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MEAN STREETS MEDIA

Tuesday, March 5, 2013

Japan ( Man dies after 25 Hospitals reject him 36 times )

Man dies after hospitals reject him 36 times

The ambulance eventually made a 20 minute drive to a hospital in neighbouring Ibaraki prefecture, but the man was pronounced dead shortly after arrival. The cause of death has not been made public.

One of the paramedics told Jiji Press they had never experienced "a patient being rejected so many times".

The city of Kuki, where the man lived, in Saitama prefecture, has asked hospitals in the region to improve their emergency room capacity, the official said.

Public healthcare in Japan is heavily subsidised and generally of a high global standard.

But commentators warn that with a population that is living longer and with fewer young people entering the workforce, healthcare operators could become increasingly strained over the coming decades.

Monday, March 4, 2013

Arizona Tribes speak out ( Mike and Molly's TV show and comment about drunk Arizona Indians )

Arizona tribes stunned by 'Mike & Molly' alcoholism joke


Mike & Molly
Billy Gardell and Melissa McCarthy star in the CBS series "Mike & Molly."
CBS

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FLAGSTAFF — Arizona tribal members say they’re shocked by a television sitcom that made fun of one of the most pervasive social ills on American Indian reservations — alcoholism.
One of the characters on the CBS show “Mike & Molly” joked about drunken Indians in Arizona, a state that is home to 21 federally recognized American Indian tribes. Although drinking and selling alcohol largely is banned on reservations, it can easily be found in border towns, brought in by bootleggers or sneaked past authorities.
No one disputes that public intoxication is a problem on and off the reservations, but tribal members say alcoholism often is linked to poverty, hopelessness and a history of trauma within American Indian families that is hard to overcome. American Indians and Alaska Natives die at a higher rate from alcoholism than other Americans, according to federal data, and authorities say alcohol fuels a majority of violent crimes on reservations.
“You can see somebody who is drunk and tripping over themselves and it’s easy to make fun of them,” said Erny Zah, a spokesman for the Navajo Nation, which extends into Arizona, New Mexico and Utah. “But the disease itself isn’t funny, the coming home late at night, possibly beating on family members, the absence of family members, the fear it instills in a lot of children.”
The Native American Journalists Association called on CBS to apologize, saying it’s inexplicable for a highly entertaining show to resort to humor at the expense of Arizona tribes. The group urged screenwriters to think twice about what might offend minority groups and to work to overcome stereotypes.
“I think a lot of times people make excuses for when they do those type of jokes or sarcasm,” said NAJA President Rhonda LeValdo, who is from Acoma Pueblo in New Mexico. “To me, it’s not funny making fun of a minority group. Are we supposed to be the entertainment for mainstream?”
The joke about American Indians in Arizona last week was brief and made by Mike’s mother on the show, played by Rondi Reed. The show that airs on Mondays debuted in September 2010, starring Billy Gardell and Melissa McCarthy as a couple who found love at an Overeaters Anonymous meeting.
CBS spokesman Chris Ender declined to comment.
Not all viewers were offended by the joke, with some posting on the show’s Facebook page that anyone who didn’t like it can tune out.
Racheal Povatah, a member of the Hopi tribe in northern Arizona, didn’t watch the episode that included the joke but heard about it and was offended. Despite a strong cultural and traditional background, she said tribal members turn to alcohol, drugs and self-destructive behavior to mask the pain of trauma they have suffered.
“Sometimes it’s a decision it doesn’t seem like we can make on our own, it’s just there,” she said. “There’s so much that goes along with it.”
Zah said an apology won’t fix the negative perception of American Indians that the show perpetuated, and joking about alcoholism disregards the progress tribes have made or their contributions to address alcoholism.
“I would hope the rest of the country would be educated enough to understand we are more than what that comment made us out to be,” he said. “We have educated people who are in the highest parts of the government, science, everywhere within this country.”

