Showing posts with label denied. Show all posts
Showing posts with label denied. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 19, 2014

Immigrant Youth in North Carolina Faces Discrimination – Denied Enrollment in High School

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Immigrant Youth in North Carolina Faces Discrimination – Denied Enrollment in High School

Wednesday, October 16, 2013

Nazi war criminal denied burial in Italy after fierce protests



Published time: October 16, 2013 15:54

Protesters and far-right activists clash as Catholic rebels try to hold funeral of Nazi war criminal Erich Priebke in Albano Laziale near Rome on October 15, 2013. (AFP Photo / Vincenzo Pinto)

Protesters and far-right activists clash as Catholic rebels try to hold funeral of Nazi war criminal Erich Priebke in Albano Laziale near Rome on October 15, 2013. (AFP Photo / Vincenzo Pinto)




The funeral of a Nazi war criminal, Erich Priebke, who died in Rome last week, has been halted in Italy after fierce protests. The coffin containing his body has been taken to a military airport with the final destination remaining unclear.


As the country marks the 70th anniversary of the roundup and deportation of Jews from Rome’s ghetto, a leading Italian rabbi praised the protesters who blocked Priebke’s funeral. 


Priebke, a former SS officer, had been serving a life sentence in Rome under house arrest for his participation in one of the worst massacres in German-occupied Italy during World War II – the killing of 335 civilians at the Ardeatine Caves outside the capital in March 1944.


Not only did Priebke never apologize for his crimes, he also defended his wartime actions and denied that Jews were gassed during the Holocaust. In a final interview released by his lawyer after his death, the former SS officer accused the West of inventing such crimes to cover up atrocities committed by the Allies during the war.


After Priebke died last Friday aged 100, a bitter debate has been raging over what to do with his remains, with nowhere apparently willing to offer his body a final resting place.


The Catholic Church in Rome refused his funeral service, despite protests from his family and lawyer.


On Wednesday, Rome’s Jewish Community gathered in the city’s main synagogue to commemorate the 1943 deportation of 1,000 Jews to Auschwitz, of whom only 16 survived.


The head of the Union of Italian Jewish Communities, Renzo Gattegna, drew applause at the ceremony, and, referring to Priebke, he refused to pronounce his name “not to profane this sacred place”.  He added that the Nazis killed the innocent and their “followers are assassins of memory” who “will never win,” AP cited.


For this we feel proud to be Romans,” the President of the Jewish Community of Rome, Riccardo Pacifici, said, according to Reuters.  He said the public outcry over Priebke has shown the “beautiful face of Italy,” with both civil and Catholic Church officials acting in solidarity to deny his burial.


Protesters demonstrate as Catholic rebels try to hold the funeral of Nazi war criminal Erich Priebke in Albano Laziale near Rome on October 15, 2013. (AFP Photo / Vincenzo Pinto)


Argentina, where Priebke spent nearly 50 years before being extradited to Italy in 1995 to stand trial for the WWII massacre, also refused to take him. Previously, his hometown of Hennigsdorf in Germany, had declined, fearing that Priebke’s grave could turn into a neo-Nazi pilgrimage site.


The story got a new twist on Tuesday, when the schismatic Society of St. Pius X (SSPX) in the city of Albano Laziale, south of Rome, agreed to celebrate the funeral Mass. The group is known for the anti-Semitic views of some of its members. It rejects the church’s modernizing moves, such as the teaching that absolved Jews of responsibility for the crucifixion of Jesus and celebrates the pre-Vatican II old Latin Mass.


However, as the coffin with the body of the war criminal arrived for the funeral, it was met by hundreds of angry protesters shouting “murderer” and “executioner.”  Riot police had to hold back outraged protesters who punched the hearse as it was passing by. Protesters also targeted a priest who arrived at the gates and clashed with Nazi sympathizers also gathered at the site. As a result, the funeral was cancelled.


