Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Baby Shower Wicker Chair Tradition

Locked up for reading a poem

. .
Ayat al-Gormezi, the woman who symbolises
Bahrain's fight for freedom

By Patrick Cockburn

Bahrain's security forces are increasingly targeting women in their campaign against pro-democracy protesters despite yesterday lifting martial law in the island kingdom.
Ayat al-Gormezi, 20, a poet and student arrested two months ago after reading out a poem at a pro-democracy rally, is due to go on trial today before a military tribunal, her mother said. Ayat was forced to turn herself in when masked policemen threatened to kill her brothers unless she did so.
.

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حوار مع "مرآة البحرين" حول أساليب النضال اللاعنيف

quoting site mirror Bahrain . .

despair in front of many of the brutality of dictatorships. To force majeure, which embodied the military machine and equipped police units, some may think that the solution lies in the recourse to violent options: "Diamond cut is iron." But that Wrong. Going to violence in the tribes have trained conventional devices, the battle will lose no doubt.
"Achilles heel" of systems that are usually resorted to violence to hit the rebel movements, is to face the opposite Elements of strength. If the source of its strength is in the presence of a strong military and security apparatus, effectively, the point of weakness lies in its standoff other than this power of color in particular, the methods of "nonviolence."

"mirror Bahrain" opened the topic of "Non Violent Resistance," with Professor of Sociology Dr. Abdulhadi Khalaf, taking into account the movement of February 14 demands a model for analysis. The following Excerpts from the interview:

mirror Bahrain : I have sought in your book "civil resistance" to discuss the phenomenon of "mass action" and forms of struggle used as a tool for change. What this means for the resistance? It seems your interest in civil resistance, since the late eighties, early spring compared to the Arab peaceful revolutions that did not come before 2011?

Hadi Behind: the resistance is an act of voluntary collective aims to change the data in the political and social reality-based, starting from denying the power of their ability to subdue people. And civil resistance Are those that eschew the use of violence to achieve its goals depends on the involvement of as many people as possible on a voluntary basis in the activities of the Assembly. Based on civil resistance on the intuitive Confirmed by extensive experience in human history. An axiom which says very briefly that the capacity of any authority to exercise its powers subject to acceptance of people of that authority and obedience to her either Legitimacy because of their conviction or fear of tyranny or in pursuit of riches.

As written about the "civil resistance" was a secondary output in a research project for several years contributed to It with other colleagues to study the situation of the Palestinian people in the diaspora and in the occupied territories. The aim of the book is to promote the idea of \u200b\u200bcivil resistance struggle as one of the options possible And effective. The synchronization of the book was published in 1986 with the increasing interest of the Palestinian leadership (and in particular the martyrs Obuamar and Abu Jihad) the ethics of civil resistance, including the legacy of Mahatma Gandhi and the Rev. Martin Luther King and Serthma.

It was not easy at that time, many have considered that the invitation to study the potential of civil resistance is to try to "suspicious" to disarm Legitimacy for a weapon of resistance. However, the first intifada that erupted in 1987 in the Occupied Palestinian Territory re-consideration of the non-armed resistance and struggle, which gave a value It deserves as a possible option and effective options within the struggle against occupation and for a change.

to read the rest of the dialogue in a mirror site of Bahrain Click here

.



.

Saturday, May 28, 2011

How To Make A Margaritta Using Premix

Norwegian Wood - Murakami H.

are books that are read in one breath, because the action is thrilling, and you can not get them straight away, others read the same breath because of the large font, the same dialogue (ie a complete lack of even cheeky descriptions) and the desire to end as soon as possible.


O "Norwegian Wood" I have heard various opinions from a masterpiece, the crap. I like the extreme opinion, I like to form their own opinion about the writer. I read the mainstream writers not only because we know those who know everyone, but that did not be excluded from the discussion.

I started with books that take hours to live, occupy it and do not want to give back. Sometimes we regret sometimes bless them. I have doubts about "Norwegian Wood", a lot of doubts. I read it on the train, without carrying anything else to read, you can tell from boredom. A little yes, but the story sucked me, but not convinced. Yes, we want to learn how to roll his complicated love life, on the other hand one has the impression that reading does not require any intellectual effort czytadło. Too sharply? Maybe, but see for yourself.

Hero worst possible, phlegmatic suspended between women. Someone who wants to carried out his hand and was decided for him. I hate these guys, so in reality and in novels. The language is neither new, nor engaging, the dialogue is weak, and making nothing. Plus, cheap tricks, or writing about sexual initiation, mental problems and twisted women. I liked the idea, the title of a well-known song, worthy of praise, though undeveloped background revolt Student and youth, about which much has been written, but it is after all an endless topic. If only Murakami wrote a novel about the hero of any secondary importance, czytałoby me it even faster.

