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TDB Top 5 International Stories: Friday 31st March 2017

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5: Amnesty: Hundreds of Iraqi Civilians Killed in U.S. Airstrikes After Being Told Not to Flee Mosul

The Iraq War started 14 years ago this month, and it is showing no signs of letting up. Since President Trump took office, the U.S. military has expanded its aerial bombing campaign targeting areas held by the Islamic State. The Air Force Times is reporting U.S.-backed military aircraft have dropped over 2,000 bombs on the ISIS-held city of Mosul so far this month. According to Airwars, almost 1,500 civilians have reportedly been killed in U.S. airstrikes in Iraq and Syria this month alone. On March 17, a U.S. airstrike in Mosul reportedly killed up to 200 civilians. Meanwhile, Amnesty International is reporting that hundreds of Iraqi civilians have been killed by U.S.-led airstrikes inside their homes or in places where they sought refuge following Iraqi government advice not to leave during the offensive to recapture the city of Mosul. We speak to Donatella Rovera, senior crisis response adviser at Amnesty International.

Democracy Now

4: Land Day 2017: Israel’s relentless land grab continues

Today’s commemoration of Land Day is an emblematic reminder of the countless human rights violations that have characterised half a century of Palestinian land confiscation and dispossession.

During the first Land Day in 1976 Palestinian citizens of Israel protested against the Israeli government’s expropriation of 2,000 hectares of land surrounding Palestinian villages in the Galilee. Six Palestinians were killed and more than 100 were injured when Israeli forces crushed the protests.

Every year since, Palestinian communities in Israel and the Occupied Palestinian Territories (OPT) have gathered on March 30 to commemorate these events to highlight Israel’s ongoing seizure of Palestinian land, and to reaffirm their connection to the land.

This year’s Land Day will be marked with a march between Deir Hana and Sakhnin in northern Israel, as well as demonstrations and events across central Israel and the Negev/Naqab region, and in the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip. The protests are often met with brutal and excessive use of force by Israel.

Aljazeera

3: FACEBOOK FAILED TO PROTECT 30 MILLION USERS FROM HAVING THEIR DATA HARVESTED BY TRUMP CAMPAIGN AFFILIATE

IN 2014, TRACES of an unusual survey, connected to Facebook, began appearing on internet message boards. The boards were frequented by remote freelance workers who bid on “human intelligence tasks” in an online marketplace, called Mechanical Turk, controlled by Amazon. The “turkers,” as they’re known, tend to perform work that is rote and repetitive, like flagging pornographic images or digging through search engine results for email addresses. Most jobs pay between 1 and 15 cents. “Turking makes us our rent money and helps pay off debt,” one turker told The Intercept. Another turker has called the work “voluntarily slave labor.”

The task posted by “Global Science Research” appeared ordinary, at least on the surface. The company offered turkers $1 or $2 to complete an online survey. But there were a couple of additional requirements as well. First, Global Science Research was only interested in American turkers. Second, the turkers had to download a Facebook app before they could collect payment. Global Science Research said the app would “download some information about you and your network … basic demographics and likes of categories, places, famous people, etc. from you and your friends.”

“Our terms of service clearly prohibit misuse,” said a spokesperson for Amazon Web Services, by email. “When we learned of this activity back in 2015, we suspended the requester for violating our terms of service.”

Although Facebook’s early growth was driven by closed, exclusive networks at college and universities, it has gradually herded users to agree to increasingly permissive terms of service. By 2014, anything a user’s friends could see was also potentially visible to the developers of any app that they chose to download. Some of the turkers noticed that the Global Science Research app appeared to be taking advantage of Facebook’s porousness. “Someone can learn everything about you by looking at hundreds of pics, messages, friends, and likes,” warned one, writing on a message board. “More than you realize.” Others were more blasé. “I don’t put any info on FB,” one wrote. “Not even my real name … it’s backwards that people put sooo much info on Facebook, and then complain when their privacy is violated.”

In late 2015, the turkers began reporting that the Global Science Research survey had abruptly shut down. The Guardian had published a report that exposed exactly who the turkers were working for. Their data was being collected by Aleksandr Kogan, a young lecturer at Cambridge University. Kogan founded Global Science Research in 2014, after the university’s psychology department refused to allow him to use its own pool of data for commercial purposes. The data collection that Kogan undertook independent of the university was done on behalf of a military contractor called Strategic Communication Laboratories, or SCL. The company’s election division claims to use “data-driven messaging” as part of “delivering electoral success.”

