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Thursday, September 23, 2010

Woman execution in Virginia














Virginia executes Teresa Lewis for role in slayings of husband, stepson in 2002


source : The Washington Post
Teresa Lewis
Teresa Lewis was convicted of plotting to kill her husband and stepson








Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, September 23, 2010;

JARRATT, VA. - Teresa Lewis, who plotted with her young lover to kill her husband and stepson for insurance money, became the first woman executed in Virginia in nearly 100 years Thursday night when she was killed by lethal injection

Lewis, 41, was a mother who became a grandmother behind bars. Wearing a light blue prison-issued shirt and dark blue pants, Lewis looked anxious as she was led by officers into the death chamber at 8:55 p.m. She was placed on a white gurney, with leather straps securing her ankles, legs, wrists and chest, before intravenous lines were attached to each arm.

Lewis asked whether Kathy Clifton, the daughter and sister of her victims, was in the chamber.

"I just want Kathy to know that I love you, and I'm very sorry," Lewis said before the drugs were pumped into her arms. Her feet, clad in flip-flops, twitched, but no other movement was visible. Her spiritual adviser, Julie Perry, cried as she stood in the back of the witness room.

Lewis was pronounced dead at 9:13 p.m.

Lewis's case generated passion and interest across the world. The European Union asked Virginia Gov. Robert F. McDonnell (R) to commute her sentence to life, citing her mental capacity. Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad cited the case at an appearance in New York.

The case began on an October night nearly eight years ago, when Lewis prayed with her husband, slipped into bed next to him in their Danville trailer and waited for her two conspirators to come inside the door she had left unlocked. The two men showed up about 3:15 a.m., opened fire, then fled.

After the shooting, Lewis waited about half an hour to call 911. Her stepson, Charles "C.J." Lewis, died quickly. But her husband, Julian Lewis, whose body was riddled with birdshot, was alive and moaning "baby, baby, baby" when police arrived.

At first, Lewis told officers the shooting was the work of an unknown intruder dressed in black. But she eventually confessed that she and her lover, Matthew Shallenberger, then 22, killed for money. She led police to Shallenberger and a second gunman and ultimately admitted her crimes in court.

Lewis is the 12th woman to be executed in the United States since capital punishment was reinstated in 1976. The most recent was in Texas in 2005, when Frances Newton was killed by lethal injection for shooting her husband and two children.

Although the fight for Lewis's life did not draw nearly the attention of that surrounding Karla Faye Tucker, the pickax killer turned born-again Christian executed in 1998, more than 5,500 people signed an electronic petition asking McDonnell to spare her.

The Virginia Catholic Conference, the Virginia Conference of the United Methodist Church and the ARC of Virginia, which advocates for people with mental disabilities, were among the groups that urged that Lewis's sentence be commuted to life in prison.

On Saturday, Lewis was moved to the Greensville Correctional Center, site of Virginia's death house. She requested her final meal: fried chicken, sweet peas with butter, German chocolate cake and Dr Pepper, corrections officials said.

Lewis's attorney, James Rocap, said she visited her son, Billy, twice Thursday and spoke with her daughter, Christie, by phone. He said she wrote private letters to both children.

Her supporters never said that Lewis was innocent or that she shouldn't be punished. But they said she did not deserve to die because she was borderline mentally retarded, with the intellectual ability of about a 13-year-old, and was manipulated by a smarter conspirator. It was wrong for her to be sentenced to death, they said, when the two men who fired the shots received life terms.

Prison chaplains and fellow inmates supported Lewis, saying she created a ministry of sorts in prison and was a source of strength for other women looking for a maternal figure. Some prisoners said she sang gospel music, calming the ward.

McDonnell, who has supported legislation to expand the use of the death penalty, denied a first clemency request, then a second renewed plea. He said in a statement that no medical expert had determined that Lewis was mentally retarded as defined by Virginia law.

McDonnell said Lewis was an active participant in the crime, giving the men cash to buy weapons and drawing her 16-year-old daughter, who had sex with one of the gunmen, into the plot. Lewis had helped orchestrate an earlier failed plot to kill Julian Lewis and left the door unlocked the night of the shootings.

In 2003, Lewis pleaded guilty to capital murder and was sentenced to death by a judge who called her "the head of this serpent." One shooter, Rodney Fuller, made a deal with prosecutors in return for a life sentence. The judge sentenced Shallenberger to life, saying that was only fair because of Fuller's deal.

But Shallenberger, who dreamed of becoming a mob hit man, later told a former girlfriend in a letter that he had used Lewis because he wanted money to go to New York and become a drug dealer. He committed suicide in prison.

On Friday evening, Kathy Clifton, Julian Lewis's daughter and C.J.'s sister, learned from McDonnell's office that the execution would probably be carried out. After dinner, she went to the cemetery where her father and brother are buried.

"We went just to visit," Clifton said. "That's the last place I saw them."

Clifton said this week that she planned to witness Lewis's execution to honor her father and brother. She has kept scrapbooks documenting the criminal case.

Julian Lewis, a Vietnam veteran who worked as an electrician at the Dan River textile plant, often cared for Kathy Clifton's son, his grandson. C.J. Lewis, who was in the National Guard, was a musician and played piano, mandolin and guitar. His daughter was 4 when he was slain.

Clifton, who said she had forgiven Teresa Lewis, had never pushed for the death penalty. But she had said earlier that Lewis's death would bring "vindication."

"I feel like once it's all said and done, I'll be able to shut the door on this chapter and move on with the future," Clifton said.

"I will know for a fact she will never be able to harm anyone again," Clifton said. "She claims to be a Christian, and I don't know how strong her faith is, but I have faith in my Lord. He says not to kill, but He also says to obey the law of the land. If she was truly a spiritual person, she would be happy to go along with any sentence."

Rocap said Lewis asked him to thank the people who fought to spare her life, saying: "It was just awesome."

"Tonight, the machinery of death in Virginia extinguished the beautiful and childlike human spirit of Teresa Lewis," Rocap said.

As she visited with family and lawyers over the past few days, Rocap said, Lewis prayed for her victims, for McDonnell and even the prosecutor.

"She laughed, she sang, she prayed," Rocap said. "I think, frankly, she had accepted what was going to happen a long time ago, and she was very peaceful."

In an interview last month at the Fluvanna Correctional Center for women, where Lewis was imprisoned for seven years because the state's death row accommodates only men, she said she prayed and read her Bible. She had nightmares about the murders and said she thought of Julian Lewis and C.J. Lewis each day.

"I wish I could give Kathy the world and take away her hurt," Lewis said then. "I can't even imagine the pain she's been through all these years."

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

US woman Teresa Lewis executed for family murders

Source : BBC

Teresa Lewis Teresa Lewis died by lethal injection in Jarratt, Virginia

A 41-year-old woman who conspired to murder her husband and stepson has been executed in the US state of Virginia.

Teresa Lewis was the first woman to be put to death in the US for five years and in Virginia since 1912.

Lewis, who had learning difficulties, used sex and cash to persuade hitmen to kill her family in 2002.

The US Supreme Court and Virginia's governor refused to stop her execution, which took place at 2100 (0100 GMT) at Greensville Correctional Center.

Last meal

Lewis spent her last hours with her spiritual adviser and family members at the prison in the city of Jarratt.

She requested a final meal of two breasts of fried chicken, sweet peas with butter, a slice of either German cake or apple pie, and a Dr Pepper soft drink, prison spokesman Larry Traylor said.

As she was escorted into the death chamber, Lewis appeared tearful, her jaw clenched, Associated Press reported.

Shortly before her execution, Lewis asked if her stepdaughter Kathy Clifton, daughter of her murdered husband Julian Lewis, was there.

Ms Clifton was in a witness room separated from the execution chamber by a two-way mirror.

"I want Kathy to know that I love her and I'm very sorry," Lewis said.

Those were her final words. The time of her death was given as 2113 (0113 GMT).

Clemency plea

On 30 October 2002, Lewis left the door to her family home in the Virginia city of Danville unlocked for gunmen Matthew Shallenberger and Rodney Fuller.

Lewis's husband Julian, 51, and stepson, Charles Lewis, 25, were later found dead from shotgun blasts.