At the end of "Norwegian Wood " in the immortal Beatles performed .

Friday, May 27, 2011

Pathophysiology Of Cyst

Nelsonki - March

March I finished. Backstitch was doing more than the entire image, and the longest flower. But it was worth the torture.
Now I've gone for September. We'll see how I go with the leaves.
But anyway, despite the March crisis, I like to embroider konturki.

cinema plan for today - the Day of the Child. Pomoczymy into the ocean. we go to the "Dolphin Pluma." In addition, our cinema for children will be waiting for a meeting with the pirates.
And because the weather is going to be beautiful, it can still skusimy for ice cream.


Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Gpsphone Cheats Chaos Black Source

Guziczkowo

Arranges with Paul, a collection of buttons. We'll do the album. We have divided it thematically. Przyszykowaliśmy sheets of felt. I began to sew.
This is the first made part of the collection:
first caps and hats:
second smiley, et al.
third hearts
4th dinosaurs
5th night (moons and gwiazki), pumpkins and witch on a broom (not very visible on dark blue background)
There is still a lot of work. I will try to gradually show more part of the collection.

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

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must be better

I generally try not to complain, do not linger. As it is very bad teeth clench. Somewhere deep down inside, I believe that would be better. But sometimes you have to pour out his sorrows somewhere. Girls
thank you sincerely for your warm words for their support.
All comments I read only today, after returning from work and immediately I felt better. In the case of yesterday's post turned on moderation of comments and decided not to publish. I hope that they will not be angry. Thank you again for all the words.

Ela, tempting proposition. I wanted to write to you meile, but something I can not go through your blog. Speak to me please at: koraliki_agi@wp.pl


Finally, a photograph of our acrobat, jumping from the closet door. In the picture you can not see it well, but the doors were opened and moved. A Kleks gave advice.

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Bahrain:An interrupted movement of political change

. .
American University of Beirut
Faculty of Arts and Sciences
Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences
Cordially invite s you to a public lecture by
Abdulhadi Khalaf
Senior researcher at the Department of Sociology & the Center for Middle Eastern Studies, University of Lund, Sweden
On
Bahrain:
An interrupted movement of political change
Thursday, May 19. 6-7:30 pm
Nicely 203
 .

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Maytag Washer Squeaking On Spin Cycle

When will it be better?

Nothing I do not want to. Changes in the workplace.
work in the same place for over 10 years and have never so much I did not want change their place of work, like now. But it is not so simple. I would like to continue working in their profession, and unfortunately, with us occasionally show up such jobs. There are better and worse moments, but I feel that the latter is definitely more. I try not to move your mood to your home. But it is hard. I would like somewhere to go to some wilderness, need time for themselves and their families, away from everything.

blurted out. Maybe it will be easier for me?

Sunday, May 15, 2011

Always Getting Sick Before Birthday

Maczki

second image is ready. Now for a workshop Nelsonek jumps.

Thursday, May 12, 2011

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Bahrain topples its own people

 .
An article by Pepe Escobar
 March 14, 2011, will go down in history as the infamous day when the House of Saud launched - with full United States
backing - a vicious counter-revolution designed to smash the Gulf chapter of the great 2011 Arab revolt. (See Exposed: The US/Saudi Libya deal Asia Times Online, April 2, 2011).
This is the day Saudi troops - with a token few from the United Arab Emirates (UAE) - invaded Bahrain, theoretically at the request of the ruling Sunni al-Khalifa dynasty, to "help" in the crackdown on nationwide pro-democracy protests.
............................................ Read more in http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/ME11Ak01.html



.


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Monday, May 9, 2011

Picutres Of Acne On Blck Skin

It is already May

And this for quite some time. Jumped on my calendar just finished today. Better late than never ;-) Still I use a break in Nelsonkach.

Thank you very much for the delightful comments on the previous image - fields of lavender. Very motivated. Already started meal. So far there are few. Image of like a small but embroiders it long enough. The more that a week does not have too much time on xxx.

Sunday, May 8, 2011

Vodka Makes You Impotent

lavender field

I would like to see and feel this field of "live".
For now, I have enough miniature. Anchor embroidery floss embroidered on linen.

Magda sincerely thank you for the pattern.
The other two (meals and sunflowers) will take it up, because the patterns are beautiful.

