the Balkans. On October 27, NATO and the U.N. reached a draft compromise that would allow unannounced air strikes when there is little danger of civilian casualties, and require warnings if the strikes could endanger civilians.
On August 15, South African Judge Richard Goldstone took office as prosecutor to the international war crimes tribunal established by the U.N. to adjudicate war crimes and crimes against humanity in Bosnia and Croatia. The prosecutor’s office began investigating specific cases of abuse in 1994 and, on November 8, it issued its first indictment against Dragan Nikolic, the former commander of the Bosnian Serb-run Susica camp. On the same day, the tribunal announced that it would ask Germany to extradite Dusko Tadic, a Serb accused of atrocities in the Omarska detention camp in 1992, who had been arrested in Munich in February. Other suspected war criminals from the former Yugoslavia had been apprehended in Denmark, Switzerland, and Austria by mid-November.
Throughout 1994, Human Rights Watch/Helsinki continued monitoring and reporting on violations of the rules of war in Bosnia, with a view to identifying by name those responsible for such abuses. We also urged international negotiators to address human rights concerns as part of an overall peace settlement.
In April, we reported on, and identified persons responsible for, crimes in the northern Bosnian town of Bosanski Samac. In June, we issued a report about continuing human rights violations in the Banja Luka area and criticized international peace negotiators’ disregard for continued “ethnic cleansing.” Indeed, on June 28, prior to a meeting of the G-7 leaders (Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, United Kingdom, and United States), Human Rights Watch/Helsinki issued a press release warning the G-7 not to endorse the contact group’s peace proposal partitioning Bosnia until human rights concerns were made part of an overall peace settlement; we sent a similar letter to President Clinton. In early September, we issued a press release calling on the contact group to use its influence with Bosnian Serb authorities to stop “ethnic cleansing” in Bijeljina and other parts of northern Bosnia. We continued calling on the international community to respond to continued “ethnic cleansing” in northern Bosnia in a November newsletter. In a March letter to Jose Ayala Lasso, U.N. high commissioner for human rights, we suggested improvements in the UNPROFOR mission in Croatia and Bosnia-Hercegovina.
Human Rights Watch/Helsinki sent a mission to Sarajevo in May and June and issued a newsletter in October reporting on past and present human rights violations in the city. In September and October, Human Rights Watch/Helsinki sent a mission to central and southwestern Bosnia to investigate the status of human rights and accountability for past crimes in the Muslim-Croat federation. We met with E.U. administrators of Mostar in the field and in Brussels. Also in the fall, we researched the campaign to “ethnically cleanse” eastern Bosnia of Muslims and to identify persons who planned or perpetrated abuses in the area in 1992.
Throughout the year, Human Rights Watch/Helsinki kept up pressure for the establishment and support of the international tribunal to adjudicate war crimes and crimes against humanity in Bosnia and Croatia. In February, Human Rights Watch/Helsinki issued The War Crimes Tribunal: One Year Later, which called for the appointment of a prosecutor to the international war crimes tribunal and for the tribunal to begin its work. We also advocated for proper funding and staffing of the tribunal, and on February 25 sent a letter to U.N. Secretary-General Boutros-Ghali expressing concern over the failure to provide adequate funding. In March, we urged U.N. budgetary bodies to allocate sufficient funds to the tribunal. Prior to and after the appointment of Judge Goldstone, representatives of Human Rights Watch maintained regular contact with the prosecutor’s office and forwarded our documentation to the tribunal’s staff.
Nueva York — El relato parece extraído de las historias de horror de Edgar Allan Poe, E.T. Hoffman, Guy de Maupassant o Bram Stoker.O más, de las transcripciones de los interrogatorios brutales en los campos nazis deconcentración de Dachau o Treblinka. Pero no lo es.
Tampoco es ficción de un literato dedicado a provocar estremecimientos de terror e insomnio en sus lectores. Es, simplemente, una página arran cada de la tragedia vivida en las ergástulas de las dictaduras militares de los años 70, instauradas, alegadamente, para defender la libertad y la democracia, amenazadas por la insurgencia de pueblos anhelantes de justicia social. La página siniestra vivida hace tres décadas por Luz de las Nieves Ayress Moreno, chilena, una activista comunitaria que reside desde hace 12 años en Nueva York, toma actualidad cuando una Comisión de la Verdad en Chile, acaba de entregar al presidente Ricardo Lagos un informe sobre la tortura ejercida por el régimen militar que encabezó por 17 años el general Augusto Pinochet Ugarte, quien, en una entrevista para una cadena de televisión hispana, en 2003, su autocalificó como “un ángel bueno”.
Lagos declaró sentirse “asqueado” de la lectura y el general Manuel Contreras, jefe la DINA, la policía política de Pinochet, dijo a los medios de prensa que “en la Dirección de Inteligencia Nacional no hubo ninguna política de tortura ni tampoco de detener gente para asesinarla, ni cosas por el estilo”.
Las reaccion es a esta declaración fueron desde la calificación de “cín i cas y perversas” hasta la de la ex ministra de Defensa, Michelle Bachelet, sobreviviente de las torturas en Villa Grimaldi, quien acusó a Contreras de ser “un cara de palo”.
Nieves Ayress tenía 23 años y era, según su relato, una joven estudiante que había sido influida, como casi todos los jóvenes de su generación, por la Revolución Cubana, el movimiento hippie, las reformas sociales, la guerra de Vietnam y los movimientos juveniles contestatarios de Francia que encabezaba Daniel Cohn Benditt o “Danny, el rojo”=. Lo que queríamos era un mundo más humano y igualitario, por eso me afilié al Ejército Nacional de Liberación en Bolivia en 1968 y trabajé con mujeres y niños en varias poblaciones pequeñas. Yo no maté a nadie, no robé, no cometí ningún delito. Mi pecado era ser joven, y apenas derrocado Allende los militares y los extremistas de derecha sospechaban de todo aquel que fuera joven” dice Nieves alinicio de su charla.