India ( 4 Policemen beat woman on video- then beat family for talking )see video

Four cops suspended after woman beaten on camera




Tarn Taran: Policemen in Punjab are seen clearly on camera hitting a young woman who allegedly tried to complain about harassment by a truck driver. The shocking footage was shot on a cellphone by a witness.

Four policemen have been suspended for the brutal assault.


The 23-year-old woman says she was harassed by the truck driver while returning from a wedding party.

Her family then decided to approach constables who they spotted on the road at Tarn Taran near Amritsar.

But, the woman says, instead of helping her, the policemen took a bribe from the driver and started beating her.

Despite the footage, a senior police officer tried to defend the cops involved. "I don't think our cops did anything (wrong)... they were actually trying to intervene and stop the fight between two sides," said Sukhbir Singh, who heads the local police station.

Some policemen said that the altercation began when constables tried to arrest the victim's father, who was allegedly drunk and was misbehaving. They say the woman tried to stop her father from being taken away by the policemen. However, they agreed that even if that were the case, there was no justification for the police hitting her in retaliation.

Sunday, March 3, 2013

CHINA ( Chinese trader - Li Fangwei earned 10 million from illegal sales to Iran ) Missile Issue

Chinese trader accused of busting Iran missile embargo
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(Reuters) - A Chinese businessman indicted in the United States over sales of missile parts to Iran is still making millions of dollars from the trade, say security officials who monitor compliance with Western and U.N. sanctions.
These officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the businessman, Li Fangwei, has earned at least $10 million from illegal sales to Iran since his indictment by the New York County District Attorney in 2009.

Trade sanctions are at the heart of international efforts to curb Iran's nuclear program for fear it is for military ends - a suspicion Iran rejects. Li's alleged activities may point to Iran's resourcefulness in circumventing those sanctions and turn a spotlight on China's ability to police its own export restrictions.
It is hard to quantify the contribution of foreign firms and individuals to Iran's nuclear and missile programs, but analysts believe some vital components are all but impossible for Tehran to produce at home

Colombia ( Colombia coffee strike continues - protesters block road )

Colombia coffee strike to continue: Growers
Colombia coffee strike
Colombia coffee growers denied Saturday having reached a deal with the government. Instead they announced to continue their strike and the blocking of roads to demand government aid for one of Colombia's most iconic economic sectors.
In a press release published on Facebook, the striking coffee growers said the announcement of President Juan Manuel Santos earlier in the day was a "pharce" and "has nothing to do with the people on strike."
Tens of thousands of growers have been on strike throughout the country since Monday to demand more government support. According to the strikers and Colombia's coffee growers federation Fedecafe, inflated coffee prices and an expensive peso is forcing the coffee producers to sell their beans below production cost.
Santos had vowed an increase in financial aid for the sector, but according to the coffee growers "the announced measure is insufficient taking the magnitude of the problem in account."
Additionally, the coffee growers say the government "unilaterally broke off the talks with the movement's spokespersons en let them wait in vain for a second meeting on [Friday] March 1."
While the growers and their federation agree current government assistance for the sector is insufficient, there have been tensions between Fedecafe and its striking members over how to approach a solution to what they agree is a lack of government support.

India ( Uncle arrested for killing the 2 kidnapped children found dead )

Delhi siblings strangled, crushed with a rock, says police; uncle, two others arrested

New Delhi: The two siblings, whose decomposed bodies were found near Pragati Maidan in Delhi yesterday, had been killed on February 26 itself, the day they were kidnapped from their school in Mandawli in East Delhi. The Delhi Police today arrested three men, including an uncle of the children, who revealed to them the gruesome details of the killings.

Police says Amit Singh, the maternal uncle of the children, was the mastermind in the case. Jobless, he wanted to try his hand in the real estate business and had fixed a deal for a flat for Rs. 13 lakhs. The owners of the flat wanted Rs. 6 lakh as advance, which led Amit Singh to plot a conspiracy, along with two of his friends, to kidnap the children. Amit Singh was under the perception that the children's parents had a lot of money.