Lawyers for Lewis filed a petition for clemency on 25 August 2010, but the US Supreme Court refused to intervene. Two of three women in the nine-judge court voted to halt the execution.

Lewis, who has an IQ of 72, claimed that she did not possess the intelligence to have planned the killings, and that new defence evidence allegedly proved one of the gunmen manipulated her.

Virginia Governor Bob McDonnell said medical and psychological reports provided no compelling reason to grant clemency to Lewis, noting she had admitted her role in the killings.

"After numerous evaluations, no medical professional has concluded that Teresa Lewis meets the medical or statutory definition of mentally retarded," Mr McDonnell said after he rejected the clemency plea.

Lewis was motivated to hire the gunmen by the desire to inherit her husband's assets and her stepson's life insurance. She paid for the weapons and ammunition used in the murders.

Shallenberger and Fuller were both sentenced to life in prison. Shallenberger committed suicide in 2006.

Virginia carries out the second highest number of executions of any state in the US.











Photos Courtesy : The washington post

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Ongoing Fire

I am very disturbed by the ongoing time, This reflects in my poem. A recent poem









সাম্প্রতিক আগুন
অ্যালবার্ট অশোক

আকাশে আগুন বুড়ো ছড়িয়ে দিচ্ছে তাপ
বেজায় ক্ষেপে লাল বুড়ো জ্বলছে হলায়
কেনরে আগুনে, কিসে তোর এত রাগ
সময় চলছে পালিয়ে, কাকে ধরে খায়।

গ্রাম গঞ্জ জুড়ে রাজা হাঁটে, রাজার পা ভারী
শূন্য হয়ে গেছে মন, কেঁদে কেঁদে কেমনে বাঁচি
ঘটি বাটি শুনশান্‌, বারান্দায় শুকনো আঁচল
এখানে ওখানে দেখছি শব আর ভনভন মাছি।

তুই যত নস্টের গোড়া আগুনে মাথা, অশান্তি
পড়তে টেবিলে যাসনা, কলমে বিদ্যুতের ঝলকানি
লাল রং দিয়ে ওরা কী করে হাটে, ঘাটে আঁকে
এত ভয়ঙ্কর ছবি, হিংসা, সন্ত্রাস, হানাহানি।

আকাশ থেকে দেখ বুড়ো, আগুন কী আহ্লাদ
তড়পানিতে বসতি জ্বলে, টানটান শ্লোগান
তূষের তলায় ধিকিধিকি, পোড়া লাশ আজাদ
এত জল কত দল, একটা প্রাণাধিক বাগান।

ধোঁয়া উঠে মেঘ হয়ে আকাশে, সাদা না কালো
আমার স্বপ্নে আশা চলে, নদী ঘোরে বাঁকে
শিশু তাকায় ডাগর চোখে, তাকে বাঁচান--
ওরে নির্লজ্জ, পোড়াসনা শহরগ্রামের এই সভ্যতাকে।

২২ শে সেপ্টেম্বর ২০১০



Monday, September 20, 2010

Delhi cracks down on street beggars

Delhi cracks down on street beggars ahead of Commonwealth Games

Source : BBC

As the 2010 Commonwealth Games in Delhi draw closer, the city is being prepared to receive visitors from all over the world.

The authorities in the Indian city are starting to round up the beggars on the streets and are prosecuting them under tough laws.

The BBC's Sanjoy Majumder reports from Delhi.

U.N. struggles to prove its relevance

The United Nations building is reflected on the window of the U.S. mission to the U.N. in New York.
The United Nations building is reflected on the window of the U.S. mission to the U.N. in New York. (AP)

U.N. struggles to prove its relevance


Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, September 19, 2010;







UNITED NATIONS - President Obama will travel this week to New York for the annual U.N. gathering of world leaders to reaffirm America's commitment to a "new era of multilateralism." He will arrive, however, at a time when the United Nations, the world's principal multilateral institution, is struggling to remain relevant on the world stage.
From nuclear diplomacy with North Korea to economic negotiations among the Group of 20 nations and peace talks in the Middle East, U.N. diplomats have frequently been reduced to bit players over the past year.

Even on climate change, an issue on which the United Nations has tried to stake its claim, the world body has failed to show much progress. Highly anticipated negotiations in Copenhagen ran aground in December.
For an institution with its share of proud chapters, these are tough times.
"A lot of the juice is outside the United Nations," said Bruce Jones, the director of the Center on International Cooperation at New York University. "The old days when the U.S. and the Europeans could stitch things up at the United Nations are over, and we haven't yet seen the emergence of a new platform for action or a consortium for action at the U.N."
Jones noted that the growing assertiveness of emerging powers - particularly China - has made it harder to reach international compromise. But the United Nations has been hobbled by failures, and distractions, of its own making.
The outgoing head of an anti-corruption office delivered a parting shot to Secretary General Ban Ki-moon in July, accusing him of leading the United Nations into an era of decline. More recently, the top Chinese official at the United Nations, in an alcohol-fueled outburst, noted at a U.N. retreat that he had never really liked Americans, or his boss, Ban.
Asked to comment about the Chinese diplomat at a recent press briefing, the secretary general sighed and urged reporters to turn their attention to more pressing international problems.
The U.N. General Assembly, the world's biggest international diplomatic debate, still provides an opportunity to take stock of America's role in the world, as well as a platform for authoritarian leaders to air their grievances. During the past decade, the General Assembly chamber has reflected the strains of global policymaking, with President George W. Bush lecturing the world body about its failure to confront Saddam Hussein and Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez famously comparing Bush to the devil.
This year, the mood is favorable for an American president who has restored U.S. funding to the United Nations, ended a U.S. boycott of the U.N. Human Rights Council, and reinvigorated U.N. nuclear disarmament efforts.
On Wednesday, Obama will also reaffirm U.S. support for a series of U.N. development targets, known as the Millennium Development Goals, before the General Assembly begins in earnest.
The Obama administration, however, will make no new financial pledges to the campaign.
Susan E. Rice, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, said that the administration "set out to rather dramatically change the tone and the substance of our engagement" with the world body, whose relationship with the United Nations was marked largely by confrontation.
She highlighted U.S. initiatives to impose U.N. sanctions on North Korea and Iran. She said the United Nations was providing a critical role in managing peace efforts in places including Sudan and supporting U.S. efforts in Afghanistan and Iraq. And she noted the United Nations's vital role in responding to natural disasters in places such as Haiti and Pakistan.
"We've seen tangible results that in fact will make Americans safer and make the world a more peaceful and prosperous place," she said. "We've ended needless U.S. isolation on a range of issues."
Still, during the past two years, the U.N. Security Council has made fewer decisions than at any time since the end of the Cold War, according to a report by the Security Council Report, an independent, nonprofit group.
U.N. peacekeeping, which grew rapidly during the Bush administration, has stalled. Not a single new U.N. peacekeeping mission has been authorized since Obama came into office, though the council has authorized additional troops to ensure order in Haiti after the January earthquake.
The United States and its European allies, meanwhile, have opposed calls by African governments to send the United Nations back into Somalia. And the council mounted a largely anemic effort to prevent mass atrocities of civilians in Sri Lanka. Russia, meanwhile, blocked any discussion of a peacekeeping force for Kyrgyzstan to halt violence against ethnic Uzbeks earlier this year. In Congo, the United Nations has admitted failing to provide adequate protections for victims of mass rape.
"The feeling that I get watching the [Obama] administration is that their heart is certainly there," said John Ruggie, a professor at Harvard's John F. Kennedy School of Government and an adviser to Ban. "The willingness to be supportive is certainly there, but with so many other issues to juggle and deal with I don't think [the U.N.] has become a real focus of attention."
In perhaps its most important challenge at the moment, the United Nations is leading the effort to oversee a referendum on independence for southern Sudan - a ballot that threatens to reignite one of Africa's bloodiest civil wars if it's not seen as credible.In a bid to bolster the U.N. effort, Obama will participate in a high-level meeting this week to prod Sudan's rival camps to commit to a peaceful vote.
Edward Luck, a historian at the International Peace Institute who acts as an informal adviser to Ban, said the U.N. effort to find its way has been complicated by a "geopolitical strategic situation that is very, very murky."
"The U.N. reflects that," he said. "The world is muddling through as the U.N. is muddling through."
Luck said that situation will only become more difficult in the coming year as key emerging powers - including Brazil, India, South Africa, Turkey and Nigeria - get their turns as members on the Security Council for two-year terms. Brazil and Turkey, who are also serving, have used their position to challenge the existing order on the council, mounting a campaign, for instance, to thwart the U.S. push for sanctions on Iran.
But Luck said he was confident that the United Nations would remain a key player, noting that there are no other international institutions with the capacity to implement their policies on the ground or with the same kind of political legitimacy that comes with being an organization with universal membership.
"The U.N. is not the sun of the international solar system; everything doesn't revolve around it," he said. "But it is the final reference point on most issues, which have to come to the U.N. for legitimacy."