Su testimonio discurre fluido, haciendo difícil para su interlocutor conservar el pulso y la presión arterial normal al escuchar el lúgubre relato.
“El día del golpe yo estaba en casa. Sabíamos que la insurrección militar venía porque en mi familia se hacía política. Mis abuelos fueron los que junto a Recabarren fundaron los movimientos revolucionarios en Chile; mis padres, Virginia Moreno y Carlos Ayress, fundaron junto a Salvador Allende el Partido Socialista”.
“Mis cinco hermanos y yo pertenecimos siempre a movimientos sociales. El día 11 de septiembre de 1973 nos fuimos al barrio pobre de La Legua donde se produjeron enfrentamientos con los militares. Una semana después fui detenida por primera vez y llevada al Estadio Nacional. Estuve detenida por dos semanas y empecé a ser torturada. Permanecí enclaustrada en una torre, sola, y desde allí veía los golpes y las torturas a otros presos. Me pusieron en libertad sin darme ninguna explicación pero en enero de 1974 caí por segunda vez a órdenes de la DINA que dirigía el general Manuel Contreras.
Cuando me detuvieron yo estaba en la fábrica de mi padre. Me esposaron y me llevaron a la casa de nuestra familia en San Miguel y detuvieron también a mi padre, Carlos Ayress, y a mi hermano Tato. De allí me condujeron a un centro de torturas en el número 38 de la calle Londres, donde permanecí dos semanas sola e incomunicada y fui tratada salvajemente. Las torturas incluían golpes, choques eléctricos a las partes más sensibles del cuerpo como ojos, senos, ano, vagina, nariz, oídos y dedos. Un método muy común era el que ellos llamaban ‘pau de arara’, introducido por torturadores br
asileños que experimentaron con nosotros. Este consistía en amarrarnos de pies y manos y colgarnos cabeza abajo. En esa posición nos aplicaban choques eléctricos en el ano. Otra forma era ‘el teléfono’. Nos golpeaban con fuerza y simultáneamente los oídos. Desnuda y encapuchada fui torturada en presencia de mi padre y hermano e intentaron que tuviera relación sexual con ellos. También me obligaban a presenciar como torturaban a mi padre y de otros amigos que se encontraban presos. En los baños de la prisión de la calle Londres fui repetidamente violada”.
“Aunque no supe quienes eran mis torturadores en ese sitio, por sus voces pude entender que eran argentinos y paraguayos quienes me convencieron que estaba en Buenos Aires. En una sesión de torturas sufrí un colapso cardíaco. Los verdugos se asustaron y pidieron unas medicinas a un sitio de la calle Arturo Pratt. Fue así como supe que estaba en Santiago”. “Calculo que fue en febrero de 1974 cuando me llevaron a otra prisión en Tejas Verdes donde estuve incomunicada. Este era otro sitio de entrenamiento de torturadores y los recuerdos que tengo son de absoluta brutalidad. Me forzaron a realizar actos sexuales con un perro que había sido especialmente preparado para este tipo de abuso. También colocaban ratas dentro de mi vagina y luego me daban choques eléctricos. Las ratas, desesperadas, hundían sus garras en mi interior. Se orinaban y defecaban en mi cuerpo. Después me inocularon el virus de la toxoplasmósis. Fui violada constantemente y forzada a tener sexo oral con mis captores. Me cortaron las capas superficiales del vientre con un cuchillo y las orejas. Luego me ponían alcohol en las heridas y me aplicaban corriente eléctrica. Toda vía pueden verse las cicatrices en mi cuerpo. Me introdujeron botellas de Coca Cola por el ano y me gritaban ‘Esto es para que sientas el Imperio’”.
“El general Manuel Contreras ha declarado hace pocos días que en la DINA nunca se torturó a nadie. Yo puedo decir que en una ocasión fui torturada por el propio Manuel Contreras y una mujer alemana que estaba presa, de quien decían que nos parecíamos y debíamos ser hermanas. A Contreras lo pude ver porque la venda que cubría mis ojos estaba floja. Después lo reconocí en fotografías”. “Un ex agente. Samuel Fuenzalida Devia, declaró a un diario digital chileno que el general Manuel Contreras, quien acaba de ser condenado en su país a 12 años de prisión, supervisaba las torturas en Londres 38”.
“A las mujeres se les aplicaba corriente en los genitales y en los senos. También eran quemadas con cigarrillos”, dijo Fuenzalida y agregó que Contreras le dijo en una ocasión que “debía estar orgulloso de pertenecer a la DINA”.
“En abril de 1974, cuando había sido llevada a la Cárcel de Mujeres de la calle Vicuña Mackenna, que estaba administrada por una orden de monjas, caí en cuenta que estaba embarazada. Un doctor de apellido Mery, militar que ejercía en la Universidad Católica, me confirmó el embarazo y me dijo que yo debía estar orgullosa de tener ‘un hijo de la patria’, es decir un producto de violaciones de los militares. Mi situación causó una gran controversia internacional pues mi madre y toda mi familia había denunciado mi prisión y torturas. Fui entrevistada por la Cruz Roja Internacional, Amnistía Internacional, Comisión Kennedy, Comisión de Derechos Humanos de la OEA, el cardenal Silva Enríquez y esposas de los militares. Me ofrecieron la libertad si no denunciaba las violaciones y el embarazo. Las monjas ofrecieron ayudarme para pedir un permiso que me permitiera abortar. Tenía que elevar una solicitud al cardenal y éste elevarla al Papa. En Chile el aborto era penado por la ley y yo estaba en muy mala condición física, muy débil, así que decidí tener el hijo. Después de haber sobrevivido a tanto tiempo de detención y crueles maltratos, no iba a dar a los militares el gusto de morirme. Sin embargo en mayo tuve un aborto espontáneo pero no recibí atención médica ni medicinas”.