SCL has a growing U.S. spin-off, called Cambridge Analytica, which was paid millions of dollars by Donald Trump’s campaign. Much of the money came from committees funded by the hedge fund billionaire Robert Mercer, who reportedly has a large stake in Cambridge Analytica. For a time, one of Cambridge Analytica’s officers was Stephen K. Bannon, Trump’s senior adviser. Months after Bannon claimed to have severed ties with the company, checks from the Trump campaign for Cambridge Analytica’s services continued to show up at one of Bannon’s addresses in Los Angeles.

“You can say Mr. Mercer declined to comment,” said Jonathan Gasthalter, a spokesperson for Robert Mercer, by email.

The Intercept

2: White House invites lawmakers to view intelligence material on Trump ties

The White House refused to say on Thursday whether it gave Devin Nunes, the top Republican on the House intelligence committee, access to highly classified materials.

But it invited a bipartisan group from the panel to view information it says relates to surveillance of Donald Trump’s associates.

The New York Times reported that two White House officials – including an intelligence aide whose job was recently saved by Trump – helped Nunes view intelligence. Nunes is chair of the House intelligence panel, which is investigating Russian ties to the 2016 election and possible Trump campaign connections to Russia.

The committee’s work has been deeply, and perhaps irreparably, undermined by Nunes’s apparent coordination with the White House. He told reporters last week that he had seen troubling information about the improper distribution of Trump associates’ intercepted communications, and he briefed the president on the material, all before informing his Democratic counterpart on the House committee.

The Guardian 

1: Why We Need to Challenge the Culture of Monogamy

Relationship norms are so pervasive that they’ve led to flawed science.

As someone who identifies as poly, I’ve often experienced negativity from those who don’t think outside of how their relationships function. At times, this judgment has come from those close to me. “You’re just slutty” or “Your man is OK with that, really?” are words I’ve heard over and over, not to mention those who’ve tried to rat me out to my primary partner for what they construe as “cheating.”

Because of these kinds of reactions to who I am, I’ve always kind of known that our society isn’t built for people like me. And, according to newly released research, it turns out that the norm of monogamy is so pervasive it extends past the realm of our social interactions and into to the field of science.

Vice News

 

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The Daily Blog Open Mic – Friday 31st March 2017

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openmike

 

Announce protest actions, general chit chat or give your opinion on issues we haven’t covered for the day.

Moderation rules are more lenient for this section, but try and play nicely.

 

 

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Union questions ethical status at Ceres “Certified” Organics as workers strike

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Union questions ethical status at Ceres “Certified” Organics as workers strike

Approximately 10 distribution centre workers at Ceres Organics, an “ethical” food supplier, are taking strike action today as the workers’ union accuses the company of failing to meet ethical certification standards.

The distribution centre workers – striking for the second time as the company repeatedly refuses to negotiate over better wages, redundancy entitlements and overtime rates – say Ceres Organics also denied union members their right to natural justice.

“We’re aware of cases where workers at Ceres Organics were denied the right to representation and due process,” said the workers’ representative, FIRST Union organiser Marcus Coverdale.

“It’s not enough for Ceres Organics to just act as an ethical trader, the company has to act as an ethical employer too.”

“Denying people their right to natural justice isn’t the kind of behaviour you’d expect from an ethically certified employer.”

Ceres Organics market their products as fair trade with BioGro as their ‘certifier of choice’. However, unethical employment practices mean that, from the workers’ perspective, the company falls short of the standard required for certification.

“Ceres Organics is a certified organic company and to qualify for certification you have to respect workers’ rights. Refusing to negotiate over wages, denying people their natural justice rights, this isn’t what an ethical company looks like,” said Coverdale.

“In the end our members aren’t asking for much. Just job security, a wage they can live on and respect for their rights. That’s why they’re taking action today.”

Workers will picket outside the Ponsonby Central Markets, Ponsonby, Auckland from 11:30am today. They will also hand out leaflets to customers.