Source : Washington post

U.N. foresees poverty around the world

U.N. foresees dramatic cuts in poverty



Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, September 20, 2010; 8:43 PM
Source : Washington post

A decade ago, world leaders at the United Nations signed off on eight goals aimed at transforming the lives of the world's least fortunate - including cutting extreme poverty in half by 2015. Many Americans were skeptical; in a poll, only 8 percent thought that was possible.

This week, as nations gather to assess the goals, the United Nations countered the skeptics with an announcement: The world is actually on track to halve the percentage of people on the lowest rung of the economic ladder.

Even with the brutal global recession, the ranks of the world's desperately poor are likely to shrink to 15 percent of the population by 2015, less than half of the original 42 percent, said a recent U.N. report. The World Bank, in a separate analysis, said the objective appears "well within reach."

Despite the achievement, not everyone is celebrating.

Because of the economic crisis and jumps in food and fuel prices, "the momentum has been derailed" toward even deeper cuts in poverty, Dominique Strauss-Kahn, of the International Monetary Fund, said Monday at the opening session of a summit on the Millennium Development Goals, as the U.N. benchmarks are known.

Several of the original eight goals will probably not be met, including slashing the maternal and child mortality rate worldwide. Moreover,the progress on poverty comes with caveats: The absolute number of poor will shrink less than the percentage figure, because of population growth. Many note that the decline in poverty is due in large part to changes in a few big countries - in particular, China.

Still, development experts say that there are numerous underreported success stories in other countries, even in Africa. While the economic growth drove the reductions in poverty, the ambitious U.N. goals prompted a greater flow of international aid, and got some poor countries to adopt better policies, experts say.

"What is not often understood is how many countries there are that have been making real progress," said Mark Suzman, policy director at the Global Development Program of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. For example, he said, nine African nations have already succeeded in halving their rate of extreme poverty since 1990, the baseline for the U.N. targets.

The U.N. goals are aimed at the dirt-poor, a different level of misery than what's measured in the United States. The U.S. census sets the poverty level at $22,000 a year for a family of four. The U.N. goal, in contrast, targeted people living on less than $1 a day (later raised to $1.25 to reflect inflation). Many of them live in mud huts and shanty towns, with little access to flush toilets, medicine or high school.

How have so many people managed to get out of poverty? China, with 1.3 billion people, has had the biggest impact. About 60 percent of its massive population lived in extreme poverty in 1990; because of pro-market overhauls, that figure had plummeted to 16 percent by 2005, according to U.N. figures.

Excluding China, the percentage of people worldwide in extreme poverty is still projected to drop from about 35 percent to 18 percent in 2015, according to the World Bank.

"There are a lot of very large countries in terms of population that have had dramatic reductions in poverty," said Benjamin Leo, a researcher at the Center for Global Development. He cited Brazil, Pakistan, Vietnam and Bangladesh as examples.

While growth is the most critical ingredient in lowering poverty, other factors have mattered too - like remittances, improved governance, international aid and social spending.

For example, Brazil's growth averaged 4.2 percent a year from 2003 to 2008, healthy if not red-hot like China's. But about one-quarter of the Brazilian population is now getting small cash payments under an innovative government program known as Bolsa Familia. The country's rate of extreme poverty fell by one-third, to 5 percent, according to the World Bank.

The relatively bright picture on poverty reduction doesn't extend to sub-Saharan Africa, which fared the worst of all regions. Analysts say development there has been stalled by conflicts in big countries like Sudan and the Democratic Republic of theCongo, as well as environmental devastation.

Africa's poverty rate fell from 58 percent in 1996 to 50 percent in 2005, according to the World Bank. But because of population growth, the absolute number of poor grew from 296 million to 388 million. In other words, the poor were a smaller slice of the pie, but the pie got bigger.

Still, analysts say, there are notable examples of improvement in the continent. Consider Ethiopia, which became the symbol of African suffering during the 1984 famine. The level of extreme poverty there has dropped from 60 percent to 39 percent.

The country was, of course, coming off a low base. But Ethiopia has benefited from strong growth and government policies that are more business-friendly and give local communities more say in spending on schools, water and sanitation, according to Africa experts.

"They've improved delivery of basic services quite dramatically," said Shanta Devarajan, chief economist for Africa at the World Bank, a major provider of aid to the country.

The Millennium Development Goals were originally proposed by a broad movement of activists and others to reinvigorate foreign aid after it plunged in the aftermath of the Cold War.

"In this context, they were extremely successful. Aid has exploded over the last 10 years," with such programs as the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, said Leo. In addition, billions of dollars in poor countries' debts have been forgiven.

But many countries participating in the summit are angered the developed world hasn't been more generous, and hasn't kept some of its aid promises.

While many initially saw the goals as wildly optimistic, they were embraced by aid institutions and many poor countries.

"When I look at governments in low-income regions around the world, the [development goals] are very high on the minds of the cabinet, and very much embedded in government strategies and structures," said Jeffrey Sachs, a leading economist and adviser to U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon.

"This has been a big change. . . .It's surprising, because most U.N. goals are not remembered, they don't last 10 years. They don't necessarily last a year."



Brown angry at slow work to meet UN poverty goals

Former UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown has expressed "anger" at the failure of rich nations to honour pledges to combat global poverty.

The United Nations' eight Millennium Development Goals were set out in 2000 with the aim of being reached by 2015.

Mr Brown is particularly concerned by the lack of progress in ensuring every child has access to primary education.

Speaking in New York, Mr Brown said he wanted to "press, inspire and push" people to see the virtues of education.

Ensuring education for all was an issue of "security, anti-poverty and health", he added.

Millennium Development Goals

* Eradicate extreme poverty and hunger
* Achieve universal primary education
* Promote gender equality and empower women
* Reduce child mortality
* Improve maternal health
* Combat HIV/Aids, malaria and other diseases
* Ensure environmental sustainability
* Develop a Global Partnership for Development



* UN millennium goals 'can be met'

"I'm angry because we made commitments that we would meet these Millennium Development Goals," he told the BBC at a meeting to review progress towards them.

"I think rich countries have not done enough to honour the promises that we made."

He added that it was "too easy sometimes for the governments to say something else has come up, some other thing has changed our view".

Mr Brown, who was UK chancellor at the time the pledges were made, said the governments of wealthy nations needed to face continuing public pressure to ensure they stuck to their pledges.

Turning his attention to poorer nations, he said their governments "have to put resources into education and not into corruption, to put resources into health and not to waste them on prestige projects".

Mr Brown's comments came after UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said the Millennium Development Goals could still be met if enough work was done.

Mr Ban urged world leaders meeting in New York to stick to the task despite the global downturn, insisting they could be achieved by 2015.

More than 140 leaders are meeting to review progress toward the targets.

The UN itself concedes that it will be difficult, if not impossible, to meet some of the targets.





The Millennium Development Goals aim to tackle global poverty and improve living standards for developing countries. We've taken key indicators, broken down by UN-defined regions as shown here, and set the 2015 target as a baseline to reveal the true picture of how each region is faring.

~
~

Developing nations are on track to meet the poverty target largely because of progress in China. But in Sub-Saharan Africa and Western Asia the proportion of hungry people has increased. Globally, the number of hungry people rose from 842 million in 1990-92 to 1.02 billion people in 2009.~


While countries in Sub-Saharan Africa have seen great improvements by abolishing school fees and offering free school lunches, the target is unlikely to be met. The drop-out rate is high, and although there has been some investment in teachers and classrooms, it is not enough.