“De Vicuña Mackenna me llevaron a Tres Álamos, otro campo de concentración. Fui sometida nuevamente a violaciones, amenazas y hasta un simulacro de fusilamiento. En diciembre de 1976 salí expulsada de Chile junto a 17 presos políticos entre los que estaban mis compañeros Víctor Toro, Gladys Díaz, el doctor Luís Corbalán. El decreto de expulsión señalaba que no podíamos volver jamás a nuestra patria. Con la solidaridad de mucha gente conseguí quedarme a vivir en Berlín”.
“A fines de 1977 fui a Cuba. En el hospital Calixto García, sin tener que pagar un centavo, me trataron de la toxoplasmosis, me reconstruyeron la vagina y todo mi cuerpo para que pudiera engendrar, me trataron las infecciones vaginales, la descalcificación y la sordera provocada por ‘el teléfono’, me arreglaron las cicatrices del cuerpo y las orejas y me operaron los pies deformados por el maltrato. También me dieron terapia psicológica en una muestra de solidaridad de los cubanos imposible de pagar”.
“Pese a todo lo que me hicieron los sicarios de Pinochet pude sobrevivir. Tengo aún secuelas psicológicas por todo lo que me tocó vivir. Siento dolor permanente en el cuello, las manos, las rodillas y los pies; tengo marcas y cicatrices en todo mi cuerpo. Cuando veo una rata siento un dolor reflejo en la vagina. Siento ansiedad, pesadillas y depresión. He superado algunas de esas secuelas, por ejemplo el miedo al encierro surgido por las violaciones que sufrí en el baño de la prisión de la calle Londres, pero sigo siendo muy sensible emocionalmente. Mi familia fue dividida, destruida y toda mi vida cambió después del golpe militar”.
“Pero, al fin, yo estoy aquí, resucitada. Con mi esposo, Víctor Toro, preso y torturado igual que yo, tenemos una hija, Rosita, quien estudia en la Universidad de Nueva York. A los 21 años regresé a Chile con ella, y pude decir a mis torturadores militares: ¡Aquí estoy yo y aquí está mi hija. Me torturaron pero no me destruyeron, no me jodieron por que tuve una hija!”.
(*) Nieves Ayress enfatiza que su testimonio no persigue ninguna compasión. Sólo consignar
un ejemplo para que los sucesos de Chile, no se repitan nunca.
©CEME web productions 2005
Never forget these crimes. The devil walks the earth.
Not only have its efforts to bring peace often been failures, but the organisation itself is riddled with waste, fraud and abuse.
AS THE United Nations approaches its fiftieth anniversary this year, Reader’s Digest assigned Roving Editor Dale Van Atta to examine U.N. operations and effectiveness. For four months he interviewed dozens of officials and poured over U.N. budget documents and confidential files. He found an institution in critical need of reform.
This article, on the U.N.’s peacekeeping operations; is the first of two reports. Part 2 will appear next month.
Sonja’s Kon-Tiki Café is a notorious Serbian watering hole ten kilometres north of Sarajevo. While Serb soldiers perpetrated atrocities in nearby Bosnian villages, local residents reported that U.N. peacekeepers from France, Ukraine, Canada and New Zealand regularly visited Sonja’s, drinking and eating with these very same soldiers — and sharing their women.
The women of Sonja’s, however, were actually prisoners of the Serb soldiers. As one soldier, Borislav Herak, would later confess, he visited Sonja’s several times a week, raping some of the 70 females present and killing two of them.
U.N. soldiers patronised Sonja’s even after a Sarajevo newspaper reported where the women were coming from. A U.N. spokesman excused the incident by saying no-one was assigned to read the newspaper. The U.N. soldiers who frequented Sonja’s also neglected to check out the neighbourhood. Just over 60 metres away, a concentration camp held Bosnian Muslims in inhuman conditions. Of 800 inmates processed, 250 disappeared and are presumed dead.
Tragically, Sonja’s Kon-Tiki illustrates much of what has plagued U.N. peacekeeping operations: incompetent commanders, undisciplined soldiers, alliances with aggressors, failure to prevent atrocities and at times even contributing to the horror. And the level of waste, fraud and abuse is overwhelming.
Until recently, the U.N. rarely intervened in conflicts. When it did, as in Cyprus during the 1960s and ’70s, it had its share of success. But as the Cold War ended, the U.N. became the world’s policeman, dedicated to nation building and peacekeeping. By the end of 1991, it was conducting 11 peacekeeping operations at an annual cost of $615 million. In three years, the numbers rose to 18 operations and $3.3 billion — with Australian taxpayers paying 1.5 per cent of the bill.
Have the results justified the steel cost? Consider the U.N.’s top four peacekeeping missions:
Bosnia In June 1991, Croatia declared its independence from Yugoslavia and was recognised by the U.N. The Serbian-dominated Yugoslav army invaded Croatia, ostensibly to protect its Serbian minority. After the Serbs agreed to a cease-fire, the U.N. sent in a 14,000-member U.N. Protection Force (UNPROFOR) to build a new nation. (The mission has since mushroomed to over 40,000 personnel, becoming the most extensive and expensive peacekeeping operation ever.)
After neighbouring Bosnia declared its independence in March 1992, the Serbs launched a campaign of “ethnic cleansing” against the Muslims and Croats who made up 61 per cent of the population. Rapidly the Serbs gained control of two-thirds of Bosnia, which they still hold.