Saturday, May 7, 2011

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cry for the rights of women - M. Wollstonecraft

review this time, not mine, but borrowed from the policy. I agree with every word.


great-grandmother of feminism
Series "grandmother" is a project that seeks to enter the Polish market publishing rights for classic items women. The first one has just appeared.


is written in the late eighteenth century philosophical treatise Mary Wollstonecraft, "A cry for the rights of women" . First as a distinct voice in the debate still goes on today about the discrimination written at a time when women were deprived of all rights: civil, political, wealth, and that in general take the public vote, gave rise to a sensation. Mary Wollstonecraft accuses the society that made the women "kokietujące slaves." Arranged marriages called "legal prostitution." He writes about domestic violence. I indicate the source of evil - is the system of education for women, which focuses on, to turn them into "aesthetic objects", designed to provide pleasure to her husband.

According to Wollstonecraft way to equalize opportunities and changes in the situation of women is access to education. This was the diagnosis of penetrating and innovative. About how innovative, can be proved by the fact that serious scholars have argued then that the education of women is roughly the same sense as the training of animals. Jean-Jacques Rousseau, with whom fervently Rebuttal Wollstonecraft, wrote: " whole education of women must bear in mind the man and his needs ." The fact that his words sound today kuriozalnie owe just prababkom feminism. "Grandmothers" is a non-profit project. Translation finished a team of volunteers working without pay. After two years of selling translation will be "unbundled" into the public domain. The electronic version will be available free of charge. This is the first such experiment on our book market.

Wednesday, May 4, 2011

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Israeli officials want a public commitment from Washington to protect the Saudi regime

. .
The Arab Spring and U.S. Policy: The View From Jerusalem
Israeli officials want a public commitment from Washington to protect the Saudi regime should it come under threat.

By: Ted Koppel in W S J


____________________


Israeli officials want a public commitment from Washington to protect the Saudi regime should it come under threat..
It is provocative, but not entirely inaccurate, to suggest that U.S. foreign policy these past few months has been sufficiently erratic to make America's allies reconsider the
degree to which we can be trusted-and our adversaries re-evaluate the degree to
which we must be feared.
The canary in the coal mine on such matters is Israel. None of America's allies is more sensitive to even the most subtle changes in the international environment, or more conscious of the slightest hint of diminished support from Washington.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has been so concerned that a member of his fractious coalition might give vent to some damaging public observation on this issue that he has imposed a strict "nobody talks on the subject but me" rule. That the gag has been even partially effective, given the wide-open nature of the Israeli political
process, is astonishing. It is also a measure of how worried the Israelis
are.
My own reporting on the Middle East in general and Israel in particular goes back almost 40 years-to the days of Henry Kissinger's shuttle diplomacy in the region. On a recent visit to Jerusalem, I met with a number of very senior current and former government officials who spoke on a not-for-attribution basis. They were anything but restrained in voicing their concerns, and some of the views expressed in this article reflect the outlook of the prime minister himself.
Overshadowing all other concerns is the fear that Iran is poised to reap enormous benefits from the so-called Arab Spring. "Even without nukes," one top official told me, "Iran picks up the pieces. With nukes, it takes the house."
Hearing Israeli leaders express grave concerns about Iran and its nuclear potential is nothing new. What is new is a growing worry that America's adversaries will be less inclined to take warnings from Washington seriously. Each week that passes without the overthrow or elimination of Moammar Gadhafi is perceived in Jerusalem as emboldening the leadership of Iran and North Korea."Imagine," one source told me, "how Gadhafi
must be kicking himself for giving up the development of Libya's nuclear
program."
The Israeli government is so concerned that America's adversaries may miscalculate
U.S. intentions that it is privately urging Washington to make it clear that the
U.S. would intervene in Saudi Arabia should the survival of that government be
threatened. That is, after all, what President George H.W. Bush did more than 20
years ago when Saddam Hussein ordered Iraqi forces into Kuwait and moved forces
in the direction of Saudi Arabia. "This," President Bush said on more than one
occasion, "will not stand." And it didn't.
Given the current wide range of U.S. responses to public upheavals throughout North Africa and the Persian Gulf, the Israelis are convinced that the principle needs to be unambiguously restated, if only as a reminder that Washington knows where its critical national interests lie. Absent such a public recommitment, they worry that Iran will be encouraged to even greater mischief. Wherever there is a restive and newly active Shiite
minority, as for example in Bahrain, a mere causeway from the coast of Saudi
Arabia, Tehran can be expected to provide assistance and stir the pot.
Just as enemies such as Iran need to be cautioned, America's traditional allies need to be reassured. That's why Israeli officials are recommending a Marshall Plan for Egypt. The overthrow of Hosni Mubarak may have been no loss in the annals of democracy, but under Mr. Mubarak Egypt was a pillar of stability and a reliable if not always warm partner for Israel. Egypt's political future at this time is uncertain enough; the Israelis believe it is essential to prevent its economic collapse. The U.S. has poured billions of dollars into Egypt since Anwar Sadat made peace with Israel, and senior Israeli officials believe the economic spigot should remain wide open.
With almost no margin for error, the Israelis have long been among the world's foremost pragmatists. While I was in Jerusalem, events in Syria were coming to a boil. Since the Syrians are closely allied with Israel's bitterest enemies-Hezbollah in Lebanon and Hezbollah's main sponsor, Iran-one might expect Israeli leaders to take some comfort in seeing the regime of Bashar Assad in trouble. But here, too, the Israelis are far more
comfortable with stability on their borders. Assad, like his father before him,
has maintained an uneasy truce along Syria's border with Israel, despite
Israel's continued occupation of the Golan Heights.
Little, if anything, that has happened during the past few months has improved Israel's standing in the region. One of the most telling blows to Israel's security has gone all but unnoticed in the swirl of uprisings. For years, the most stable relationship that Israel enjoyed with any Muslim nation was with Turkey. Even under the leadership of Prime
Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who has specialized in publicly baiting the Israelis, the relationship between the two countries' intelligence agencies remained strictly professional. "That," a high-ranking Israeli official told me, "is no longer the case."
The outlook from Jerusalem these days is not encouraging. Iranian influence is growing throughout the Persian Gulf and beyond. Egypt's commitment to its peace treaty with Israel is uncertain. Syria could explode into total chaos at any moment. Jordan's stability is in question.
Pakistan, a Muslim country with more than a 100 nuclear warheads, is confronting
an uncertain future-made all the more unpredictable by the commencement of a
U.S. military withdrawal from Afghanistan this summer. Whether any U.S. troops
will remain in Iraq after the end of this year remains an open question. America
is war-weary and facing a crushing deficit.
The only glimmer of good news for the Israelis may be that, when it comes to reliable allies in the region, Washington's list also keeps getting shorter.