Gender gaps in education have narrowed, but remain high at university (tertiary) level in some developing countries because of poverty. Employment for women has improved but there are still many more women than men in low-paid jobs. There have been small gains for women in political power.

Child deaths are falling but at the current rate are well short of the two-thirds target. They more than halved in Northern Africa, Asia,Latin America and the Caribbean but remain high in parts of Southern Asia. In Sub-Saharan Africa the absolute number of children who have died actually increased.

Although in all regions there are advances in providing pregnant women with antenatal care, the maternal mortality rate is unacceptably high, with progress well short of the decline needed to meet the target. Those at most risk are adolescent girls, yet funding on family planning is falling behind.



The HIV/AIDS epidemic has stabilised in most regions, but new infections are rising in some areas and antiretroviral treatment has mushroomed. Global funding has helped control malaria but is still far short of what is needed. On current trends tuberculosis will have been halted and started to reverse.

The world will meet the drinking water target on current trends but half the population of developing regions still lacks basic sanitation. The 2010 target to slow decline in biodiversity has been missed. Improving the lives of 100 million slum dwellers has been achieved but their actual numbers are rising.

Levels of aid continue to rise, but major donors are well below target. In terms of volume the USA, France, Germany, UK and Japan are the largest donors. G8 countries have failed to deliver on a promise to double aid to Africa. Debt burdens have been eased for developing countries. ~

Source : BBC



Children in Iraq pay for sins of their fathers

Souirce : Washington Post

Children of al-Qaeda in Iraq pay for sins of their fathers


Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, September 20, 2010

IN BAQUBAH, IRAQ Zahraa is a rambunctious toddler. She still sucks on a pacifier, and her mother dresses her in pink. But according to the government, she does not exist.

The daughter of an al-Qaeda in Iraq militant who forced her mother into marriage and motherhood, then disappeared, Zahraa is one of hundreds, perhaps thousands, of children whose births amid the anarchy and insurgent violence of Iraq were never legally recorded.

Without the paperwork to prove that she is the child of an Iraqi man and that her parents were joined in a legitimate marriage before her birth, Zahraa and others like her have no rights as Iraqi citizens, legal experts say. They do not have birth certificates, passports or national identification cards and will be unable to go to school or hold a government job.

These children, a little-noticed legacy of more than seven years of war, are paying for the sins of their fathers.

"It's dangerous because in the future they might hurt the society that hurt them," said Ahmed Jassim, director of the Nour Foundation, a nongovernmental organization working to improve the lives of the militants' offspring in the northeastern Iraqi province of Diyala.

The children are products of a time when al-Qaeda in Iraq controlled large swaths of the nation after the U.S.-led invasion. The legal system broke down, institutions stopped functioning and an insurgency raged. Some Sunni Muslim communities gave sanctuary to the men, Iraqi and foreign Arabs, believing they would help rid them of a foreign army. But al-Qaeda in Iraq quickly grew brutal, overpowered other Iraqi insurgent groups, declared an Islamic state and enforced a severe form of Islamic law.

Communities slowly turned on the group, and the men of al-Qaeda in Iraq were jailed or killed, or are lurking in the shadows. The undocumented children they left behind are now between 1 and 4 years old.

Jassim has identified at least 125 families in Diyala province alone with children from forced al-Qaeda in Iraq marriages. Many of the women don't know the real identities of their absent husbands and fear that if they fight for the rights of their children, they and the men of their families will be scorned or jailed for a connection to the outlawed organization.


The country's political void has not helped. More than six months after the national parliamentary elections, a government has yet to be formed. Many of the women are Sunni Arabs and worry that a Shiite-led government would lack sympathy and consider them accomplices in the crimes of their missing husbands.

Officials in the Interior Ministry tasked with assisting victims of the Iraq war said the women are not considered victims of rape and, although the situation is unfortunate, there is nothing they can do.

"Helping them could encourage al-Qaeda in Iraq," said Fadhil al-Shweilli, a ministry official who deals with victims of war.

Legal experts said the easiest solution would be to give the children to orphanages or forge their birth certificates with the name of a fake father.

Naheda Zaid Manhal, a parliament member from the largely Sunni-backed Iraqiya coalition, said she will fight on behalf of the children once the government is formed.

"These children are guilty of nothing," she said.

This account of Zahraa's birth and life is based on interviews with her mother - who goes by Umm Zahraa - her grandmother and other relatives, but it could not be independently verified and they would not allow their full names to be used for fear of repercussions. In addition to their legal problems, mothers such as Umm Zahraa say they feel ostracized in a culture that sees out-of-wedlock births as taboo.

One night in summer 2008, six militants from al-Qaeda in Iraq burst into Umm Zahraa's home in Buhroz, just outside Baqubah. Shiite Arabs had already been forced out of the neighborhood or killed by al-Qaeda in Iraq during Iraq's civil war from 2005 through 2007. Residents were too scared to turn against al-Qaeda in Iraq, despite its waning influence in other areas of the country.

A man who identified himself only as Abu Zahraa - father of Zahraa - and the others told Umm Zahraa's brother he had three choices: join them, be killed or give them his mother, Umm Hassan, and his younger sister, then a striking 18-year-old with dark eyes.

The women relented and the marriages were performed by one of the armed men, though no marriage contract was signed. Abu Zahraa then forced the teenager to have sex, and for the next three months, he and the others would arrive late at night, the women said. They always left before sunrise. Umm Zahraa's husband never gave his real name, the family said. Umm Zahraa says she never saw the face of the man who stole her virginity.

"I hate him. He took the dearest thing in a woman's life," she said.

When she became pregnant, the young woman considered aborting the baby or killing herself. But she believes in God, she said, and Islam sanctions neither act. By the time she gave birth, the baby's father had been gone for months, having disappeared without a trace.

But she named her daughter Zahraa, in case he returned.

Now Umm Zahraa's family lives in Baqubah, the capital of Diyala province.

They told their new neighbors that the baby was an orphan they had taken into their home. But Umm Zahraa knows the neighbors whisper about her and wonder why Zahraa calls her "Mama.''

Umm Zahraa will not go to court to pursue the rights of her child, now 11/2 years old. She worries that people will fault her for the marriage and the child that resulted, she said.

The family can't afford the $100 to $300 for a forged birth certificate with a fake father's name. With her husband killed, Umm Hassan, Zahraa's grandmother, volunteers at a local hospital and lives off tips. When she gets tips, they eat, but when she doesn't, they don't. Around her is the evidence of a life in poverty: pink cracked walls, no furniture, a son in jail, accused of kidnapping. Despite her meager earnings, Umm Hassan hopes to save enough to bribe the midwife and buy Zahraa a forged birth certificate.

For now, Umm Zahraa does not leave the house. At 20, she bears the burden of someone much older, her face drawn with sadness. She is conflicted about her past, abused by the father of her child and guilt-ridden because she could not stop him.

Every day she searches her daughter's face and wonders whether the features come from the child's father. She wonders whether her daughter will ever have a chance here.

"No one will understand," Umm Zahraa said. "No one will say I'm a victim."

Special correspondents Jinan Hussein and Hassan Shimmari contributed to this report.