Bosnian Serbs swept into Muslim and Croat villages and engaged in Europe’s worst atrocities since the Nazi Holocaust. Serbian thugs raped at least 20,000 women and girls. In barbed-wire camps, men, women and children were tortured and starved to death. Girls as young as six were raped while parents were forced to watch. In one case, three Muslim girls were chained to a fence, raped by Serb soldiers for three days, then drenched with petrol and set on fire.
While this was happening, the UNPROFOR troops stood by and did nothing to help. Designated military “observers” counted artillery shells — and the dead.
Meanwhile, evidence emerged that there was a serious corruption problem. Accounting procedures were so loose that the U.N. overpaid $2.3 million on a $28-million fuel contract. Kenyan peacekeepers stole 95,000 litres of fuel and sold it to the Serbs.
Corruption charges were routinely dismissed as unimportant by U.N. officials. Sylvana Foa, then spokesperson for the U.N. Human Rights Commission in Geneva, said it was no surprise that “out of 14,000 pimply 18-year-olds, a bunch of them should get up to hanky-panky” like blackmarket dealings and visiting brothels.
When reports persisted, the U.N. finally investigated. In November 1993 a special commission confirmed that some terrible but “limited” misdeeds had occurred. Four Kenyan and 19 Ukrainian soldiers were dismissed from the U.N. force.
The commission found no wrongdoing at Sonja’s Kon-Tiki, but its report, locked up at U.N. headquarters and never publicly released, is woefully incomplete. The Sonja’s Kon-Tiki incidents were not fully investigated, for example, because the Serbs didn’t allow U.N. investigators to visit the site, and the soldiers’ daily logbooks had been destroyed.
Meanwhile, Russian troop commanders collaborated with the Serb aggressors. According to U.N. personnel at the scene, Russian battalion commander Colonel Viktor Loginov and senior officer Colonel Aleksandr Khromchenkov attended lavish feasts hosted by a Serbian warlord called “Arkan,” widely regarded as one of the worst perpetrators of atrocities. It was also common knowledge that Russian officers directed that U.N. tankers unload petrol at Arkan’s barracks. During one cease-fire, when Serbian materiel was locked in a U.N. storage area, a Russian apparently gave the keys to the Serbs, who removed 51 tanks. Eventually, Khromchenkov was repatriated. Loginov, after finishing his tour of duty, joined Arkan’s Serbian forces.
Problems remained, however, under the leadership of another Russian commander, Major General Aleksandr Perelyakin. Belgian troops had been blocking the movement of Serb troops across a bridge in northeastern Croatia, as required by U.N. Security Council resolutions. Perelyakin ordered the Belgians to stand aside. Reluctantly they did so, permitting one of the largest movements of Serbian troops and equipment into the region since the 1991 cease-fire. According to internal U.N. reports, the U.N. spent eight months quietly trying to pressure Moscow to pull Perelyakin back, but the Russians refused. The U.N. finally dismissed him last April.
Cambodia In 1991, the China and the Soviet Union helped broker a peace treaty among three Cambodian guerrilla factions and the Vietnamese-installed Cambodian government, ending 21 years of civil war. To ease the transition to Cambodia’s first democratic government; the U.N. created the U.N. Transitional Authority in Cambodia, called UNTAC. In less than two years, about 20,000 U.N. peacekeepers and other personnel were dispatched at a cost of $2.4 billion.
Some of the Cambodian “peacekeepers” proved to be unwelcome guests — especially a Bulgarian battalion dubbed the “Vulgarians.” In northwest Cambodia, three Bulgarian soldiers were killed for “meddling” with local girls. One Bulgarian was treated for 17 different STDs. The troops’ frequent carousing once sparked a mortar-rifle battle with Cambodian soldiers at a brothel.
The Bulgarians were not the sole miscreants in Cambodia, as internal U.N. audits later showed. Requests from Phnom Penh included 6500 flak jackets — and 300,000 condoms. In the year after the U.N. peacekeepers arrived, the number of prostitutes in Phnom Penh more than tripled.
U.N. mission chief Yasushi Akashi waved off Cambodian complaints with a remark that “18-year-old hot-blooded soldiers” had the right to drink a few beers and chase “young beautiful beings.” Akashi did post an order: “Please do not park your U.N. vans near the nightclubs” (i.e., brothels). At least 150 U.N. peacekeepers got AIDS in Cambodia; 5000 of the troops came down with STDs. Meanwhile, more than 1000 generators were ordered, at least 330 of which, worth nearly $4 million, were never used for the mission. When U.N. personnel started spending the $300 million budgeted for “premises and accommodation,” rental costs became so inflated that locals could barely afford to live in their own country. Some $102 million was spent buying vehicles, including hundreds of surplus motorcycles and minibuses. When 100 12-seater minibuses were needed, 850 were purchased — an “administrative error,” UNTAC explained, that cost $10.6 million.
Despite the excesses, the U.N. points with pride to the free election that UNTAC sponsored in May 1993. Ninety per cent of Cambodia’s 4.7 million voters defied death threats from guerrilla groups and went to the polls.
Unfortunately, the election results have been subverted by the continued rule of the Cambodian People’s Party — the Vietnamese-installed communist government, which lost at the ballot box. In addition, the Khmer Rouge — the guerrilla group that butchered over a million countrymen in the 1970s — have refused to disarm and demobilise. So it was predictable that they would repeatedly break the cease-fire and keep up their killing. The U.N. has spent nearly $2.5 billion, but there is no peace in Cambodia.
Somalia When civil war broke out in this African nation, the resulting anarchy threatened 4.5 million Somalis — over half the population — with severe malnutrition and related diseases. U.N. Secretary General Boutros Boutros-Ghali, the first African (and Arab) to hold the position, argued eloquently for a U.N. peacekeeping mission to ensure safe delivery of food and emergency supplies. The U.N. Operation in Somalia (UNOSOM) was deployed to Mogadishu, the capital, in September 1992. It was quickly pinned down at the airport by Somali militiamen and was unable to complete its mission.