Mr. Koppel was the anchor and managing editor of "Nightline" from 1980 to 2005. He
is currently a contributing analyst for BBC and a commentator for NPR.


http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704330404576291063679488964.html

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A reminder : Bahrain: Key U.S. Military Hub

. .
Bahrain: Key U.S. Military Hub
by Tom Bowman

The tiny island nation of Bahrain plays a big role in America's Middle East strategy. In fact, more than 6,000 U.S. military personnel and contractors are located just five miles from where government security forces violently put down demonstrations this week.
Bahrain is also home to the U.S. Fifth Fleet, a major logistics hub for the
U.S. Navy ships. The island is located halfway down the Persian Gulf, just off the coast of Saudi Arabia, and is something of a rest stop for U.S. Navy ships cruising the waters of the Gulf.
"It has facilities that can provide support to our ships, including, you
know, fuel, water provisions, resupply," retired Rear Adm.Steve Pietropaoli says.
Those facilities have been resupplying warships for nearly a half-century,
ever since Great Britain's fleet left the island. Bahrain provided major basing facilities and support for the armada of U.S. Navy ships sent for the first Persian Gulf War in 1990 and the Iraq War in 2003.
"Bahrain is an outstanding partner," Pietropaoli says. "It has been the
enduring logistical support for the United States Navy operating in the Persian Gulf for 50 years."
These days, it's not like there are a large number of Navy ships stationed
there, the way there are in Norfolk, Va., or San Diego. There's usually just a minesweeper or two. The Fifth Fleet operates a carrier and a ship full of Marines that are almost always under way.
"Bahrain is a facility which is not something measured in the number of ships that are there day by day," defense analyst Tony Cordesman says. Rather, he says, Bahrain's importance is facilitating the Fifth Fleet as it deals with am growing naval threat from Iran and piracy in places like Somalia.
Dealing with all those challenges is made simpler because of Bahrain's
location. It's just across the Gulf from Iran, where the U.S. can keep an eye on that country and also ensure that the vital sea lanes of the Persian Gulf remain open and free of trouble.
So what does Bahrain get out of this relationship besides rent? It receives security guarantees from the United States.
That's just the start. The Bahraini Defense Force sends its personnel to the U.S. for training and it buys high-quality American weapons as well. American military sales to Bahrain have totaled nearly $1.5 billion in the past decade alone.