African American Men: from Colonial Times 1492-1776





African American Men: Moments in History from Colonial Times to the Present
Colonial Times, 1492-1776


1492: Among the crew on the Santa Maria during Christopher Columbus's voyage to the Americas is Pedro Alonzo Niño, a black man. Africans also accompany Ponce de Leon, Hernando Cortes, Francisco Pizarro, Hernando de Soto, and Francisco Vasquez de Coronado in the early 16th century.
1623: William Tucker, the son of indentured servants living in Jamestown, is the first recorded black birth in America.
1625: A census of Virginia counts 11 black men among a population of 1,227.
1641: Mathias De Sousa, a free black man, is elected to the Maryland General Assembly. He had come to the colony as an indentured servant.
1644: Lucas Santomee, a black physician and one of the major landowners in what is to become New York, is granted a tract by the Dutch that stretched from modern-day Greenwich Village to Brooklyn.
1700: About 60 percent of all African Americans in the colonies (16,390) live in Virginia.
1712: Though other colonies had passed laws regulating the behavior of slaves, South Carolina passes a slave code that becomes the standard for slave-owning states. It proscribes escalating punishments for rebellious acts including death for escaping, authorizes whites to punish any slave found violating the law, and prohibits slaves from growing their own crops, working for money or learning to read and write.
1729: In an early precursor to lynchings, Maryland passes a law that mandates savage punishment for slaves accused of violent crimes: decapitation, hanging, or having a body's remains publicly displayed after being drawn and quartered.
1731: Benjamin Banneker is born to free parents on Nov. 9 in Ellicott Mills, Md.
1760: A poem by Jupiter Hammon, a slave on Long Island, is the first ever published by a black person born in America. His first poem has a Christian theme; a later poem exhorts slaves in New York to serve their masters faithfully.
1770: Crispus Attucks, a slave who had escaped to Boston, is killed during the Boston Massacre. He is considered to be the first casualty of the American Revolution.
1776: Five thousand black men serve in the Army and Navy during the American Revolution. But 20,000 fight for the British, who promise freedom to any slave who joined them. At the end of the war, 12,000 African Americans leave with the British. While some are freed in Europe and Africa, thousands more are sold back into slavery in the West Indies.
Slavery at Full Strength, 1780-1860
1783: The black population reaches 1 million; two-thirds of which was in Maryland and Virginia.
1786: A slave trader hunting for victims in Philadelphia attempts to kidnap the Rev. Richard Allen. The slave trader is jailed for perjury. He insists that Allen is an escaped slave. Allen founds the African Methodist Episcopal Church in 1794. Also this year, a group of runaway slaves who fought for the British and called themselves the "King of England's soldiers" terrorize Savannah to try to foment a slave rebellion.
1790: The first official United States census counts 697,624 slaves and 59,557 free blacks. More than half of all slaves live in Maryland, the District of Columbia and Virginia.
1793: Eli Whitney invents the cotton gin, revitalizing agriculture in the South and creating an even greater need for slaves to harvest the cotton.
1800: Inspired by a slave revolt in Haiti that overthrows the government, Virginia slave Gabriel Prosser leads 1,100 set to lay siege to Richmond. Prosser is betrayed before the attack. He and his family are hanged with 10 other conspirators.
1804: Ohio enacts the first Black Laws, requiring free blacks to register with the state and preventing them from testifying against whites or gaining employment without proof of their freedom. Kentucky and Virginia slave owners had lobbied for the law because Ohio had been a popular destination for escaped slaves.
1805: Virginia passes a law to expel all free blacks. Despite this, the population of free blacks grows to 36,000 in 1820, second to Maryland's 39,700.
1810: D.C. native Tom Molineaux, a former slave who moved to London after he bought his freedom through boxing matches, challenges the British heavyweight boxing champion to a match in what is considered to be the first international title bout. Though Molineaux knocks out champion Tom Cribb before 10,000 spectators, the fight is allowed to continue and Cribb beats Molineaux in the 43rd round.
1822: Denmark Vesey, an abolition activist and former slave who had acquired wealth as a property owner in South Carolina, designs the largest slave revolt to date. He raises money and secures weapons for an uprising of 9,000 black people around Charleston, intending to strike when many plantations would be idle during the summer. The plan was exposed by a house slave before Vesey could strike and he and 35 co-conspirators are executed. South Carolina imposes even more laws restricting the activities of free blacks, and white religious leaders begin framing the revolt's failure as divine intervention in support of slavery.
1823: Alexander Lucius Twilight is the first black person to graduate from college, earning an associate's degree from Middlebury College in Vermont. The next year, two more men graduate with bachelor's degrees from Amherst College in Massachusetts and Bowdoin College in Maine.
1828: White actor Thomas "Daddy" Rice performs in blackface for the first time in New York, immortalizing "Jim Crow" with a minstrel song about a ludicrously ignorant slave. Also this year, Postmaster General John McLean announces that black employees are alllowed to deliver mail only if they are supervised by a white man.
1831: Nat Turner leads one of the deadliest slave revolts in history, orchestrating the killing of his master and 60 other white people between Aug. 21 and 23 in Southampton, Va. Though dozens of other slaves are lynched or executed after the rampage, Turner remains at large until Oct. 30. He is hanged 12 days after his capture. The following year, many slave states prohibit slaves from preaching (as Turner did before his revolt) and expand crimes for which slaves can be executed. Virginia banned free blacks from purchasing freedom for any slave who is not an immediate family member.
1835: Two years after its founding as the first co-educational college in the country, Oberlin College becomes the first in the nation to admit students regardless of race.
1837: The first medical degree awarded to an African American goes to James McCune Smith, who graduated from the University of Glasgow in Scotland and later returns to his native New York City to practice medicine.
1838: Frederick Douglass, 20, escapes from slavery in Baltimore and settles in New Bedford, Mass. In 1841 he is recruited as an abolitionist speaker for the Massachusetts chapter of the Anti-Slavery Society and often collaborates with the chapter's white founder, William Lloyd Garrison. In one of his earliest speeches, Douglass speaks of the hypocrisy of whites who supported abolition but cannot bear to share the sacrament–or even the pew–with blacks at church. Though Garrison opposes slavery, he was an architect of the movement to send free blacks to Liberia to relieve them of the discrimination they faced and placate whites who feared them. But Douglass vehemently opposes the colonization movement, writing in an 1849 editorial: "We live here–have lived here–have a right to live here, and mean to live here." Richard Purvis, the American Anti-Slavery Society's co-founder, is dubbed "president of the Underground Railroad" for hosting many slaves who passed through Philadelphia on their journey North. Like Douglass and other progressive activists, Purvis was a strong opponent of the colonization plan and an early advocate for integration when blacks often gravitated toward racial-segregated schools and abolitionist societies and whites championed Liberia as a solution to racial discord. While abolitionists universally opposed slavery, they differed in their ideas of freedom.
1839: Joseph Cinque and 52 other slaves bound for Cuba mutiny aboard the slave ship Amistad, killing most of the whites on board and forcing the two surviving crew members to take them back to Sierra Leone. The crew instead sails to New York where the slaves are arrested. Former President John Quincy Adams defends them before the Supreme Court in 1841. The court rules they are free men who had been seized illegally, and eventually the 35 slaves who survived the voyage and their years in the United States raises enough money to go home.
1845: Frederick Douglass publishes his memoir, "The Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass," for which he risks arrest by revealing that he is an escaped slave and naming his former owner. He seeks refuge in England while supporters raise money to purchase his freedom.
1852: Harriet Beecher Stowe publishes "Uncle Tom's Cabin," a novel about the horrors of slavery. It sold 300,000 copies in its first year, and ignited northern support of abolition.
1857: Slave Dred Scott appeals to the Supreme Court for his freedom after his master moved him to the free states of Illinois and Minnesota. The Supreme Court rejects his petition and rules that no one of African heritage–slave or free–is a U.S. citizen and the federal government does not have the power to ban slavery in northern states.
Civil War and Reconstruction, 1860-1900
1863: Abraham Lincoln issues the Emancipation Proclamation, which declared slaves in Confederate states free. Runaway slaves flowed north in se arch of freedom, and Union forces began recruiting them to fight against the South. More than 186,000 answer the call, including the soldiers of the historic, all-black 54th Regiment, commanded by Robert Gould Shaw.
1865: The 13th Amendment abolishing slavery is ratified, and Congress establishes the Freedmen's Bureau to help former slaves make the transition to freedom. President Andrew Johnson overrode congressional plans to break up plantations and give every man 40 acres and supplies to farm with, prompting black leaders to famously demand the "40 acres and a mule" they were promised. Former Confederate soldiers in Tennessee organized the Ku Klux Klan in response to northern interference in the South after the war.
1868: Reconstruction era reforms produce the South's first elected black men: South Carolina Secretary of State Francis L. Cardozo; Louisiana Lt. Gov. Oscar J. Dunn; and Rep. John W. Menard of Louisiana. Although Congress refuses to recognize Menard, he becomes the first African American to speak on the House floor when he defended his right to be admitted. The Georgia Legislature refused to seat Henry Turner and 26 other newly elected African Americans.
1869: The first law degree awarded to an African American is granted by Harvard University to George L. Ruffin.
1870: Hiram Revels is elected the first black senator from Mississippi. Jasper J. Wright is elected to Supreme Court of South Carolina. Wyatt Outlaw, a black political appointee in North Carolina, is lynched by the White Brotherhood, a racist group.
1874: Coal mines use black men as strikebreakers in Ohio, prompting other mines in the coal, steel and iron industries to use them as well. But according to the census, the most popular occupations for black men were coachman, footman, valet, chef and waiter.
1881: Booker T. Washington becomes the first president of the Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute in Tuskegee, Ala. Though considered to be the next great social activist after Frederick Douglass, Washington differs from Douglass's vision of equality and encouraged post-slavery blacks to focus on increasing their wealth and education now rather than wait for the nation's social climate to improve. Within 20 years, Du Bois would emerge as a radical advocating for the equality and social change that would create more opportunities for blacks.
1895: Booker T. Washington delivers his "Atlanta Compromise" speech, calling on black people to focus on hard work and education, instead of immediate equality and integration. Of whites, he calls for tolerance. His speech establishes him as the most influential black leader of his time. He is hailed as a successor to Frederick Douglass, who died this year.
1896: The Supreme Court rules in Plessy vs. Ferguson that states can segregate public facilities by race, as long as the accommodations are "equal." Homer Plessy had brought the case against Louisiana for refusing to seat him in a whites-only train car.
Great Migrations, 1900-1950
1900: Sgt. William H. Carney of the Massachusetts 54th Regiment is the first black man to receive the Congressional Medal of Honor. He is cited for bravery during the assault on Fort Wagner, S.C., during the Civil War.
1903: W.E.B. Du Bois publishes "The Souls of Black Folk."
1905: Robert Abbott launches the Chicago Defender, an African American newspaper that he uses to encourage African Americans to move north.
1909: Du Bois helps found the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.