Ex-Nazi captain Erich Priebke, 83, is surrounded by carabinieri 01 August 1996 in a military court in Rome. (AFP Photo / Gerard Julien)


On Wednesday, the SSPX defended their decision to agree to hold the funeral for Priebke, saying a baptized Christian has the right to a proper burial “no matter what his sins”.


We hereby reiterate our rejection of all forms of anti-Semitism and racial hatred,” the Italian branch of the fringe right-wing group said, as quoted by Reuters.


Reportedly, Italian authorities have been in negotiations with Germany to take Priebke’s remains.


The German Foreign Ministry said on Wednesday that there are no laws preventing a German citizen who has passed away abroad from being buried in the homeland. 


It is in our interests that this case does not become something it shouldn’t – namely an argument about the life of this man,” the ministry’s spokesman told reporters on Wednesday. “It would be nice if Mr. Priebke’s remains could be laid to rest somewhere, without it being used by anyone for political ends.”


For now, the coffin bearing the body of the Nazi war criminal reportedly remains in limbo at a military air base near Rome.




RT – News



Nazi war criminal denied burial in Italy after fierce protests

Nazi war criminal denied burial in Italy after fierce protests



Published time: October 16, 2013 15:54

Protesters and far-right activists clash as Catholic rebels try to hold funeral of Nazi war criminal Erich Priebke in Albano Laziale near Rome on October 15, 2013. (AFP Photo / Vincenzo Pinto)

Protesters and far-right activists clash as Catholic rebels try to hold funeral of Nazi war criminal Erich Priebke in Albano Laziale near Rome on October 15, 2013. (AFP Photo / Vincenzo Pinto)




The funeral of a Nazi war criminal, Erich Priebke, who died in Rome last week, has been halted in Italy after fierce protests. The coffin containing his body has been taken to a military airport with the final destination remaining unclear.


As the country marks the 70th anniversary of the roundup and deportation of Jews from Rome’s ghetto, a leading Italian rabbi praised the protesters who blocked Priebke’s funeral. 


Priebke, a former SS officer, had been serving a life sentence in Rome under house arrest for his participation in one of the worst massacres in German-occupied Italy during World War II – the killing of 335 civilians at the Ardeatine Caves outside the capital in March 1944.


Not only did Priebke never apologize for his crimes, he also defended his wartime actions and denied that Jews were gassed during the Holocaust. In a final interview released by his lawyer after his death, the former SS officer accused the West of inventing such crimes to cover up atrocities committed by the Allies during the war.


After Priebke died last Friday aged 100, a bitter debate has been raging over what to do with his remains, with nowhere apparently willing to offer his body a final resting place.


The Catholic Church in Rome refused his funeral service, despite protests from his family and lawyer.


On Wednesday, Rome’s Jewish Community gathered in the city’s main synagogue to commemorate the 1943 deportation of 1,000 Jews to Auschwitz, of whom only 16 survived.


The head of the Union of Italian Jewish Communities, Renzo Gattegna, drew applause at the ceremony, and, referring to Priebke, he refused to pronounce his name “not to profane this sacred place”.  He added that the Nazis killed the innocent and their “followers are assassins of memory” who “will never win,” AP cited.


For this we feel proud to be Romans,” the President of the Jewish Community of Rome, Riccardo Pacifici, said, according to Reuters.  He said the public outcry over Priebke has shown the “beautiful face of Italy,” with both civil and Catholic Church officials acting in solidarity to deny his burial.


Protesters demonstrate as Catholic rebels try to hold the funeral of Nazi war criminal Erich Priebke in Albano Laziale near Rome on October 15, 2013. (AFP Photo / Vincenzo Pinto)


Argentina, where Priebke spent nearly 50 years before being extradited to Italy in 1995 to stand trial for the WWII massacre, also refused to take him. Previously, his hometown of Hennigsdorf in Germany, had declined, fearing that Priebke’s grave could turn into a neo-Nazi pilgrimage site.