A U.S. task force deployed in December secured the Mogadishu area, getting supplies to the hungry and ill. After the Americans left, the U.N. took over in May 1993 with UNOSOM II. The $2.5-million-a-day operation transformed the former U.S. embassy complex into a 32hectare walled city boasting air-conditioned housing and a golf course. When U.N. officials ventured out of the compound, their “taxis” were helicopters that cost $640,000 a week.
The published commercial rate for Mogadishu—U.S. phone calls was $6.30 a minute, but the “special U.N. discount rate” was $10.78. Unauthorised personal calls totalled more than $2.5 million, but the U.N. simply picked up the tab and never asked the callers to pay.
Meanwhile, the peacekeeping effort disintegrated, particularly as warlord Mohammed Aidid harassed UNOSOM II troops. As the civil war continued, Somalis starved. But U.N. peacekeepers — on a food budget of from South America, beef from Australia and frozen fish from New Zealand and the Netherlands.
Thousands of metres of barbed wire arrived with no barbs; hundreds of light fixtures to illuminate the streets abutting the compound had no sockets for light bulbs. What procurement didn’t waste, pilferage often took care of. Peacekeeping vehicles disappeared with regularity. Egyptian U.N. troops were suspected of largescale black-marketing of minibuses.
But these losses were eclipsed in a single night by a thief who broke into a U.N. office in Mogadishu and took $5 million in cash. The office door was easy pickings: its lock could be jemmied with a credit card. The money, stored in a filing cabinet, had been easily visible to dozens of U.N. employees. While the case has not been solved, one administrator was dismissed and two others were disciplined. UNOSOM II itself was later shut down, leaving Somalia to the same clan warfare that existed when U.N. troops were first deployed two years before.
Rwanda Since achieving independence in 1962, Rwanda has erupted in violence between the majority Hutu tribe and minority Tutsis. The U.N. had a peacekeeping mission in that nation, but it fled as the Hutus launched a new bloodbath in April 1994. Only 270 U.N. troops stayed behind, not enough to prevent the butchery of at least 14 local Red Cross workers left exposed by the peacekeepers’ swift flight. The U.N. Security Council dawdled as the dead piled up, a daily horror of shootings, stabbings and machete hackings. The Hutus were finally driven out by a Tutsi rebel army in mid-1994.
Seven U.N. agencies and more than 100 international relief agencies rushed back. With a budget of some $256 million, the U.N. tried unsuccessfully to provide security over Hutu refugee camps in Rwanda and aid to camps in neighbouring Zaire.
The relief effort was soon corrupted when the U.N. let the very murderers who’d massacred half a million people take over the camps. Rather than seeking their arrest and prosecution, the U.N. made deals with Hutu thugs, who parlayed U.N. food, drugs and other supplies into millions of dollars on the black market.
Earlier this year the U.N. began to pull out of the camps. On April 22 at the Kibeho camp in Rwanda, the Tutsi-led military opened fire on Hutu crowds. Some 2000 Hutus were killed. Where was the U.N.? Overwhelmed by the presence of nearly 2000 Tutsi soldiers, the 200 U.N. peacekeepers did nothing. A U.N. spokesman informed Reader’s Digest, meekly, that the UN. was on the scene after the slaughter for cleanup and body burial.
With peacekeeping operations now costing over $3.8 billion a year, reform is long overdue. Financial accountability can be established only by limiting control by the Secretariat, which routinely withholds information about peacekeeping operations until the last minute — too late for the U.N.’s budgetary committee to exercise oversight. In December 1993, for example, the budget committee was given only one day to approve a $770-million budget that would extend peacekeeping efforts into 1994.
More fundamentally, the U.N. needs to re-examine its whole peacekeeping approach, for the experiment in nation building has been bloody and full of failure. Lofty ideas to bring peace everywhere in the world have run aground on reality: member states with competing interests in warring territories, the impossibility of lightly armed troops keeping at bay belligerent enemies, and the folly of moving into places without setting achievable goals.
“It has been a fundamental error to put U.N. peacekeepers in place where there is no peace to keep,” says Sam Nunn, a member of the US Senate Armed Services Committee.” We’ve seen very vividly that the U.N. is not equipped, organised or financed to intervene and fight wars.”
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“Serious failings” at the BBC allowed Jimmy Savile to sexually abuse 72 people without detection for decades, according to a damning report published on Thursday, which insisted that the corporation still had lessons to learn from the affair.
Dame Janet Smith, who started the independent inquiry in October 2012, found that despite what had happened with Savile, those worked at the BBC were still worried about reporting potential abuse and taking on the broadcaster’s stars.
She concluded that “an atmosphere of fear still exists today in the BBC possibly because obtaining work in the BBC is highly competitive and many people no longer have the security of an employment contract”.
It was incumbent on the BBC to examine its culture today, Smith added, particularly when it came to the continued fear of speaking out and its attitudes towards “the talent”, or on-screen presenters.
In total, Savile sexually assaulted 57 females and 15 boys. Three incidents of rape and attempted rape took place on BBC premises, Smith said, and the youngest victim to whom Smith spoke was eight years old at the time of the offence.
The report, which runs to is 372,400 words, made for “sorry reading” for the BBC, said Smith, a former court of appeal judge.
It examines sexual abuse perpetrated by Savile and Stuart Hall, who was released in December after serving half of a five-year jail term for historical indecent assaults against girls aged between nine and 17.
A “macho culture” of sexism and sexual harassment and an “atmosphere of fear” led many employees to keep quiet about concerns, she wrote. She found BBC staff “more worried about reputation than the safety of children”.
Regarding abuse by stars and others at the BBC, Smith concluded that the criminal behaviour was largely the fault of the perpetrators, the broadcaster could have stopped it but failed to do so.