1914: America's entry into World War I generates huge demand in the north for factory labor. Pushed out of the South by racism, violence and brutal farming conditions, African Americans begin the Great Migration to northern cities. They find unskilled jobs in foundries and meatpacking plants or work as railroad porters or janitors.
1915: Booker T. Washington dies in Tuskegee, Ala., at the age of 59.
1917: America joins World War I. More than 370,000 African Americans enlist. Half are sent to combat in France.
1921: "Shuffle Along," a variety show featuring black writers and an all-black cast, opens on Broadway and launches the careers of many black performers, including Paul Robeson.
1925: Poet Countee Cullen graduates from Harvard and publishes "Color," his first book of poetry.
1927: The Harlem Renaissance is in full swing: Duke Ellington debuts at the Cotton Club; Paul Robeson stars in "Show Boat" on Broadway; poet Langston Hughes publishes "The Weary Blues" and poet Countee Cullen publishes "Copper Sun."
1929: Black historian Walter White publishes "Rope and Faggot: A Biography of Judge Lynch." Countee Cullen, Claude McKay and Wallace Thurman also publish.
1935: To help struggling artists during the Great Depression, the government launches the federal arts program. Writers Claude McKay, Ralph Ellison, Richard Wright and photographer Gordon Parks make notable contributions.
1936: Sprinter Jesse Owens sets three Olympic records and takes home four gold medals at the Olympics in Nazi-controlled Berlin.
1941: The Tuskegee Institute and the United States Tuskegee Army Air Field begin training black men to serve as combat pilots. By the end of the World War II, 992 men complete training and 450 are sent into combat. Ship's Cook, 3rd Class Doris "Dorie" Miller is awarded the Navy Cross for heroism aboard the USS West Virginia during the attack on Pearl Harbor. After his battleship is struck by the Japanese, Miller carries his fellow sailors to safety and then fires on the attacking planes with an anti-aircraft machine gun until the order is given to abandon ship. Two years later, Miller dies in a torpedo attack during a battle off the Gilbert Islands in the Pacific. Forty years after his death, the USS Miller is commissioned in his honor.
1942: The United States enters World War II. Three million African American men register with the Selective Service. About 800,000 African Americans enlist in the Armed Forces.
1944: Adam Clayton Powell Jr., is elected to the House of Representatives and serves 26 years.
1947: Jackie Robinson becomes the first black player in Major League Baseball when he signs with the Brooklyn Dodgers. He is voted Rookie of the Year.
1949: Dunbar High School alumni Wesley A. Brown becomes the first African American to graduate from the United States Naval Academy in Annapolis.
Civil Rights Movement and the Vietnam War, 1950-1970
1950: The United States enters the Korean War. The military abandons racial quotas and segregation, gradually phasing black personnel into previously all-white units, though many remain segregated during the conflict. By the end of the war, 3,075 African Americans die and another 7,000 are wounded in combat. Among the men who distinguish themselves are the nation's first black naval aviator Jesse L. Brown, who died during a combat flight, and Pfc. William Thompson, the first African American to receive the Congressional Medal of Honor since the Spanish-American War.
1952: Ralph Ellison publishes his existential novel, “Invisible Man," which wins the National Book Award the following year.
1953: Novelist James Baldwin publishes "Go Tell It On The Mountain."
1954: The Supreme Court rules in Brown vs. The Board of Education of Topeka, Kan., that segregation in public schools is unconstitutional. NAACP Legal Defense Fund attorney Thurgood Marshall argues the case and 31 others that challenge racist state policies.
1955: Emmett Till, a 14-year-old from Chicago, is kidnapped and lynched while visiting relatives in Money, Miss. Northern support of the civil rights movement intensifies when Till's mother defiantly shows his battered body in an open casket during his funeral, and photographs of his corpse run in papers around the country. He is remembered as a martyr of the Civil Rights Era.
1956: The Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr., and the Rev. Ralph David Abernathy coordinate the Montgomery bus boycott in Alabama. The next year, in the face of bombings targeting King and Abernathy, they establish the Southern Christian Leadership Council to coordinate religious opposition to segregation.
1962: James Meredith becomes the first black man to attend the University of Mississippi after the governor, the Ku Klux Klan and a racist mob attempt to block his way. Federal troops occupy the campus to suppress violence until he graduates. Four years later, he is shot and seriously wounded by a sniper as he led a march to the state Capitol in support of voting rights.
1963: Martin Luther King leads 100,000 in the March on Washington and delivered his "I Have A Dream" speech at the Lincoln Memorial.
1964: Martin Luther King Jr., receives the Nobel Peace Prize. Between 1882 and this year, the Tuskegee Institute records 4,742 lynchings. Sidney Poitier becomes the first black man to win an Oscar for Best Actor for his starring role in Lilies of the Field.
1965: Malcolm X is assassinated in New York City. King marches from Selma to Montgomery to expose Gov. George Wallace's brutal suppression of civil rights workers. In Los Angeles, thousands riot in Watts.
1966: Huey Newton and Bobby Seale established the Black Panther Party, and Stokley Carmichael, who coined the term "black power," takes over the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee.
1967: Thurgood Marshall is appointed the first black Supreme Court justice by President Lyndon Johnson. Marshall serves on the court for 24 years. Heavyweight boxing champion Muhammad Ali is stripped of his title for refusing to serve in Vietnam after he was drafted. His conviction and five-year prison sentence for violating the draft is eventually overturned.
1968: Martin Luther King Jr. is assassinated by James Earl Ray in Memphis. Riots erupt in more than 125 cities. Ralph Abernathy becomes the new head of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, and continues King's campaign against poverty with a poor people's march in Washington, D.C. Congress repeals a provision in the Social Security Act that limits welfare to homes where a parent is absent or disabled. Many believed the provision contributed to the declining marriage rates among low-income African Americans.
Changing the Mainstream, 1970-2006
1971: Richard Roundtree stars as a black detective in "Shaft," which becomes one of the top 20 highest grossing movies of the year. Isaac Hayes's theme song wins an Oscar the following year. The movie proves there is a demand for films targeted to black audiences, and prompts investment in African American-oriented scripts. Independent filmmaker Melvin Van Peebles breaks Hollywood conventions with “Sweet Sweetback’s Baadasssss Song.� His coldblooded hero sets the mold for the generations of romanticized black rebels that follow in his swaggering wake, in music, movies, video games and more. Made for $500,000, it grossed $10 million.
1972: The Tuskegee Study is exposed as one of the worst breaches of medical ethics in U.S. history–for 40 years, government-funded researchers studied syphilis in more than 400 black men without ever telling them they had the disease. At least 28 die as a result of the negligence.
1973: U.S. troops leave Vietnam. During the war, 275,000 black men serve and 7,241 are killed. Also this year, black mayors are elected in Detroit, Atlanta and Los Angeles.
1974: Hank Aaron surpassed Babe Ruth's record by hitting his 715th career home run.
1975: Gen. Daniel "Chappie" James Jr., becomes the first African American to be achieve four-star rank.
1977: Alex Haley is given a special award from the Pulitzer Prize board for his 1976 book, "Roots." Two years later, the miniseries based on his book is watched by 130 million people and earns nine Emmys.
1979: The Sugar Hill Gang becomes the first group to achieve commercial success with a rap song as "Rappers Delight" goes gold.
1981: Coretta Scott King opens the Martin Luther King Jr. Library and Archives in Atlanta.
1982: An Atlanta jury convicts Wayne B. Williams of murdering two men. Authorities believed he was the infamous serial killer who had murdered 25 poor, black boys in the city between 1979 and 1981, though he was never tried for those crimes.
1983: Congress establishes a federal holiday the third Monday in January in honor of Martin Luther King, Jr. Also this year, Michael Jackson's 1982 album "Thriller" wins eight Grammys and becomes the biggest selling record in U.S. history.
1984: Presidential candidate Jesse L. Jackson successfully negotiates with Syrian President Hafez Assad for the release of Navy pilot Robert O. Goodman Jr. Jackson wins more than 3.2 million votes in the presidential primaries and inspires millions of African Americans to register to vote.
1985: Lionel Richie and Michael Jackson write "We Are The World" and donate $50 million generated by the No. 1 song and album to famine relief in Africa.
1986: After only a few years on the streets, "crack" cocaine has already caused increases in emergency-room visits, drug arrests and infant mortality.
1988: Jesse Jackson runs for president a second time, getting 6.6 million votes in the primaries.
1989: A government study estimated that 2.4 million Americans had tried crack cocaine.
1990: Virginia elects L. Douglas Wilder as its first African American governor.
1991: The Senate confirms Clarence Thomas to be the 106th justice of the Supreme Court after a polarizing confirmation hearing in which he is accused of sexual harassment by Anita Hill. Thomas characterized the nationally televised hearing as "a high-tech lynching" and denies Hill's charges. Also this year, director John Singleton, 24, became youngest person and the first African American to be nominated for an Academy Award in directing for his 1990 film "Boyz 'n the ''Hood." The film about life in violence-plagued south-central Los Angeles grosses more than $100 million.
1992: The deadliest U.S. riot in 70 years erupts in Los Angeles after a jury acquits three officers and failed to reach a decision on charges against a fourth for the 1991 videotaped beating of Rodney G. King. After three days, more than 50 people were dead and south central had suffered $1 billion in damage.
1996: Rapper Tupac Shakur, 25, dies six days after being wounded in a Las Vegas drive-by shooting. The prime suspect is killed in Compton in 1998; the case remains unsolved.
1997: The Bureau of Justice Statistics releases a study estimating that 28 percent of black men are likely to go to prison in their lifetimes. When the figures were updated in 2003, that estimate increases to 32.2 percent. Tiger Woods, 21, becomes the youngest player and first person of color to win the Masters tournament at Augusta National Golf Club. He wins by 12 strokes, which was also the largest margin of victory in Masters history.
1998: James Byrd Jr., a black man in Jasper, Tex., is murdered by white supremacists who drag him to death behind their pickup truck after offering him a ride home. Two of the killers are sentenced to death and a third to life in prison for the murder. The murder leads to passage of a hate crimes law in the state in 2001.
2002: For the first time, two black actors, Halle Berry and Denzel Washington, win the top acting awards at the Oscars in the same year.
2004: During a celebration in Washington of the 50th anniversary of the Supreme Court's Brown vs. Board of Education ruling, comedian Bill Cosby delivers a blistering speech criticizing the black community for not taking responsibility for the social ills that he said are harming young people. His remarks touch off a national debate among African Americans about their role in combating cultural influences that disparage education and glorify violence. Also that summer, Democratic Senate candidate Barack Obama delivers the keynote speech at the Democratic National Convention in Boston. In the November general election, Obama defeats Republican Alan Keyes in the Illinois with more than 70 percent of the vote. Obama becomes the third African American senator since Reconstruction. It is the first time in an American Senate race that both major party candidates are black. In the national election, Rev. Al Sharpton contended with eight other candidates for the Democratic nomination for president, getting 385,547 votes in the primaries. In his speech at the convention endorsing John F. Kerry, Sharpton said: "As I ran for president, I hoped that one child would come out of the ghetto like I did, could look at me walk across the stage with governors and senators and know they … could stand up from a broken home, on welfare, and they could run for president of the United States."
2006: Gordon Parks, the famed photographer and film director who directed the movie "Shaft" and took the iconic "American Gothic" photograph of cleaning woman Ella Watson during World War II, dies in New York City at the age of 93.
- Meg Smith, Washington Post
© 2005 The Washington Post Company