The story got a new twist on Tuesday, when the schismatic Society of St. Pius X (SSPX) in the city of Albano Laziale, south of Rome, agreed to celebrate the funeral Mass. The group is known for the anti-Semitic views of some of its members. It rejects the church’s modernizing moves, such as the teaching that absolved Jews of responsibility for the crucifixion of Jesus and celebrates the pre-Vatican II old Latin Mass.


However, as the coffin with the body of the war criminal arrived for the funeral, it was met by hundreds of angry protesters shouting “murderer” and “executioner.”  Riot police had to hold back outraged protesters who punched the hearse as it was passing by. Protesters also targeted a priest who arrived at the gates and clashed with Nazi sympathizers also gathered at the site. As a result, the funeral was cancelled.


Ex-Nazi captain Erich Priebke, 83, is surrounded by carabinieri 01 August 1996 in a military court in Rome. (AFP Photo / Gerard Julien)


On Wednesday, the SSPX defended their decision to agree to hold the funeral for Priebke, saying a baptized Christian has the right to a proper burial “no matter what his sins”.


We hereby reiterate our rejection of all forms of anti-Semitism and racial hatred,” the Italian branch of the fringe right-wing group said, as quoted by Reuters.


Reportedly, Italian authorities have been in negotiations with Germany to take Priebke’s remains.


The German Foreign Ministry said on Wednesday that there are no laws preventing a German citizen who has passed away abroad from being buried in the homeland. 


It is in our interests that this case does not become something it shouldn’t – namely an argument about the life of this man,” the ministry’s spokesman told reporters on Wednesday. “It would be nice if Mr. Priebke’s remains could be laid to rest somewhere, without it being used by anyone for political ends.”


For now, the coffin bearing the body of the Nazi war criminal reportedly remains in limbo at a military air base near Rome.




RT – News



Nazi war criminal denied burial in Italy after fierce protests

Wednesday, October 2, 2013

Selective Shutdown: NSA Spying Funded, FOIA Requests Denied


The government might be shut down, but both parties have agreed that the National Security Agency’s dragnet surveillance programs will not be impacted by the stoppage.


However, fulfilling the requests of citizens or journalists trying to obtain information about the government’s activities has been deemed not “an essential service.”


As journalist Glenn Greewald tweeted Wednesday morning:


The link is to a NSA/CSS press statement which reads:


Due to the government shutdown, FOIA/PA requests or inquiries submitted to the FOIA/PA Office will not be addressed until the office reopens.



The contradiction has been hit on by other commenters who say the selectivity of the shut down reveals much about the government’s priorities.



Writing at Common Dreams on Tuesday, author and activist Norman Solomon argued not only should the NSA not be funded throughout the so-called “shutdown,” but that it should be permanently shuttered:


At the top of the federal government, even a brief shutdown of “core NSA operations” is unthinkable. But at the grassroots, a permanent shutdown of the NSA should be more than thinkable; we should strive to make it achievable.


NSA documents, revealed by intrepid whistleblower Edward Snowden, make clear what’s at stake. In a word: democracy.


Wielded under the authority of the president, the NSA is the main surveillance tool of the U.S. government. For a dozen years, it has functioned to wreck our civil liberties. It’s a tool that should not exist.



And Rabbi Michael Lerner, writing at Common Dreams on Wednesday, pointed the finger at Democrats, arguing they’ve made it all too easy for the shutdown to hurt everyday workers, but have preserved funding for the sacred cows of war and military spending. Lerner writes:


If [Democrats] had a backbone, they would have insisted that if the government is going to be shut down, then all of the government will be shut. Instead, they’ve taken the standpoint of the Republicans in dividing “essential services” from “non-essential,” and saying only non-essential services are to be shut down. So when it comes to taking care of the poor and the powerless, those services get shut.