 

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A tale of two countries: While Canada legalises cannabis, NZ Police charge more people

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As Canada’s Prime Minister Justin Trudeau makes good on his campaign pledge to make cannabis legal by 2018, the latest figures obtained by NORML show the New Zealand Police are now charging more people for cannabis offences.

Trudeau announced yesterday that legislation would be introduced in April, and regulations enacted by the end of the year, to create a legal, adults-only, and taxable market for cannabis.

Retail stores selling government-procured cannabis will be R18, and adults will also be able to grow their own, with a standard limit of four plants per household. Under the proposals, cannabis lounges or “social clubs” will be able to operate as long as they are alcohol- and tobacco-free.

Medicinal cannabis has been legal in Canada since 1999 and will still be an option for many, with prices expected to be lower than for the regular adult market.

To satisfy the Single Convention on Drugs – which both New Zealand and Canada signed up to way back in 1961 – Canada’s legal cannabis supplies will be purchased by a single federal agency which will then onsell them to local stores.

It’s kinda similar to how commodities used to be sold in NZ, with the old Apple and Pear Marketing Board. Wool and most of our other farming products were also bought by central co-ops then on sold to the marketplace.

If that sounds old fashioned, it’s actually an imaginative and novel approach to satisfying the demands of the international drug control treaties, which the international community failed to amend last year. UNGASS 2016 was the big chance to end the devastating War on Drugs but countries including New Zealand – represented by Peter Dunne – did little other than talk about it.

It’s also similar to the Cannabis Social Club as Incorporated Societies model proposed last year by Dr Chris Wilkins of Massey University. I blogged about that here.

What’s really old fashioned is the attitude of the New Zealand Police.

The latest figures obtained by NORML show they are not charging fewer people for cannabis, but more. Ignoring the wishes of the community, they are spending more time and more money on it, and filling our courts and jails with even more canna-folk.

In the 8 months to August 2016, police laid 3387 charges for possession of cannabis (around fourteen people every day). This compares to 3891 in all of 2015.

But if those first 8 months in 2016 are typical and the same rate occurred in the rest of the year, it would be around 5080 arrests – an increase of 30 per cent over the year before.

Thirty per cent!

The same pattern is apparent for providers charged with growing or selling cannabis.

The data is for charges (not arrests) so they each represent a person who the police have decided to not let go with a warning but to throw at them the full weight of the law. Admittedly, it is down from the peak arrest rate in 2009, but it still begs the question of why NZ Police have now decided to charge more people with cannabis offences.

It’s worth considering the context. This increase in charges was at the same time as Helen Kelly was bravely fighting lung cancer and very publicly using cannabis medicinally. Cannabis has been in the media most days and we’ve been having a massive public debate about our laws. Three major polls put support for medicinal cannabis law reform in the 75-80 per cent range, and support for wider reforms (like Canada) at a healthy 60 per cent.

Government figures also emerged during this period that showed one-in-twenty New Zealanders is using cannabis medicinally – almost half of all cannabis consumption. How are police to know whether a cannabis consumer is using it medicinally or not? They have no training in it, there is no policy and they’re given no guidance on how to make the decision to arrest or not.

It’s no wonder there was a strong backlash on social media to their posts which boast and taunt about how much cannabis they are seizing (and the resources they are wasting).

Our police should take a leaf from police around the world who are realising how destructive and counter-productive the War on Drugs really is. Reforms in Canada and elsewhere have the support of their police. It’s about time police here stopped hiding behind a false claim that they just enforce the law, and start advocating for law reform, so they can get on with fighting crimes that matter.

Their former union leader, Greg O’Connor, is a convert and in a delicious irony is running against Peter Dunne. That’s a contest we’re looking forward to, and frankly I’m backing the cop.

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English shows how out of touch he is on housing – Labour Party

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Bill English has shown how out of touch he is by claiming the Auckland housing crisis is ‘in the process of being solved’ and all that is needed is ‘a few more’ houses to be built, says Labour’s Housing spokesperson Phil Twyford.

“Bill English told Leighton Smith that ‘Auckland is in the process of resolving the pressures on housing’, ‘the best thing that is happening is 10,000 houses are getting built each year’, and ‘they probably need a few more’.

“Truth is, Auckland building consents are falling. And a significant percentage of consents are never built, so the actual number of houses built is below the 10,000 consents.