Those sales include everything from Apache and Cobra attack helicopters to
F-16 warplanes, missile launchers and howitzers, plus more than 50 Abrams tanks — some of which now patrol Bahrain's capital of Manama .
.
http://www.npr.org/2011/02/19/133893941/Bahrain-Unrest-Threatens-U-S-Military-Hub

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Plight of Journalists in Bahrain

. .From the Bahrain Center for Human Rights
http://www.bahrainrights.org/en/node/3992
3 May 2011
Since the 14th of February 2011, Bahrain has seen a political movement demanding freedom, democracy, and the revival of communal partnership in the framework of the civil movements seeking freedom which are currently overrunning Arab countries. This was followed by brutal security crackdowns and the entry of the Peninsula Shield forces (Military units of 6 Gulf countries) into Bahrain. Journalists engaged in this event with daily coverage through both their jobs at local newspapers, through their announcements on satellite television stations, by writing to Arabic newspapers in the framework of their presence at the site of action, and via effective action through online social networking tools such as Facebook and Twitter. Because of that, journalists have been subjected to a campaign of lay-offs and collective arrests affecting more than 68 journalists, while many have received different threats originating from the Bahraini authorities, its associated organizations, and affiliated parties. The online activist Zakariya Al Aushayri has been killed in detention and Reporters without Borders have released an official statement demanding an investigation into the incident, indeed the reporters Faisal Hayyat, Hayder Mohammad, Ali Jawad, and other bloggers and e-activist have been arrested. Warrants have been issued for others as well, causing some to leave Bahrain, in fear of their personal safety.

Bahrain is currently considered a dangerous zone for the freedom of press and journalists. Bahraini journalists are hoping for a helping hand and for the adoption of measures to insure their safety. We firmly believe that any journalist arrested by the Bahraini government could die in view of the current security laws (the emergency law) implemented in the country, the severity of the situation, and the arbitrary procedures that the country has seen on multiple levels that go up against the international commitments concerning human rights; especially with the rise in the number of people killed in Bahraini interrogation centers to 4, asides from the 35 dead during the demonstrations so far, all in a country with a population that does not exceed 570 thousand people.

Attached a list of all documented cases of journalists who have been under attack, and the type of abuses they have been subjected to.

Original report in Arabic can be found here (PDF)

. Bahrain Center for Human Rights

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

3d Appartament Extreme

Couples - J. Updike

wonderful novel! It is impossible to break away from her. For me it so happened that it was due to the sick and caused her not sleeping, but the zaczytałam.


60s America. A small town inhabited by young married couples. Mores of a small population. Powered by the sexual revolution, the pill was introduced, and the American public feels liberated lifestyle. Przyjaźniące the pair exchanged sexual partners in a very discreet way the American way.

Everything changes the appearance of a new pair, she is an educated woman, who was just a dream became pregnant, her husband is a busy researcher - a careerist. Its immediacy and ease of with which adapts to current relationships, especially in an affair with one of the men of concern. However, her husband was the boldest and most moral character throughout the novel, the only one who is able to resist it rozpasaniu surrounding obyczajowemu. Feeling and change the rules prevailing in the town of relations.

Updike wrote one of the best analysis of American society, in which American dream, the rich homes in the suburbs and evenly trimmed lawns are just a cover for moral decay. The author asks important questions the merits of setting boundaries, rules, of the need for fidelity and power of feelings. Updike's novel is kept in a climate of excellent films deposited sixties "Far From Heaven," "Graduate," "Revolutionary Road" and the TV series "Mad Men."

Monday, May 2, 2011

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Anthill - D. Lessing

came time for catching up, a lot of them nazbierało.


Two weeks ago I finished reading "The Anthill" Doris Lessing. Ashamed to admit that yes I did not look here long. Nevertheless, I intend to focus, gaily take to work. Before turning to the merits, a note, basically a statement - I'm going to change the face of this blog, not visually, but in content, we'll see what comes up.


I write a blog for several months, Doris Lessing read a few years . behooves the occasion of the great stories that brought her international acclaim and the Somerset Maugham Award. A young South African of European descent writes stories about the surrounding world, the realm of racial and class divisions notice. The author wraps it in an ironic and refined package subtly expressing their disapproval.


Lessing started reading from the "gaps" fun feminist interpretation of the myth about the creation of man. After a series of "Fifth Child" and "Ben's Journey", the most interesting books about parenting and the difference that came to me to read. From "Good a terrorist" and "memoir of survival," I did not go easily, they are brilliant novel, and thus not easy, first, the story of a young girl living in sqacie and wishing with all your friends change the world, says a lot about youth and rebellion, while the other is a surreal novel about happening around us apocalypse. Both can be interpreted a thousand ways, and as with any brilliant books at each reading enucleate something else.