What they should have been saying, and could still say, is this: the government finances and the ability to pay the national debt impact everything, and if the Republicans want to shut down the government, then everything will be shut. So, no pay for anyone who receives government pay, including the Congress (which right now continues to get paid), the entire military (after all, we are not in a war, and if we are still fighting in Afghanistan, we shouldn’t be), the entire homeland security, NSA, FBI, etc. including the people searching us when we get on airplanes (and if the airports have to shut down, that’s another consequence of the Republican’s move), the border guards and the entire Immigration and Naturalization service.



_________________________________________


This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 License


Copyright: Common Dreams




WHAT REALLY HAPPENED



Selective Shutdown: NSA Spying Funded, FOIA Requests Denied

Tuesday, June 18, 2013

Media Cut Obama Slack They Denied Bush on NSA



In recent days, there has been discussion about how Democrats and liberals, once severe critics of anti-terror surveillance programs when Republican President George W. Bush was conducting them, have been more careful, and less critical, when responding to the massive data collection sweeps that have come to light under President Obama.


“It is jarring to see the left so compliant now that the surveillance has been sanctioned by a Democratic president,” Washington Post columnist Dana Milbank wrote Sunday.


Milbank raised a valid point. But perhaps even more “jarring” are the carefully chosen, softer words used by the news media when reporting on the Obama program, compared to the inflammatory and alarmist language used when his predecessor was in charge.


When news broke in December 2005 that the Bush administration was engaged in phone wiretaps (without court orders) against suspected terrorists, the major news outlets almost immediately labeled the program “domestic spying.”


“In address, Bush says he ordered domestic spying,” said a Page One headline in The New York Times on Dec. 18, 2005.


The Washington Post, reporting on the same radio address, used similar wording in its headline: “President says he ordered NSA domestic spying.”


The Times and Post news articles each went on to use the word “spying” — which has dark, sinister connotations — four more times, although Bush, in his speech, never used it once. The Post followed up with an editorial: “Spying on Americans.”


So use of the word “spying” was the media’s choice, not the president’s. But the stage was set.
From then on, The Times, The Post and other major news outlets continuously used the phrase “domestic spying” when reporting on the Bush wiretap program months after the initial outburst.


Bush, apparently frustrated by what he saw as media failure to fully explain what was really going on, tried to clarify in a Jan. 23, 2006 speech at Kansas State University. He hoped to get rid of the “spying” label and convince Americans that he was not listening in on phone calls to their mothers.


“I’ll repeat to you, even though you hear words, ‘domestic spying,’ these are not phone calls within the United States. This is a phone call of an al-Qaeda, known al-Qaeda suspect, making a phone call into the United States.”


The presidential explanation didn’t work. Here is the USA Today headline on the speech: “White House steps up defense of domestic spying.”


Fast-forward to June 2013. Obama, thanks to an explosive leak by a National Security Agency contractor, finds himself embroiled in a similar flap over the gathering of domestic intelligence. This time, he is in charge of what appears to be the most sweeping “domestic spying” mission ever undertaken. “Unprecedented” is a word Obama likes to use. That’s what it is. And while the news media have not shied away from covering the controversial program and its citizen-privacy ramifications, the style, tone and use of language are far different from the Bush days.


Mostly gone from the reporting is the loaded phrase “domestic spying.” Instead, we find a flurry of euphemisms such as “call monitoring,” “data collection,” “data mining,” “data gathering” and “electronic surveillance.” Most news outlets that continue to use the word “spying” when referring to the current U.S. intelligence gathering programs are foreign newspapers and broadcasters.


“Top official tries to quell US spying scandal,” said a headline in the June 10 New Zealand Herald.
Moreover, many of the reports repeatedly remind us that the programs in question began under the Bush administration. So, by implication, it’s not really Obama’s fault.


Last Sunday’s Washington Post front page had a nearly 2,000-word story on the surveillance controversy headlined “NSA Surveillance: The Architecture.” It strongly reiterated the point that this is what Bush wrought.