“Auckland doesn’t need ‘a few more’ houses; it needs 16,000 a year just to keep up with population growth, let alone address the existing shortage of up to 40,000 homes.

“It’s clear that Bill English is out of touch and complacent. Every day that Bill English sits on his hands and leaves his bungling mate Nick Smith in charge of housing, the crisis worsens.

“Bill English’s languid lack of leadership is the opposite of the action Auckland needs.

“Young families are being forced to take on record debt to buy a first home, and housing costs are eating up wage rises. Yet all Bill English does is admonish them to ‘think pretty hard about the level of debt they’re willing to take on’.

“It’s time he took responsibility for the position his policies have put Kiwi families in, and offered some real solutions.

“Labour will build 100,000 affordable houses for first home buyers, half of them in Auckland. We will ban foreign speculators and crack down on tax loopholes that encourage speculation. We will improve rental standards and invest in thousands of new state houses.

“That’s the comprehensive action plan Auckland and New Zealand needs,” says Phil Twyford.

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Time For Independence From A Crumbling US Empire

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TIME FOR INDEPENDENCE FROM A CRUMBLING US EMPIRE – Murray Horton

The advent of President Donald Trump in the US provides an unprecedented opportunity to take a good, hard look at Aotearoa’s place in the world. And to ask the question – why are we still a loyal member of the American Empire?

As the old saying goes, you are judged by the company you keep.

CAFCA says it’s time for this country to pull the plug, to finish the business started in the 1980s which saw us out of ANZUS; and break the chains – military, intelligence, economic and cultural, etc, etc – that continue to bind us to the American Empire.

Speaker: Murray Horton, national organiser of the Christchurch-based Campaign Against Foreign Control of Aotearoa (CAFCA)

When: Friday, April 7, 4.30-6pm

Where: WG126, Sir Paul Reeves Building, AUT University

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Political Caption Competition

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GUEST BLOG: Willie Jackson – Crime, burglaries and how failed politics impacts your community

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New crime stats showed that last year burglaries jumped 16 per cent to 74,182 – that’s a burglary happening every 7 seconds.

That is a total failure of politics and policy.

Let’s be clear, there is no easy solution to crime. Anyone telling you that more cops and locking people up for longer is the solution is lying to you. Crime is made far worse by failed politics and stupidly thought out policy so if we want to be serious about reducing our crime rate we need to look far closer at what is driving that crime. Burglaries are one of the consequences of this mess, sadly the thieves can see opportunities but I believe there are some key drivers to the upsurge in burglaries and crime.

They are:

Jobs – The appallingly high level of youth unemployment, especially for our Maori and Pasifika teenagers, obviously contributes to the problems we are seeing with crime. A Government that isn’t prepared to invest in job creation will just end up building more prisons.

Truancy – There is a clear correlation between truancy and youth offending. If we can keep kids in school, then we lower crime rates and build better citizens at the same time.

Meth – Experts are saying that the jump in burglaries is connected to the explosion of meth use, users will steal anything to feed their addictions. We need far more meth treatment programs and the same kind of anti-P public advertising campaigns we have for traffic safety.

Poverty – I’m not saying poverty causes crime, but it sure doesn’t help. When people feel trapped, they look for desperate ways to survive. People trapped in poverty need to see better opportunities or else crime looks preferable.

Tobacco black market – Consistently raising the price on tobacco is creating a black market and our community dairies are bearing the brunt. Now although politicians have probably done the right thing by making tobacco inaccessible particularly to the working class, Maori and Pacific Islanders, they have created a problem at the other end with some of these people turning to crime to placate their fix.

Now those 5 drivers of crime are things politicians need to show leadership on and if addressed will surely help in our efforts to reduce crime and burglaries.

In terms of protecting ourselves from burglaries and crime day-to-day there are simple things we can do. The first one is get to know your neighbourhood. Too often we don’t know who our neighbours are and too often this lack of community can be exploited by thieves. If you don’t have a community neighbourhood watch group, organise one now. Neighbour watch groups have every tip that we should know in making ourselves and family safe, so make it a priority to join one.

We can never ever be crime free as a country, but cracking down on the drivers of crime and more education of how to keep ourselves safe can minimise it.

 

First published in the Manukau Courier 

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TDB Top 5 International Stories: Thursday 30th March 2017

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5: Trump’s Lawyer Thinks His Client Can’t Be Sued for Anything While President

The president’s longtime lawyer argues that a clause in the Constitution could protect Trump from the defamation suit filed by a former ‘Apprentice’ cast member.