Courtesy : http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/metro/interactives/blackmen/chronologyblackmen.html

Sunday, September 19, 2010

Sickle cell testing of athletes stirs discrimination fears

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/09/19/AR2010091904417.html

Sickle cell testing of athletes stirs discrimination fears


Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, September 20, 2010
U.S. colleges and universities for the first time are requiring top student athletes to submit to testing for the gene for sickle cell anemia, a mandate aimed at preventing sudden deaths of promising young players but stirring deep fears about reviving dangerous old prejudices.

The screening hopes to identify athletes at high risk for life-threatening complications from intense physical exertion. That way, those with the gene could be monitored more closely and their training could be modified by, for example, allowing more time for rest and drinking more water.

But the prerequisite is evoking some of the most notorious episodes in the nation's history. While less known than the infamous Tuskegee syphilis experiment, for decades blacks were stigmatized by sickle cell because they carried it far more commonly than whites, marking them as supposedly genetically inferior, barring them from jobs, the military, insurance and even discouraging them from marrying and having children.

"This amounts to a massive genetic screening program, with tens of thousands being screened," said Troy Duster, a professor of sociology at New York University who studies the racial implications of science. "This could have an extraordinarily heavy impact on black athletes. You are going to be picking out these kids and saying, 'You are going to be scrutinized more closely than anyone else.' That's worrisome."

The testing is being watched closely as a case study in both the potential benefits and risks of large-scale modern genetic screening, which is proliferating as the genetic bases for more and more diseases are being deciphered.

"This could be a tip of an iceberg of genetic screening as we go forward," said Vence L. Bonham of the National Institutes of Health's National Human Genome Research Institute. "Getting it right is important, especially this one being the first one out of the gate."

Although endorsed by some doctors, sports officials, athletes and parents, the testing has raised objections from both the Sickle Cell Anemia Association of America and a federal panel that advises the government on issues related to genetic testing.

"We're very concerned that identifying someone as a carrier could be discriminatory," said R. Rodney Howell, who chairs the Health and Human Services Department's Advisory Committee on Heritable Disorders in Newborns and Children, which sent a letter to HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius in June expressing concern about the program. "There is no need to single out this group."

The National Collegiate Athletic Association mandated the testing in April in response to a lawsuit filed by the family of Dale Lloyd II, a 19-year-old African American freshman at Rice University who died after an intense football workout in 2006 and was later discovered to have had the sickle cell trait.

"We want to prevent this from happening to anyone else," said Lloyd's mother, Bridgette Lloyd of Houston. "Coaches and trainers need this knowledge. We don't want another young person to lose their life because of a lack of information."

Under the policy, as of Aug. 1 all new students joining NCAA Division I teams, regardless of race, must be tested for the sickle cell trait - a requirement affecting about 170,000 student-athletes. No one will be excluded from sports or restricted in training or playing based on the results, officials said. Rather, athletes who test positive will be conditioned more carefully and watched more closely to ensure they drink enough and avoid overexertion, especially on hot days and in high altitudes. The NCAA is considering expanding the testing to Division II and III players, which would extend the order to about 260,000 more students.

"We're trying to protect the health and well-being of our student athletes," said Yvette Rooks, the University of Maryland's team physician, who served on the NCAA committee that recommended the policy. "One death is too many. Anything we can do to prevent it and help people be healthier is important."