However, the report ultimately concludes that there is no evidence that the BBC as a corporate body was aware of Savile’s conduct and therefore cannot be convicted of any offence.
It also concludes that BBC staff failed to report Hall indulging in “inappropriate sexual conduct” partly because he was seen as an “untouchable” celebrity, a report found.
Staff at BBC Manchester knew the former It’s a Knockout host was taking women into his dressing room for sex, although not that some of them were under age, a report by former high court judge Dame Linda Dobbs found.
The report said he had abused 21 female victims at the BBC, with the youngest aged 10, between 1967 and 1991, but no complaints were passed on to senior management.
In conclusion, Smith writes: “The delivery of these reports presents an opportunity for the BBC to take steps to ensure that history cannot repeat itself.”
In a final verdict which may disappoint campaigners for victims, her “overarching recommendation” was that the BBC should carry out a further review and subsequent audit of its current management.
After speaking to more than 800 people, Smith concluded:
Although largely completed a year ago, the report was delayed by the police investigations and sent to the BBC itself a week ago.
In the report, Smith says: “The BBC should examine its attitude towards ‘the talent’. I have reported that the BBC appeared at least in the past to be tolerant of inappropriate conduct by the stars because they were more valuable to the BBC than the BBC’s own values.
“The BBC should leave members of the talent in no doubt as to the standards of the behaviour expected of them.”
“The first reason for this is because of a deference or even adulation which was, and still can be, accorded to celebrity in our society,” she says.
The report found that one complainant was told to “keep your mouth shut; he is a VIP” while talent were “treated with kid gloves and rarely challenged”.
The review found that Savile would “gratify himself whenever the opportunity arose” and in “virtually every one of the BBC premises at which he worked”, which included BBC Television Theatre, Television Centre, Broadcasting House, Egton House, Lime Grove studios and studios in Leeds, Manchester and Glasgow.
“Savile had a voracious sexual appetite,” Smith writes. “He was obsessively interested in sex.”
Smith said Savile’s tactic with young girls was to invite them to watch him perform either on radio or television as a “form of grooming”.
“He used his celebrity status, his entree to the BBC and his connections with other stars as bait with which to draw young girls into his sphere.”
In addition to unnamed supervisors and technical staff who worked on shows like Top of the Pops, Smith lists other examples of people who knew or suspected Savile was behaving inappropriately or illegally.
Source: The Guardian
By Yoichi Shimatsu 3-27-14 BANGKOK
It is by no mere coincidence, when telltale evidence of a Mossad role in the MH370 hijack was starting to snowball, that Israel’s embassies and consulates were suddenly shut down due to a “strike by diplomatic staff”. This fork-tongued alibi was obviously meant to prevent law enforcement agencies across Asia and the Western world from questioning Israeli intelligence agents and military attaches about the whereabouts and fate of the hundreds of passengers.
The Jewish state’s diplomatic corps has retreated further into a tortoise shell, perhaps because of the hammer blow from investigative journalist Christopher Bollyn, who previously exposed Israel’s hand behind the 911 attacks. Based on eyewitness reports from a network of plane watchers in Europe and in Israel, Bollyn reports that an identical production model of the Malaysian Airlines Boeing 777 is being kept out of regular service inside a hangar at Tel Aviv Airport.
Seattle-based Boeing assembles aircraft in pairs as its standard practice, but the question is how one jet was leased by Malaysia’s national carrier while the matching plane was secretly turned over to the Israeli government without a purchase order from state-run El Al airlines.
Bollyn uncovered the fact that the two jets were delivered to a third-party company, whose top manager has a longtime connection with the George Soros. From the timeline of events, it is obvious that the plane transfers and subsequent electronic hijacking were part of a larger strategy, which was aimed at first, a planned false-flag attack involving mass murder of American citizens to be blamed on the two Iranians aboard MH370, in order to prompt the White House to order air strikes against Iran’s nuclear facilities and air defenses; and second, the blatant theft of key technology related to Freehold Semiconductor’s Kinesis microchip, the world’s tiniest microcontroller, for use in miniature weapons systems that will ensure Israeli military supremacy for decades to come.
Bait and Switch
Why do the Israeli false flaggers need to hijack the Malaysian sister-plane, when just one plane will suffice for the ruse? The mint-condition jet in Tel Aviv would be refitted with Stealth cloaking, state-of-air avionics (aviation electronics, DU-tipped munitions and high-temperature explosives, but fake evidence of Malaysian origins are needed to complete the ruse. Therefore, identifying metal tags and other identifying parts have to be removed from MH370, along with seat covers, crew uniforms and the bodies of the two Iranians, to be frozen in a morgue. The deception would, be complete with the transfer of the stripped Malaysian jet to El Al.
The cover story for TIME and the New York Times would fly as easily as a captured jetliner, running something like “The Iranian hijackers overcame the crew and flew the jet into a military airfield in Iran. Then the Revolutionary Guards loaded the plane with gasoline drums for a suicide mission against innocent civilians and our congressmen in Washington DC. We mourn the loss of the Capitol and the White House in the intense blaze that destroyed half of our beloved capital, but we face the future with courage and will deliver justice against that terrorist state. The last of the Axis of Evil will share the fate of its erstwhile partners. Now, from the Superdome, let’s hear Lady Gaga sing the Star-Spangled Banner.” Those are fighting words that can snap average Americans out of their antiwar malaise. Yes, propaganda is made for consumption by fools.
Going Boeing: We Know Why We’re Here
Boeing’s motto is precision perfect when it comes to MH370. No other aircraft manufacturer (think of McDonnel Douglas, for example, or long-gone Hughes) is closer to the US intelligence services. More than a business corporation, Boeing is a state unto itself, with a vast network of facilities around Seattle and at every major airport around the globe. Less visible are its connections with obscure airlines operating in remote islands, where it is routine to find amputated limbs of human-sacrifice victims floating into Puget Sound. The company provides for all of its powerful customers needs, desires and wildest fantasies, as expressed in its older slogan: Forever New Frontiers.
