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Category Archives: International
Libya!
It must be something about 80 year old dictators. First Tunisia, then came Egypt, and now it appears things are going tits up in Libya… you see, millions of protestors are fed up with this guy:

Col. Muammar Gaddafi is fighting to keep power in a country rife with protest and anger at the leader’s 40-year despotic rule. What started out as a small scale protest against Gaddafi’s crackdown on civil rights has transitioned into a full-blown revolution, with many members of the official militia and tribes around the region siding with the protesters. Many cities and rural areas have turned to the protesters, with the main city of Tripoli being the key hold by Gaddafi.
African mercenaries are now reportedly being sent to the area to join with pro-Gaddafi forces against the protestors in Tripoli and things are about to get a whole lot worse, since Gaddafi is adamantly refusing to step down. Al-Jazeera is keeping an incredible live blog of the events as they take place, I highly recommend viewing it. (UPDATE As of March 8: New blog up.) If the protests succeed, this will be the third dictatorship to fall in the Middle East in mere weeks. No matter how you shake it, these successful protests have been a real victory for human rights.
Posted in Africa, Blog, Foreign Affairs, International
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ANC Leading in South Africa Vote
This was the line to vote in a township outside of Johannesburg.
Greetings my American friends (and readers of other nationalities if you somehow made it over to this blog)! With voting in South Africa’s elections having taken place on Wednesday, I feel it is time for me to share a bit of insight about what is going on.
The title of this post comes from this New York Times article on the election. Before you interpret this as an endorsement of the article, please note: THE ARTICLE IS RUBBISH!
Yes, I said it. I say that the article is rubbish for two reasons.
The first reason is that there was no question that the ANC would win. Not a single analyst even considered an outcome to the contrary, and supporters and members of the opposition parties themselves would admit that they never expected the ANC to lose. It is absolutely pointless for a news agency to spend time telling people what they already knew would happen, yet unfortunately the New York Times has done exactly that. Focusing on this aspect of the outcome of the elections takes away from the aspects of the election that actually are noteworthy.
Legalized Rape

This week in Afghanistan, the parliament passed a set of laws “to give the minority Shia community their own identity.” However, as a female member of parliament stated, “In Afghanistan, the sacrifice in the political game is women and children.”
The most controversial of the laws that infringe on women’s rights is the fact that men can now have sex with their wives even when they say “no,” which constitutes as rape in marriage.
Afghan president Hamid Karzai stated that the conerns shown from Western countries concerning the issue were due to “inappropriate, not-so-good translation of the law, or misinterpretation.” After the passage of this law, Afghan women expressed concern that their new rights could be taken away slowly by the government. Since the Taliban regime ended, women have been able to gain some rights, namely that they are not forced to wear a burqa anymore. However, this law starts to undermine the limited freedom women have received in the past few years.
Both President Obama and German Chancellor Angela Merkel were quoted as expressing severe distate for the law, calling it “abhorrent.” Hopefully Western pressure will force them to withdraw the law, however, the “conservative legislators [in Afghanistan] are pushing back any progress made for women’s rights.”
Posted in Blog, International, Social Justice
Tagged afghanistan, International, justice, Women's Rights
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TB or Not TB

The World Health Organization recently reported that we are nowhere near eradicating Tuberculosis from the planet. “The rate of tuberculosis infection is falling at such a slow rate it would take more than 1,000 years to wipe the disease out.”
The article cites that the worldwide financial crisis is not helping the fight against TB. Doctors working with TB patients are not able to get the funding they need to start eliminating the disease at a higher rate. The director of the U.N- backed Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria, Michel Kazatchkine, recently stated “funding for programs to fight TB will fall $1.6 billion short in 2009 … [and] at least $4 billion in 2010.” It is sad that in this financial crisis, funding towards fighting deadly diseases has been cut short. Almost 1.5 million people die of TB each year; I do not undertsand why something with such a high fatality rate is being shafted.Â
Judging by the way the economy is going now, it will take significantly longer than 1,000 years to eliminated TB. The increasing lack of funding will aggravate the TB crisis in developing countires, and will make it a problem for centuries to come.
A Night of South African Politics

The ANC group

- The DA managed to get one of its flags up in the room where the debate was. The ANC did not have a flag.

- The DA students who formed outside.
You’ll understand the 1st and 3rd pictures better after reading this post
Last night, I was able to attend an election debate for the coming elections here in South Africa. The debate featured representatives of four political parties: COPE (Congress of the People), DA (Democratic Alliance), ANC (African National Congress), and ID. Coming off of all the time I spent watching debates in the United States during the campaign, it was very interesting to compare the issues South Africans are talking about to what the United States is talking about, as well as to try and understand how the ANC has managed to control government ever since it took power in 1994 at the end of apartheid.

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev and President Barack Obama.