President Trump and his lawyer are hoping to block a lawsuit from former Apprentice contestant Summer Zervos by arguing that the Constitution protects sitting presidents from facing state lawsuits, according to the Hollywood Reporter.

After accusing Trump of sexual assault during the campaign, the season five Apprentice cast member filed a defamation lawsuit against him in January after he denied he had “met her at a hotel or greeted her inappropriately” and called his accusers “liars.” Zervos’s suit essentially put the president in a position to either admit her story was true and apologize, or try to prove she lied about her account in court.

Now Trump’s lawyer, Marc Kasowitz, is trying to make sure the case doesn’t make it to court. According to the Reporter, Kasowitz plans to file a motion to block the lawsuit under the Constitution’s Supremacy Clause. He argues that that clause prevents a sitting president from facing litigation in a state court, an issue he says was “raised, but not decided,by the US Supreme Court in Clinton v. Jones.”

Vice News

4: House Probe into Trump Campaign Ties to Russia in Turmoil as Chair Nunes Rejects Calls to Step Down

On Capitol Hill, calls are growing for House Republican Intelligence Committee Chair Devin Nunes to step down from his committee’s investigation into possible collusion between the Trump campaign and Russia, as the investigation itself stalls amid the controversy. On Tuesday, the House Intelligence Committee was scheduled to hear testimony from former acting Attorney General Sally Yates. But Nunes canceled the hearing last week, a day after Yates and former CIA head John Brennan, who was also slated to testify Tuesday, informed the government they would contradict some statements that White House officials had made. The Washington Post is reporting the White House sought to block Yates’s testimony. White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer called this report “100 percent false.”

Democracy Now

3:  YOU SHOULDN’T BLAME ISLAM FOR TERRORISM. RELIGION ISN’T A CRUCIAL FACTOR IN ATTACKS.

What do you think of when you hear the word “terrorist”? Big beards and brown skins? Turban-wearing Muslim migrants from the Middle East? Refugees maybe?

Yet according to a report from the New America Foundation, “every jihadist who conducted a lethal attack inside the United States since 9/11 was a citizen or legal resident.” A recent study in Britain, which last week endured its worst terrorist atrocity since 2005, revealed that more than two out of three “Islamism-inspired” terrorist offenses were carried out by individuals “who were either born or raised in the UK.”

The common stereotype of the Middle Eastern, Muslim-born terrorist is not just lazy and inaccurate, but easy fodder for the anti-immigrant, anti-Islam far right. Consider the swift reaction of White House official Sebastian Gorka to the horrific terror attack in London last week. “The war is real,” he told Fox News while the bodies of the victims were still warm, “and that’s why executive orders like President Trump’s travel moratorium are so important.”

The Intercept

2: Arab League: ‘Reject apartheid system’ in Palestine

Arab leaders have demanded a two-state solution to the decades-long Israeli-Palestinian conflict amid increased unease over the stance of the United States under the administration of President Donald Trump.

The heads of Arab League states – attending a one-day summit beside the Dead Sea in Jordan – did not publicly refer to Trump or his statements on Wednesday, but they stressed their own continued backing for an independent Palestinian state.

Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani, Qatar’s Emir, said: “We are required to jointly and seriously act to put pressure on the international community and the [UN] Security Council to reject the inception of an apartheid system in the 21st century.”

Aljazeera

1: Brexit: EU condemns May’s ‘blackmail’ over security cooperation

Theresa May warned European leaders that failure to reach a comprehensive Brexit agreement will result in a weakening of cooperation on crime and security, triggering accusations that her remarks amounted to blackmail.

Senior figures in Brussels complained about the prime minister’s remarks, while critics in Westminster also piled in, arguing that the prime minister had issued a “blatant threat” and was treating security as a “bargaining chip” in negotiations.

The Guardian 

 

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The Daily Blog Open Mic – Thursday 30th March 2017

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openmike

 

Announce protest actions, general chit chat or give your opinion on issues we haven’t covered for the day.

Moderation rules are more lenient for this section, but try and play nicely.