Nobel Prize still matter to me, especially after the last great election. Mandatory reading Lessing, know necessarily derive from it a handful because he is one of the most versatile writers of contemporary topics. Involved in the reality of their stories is trying to to understand man. Many of her books is called feminist, a pity that this adjective is associated negatively. Lessing does not destroy the social rules, she perfectly understands women, and writes lovingly about them.

At the end of a curiosity. Reading the African story did not expect any mention of the mother country. British Nobel prize winner once again surprised me.

"- Now go to the Polish.
(....)
- And what is the joke about the Polish?
(...)
- During the war the white people, who had just ended, there was a country called Poland and so was a great battle, with lots of bombs, so now it's the place to which we called the Polish because of the brawls and fights that take place here. "

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Nelsonki Project 2011: August

second month, ie August, embroidered on the canvas of my namesake Aga finished.
Now I'm waiting for the next calendar and start to embroider two consecutive months in March and September.
In between calendars I have to make your calendar - May and I would like to get on with the next UFO-ka. I do not know who will be next.
begins in May, and it was me they got five, or half. At the beginning of the year I had 10 of them
Only the large or medium alone. But I'm very pleased.

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Incarcerating doctors in secret and without charge

. .Bahrain is accused of incarcerating doctors in secret and without charge
by Sophie Arie
(published in British Medical Journal )

Authorities in Bahrain are systematically arresting and “disappearing” doctors and nurses in an ongoing campaign to prevent medical professionals from treating people injured in pro-democracy protests, a new report says.
At least 32 medical workers have been arrested since street protests began in the small Gulf state in February, states the report, published on 22 April by the US based group Physicians for Human Rights.
Several doctors have been arrested and not heard from since, says the report. The surgeon Ali El-Ekri was taken from the operating room while he was performing surgery at Salmaniya …  Read the full article in British Medical Journal

BMJ   2011; 342:d2681 ;       
Published: 26 April 2011                                 

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Scores of medical employees detained for treating injured demonstrators

In Bahrain, human-rights workers say at least 50 medical staff are still missing after a crackdown on hospital care for injured anti-government demonstrators.
There are fears that some of the detained staff could face stiff sentences for treating protesters. Among them is Dr al-Ikri, a prominent physician arrested on March 17 during a military raid at Salmaniyah hospital in Manama. His wife, Fareeda al-Dallal, was also arrested and beaten under custody last Tuesday. Al Jazeera spoke to her about her arrest and the fears she has about the safety of her husband.

http://english.aljazeera.net/video/middleeast/2011/05/201151145514937193.html
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gQQ_RieWONU&feature=share


For a related report see
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IIJIPEdsDCo&feature=related


.

Thursday, April 28, 2011

Watch Nurses Digitalplayground Online

I managed

I managed to finish the decoration of Easter. I could not show her at the time. So just picture it now.
Well, that world of sun and plenty of greenery around. Immediately merrier :-)

Wednesday, April 27, 2011

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رسالة إلى الأخ Qasim Haddad

. . Dear brother Qasim Haddad

Hello,

not met, since a very long time but you always in mind what it represents in our cultural life. What I was to write Now you do not need to appeal to the conviction of your contribution to stop the widening crackdown antisepticism so long now all the groups that have contributed in this way or that and so much Or that in the national movement for change, the country has experienced recently.

know you stood critical of that move. I said in the statement of the second of March, you do not accept Some of the slogans raised in the street that is, those which "calls for the overthrow of the regime right now." Did not object to a right to do so. People keep you inspired and your position in the supervisor of your date. On top of that, people know that you are not the property Isomwa him, except he is oppressing them bragging


not agree with you in your situation declared that day. Just as the right of people to raise slogans glorifying System, it is also their right to raise slogans to abort it. I did not agree with you because I believe in what was the same in your statement about "freedom of the individual, and the right to think and take your position and independent, without To impose upon the position, or pressuring him to side with one party or another ". a



g

Sunday, April 24, 2011

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Bahraini Rulers Play Sectarian Card in Bid to Trump

By Finian Cunningham
URL of this article: www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=24390     


Global Research , April 19, 2011


       
Increasing attacks on Shia mosques in the Bahraini state’s withering crackdown against the pro-democracy movement is a deliberate attempt to isolate the political opposition and amounts to a campaign of “sectarian cleansing”, say human rights groups.

Over the past four weeks since the Saudi-led Gulf Peninsula Shield military intervention in Bahrain, there appears to be a concerted drive by pro-state Sunni forces to target repression at the Shia population and in particular Shia mosques and other religious sites, such as cemeteries and meeting places known as Mattams.

Some mosques have been vandalized, with their doors, windows and the PA systems used in the call to prayer having been smashed. More recently, other mosques, such as the 800-year-old Al Shaboor, near the capital, Manama, have in the past week been razed to the ground with bulldozers. A similar fate was met by five mosques in Hamad Town, about 15km south of Manama.