One of those frontiers is remote piloting of civilian aircraft, based on drone warfare technology, which Boeing developed from prototypes designed in Israel. The pair of 777s for Malaysia and Israel are new editions, and therefore rigged to fly by wireless.
Boeing delivered the twin jets to a middleman in October 2013, who delivered one to Malaysian Airlines in November. The timing coincides with the appointment of Joanne Magruire, a veteran Lockheed Martin Space Division executive, to the board of directors of Freescale Semiconductors, whose Kuala Lumpur staffers involved in the design of the Kinesis KL02 microchip were aboard MH370.
The plan went like clockwork.
Who is Abdol Moabery?
The twin Boeing jets were sold to GA Telesis, an aircraft leasing and servicing company, based in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. The owner of GAT is Abdol Moabery, the son of Iranian immigrants in the posh Woodlawn Hills suburb of Los Angeles.
Before and after September 2001, Moabery was executive manager of Skywatch, a company that supplied monitoring devices for the rooftops of office towers. The electronic device can spot as many as 300 flying objects in one sweep and single out the one flying toward the targeted property. Handy indeed to welcome your boss on the helipad in Manhattan and also to direct his pilot toward the right building.
One of the partners in Skywatch was New York City Mayor Rudolf Guiliani, who claimed his interest was solely in its potential application to monitor US borders against illegal immigrants. One immigrant who slipped past the Skywatch net was Mohamad Atta. Despite or perhaps because of Skywatch, the two jetliners flew into the Towers like Robin Hood’s arrows.
Six months after 911, Moabery left Skywatch to start up GA Telesis in Florida, a state then governed by fellow Republican Jeb Bush and where 911 suspects had extensive flight training.
Prior his term at Skywatch, Moabery served in the US Navy and then worked in executive positions for two Soros-owned aviation companies, Aviation Systems International and C-S Aviation. C-S stands for Chatterjee-Soros. Purnenda Chatterjee is a former Stanford Research Institute and McKinsey partner, whose Chatterjee Group funneled investment funds into West Bengal on behalf of his mentor Soros. In 2011, investors in North Carolina filed charges against Soros and his protege for fraud and embezzlement, an won the initial case by arguing that Soros concealed his ownership of the bankrupt company. Soros is not the Midas he pretends to be, often escaping out the back door leaving behind angry investors.
Moabery takes an interest in homeless children as founder of the charity called Kids in Distress.
Lord of the Skies and Depths
The Boeing corporate vice-president for Southeast Asia is Ralph “Skip” Boyce, the former US ambassador to Jakarta and Bangkok. The prize job came as reward for his past services to Boeing, black operations and the pedophile network. After his retirement from government service, Skip didn’t break his stride:
-Boyce had just sold dozens of Boeing civilian aircraft to a new airline controlled by the Indonesian military just before the “accidental” crash of a demonstration model of a lower-cost Sukhoi Super 100 passenger plane for inexplicable reasons into a mountain after takeoff from the joint U.S.-Indonesian Halim Air Force Base.
Some background on the business-savvy man from Boeing:
– Boyce was on duty during the Bali bombing. Then editor of Jakarta Post Robert Finnegan, a retired Marine and founder of the 5th Estate news site, found evidence of high explosives and nuclear materials at the bomb site, which pointed to a US intelligence role in the killing of Australians undercover agents and Indonesian civilians. The ambassador in response arranged his removal from his editorship.
– Ambassador “Boyz” was the de facto dean of American envoys in Southeast Asia when anti-pedophile activist Sean Parlaman jumped off his apartment balcony in Pattaya, Thailand, according to local police on the pedophile payroll. His protection of high-ranking pedophiles in the State Department and Congress coincided with the discovery of the skeletons of 500 Indonesian boys inside a cave in Bali and intimidation of a Cambodian orphanage as a recruiting ground for sex slaves whose average age was 10 years old.
Boeing is certainly out there on the frontiers.
Dolphins at Diego Garcia
Instead of flying to Iran immediately, MH370 presumably landed at the gateway to the Persian Gulf, Diego Garcia, the presumption being based on eyewitness accounts in nearly Maldives of a low-flying plane on descent toward that destination.
On the surface and from satellite images, Diego Garcia seems a barren atoll. That’s because most of the US Navy and Air Force bases are underground inside vast bunkers installed a decade ago. The island, part of the British-owned Chagos archipelago south of India, later made headlines as the storage site for hundreds of bunker-buster JDAM bombs for a joint Israel-US airstrike against Iran’s nuclear facilities and air defenses.
The Israeli military and intelligence presence on Diego Garcia is so massive that long-distance phone operators offer a special discount card for calls to Israel. The Israeli Navy’s nuclear-missile capable Dolphin submarines refuel and are serviced at Diego Garcia, saving the time and expense of going to Elat on the Red Sea.
An IDF Dolphin sub from Diego Garcia sank the South Korean frigate Choenan. The Dolphin crew, panicked by the unscheduled voyage, fired a smart torpedo at the frigate. On the following two days, South Korean naval divers rescued several Caucasians, including two drowning victims, from a sunken submarine. That Dolphin submarine, based at an underwater base south of Inchon, was later replaced with an IDF order for a new sub from HDW Germany. Cannon fire from the Choenan’s sister ship had hit the Dolphin after it sank the Choenan, following delivered nuclear-weapons material to the North Korean military.
Israel is neck-deep in intrigue across Asia, including nuclear deals with North Korea and Japan. As mentioned earlier in this series on MH370, Israeli-linked agents including Google and Facebook have monitored email servers across Southeast Asia and hacked into computers of Palestinian supporters.