 

 

TDB Recommends NewzEngine.com

Further information on “Operation Burnham” – McLeod and Associates

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29 March 2017

Rt. Hon. Bill English
Prime Minister
Parliament Buildings
Wellington 6160
New Zealand
b.english@ministers.govt.nz
BY FAX: (04) 817 6501

Hon. Christopher Finlayson QC
Attorney-General
Parliament Buildings
Wellington 6160
New Zealand
c.finlayson@ministers.govt.nz
BY FAX: (04) 817 6508

Re:

Further information concerning allegations of breaches of domestic and international law in Afghanistan by New Zealand Defence Forces – “Operation Burnham”

Dear Sirs,

1. We refer to our correspondence of 24 and 28 March 2017. As promised in our letter of yesterday, we now provide information relevant to our clients’ request for a formal inquiry.

2. We refer to the New Zealand Defence Force (“NZDF”) media release of 26 March 2017 and the NZDF media conference held on 27 March 2017. In both the media release and media conference, the Chief of Defence Lieutenant General Tim Keating has referred to an untitled map of the Operation Burnham Area of Operation (“the NZDF map”) (attached). We note that the NZDF has not identified the provenance of this map.

3. On the NZDF map, the author has labelled three villages: Khak Khuday Dad, Naik Village and “Tirgiran Village”. The NZDF has stated that Operation Burnham took place in “Tirgiran Village”, which it claims is located 2+ kilometres south of the villages of Naik and Khak Khuday Dad. The NZDF map identifies “Objective 1” and “Objective 2” beside “Tirgiran Village” further south within the “Operation Burnham – Area of Operation”, as outlined by a red rectangular box. It is being consistently claimed that “NZDF personnel have never operated” in the villages of Naik and Khak Khuday Dad.

4. We have provided the NZDF map to our clients, together with the NZDF media release of 26 March 2017. Our clients are locals and residents of this area, and of coursethey know the names of the villages in which they live. We are instructed (in summary) as follows:
(i) Tirgiran is not a village, and therefore “Tirgiran Village” does not exist. As explained below, Tirgiran is a valley area;
(ii) Naik and Khak Khuday Dad villages are in fact located within the red retangular box in the NZDF map. The identified Objectives 1 and 2 are located in Naik village;
(iii) The most northern village (incorrectly named Khak Khuday Dad in the NZDF map) is in fact a village named Khakandy.
(iv) The north-western village (incorrectly named Naik Village in the NZDF map) is in fact a village named Beidak.

5. As above, our clients maintain that there is no village named “Tirgiran Village” as depicted in the NZDF map and referred to by Lt Gen Keating. Tirgiran is the name of the river valley and the greater area depicted on the NZDF map, and both the Naik and Khak Khuday Dad villages are located within Tirgiran Valley. To be completely clear, there is no separate settlement of any kind named “Tirgiran Village”, anywhere in the Tirgiran Valley.

6. We are also instructed there are many settlements or villages in the Tirgiran Valley, including our clients’ villages. For the NZDF to claim that an operation occurred in “Tirgiran Village” is akin (in New Zealand terms) to claiming that an operation took place in “Otago city”, “Waikato town” or “Waitakere village”. It is plainly wrong to conflate an area into a village as the NZDF has done in this case.

7. Further, our clients confirm that their villages are in fact located within the area labelled “Operation Burnham – Area of Operation” on the NZDF map. In particular, “Objective 1” and “Objective 2” on the NZDF map correspond to the locations of two houses in Naik which were owned by those targeted in the 22 August 2010 raids.

8. To summarise, the NZDF map relied on by the NZDF in its recent media release and media conference concerning “Operation Burnham – Area of Operation” labels three villages. One of those villages does not exist while the other two have been incorrectly named and mis-identified by the NZDF as our clients’ villages. It is unclear to us whether the creation of this flawed document has been the result of misunderstanding, error or otherwise. However, it is plainly incorrect and unreliable. It must follow that so too are the conclusions which the NZDF seeks to draw from this map, namely that they have never operated in our clients’ villages. Indeed on our instructions, the latest NZDF statements are effectively an admission that they did so.

9. We reiterate that the villages of Naik and Khak Khuday Dad were raided by international forces on 22 August 2010, and that six civilians – non-combatants – were killed and fifteen were seriously injured. Our clients therefore stand by their claim that no other military operations took place in the area on that date (or indeed on any other date around that time). It follows that it is clear, for all of the reasons set out in our 2correspondence of 28 March 2017, that the NZDF’s Operation Burnham took place in our clients’ villages of Naik and Khak Khuday Dad.