The pro-democracy uprising that began on February 14 rocked the US-backed Sunni rulers for almost a month before the other Gulf states sent in heavily armed contingencies to quell the protests.

But the nature of the military intervention has evidently gone beyond its initial avowed remit of restoring “security and stability”. Over 34 unarmed civilians have been killed, two-thirds of whom since the Saudi-led forces arrived. The latest victim is a 24-year-old woman, Azeeza Ahmed, who was shot dead when army and police raided her home in the village of Belad Al Qadeem on April 16.

Up to 600 people, including medics, lawyers and academics, have been unlawfully detained, their whereabouts unknown. At least four people have died while in custody, their released bodies showing signs of torture. Some 1,000 workers have been sacked from jobs in major state-owned industries, accused of participating in anti-regime protests. And the vast majority of these victims of repression are Shia.

Nabeel Rajab, of the Bahrain Centre for Human Rights, describes the ongoing repression by the Sunni rulers as a “campaign of sectarian cleansing” against the Shia population. The upsurge in seemingly
wanton attacks on Shia mosques and religious sites is clearly demonstrative of this, he says. Such attacks, as with the previously mentioned violations, Rajab points out, constitute crimes against humanity – crimes that the governments of the six Gulf states, including Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates and Oman, are in effect party to.

The pro-democracy movement in Bahrain was seen as a largely, but not exclusively, Shia-led movement. This reflects the fact that the Shia represent 70 per cent of the indigenous Bahrain
population of less than 600,000, and that this group has historically suffered the most political and economic marginalization under the ruling Al Khalifa family who have held power since the oil-rich shaikhdom was granted independence from Britain in 1971.
However, the calls for replacement of the monarchy and for greater democratic freedoms galvanized Shia and sections of the minority Sunni population as well as labour unions and other secular groups. “Not Sunni, Not Shia, Just Bahraini,” was a common rallying slogan during the heyday of the
uprising that saw hundreds of thousands take to the streets of the capital.

Some of the government opposition spokesmen that have been detained, such as Mohammed Abu Flasa and Ebrahim Al Sharif, leader of the National Democratic Action Society, are from Sunni backgrounds.

But, having said that, the repression that has unfolded since the Saudi-led Peninsula Shield entered the country has been directed with disproportionate force at the Shia population.

Pro-democracy sources and human rights groups say that the Bahraini government is now using a policy of divide and rule to isolate the opposition as a “sectarian problem” and in particular a “Shia
problem”.

One source, who did want to be named, said: “The targeting of the Shia is a tactic by the regime to distort the pro-democracy movement from a nationalist one into a sectarian one. It is also a way of undermining international support for the pro-democracy movement by trying to present it as
an internal problem of the state dealing with ‘troublesome Shia’. In this way, the Bahraini uprising is being made to appear as something different from the uprisings for democracy that have swept the region.”

Nabeel Rajab, who describes himself as secular with both Sunni and Shia family relatives, said:
“The government is attempting to incite divisive sectarian tensions, to intimidate Sunni people into not supporting the pro-democracy movement because it is being presented as a Shia movement. The destruction of Shia mosques is a clear sign of this sectarian policy and in my view reflects a wider campaign of sectarian cleansing across Bahrain.”

Saudi troops have used bulldozers to demolish dozens of Shia mosques in Manama and in other locations such as Sitra, in the north east, at Al Barbaghi, Karzakhan, A’ali and in Hamad Town. The
latter is particularly significant and could explain why five mosques in that one place alone have demolished. Hamad is one of the newbuild towns in Bahrain with a mixed community of Shia and Sunni. The ruthless targeting of one section of the community is being seen as an attempt to drive a wedge of fear and distrust between them.

Pro-democracy activists point to the government’s announcement last week that all buildings, including places of worship, are liable for demolition if they are found to not have a licence from the Municipal and Urban Planning Affairs Ministry. This, they say, is just a way of legalizing the targeting and destruction of Shia mosques.

Since that announcement, the number of Shia mosque demolitions seems to have increased
rapidly.

Another pro-democracy source pointed to a more sinister motive. “The regime wants to start a sectarian war between Shia and Sunni. They are humiliating the Shia trying to make them take revenge on Sunnis.”  Nabeel Rajab says that despite the provocation by pro-state forces, an all-out sectarian war is unlikely.

“Bahrain is not a tribal society. Shia and Sunni communities have lived side by side peacefully here for centuries, even before the Khalifa family arrived some 220 years ago,” said Rajab.

