A child’s drawing of the civil war in Syria. Many children who have stayed in the increasingly ravaged country “face bombardment, food shortages and bitter cold without fuel or school.”
Bradley Secker / For The Washington Post
A child’s drawing of the civil war in Syria. Many children who have stayed in the increasingly ravaged country “face bombardment, food shortages and bitter cold without fuel or school.”
Bradley Secker / For The Washington Post
TWO WARS Above, Palestinian firefighters battle flames inside a building hit by an Israeli airstrike in Gaza City on Monday; below, an Israeli police officer inspects an unexploded missile fired at the city of Ashkelon by Palestinian militants. (Photos: Oliver Weiken / EPA [top]; Jim Hollander / EPA, via The Wall Street Journal)
Civilians in Tel Aviv, Israel run for cover during a rocket attack launched from Gaza. President Barack Obama expressed support for Israel, saying “There’s no country on earth that would tolerate missiles raining down on its citizens from outside its borders.” More than 500 missiles have struck inside the country since Wednesday, killing three Israelis and wounding more than 60. (Photo: Uriel Sinai / Getty Images via The Guardian)
Elbaite from Afghanistan by Dan Weinrich
An injured Palestinian construction worker screams in pain after an Israeli army driver drove a trailer hooked to a tractor over his legs, as he tried to block him when Israeli forces stopped workers on January 25, 2012 from building a house in al-Dirat village, south of Yatta in the southern Bank town Hebron region. (Photo: Hazem Bader / AFP via MSNBC.com)
Incredibly, the Israeli Embassy in Washington mounted a campaign, shortly after this photo was first published, trying to get newspapers and other news outlets to stop running the photo, implying the picture was somehow staged. However, Agence France Presse, the wire service that disseminated the photo, confirmed the Palestinian worker’s account with other media at the scene — including a medical certificate detailing his injuries.
How not to censor the news media, Vol. 1.
YEMEN: Yemen malnutrition data should “shock”
IRIN reports:
“Yemen’s Ministry of Public Health and Population, with the support of UNICEF, surveyed 3,104 households in Hudeidah Governorate in October and collected data on 4,668 children under five.
The survey found a global acute malnutrition (GAM) rate of 31.7 percent - meaning nearly one third of children surveyed suffered from either moderate or severe acute malnutrition - of which nearly 10 percent were severe cases. These figures are more than double the internationally recognized emergency threshold of 15 percent. The survey also found that nearly 60 percent of children were underweight and 54.5 percent stunted, meaning their height was too low for their age, a sign of longer-term malnutrition.”
read the rest at: Yemen | Children | Early Warning | Food Security | Governance | Health & Nutrition)
In Newt’s new Crusade against the Arab Spring, the ever-insightful Juan Cole writes:
Weirdly, he began his attack on the 2011 protest movements in the Middle East by lamenting that the number of Christians in Iraq has fallen from 1.2 million to 500,000. He observed, “This is why the current strategy in the Middle East is such a total grotesque failure…. People say, ‘Oh, isn’t this great, we’re having an Arab spring.’ Well, I don’t know, I think we may in fact be having an anti-Christian spring. I think people should take this pretty soberly.”
The foreign military conquest and occupation of Iraq took place in 2003 and has nothing to do with the Arab Spring. (No one among the activists ever even mentioned Iraq, except as a negative example. “Let’s not do that, it is what the Americans did in Iraq.”)
SLAUGHTERED People run to help a man lying on the ground after a rocket attack on Jan. 11 in the western city of Homs, Syria. A Western journalist, Gilies Jacquier of France Televisions (not pictured above) was killed and a number of other reporters were wounded when a rocket exploded as they covered a story in the Syrian city of Homs, a witness told AFP. Homs is one of the major hot spots of the 10-month-old uprising against President Bashar al-Assad; the journalists were on a visit organized by Syrian authorities. (Photo: Joseph Eid / AFP-Getty via MSNBC.com)
Ugh. This is disgusting and shameful and should be condemned by any and all sides.
Egyptian army soldiers arrest a woman protester during clashes with military police near Cairo’s downtown Tahrir Square, Friday, Dec. 16, 2011. Activists say the clashes began after soldiers severely beat a young man who was part of a sit-in outside the Cabinet building.
Protesters keep a pathway clear to move injured people during nearby clashes with Egyptian riot police in Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Tuesday, Nov. 22, 2011. Egypt’s ruling military moved up the date for transferring power to a civilian government to July next year and consulted Tuesday with political parties on forming a new Cabinet. But the major concessions were immediately rejected by tens of thousands of protesters in Cairo’s iconic Tahrir Square threatening a “second revolution.” (Tara Todras-Whitehill)
Syria’s Leader Assad denies he Ordered Crackdowns
Syria’s president has denied that he ordered the deadly crackdown on an almost nine-month-old uprising, saying that he is not in charge of the country’s security forces blamed for killing more than 4,000 people.
In a rare interview with the US broadcaster ABC airing on Wednesday, Bashar al-Assad maintained that he did not give a command “to kill or be brutal”.
“They’re not my forces,” Assad responded when asked if Syrian troops had cracked down too hard on protesters.
“They are military forces (who) belong to the government. I don’t own them. I’m president. I don’t own the country. No government in the world kills its people, unless it is led by a crazy person.”
However, in his role as president, Assad is officially the commander of Syria’s armed forces, who have reportedly used tanks, warships, plain-clothed militias, and snipers to besiege dissidents in residential areas across the country.
As a result of the brutality, up to 25,000 members of Syria’s security forces have defected to the opposition and have taken up arms to protect civilians from the crackdown.
The huge explosion that destroyed a major missile-testing site near Tehran three weeks ago was a major setback for Iran’s most advanced long-range missile program, according to American and Israeli intelligence officials and missile technology experts.
In interviews, current and former officials said surveillance photos showed that the Iranian base was a central testing center for advanced solid-fuel missiles, an assessment backed by outside experts who have examined satellite photos showing that the base was almost completely leveled in the blast. Such missiles can be launched almost instantly, making them useful to Iran as a potential deterrent against pre-emptive attacks by Israel or the United States, and they are also better suited than older liquid-fuel designs for carrying warheads long distances.
It is still unclear what caused the explosion, with American officials saying they believe it was probably an accident, perhaps because of Iran’s inexperience with a volatile, dangerous technology. Iran declared it an accident, but subsequent discussions of the episode in the Iranian news media have referred to the chief of Iran’s missile program as one of the “martyrs” killed in the huge explosion. Some Iranian officials have talked of sabotage, but it is unclear whether that is based on evidence or surmise after several years in which Iranian nuclear scientists have been assassinated on Tehran’s streets, and a highly sophisticated computer worm has attacked its main uranium production facility.
Both American and Israeli officials, in discussing the explosion in recent days, showed little curiosity about its cause. “Anything that buys us time and delays the day when the Iranians might be able to mount a nuclear weapon on an accurate missile is a small victory,” one Western intelligence official who has been deeply involved in countering the Iranian nuclear program said this weekend. “At this point, we’ll take whatever we can get, however it happens.”
In addition to providing a potential deterrent to attackers, Iran’s advances in solid-fuel missile technology, and the concern it could eventually have intercontinental reach, have been at the heart of the Obama administration’s insistence on the need for new missile-defense programs.