There were no photos on the front page, but when you jumped inside there was a four-column picture of Bush, Vice President Cheney and two other top aides in a 2008 visit to NSA headquarters at Fort Meade, Md. There also were smaller headshot photos of two Bush legal and security aides and one more picture of protesters at a 2007 Senate hearing wearing oversized sunglasses with the message “Stop Spying.” The witness at that hearing was then-Bush intelligence director Mike McConnell.


Oddly, many news stories on the current surveillance controversy do not feature photos of Obama unless he is directly addressing the issue. It conveys that while this is a serious problem, it is not necessarily Obama’s problem. He’s busy showing the world that he’s doing other things. That’s the way he likes it. And so, apparently, do the news media. 




RealClearPolitics – Articles



Media Cut Obama Slack They Denied Bush on NSA

Sunday, June 9, 2013

US officials long denied massive data trawling


WASHINGTON (AP) — For years, top officials of the Bush and Obama administrations dismissed fears about secret government data-mining by reassuring Congress that there were no secret nets trawling for Americans’ phone and Internet records.


“We do not vacuum up the contents of communications under the president’s program and then use some sort of magic after the intercept to determine which of those we want to listen to, deal with or report on,” then-CIA Director Michael Hayden told a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing in July 2006.


But on Friday, President Barack Obama himself acknowledged the existence of such programs even as he gave the government’s standard rationale to ease fears that Americans’ privacy rights are being violated.


“By sifting through this so-called metadata, they might identify potential leads of people who might engage in terrorism,” Obama said during an exchange with reporters at a health care event in San Jose, Calif.


Obama’s comments marked the first time a U.S. president publicly acknowledged the government’s electronic sleuthing on its citizens. They came in response to media reports and published classified documents that detailed the government’s secret mass collection of phone and Internet communications.


When top officials in the Obama and Bush administrations have been asked in recent years whether U.S. citizens’ communications were swept up as part of government surveillance, they’ve often responded with swift, flat denials. The denials were often carefully constructed to avoid any hints of the activities they were denying.


Even Obama’s predecessor, George W. Bush, sidestepped what he described as a kerfuffle about his administration’s secret electronic intelligence-gathering.


During a March 2006 appearance at the City Club of Cleveland, Bush described the NSA effort only as “a program that will enable us to listen from a known al-Qaida person and/or affiliate from making a phone call outside the United States in or inside the United States out, with the idea of being able to pick up quickly information for which to be able to respond in the environment we’re in.” He added: “I believe what I’m doing is constitutional, and I know it’s necessary. And so we’re going to keep doing it.”


His vice president, Dick Cheney, was more blunt during a radio appearance, denying the government was engaging in domestic surveillance.


“This is not a domestic surveillance program,” Cheney told radio host Hugh Hewitt, adding that “what we’re interested in are intercepting communications, one end of which are outside the United States and one end of which we have reason to believe is al-Qaida-related.”


Technically, Cheney’s description of the program was accurate. His insistence that the Bush administration was not engaged in domestic surveillance is more debatable.


Reports that first appeared in Britain’s Guardian newspaper and The Washington Post indicate that the NSA pulls in phone records, though not the actual content of the calls, from its secret warrants allowing it to collect data from major telecom companies. The program is aimed at detecting the calling patterns of terrorist suspects. A separate government program also collects massive amounts of data from at least nine Internet and electronic firms, pulling in everything from emails to photographs. Obama said Friday that the electronic data-mining is not aimed at American citizens or inside the U.S.


Several top Bush administration officials adamantly insisted that the government was not engaged in mass data-trawling as part of its secret NSA programs.


After a New York Times expose raised concerns about NSA targeting Americans’ phone records, Hayden told a National Press Club audience in January 2006 that there was no effort to cast a wide net over communications data.


“This is targeted and focused,” said Hayden, the principal deputy director of national intelligence at the time. “This is not about intercepting conversations between people in the United States. This is hot pursuit of communications entering or leaving America involving someone we believe is associated with al-Qaida.”