Last Tuesday, Amit Singh's friends locked the door of the children's house so that their mother could not reach the school. Amit Singh then went to the school and picked up the children himself.

Thinking it would be tough to keep the children with them as they were insisting on getting back home, the accused decided to kill the children. They took the children near Pragati Maidan, first killed the girl and then the boy by strangling them, and then crushed their bodies with a rock. The bodies were left to be eaten by stray dogs.

The kidnappers had called the parents a few times and demanded Rs. 30 lakh as ransom. They also informed the parents about the place they wanted them to come to with the desired money and fixed the time for meeting twice. The kidnappers had planned to flee once the ransom was delivered, the police said.

The parents, however, did not go to pay the amount hoping the police would nab the culprits.

"We knew that some relative was involved, our prime objective was to recuse the kids but it's unfortunate that we couldn't," the police said in a press conference today.

"After analysing the calls, we realised that the kidnappers were insiders. We wanted to save the children. Hence we did not take any drastic action. We knew that Amit Singh had recently rented a flat behind the family. We picked him up first and he confessed," the police said.

They said that the accused will be charged with kidnapping, murder and destruction of evidence.

Speaking on the tragic killings, Delhi Chief Minister Sheila Dikshit today said that law and order could be a problem, but one could blame it only to an extent. "There might be a lack of law and order. But it only goes so far. We're also responsible for seeing how such instances can be curbed," she said.

Iran Man ( Beaten and tortured by Prison guards - Father of 3 yr old boy killed) Just like Blogger

Iran: A prisoner killed under torture
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Amir Moussaei killed under torture
NCRI - The Iranian regime henchmen have killed Amir Mousaei, a 38 years old man, under torture in southern city of Borazjan’s prison on Friday, February 1.

Amir, a father of a three year old son, and a respected athletic among his friends and residents of southern city of Shiraz, was being chased for a long time by the agents of Iranian regime’s Ministry of Intelligence and Ministry and Revolutionary Guards (IRGC).

He was in his father’s house in Genaveh in mid January when Revolutionary Guards raided the house, arrested him and transferred to Genaveh prison. He was tortured in Genaveh prison for two days and then transferred to Borazjan city prison.

In Borazjan prison he was transferred to solitary confinement after 12 days of torture.

Three days later while he was quite ill and his body deeply infected because of the wounds, he was transferred to the hospital and his family was told that they could visit him in hospital in Borazjan.

To his family’s surprise, Amir was unconscious and his body was mostly infected and covered by bruises.

As Amir became conscious for a short period, he revealed some of the tortures he went through during the 15 days of torture.

He said he was beaten in his head by batons and in his stomach by a metal rod.

He said the strikes were so severe that all his intestines had been damaged. In the last moments of his life in the hospital, he asked if he could see his son. The severances of the injuries were so much that he died before having the chance to see his son for the last time.

While in prison, his parents and relatives had tried so hard to obtain a temporary release for him by providing bonds, so they could take him to the hospital, but the efforts did not have any result. Instead, he got beaten and tortured more and more in the prison.

The news of killing of defenseless Amir angered people in Genaveh who gathered the next day at his father’s house cursing Khamenei and others for Amir’s death.

This is the fourth case of killing prisoners under torture which has surfaced in recent months. Prior to Amir, Sattar Beheshti, a blogger from Robat Karim located in the vicinity of Tehran; Keramatollah Zareian, a university student in Tehran; and Jalil Savidi, a plumber from city of Ahwaz had been killed under torture.

The clerical regime in Iran is taking more tolls as the silence and inaction by the International community with regards to these atrocities continues.

The Iranian regime’s dossier on severe and systematic human rights violation in Iran should be referred to the UN Security Council and the prosecution of Iranian regime’s leader for crime against humanity is a necessary step to end the cycle of crime and repression in Iran.