“So I don’t think these communities will start fighting because there is too much common ancestry between them. However, there is a danger of conflict between the Shia and the tens of thousands of new Sunni nationals that the regime has brought in from neigbouring Arab countries over the past 20 years to fill the ranks of the army and police forces.

“The regime would like to see a sectarian conflict blow up because that would distract from the common struggle for democracy against the rulers. It would also serve to justify the state of mergency that the regime has imposed, the brutal crackdown on human rights, and the involvement of other Gulf armies in Bahrain.”

Saudi Arabia and Bahrain are designated as key allies by Washington and London, and are important
export markets for American and British weapons manufacturers. The US recently signed off on a $60 billion arms deal with Saudi Arabia, and its Fifth Fleet is based in Bahrain, which is seen as a bulwark against Iran’s growing influence in the region. Despite the escalation of violence against civilians in Bahrain by Saudi and Bahraini state forces, Washington and London have remained tightlipped. Both Western governments have pointedly refused to condemn the actions of their Gulf allies.

The unprecedented bulldozing of mosques by Arab military forces has disturbing echoes of similar violations by Israeli troops in Palestinian territories. The development in Bahrain comes in the wake of diplomatic cables disclosed earlier this month by the whistle-blowing website, Wikileaks, in which
Bahrain’s King Hamad bin Isa Al-Khalifa boasted in 2005 to the then US ambassador, William Monroe, of the kingdom’s close ties with the Israeli state and its intelligence agency Mossad.

News update:

Since being interviewed by Global Research, Bahraini human rights activist Nabeel Rajab and his family were attacked in their home in the early hours of April 18. Rajab and his family, including his elderly mother, are suffering from the effects of asphyxiation after unknown assailants threw three teargas canisters into his home in Budaiya while the family was sleeping. Rajab, who is president
of the Bahrain Human Rights Centre and is also on the board of directors for Human Rights Watch’s middle east section, has been a fearless critic of the Bahraini regime over its maltreatment of etainees. The internationally acclaimed rights activist is facing a summons from the state military prosecutor
and possible detention after he published photographs showing signs of torture on the body of Bahraini man Ali Issa Sager (31) who died while in state custody
last week. [1]

Notes:
[1] http://www.facebook.com/pages/Nabeel-Rajab/194515507249804#!/media/s et/fbx/?set=a.203298013038220.49480.194515507249804






URL of this article: www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=24390     

       

Marge Simpson Green Dress

A Report by Physcians for Human Rights on Bahrain

http://bahrain.phrblog.org/report

A Call for Bahrain to End Systematic Attacks on Doctors and Patients

Physicians for Human Rights

http://bahrain.phrblog.org/report/




alternative link http://wp.me/p18GrX-1q


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Saturday, April 23, 2011

How Should Steeltoe Boots Fit

Demolition of Mosques & Cultural sites 1

mosque believer Balnouedrat
before demolition وبعده
 
Momen Mosque in Nuwaidrat (Sitra)
Before and After



 
 
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Merry Christmas decorating

Ż I wish you all
healthy, happy Easter.
joyous, spring mood
and cordial meetings
with family and friends.

Friday, April 22, 2011

How To Build Taller Wood Swing Set

US-Saudi counter-revolution

. .
Fear and loathing in the House of Saud
By Pepe Escobar

http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/MD21Ak01.html

Early last week, US President Barack Obama sent a letter to Saudi King Abdullah,
delivered in person in Riyadh by US National Security Advisor Thomas Donilon.
This happened less than a week after Pentagon head Robert Gates spent a full 90
minutes face to face with the king.
These two moves represented the final seal of approval of a deal struck between
Washington and Riyadh even before the voting of UN Security Council resolution
1973 (see Exposed: the Saudi-US Libya deal , Apr 1, Asia Times Online).
Essentially, the Obama administration will not say a word about how the House of
Saud conducts its ruthless repression of pro-democracy protests in Bahrain and
across the Persian Gulf. No ''humanitarian'' operations. No R2P
(''responsibility to protect''). No no-fly or no-drive zones.
Progressives of the world take note: the US-Saudi counter-revolution
against the Great 2011 Arab Revolt is now official.



Read more
http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/MD21Ak01.html

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Bahrain escapes censure by West ......

. .

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/bahrain-escapes-censure-by-west-as-crackdown-on-protesters-intensifies-2269638.html

Bahrain escapes censure by West as crackdown on protesters intensifies

Saudi troops' demolition of mosques stokes religious tensions

By Patrick Cockburn in Cairo
Tuesday, 19 April 2011
The Independent

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/bahrain-escapes-censure-by-west-as-crackdown-on-protesters-intensifies-2269638.html
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