Spain’s supporters in the streets of London, before the match started…
Monthly Archive for June, 2008
Click on the pic below to watch some pix, taken by Nasser Nouri, of the drought in Balqis, 260 Km to the northeast of the Capital …
And click below to watch another set, taken by Amr Abdallah, of the water crisis in Fayoum, where the citizens are now forced to drink from the sewage, courtesy of Mubarak’s incompetent regime…
From the Sunday Times…
Millions of pounds of British government money is going to Palestinian security forces which use methods of torture including hanging prisoners by their feet and putting them in “stress” positions for hours at a time.
Evidence to be published next month in a report by Human Rights Watch was corroborated last week in interviews by The Sunday Times with victims in the West Bank, ruled by President Mahmoud Abbas’s western-backed Palestinian Authority.
Prisoners who have emerged from Palestinian Authority jails – many of whom have never been charged with any offence or even seen a lawyer – said they had been subjected to mock executions, kicked, punched and beaten with sticks, plastic pipes and hoses.
The disclosures came at the end of a week in which a Berlin conference of 40 donor nations, including Britain, pledged £121m over the next three years to bolster the Palestinian security forces and judicial system in the West Bank.
Of this total, about £20m will come from Britain, which is already committed to spending £2.7m on the training of Palestinian security forces this year. A British brigadier based in the West Bank city of Ramallah is involved in the training. Britain has set aside a further £4.5m for reform, civil justice and public prosecution over the next three years.
A total of £4 billion overall has been promised to the government of Abbas, who is the commander-in-chief of the Palestinian security forces.
…
However, many of those detained on suspicion of links to Hamas described a form of torture called “shabah” in Arabic – being forced to hold stress positions for prolonged periods.
Some have been made to stand with one leg and one arm raised for hours. Others have had to sit on the edge of a chair with their hands tied to their feet.
Amar al-Masri, 43, a Nablus businessman who is married to Kholoud al-Masri, an elected Hamas municipal official, has been held since last month in al-Jenid prison in Nablus. Last Thursday, his son Abdullah, 13, crossed off day 54 on a calendar on the family’s refrigerator.
“What is shocking me is that no charge has been addressed against my husband,” Kholoud said last week, sitting in her home in Nablus, a hijab (head-scarf) covering her hair.
“He is in a Palestinian jail, but we don’t know why.” She has been allowed to visit him only once.
“He said he was hung by his two legs by a rope connected to the ceiling,” Kholoud said. The prisoner’s lawyer said he had seen puffy wrists and legs that supported the testimony, as well as scabs on his legs and hands.
A former prisoner, interviewed at a coffee shop near his third-floor flat in Nablus after he was released at the end of a 50-day spell in prison, described similar experiences.
“They arrested me on fantasy charges that I had rockets,” said the 29-year-old law student, who did not want his name used out of fear the security forces would come after him.
“They tied my hands behind my back, and the rope was connected to a pipe,” he said. “They would stress the rope every 20 seconds. They said if they did it more I would be paralysed.”
He was eventually released without charge. “They [the security forces] told me, ‘You have been steadfast under torture so we have decided you are clean. We will not bother you again.’ ”
Click on Fathi Abul Ezz’s cartoon below to read the full report…
Hizbollah squad outshoots Sunnis at football, reports the Financial Times:
The movement’s Al-Ahed football team has won the Lebanese league title for the first time. They beat by a whisker two teams — supported by the powerful Sunni Hariri family — which have had a virtual lock on the trophy between them.
Bravo ya shabab!
Seventeen inmates at Borg El Arab Prison in Alexandria, were physically attacked by prison guards on Tuesday to force them to end the hunger strike they began on Monday, a rights advocate and lawyer told Daily News Egypt.
“Prison guards entered their cells on Tuesday and started beating them,” said lawyer Ahmed Ezzat from the Association for Freedom of Thought and Expression, who represents some of the detainees.
“When I went to see them on Saturday they told me about the assault but I was unable to gauge the full extent of their injuries because they would have had to remove their clothes for examination,” he continued.
The 17 men are all being held in detention under emergency law. They began the hunger strike in protest at being held without charge, but called it off after the alleged assault.
Rights groups have repeatedly condemned the Egyptian government’s continued renewal of the 27-year-old state of emergency which empowers security bodies to search, arrest and detain people without respecting due process guarantees.
According to the Egyptian Organization for Human Rights, thousands of individuals are being held without charge in continually-renewed administrative detention.
Nine of the seventeen men are being held in connection with the clashes which broke out in the Delta town of Mahalla on April 6 and 7, 2008 when security bodies violently quashed demonstrations against rising food prices.
A public prosecution office ordered their release on June 2. The order was not carried out, and administrative detention orders were issued against them on June 5, 2008.
Last week the Mahalla public prosecution office referred 49 individuals, including the nine assaulted on Tuesday, for trial in a state security court on what their lawyers allege are trumped-up charges.
It is believed that the first hearing will take place in August.
Click on the poster below to read the full report…
Here’s also an AFP report about the prison assaults, and it seems another hungerstrike has broken out at Abu Za’abal I Prison over ill-treatment, the banning of visits and the lack of drinking water…






