The role of Israeli intelligence assets inside Muslim-dominated Malaysia is a long-running issue that involves strings of stay-behind agents left by the British colonial authority. These underground networks are descended from two strands of Jewish administrators and merchants in colonial Malaya. First are those who have origins in the Ottoman empire and migrated under Britain’s favorable policy toward the Donmeh Jews (hidden Jews inside the Islamic community across the Arab realm, Turkey and Iran) during the Ataturk period. Second are Baghdadi Jews involved in the opium trade. More recent recruits are ordinary bureaucrats and military officers who are in need of a handful of shekels to pay their gambling debts.
The spotting of increasing amounts of flotsam and jetsam off the Australian coast are meant to throw public attention off track. In actual flotation situations, there would be less debris with each passing day, as seats become waterlogged and life jackets deflate. Obviously, submarines from Diego Garcia are jettisoning pieces of aircraft through their missile hatches with blasts of compressed air. Bodies can be frozen in morgues with life jackets to be partially opened before dispatching them out the torpedo tubes.
Soros Gets More Than a Pound
The Malaysian jetliner, and its hidden sibling in Tel Aviv, are the instruments that should have guaranteed Zionist supremacy over the global economic and political order throughout this century. Instead, their grandiose design is collapsing under its own fabrications and delusions, as Israeli envoys scurry into the shadows like rats under spotlights. The FBI and Interpol have a monumental task ahead. Crush Israeli terrorist apparatus and hunt down their cells until world civilization is safe again.
“Thieves, murderers and liars” are mere words that can hardly describe the crafty criminality of the Israeli spy chiefs. But what about their paymaster, what does Soros get out of the deal? For one thing, the Mossad turns over the Kinesis microchip technology as thanks for his patriotism. Chips aside, what Soros really, really wants is the satisfaction of payback against Malaysia. Few things are more important than money, and that short list includes revenge.
The Hungarian Jew tycoon, who bought US citizenship after defrauding the Bank of England, has a die-hard grudge against Malaysia. During his cunning attempt to wreck the currencies of Southeast Asian, with the hidden agenda of buying assets and property on the cheap, Soros was slammed down by Malaysia’s then Prime Minister Muhammad Mahathir, who imposed a currency board to stop capital flight. That was back in 2008. (The Zionist-influenced Western media and Wall Street bankers quickly denounced Mahathir as “anti-semitic”, forgetting out of their dismal cultural ignorance that an Asian Muslim cannot be such since fellow believers across the Arab world are more Semitic than European Jews.)
If revenge is a dish best served cold, Soros has ice in his veins and waited till his dying days to gouge out a pound of flesh from Malaysia’s body politick.
At the risk of sounding as soft as Lady Portia with her aristocratic Venetian accent, let me suggest that the world community is to be governed with compassion for the poor and genuine democracy, and not by a top-down global order imposed with violence and greed from a self-appointed religious minority. So as the noose tightens on that little rogue state that would be king of our planet, let us mourn the victims of Flight 370 as much as we grieved over those who died inside the World Trade Center. Such bloodthirsty evil should never be allowed to strike again.
Yoichi Shimatsu, former editor with the Japan Times group in Tokyo, is a Hong Kong-based science writer.
Source: rense
2015-10-23 (Vatican Radio)
Archbishop Bernardito Auza, the Permanent Observer of the Holy See to the United Nations, on Thursday said it was the “grave duty” of the Vatican to remind the international community that “extremists are seeking to eradicate religions, ethnic groups and cultures” that have been in the Middle East “for millennia.” Continue reading Holy See: Extremists seek to eradicate religions and cultures
#independentinvestigationkunduz
U.S. is guilty.
This is a WAR CRIME! Continue reading WAR CRIME -MSF Hospital Bombing Kunduz
The Syrian Civil War is entering a third and potentially very dangerous phase in its continuing evolution. It began as a purely domestic crisis, became steadily internationalized as other countries intervened, and it now risks becoming a full blown Russian-American cold war proxy conflict. This is a conflict that could turn hot very quickly given the proximity of American and Russian military forces in the same theater of operations. Continue reading Checkmate: Obama’s Syrian Disaster
Another Zionist Hoax Exposed by Dr. William L. Pierce
Tucked away on pages 119 and 122 of the October 6, 2015 issue of Der Spiegel, a weekly German news magazine comparable to Time or Newsweek, was a news item of considerable significance:
A scientific analysis of the manuscript purported to be the original diary of Anne Frank, a Jewish girl who died in a German concentration camp during the Second World War, has revealed that the manuscript could not have been written before 1951, six years after the end of the war.
The significance of Der Spiegel’s revelation of this fraud is twofold. First, the printing of the story in a mass-circulation publication constitutes a major break with past treatments of similar news.

Continue reading Anne Frank — the Jewish Girl That DIDN’T Write the Famous Auschwitz Diary
Exceptional -Must Watch

SESAME (Synchrotron-light for Experimental Science and Applications in the Middle East) is a “third-generation” synchrotron light source under construction in Allan (Jordan). It will be the Middle East’s first major international research centre. Source: Sesame
It is a cooperative venture by scientists and governments of the region set up on the model of CERN (European Organization for Nuclear Research). It is being developed under the auspices of UNESCO (United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization) following the formal approval given for this by the Organization’s Executive Board (164th session, May 2002). Continue reading SESAME – like CERN in Jordan (Open Sesame)
Who are the Tuareg people
The Tuareg people are Berber-speakers who trace their ancestry to the indigenous peoples of North Africa in ancient times. They share the same language family as the Berber-speakers of Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia and Libya. Tuaregs live primarily in Niger, Mali, Algeria and Libya, with diasporas in many surrounding countries. Continue reading Tuareg Culture and News: Who are the Tuareg people?
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