Bush’s attorney general, Alberto Gonzales, also minimized the reach of the NSA data-gathering, telling a Senate Judiciary hearing in February 2006 that “this surveillance is narrowly focused and fully consistent with the traditional forms of enemy surveillance found to be necessary in all previous armed conflicts.”


Bush administration officials were repeatedly pressed by Congress about the NSA efforts in 2005 and 2006, as the Senate and House debated whether to extend the Patriot Act and many of its provisions that gave the government broad power to conduct surveillance and data collection. But once the Patriot Act’s main provisions were reauthorized and signed into law by Bush in March 2006, public congressional concerns over the NSA’s authority seemed to dissipate.


A review of congressional transcripts shows that from 2006 well into Obama’s first term, top administration officials were rarely questioned publicly about the NSA’s data-gathering activities. Instead, the agency’s new director, Keith B. Alexander, was most often pressed about the NSA’s growing efforts in cyberwarfare and security.


It was not until May 2011, as the Patriot Act again faced another reauthorization, that the NSA’s secret programs began to receive cryptic attention from two Democratic senators, Ron Wyden of Oregon and Mark Udall of Colorado. Hobbled by the classified nature of the secret programs, the two senators offered up only guarded warnings.


“When the American people find out how their government has secretly interpreted the Patriot Act, they will be stunned and they will be angry,” Wyden said during a floor speech in May 2011. He added: “Many members of Congress have no idea how the law is being secretly interpreted by the executive branch, because that interpretation is classified.”


Still hamstrung by the programs’ security classification in 2013, Wyden pressed National Intelligence Director James Clapper at a Senate Intelligence Committee hearing in March about the NSA. “Does the NSA collect any type of data at all on millions or hundreds of millions of Americans?” he asked.


“No, sir,” Clapper replied. He added: “Not wittingly. There are cases where they could inadvertently perhaps collect but not wittingly.”


This week, after the new revelations about the NSA’s massive data haul, Clapper acknowledged the existence of both of the agency’s secret operations and denounced the media disclosures as “reprehensible.”


When contacted by the National Journal about his earlier exchange with Wyden, Clapper stood by his earlier comments denying that the NSA is collecting massive troves of data.


“What I said was, the NSA does not voyeuristically pore through U.S. citizens’ emails,” Clapper said. “I stand by that.”




Congress News Headlines – Yahoo! News



US officials long denied massive data trawling

Thursday, February 28, 2013

‘Americans denied right to free speech’

The US has eroded freedom of speech, moral values and human rights for the American people over the past decades, a political activist tells Press TV.

“[US President] Barack Obama came into office as a constitutional professor and we have seen him do more damage to our constitution than even George Bush did,” said Tighe Barry, an activist with the CODEPINK group.

The advocate further criticized Washington for manipulating the American public by denying them the information needed to make decisions in the political atmosphere.

“It is unfortunate because the people do need to have this information if they are going to make good decisions on what they want out of their foreign policy from their leaders,” said Barry.

Americans have known that their rights are being stolen but they do not want to know the extent of the loss of their freedoms, the activist added.

“They see it on their television sets. They see it in the way their leaders are composing themselves. They see it in the fact that every day you see different headlines of companies that have given up information to the government – your cell phones are now being tapped, we are being watched around the globe, our passports have special chips in them,” said Barry.


He went on to condemn the United States for failing to follow the principles of ‘freedom of speech’ in its foreign policy regarding censorship of Iranian media.

The United States imposed fresh sanctions last month on Iran that include bans on the country’s media despite Washington’s claims of protecting freedom of speech.

“As a matter of fact, we are seeing that the United States and its European and NATO allies seem to be putting pressure around the world to pigeonhole countries such as Iran, Russia and other ones that are not in the sphere of influence of the United States and the European NATO countries,” Barry concluded.

GMA/HGH/SL


PRESS TV RSS News


‘Americans denied right to free speech’