Sickle cell anemia creates sickle-shaped red blood cells, which block vessels, causing chronic problems with intense pain, life-threatening infections and organ damage.

A person born with two copies of the gene gets the illness. People who carry only one - known as having the sickle cell trait - are generally healthy. But during highly stressful physical exertion their blood cells can become sickle-shaped, preventing the delivery of oxygen to tissues and organs. Since 2000, as many as 10 Division I college football players who had the trait without knowing it have died suddenly following workouts.

"There have been players who cease activity on a hot day because of complaints of fatigue - they are sweating heavily and cramping and not understanding the evidence of sickling. Those cases have been managed as exertional heat illness - and it wasn't, with tragic consequences," said Scott A. Anderson, head athletic trainer at the University of Oklahoma, who has spearheaded the drive for testing. "The more you know, the better the athlete can protect themselves."

Students can opt out if they prove that they have already been tested or sign a waiver insulating their school from liability, though the NCAA is considering revoking that option. Even if students can refuse, critics worry that they will fear antagonizing coaches or other athletic officials, putting their scholarships and possible future professional careers in jeopardy. Coaches may be hesitant to intensively train and play those who test positive, and professional teams may be less inclined to draft them.

"The stigma and its consequences - both self-imposed and done by coaches, peers, and the institution - are likely to be far, far out of proportion to the actual risk," said Duster, who chaired the Human Genome Project's National Advisory Committee on Ethical, Legal and Social Implications.

While acknowledging that the trait may carry some risk, critics of the new policy also say the magnitude remains far from clear. Many athletes with the trait play safely in extreme conditions. And athletes who do not carry the gene have suddenly died for other reasons, most notably heart problems.

"What doesn't exist is scientific data to support the screening," said Elliott Vichinsky, director of hematology-oncology at Children's Hospital in Oakland and director of the Northern California Sickle Cell Center. "There are a lot of other people at risk for heat-related illness from exertion."

The best solution, they argue, would be better monitoring, training and care for all athletes - a strategy that worked for the military. That would avoid targeting the estimated 8 percent of blacks who carry the sickle cell trait gene, compared with about 0.2 percent of whites and 0.5 percent of Hispanics. In 2008-09, 24.8 percent of male Division I student-athletes and 16 percent of female Division I student-athletes were black, according to NCAA statistics.

"If you want to protect people, there's an easy way to do that: change the training protocol for everyone," said Lanetta Jordan, the Sickle Cell Disease Association of America's chief medical officer.

In addition, critics worry that students who test positive for the trait and their families will misinterpret the results as meaning they have sickle cell anemia, particularly if the news is not delivered by a doctor or genetic counselor.

"If you are going to test for sickle cell trait, it should not be done in the locker room by a coach," Howell said.

But supporters argue that such concerns are easily outweighed by the benefits.

"There have been no known case of any athletes being denied participation in sport because of their sickle trait status," Anderson said. "Information beats ignorance."

Others, while raising questions about the testing, hesitate to condemn the program as ill-conceived.

"I see it as an experiment," said Lawrence C. Brody, also of the National Human Genome Research Institute. "It's an opportunity for us to learn."

Courtesy : washingtonpost

The date of migration story

Stone tools 'change migration story'



Stone tools (Petraglia et al) Dr Petraglia says robust dates can be put against the tools his group is uncovering

A research team reports new findings of stone age tools that suggest humans came "out of Africa" by land earlier than has been thought.

Geneticists estimate that migration from Africa to South-East Asia and Australia took place as recently as 60,000 years ago.

But Dr Michael Petraglia, of Oxford University, and colleagues say stone artefacts found in the Arabian Peninsula and India point to an exodus starting about 70,000 to 80,000 years ago - and perhaps even earlier.

Petraglia, whose co-workers include Australian and Indian researchers, presented his ideas at the British Science Festival, which is hosted this year at Aston University.

"I believe that multiple populations came out of Africa in the period between 120,000 and 70,000 years ago," he said. "Our evidence is stone tools that we can date."

Most of the tools are from far inland - hundreds of kilometres from the coasts. This means it was more likely humans migrated by land than in boats, he said.

The tools are found in areas that are often very inhospitable now, but which at the time would have been much more conducive to migration.

"During the period we're talking about, the environments were actually very hospitable," he told BBC News. "So where there are deserts today, there used to be lakes and rivers, and there was an abundance of plants and animals."

The team found the stone tools - ranging from a couple of centimetres to nearly 10cm in size - in layers of sediment that they can date using sand and volcanic material found above and below the implements. The tools were mainly either spear heads or scrapers.

Dig site (Petraglia et al) Most dig sites are inland

In particular, some tools were sandwiched in ash from the famous Toba eruption that geologists can date very accurately to 74,000 years ago.

Other species of early humans clearly left Africa before our species (Homo sapiens), but Dr Petraglia's team thinks that the tools it has found are the type made by modern humans - and not those of Neanderthals, for instance.

Previous research has leaned heavily on examining the genetics of different modern populations to find out how long ago they shared a common ancestor - their African common ancestor.

Professor Chris Stringer, of the Natural History Museum in London, said this genetic data showed humans left Africa around 60,000 years ago or even more recently.

He agreed that "these tools show that people were in these regions, but the genetic data show an exit from Africa of later than 60,000 years ago. The people in India could have died out."

Dr Petraglia, however, suggested that researching these migrations using population genetics might not lead to accurate results, because all of the genetic studies were based on today's people.

The absence of ancient DNA to make additional tests made this area of investigation much less reliable, he claimed.

Dr Petraglia's team now hopes to continue its excavations in the region. "We have literally hundreds of projects in Europe and a handful in the Arabian-South Asian belt," he said.

Source : http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-11327442

Scientists say : It's good to think - but not too much

It's good to think - but not too much, scientists say


Brain People who think more about their decisions have more brain cells in their frontal lobes



People who think more about whether they are right have more cells in an area of the brain known as the frontal lobes.

UK scientists, writing in Science, looked at how brain size varied depending on how much people thought about decisions.

But a nationwide survey recently found that some people think too much about life.

These people have poorer memories, and they may also be depressed.

Stephen Fleming, a member of the University College London (UCL) team that carried out the research, said: "Imagine you're on a game show such as 'Who Wants to Be a Millionaire' and you're uncertain of your answer. You can use that knowledge to ask the audience, ask for help."

The London group asked 32 volunteers to make difficult decisions. They had to look at two very similar black and grey pictures and say which one had a lighter spot.

They then had to say just how sure they were of their answer, on a scale of one to six. Although it was hard to tell the difference, the pictures were adjusted to make sure that no-one found the task harder than anyone else.

People who were more sure of their answer had more brain cells in the front-most part of the brain - known as the anterior prefrontal cortex.

This part of the brain has been linked to many brain and mental disorders, including autism. Previous studies have looked at how this area functions while people make real time decisions, but not at differences between individuals.

Illness link

The study is the first to show that there are physical differences between people with regards to how big this area is. These size differences relate to how much they think about their own decisions.

The researchers hope that learning more about these types of differences between people may help those with mental illness.

Co-author Dr Rimona Weil, from UCL's Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience, said: "I think it has very important implications for patients with mental ill health who perhaps don't have as much insight into their own disease."

She added that they hope they may be able to improve patients' ability to recognise that they have an illness and to remember to take their medication.

However, thinking a lot about your own thoughts may not be all good.

Cognitive psychologist Dr Tracy Alloway from the University of Stirling, who was not involved in the latest study, said that some people have a tendency to brood too much and this leads to a risk of depression.

More than 1,000 people took part in a nationwide study linking one type of memory - called "working memory" - to mental health.

Working memory involves the ability to remember pieces of information for a short time, but also while you are remembering them, to do something with them.

For example, you might have to keep hold of information about where you saw shapes and colours - and also answer questions on what they looked like. Dr Alloway commented: "I like to describe it as your brain's Post-It note."

Those with poorer working memory, the 10-15% of people who could only remember about two things, were more likely to mull over things and brood too much.

Both groups presented their findings at the British Science Festival, held this year at the University of Aston in Birmingham.







Source : http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-11340881

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