10. The flawed NZDF map and its derived conclusions therefore reinforce our view that it is untenable for the NZDF to assert that Operation Burnham was a separate operation on the night of 22 August 2010 to the military operation that was carried out that same night in our clients’ villages – or indeed that no NZDF military operations occurred in relation to our clients’ villages.

11. For the sake of our clients and the New Zealand public, it is imperative that the truth of what happened during the military operation of 22 August 2010 in Tirgiran be established. Allegations of serious human rights violations have been made against the NZDF Operation Burnham. These must be addressed now and at the outset by way of a formal inquiry as outlined in our letter of yesterday.

12. As per our recent correspondence, we therefore repeat our request for an independent and full inquiry to commence into Operation Burnham.

13. We await your response.
Yours sincerely
McLEOD & ASSOCIATES
RICHARD McLEOD
richard@mcleod.law.co.nz

Cc:
Hon. Gerry Brownlee
Minister of Defence
Parliament Buildings
Wellington 6160
New Zealand
g.brownlee@ministers.govt.nz
BY FAX: (04) 817 6502

Cc:
Wayne Eagleson
Prime Minister’s Chief of Staff
Parliament Buildings
Wellington 6160
New Zealand
wayne.eagleson@parliament.govt.nz

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Israel’s Gaza blockade is illegal and inhumane – Palestine Human Rights Campaign NZ

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A Shalom Kiwi Press Release celebrates the fact that the Broadcasting Standards Authority (BSA) upheld a complaint concerning TVNZ coverage of the Israeli blockade of Gaza. TVNZ was taken to task, it was claimed, for breaching the required standard of accuracy by stating that the blockade of Gaza is “illegal”. As justification for its upholding of the complaint, the BSA cited the Palmer report of September 2011. For some reason, the BSA ignored subsequent UN reports that disagree with the Palmer Report, which had itself ignored the earlier findings of a 2009 Fact-Finding Mission for the UN Human Rights Council. Four UN experts from the UN Human Rights Council had concluded that Israel’s blockade constituted collective punishment of the population of Gaza and was, therefore, unlawful. UN envoy Desmond Tutu, United Nations Human Rights Council head Navi Pillay, the International Committee of the Red Cross and most experts on international law also considered the blockade illegal.

Contradicting Palmer Report

Israel and its allies attacked the UN Human Rights Council report and did their best to discredit it but an independent panel of five UN experts reported to the UN Human Rights Council contradicting the Palmer Report and finding that Israel’s naval blockade of the Gaza Strip does in fact violate international law.

Almost daily, Israel violates the Gaza ceasefire agreement, opening fire on and sometimes hijacking Palestinian fishing boats. So far this year to 22 March, there have been over 100 such attacks, including three hijackings. In the same period there have been 9 Palestinian ceasefire violations, 3 of them against Israeli military targets. On top of the attacks on Gaza’s fishing fleet, the Israeli Army has carried out at least 190 onslaughts on the Gaza Strip, including incursions and the bulldozing of precious crops. So far this year, one person has been killed in Israeli military action against the Gaza population and 15 people have been wounded (including a five-year-old child). According to a 2015 Oxfam International report, it could take more than 100 years to rebuild Gaza at the current rate of reconstruction.

International law only permits naval blockades in the context of international armed conflict, a special legal category of conflict that imposes a framework of reciprocal rights and obligations. The asymmetrical oppression of Gaza, with its occasional acts of Palestinian armed resistance against Occupying forces cannot possibly qualify as war between two relatively equal states. Territories and populations under military Occupation are supposed to be protected by clear rules of the Fourth Geneva Convention: Occupying powers must treat the Occupied civilian population humanely, and protect the population from violence; Israel is obliged to guarantee that the population of Gaza is provided with adequate food and medical supplies. Bulldozing crops, shooting at farmers and attacking fishing boats are all gross violations of these provisions of international humanitarian law.

Shalom Kiwi describes its website as the place for “Kiwi perspectives on Israel and matters Jewish.” It might better be described as ‘Israel’s mouthpiece in New Zealand and matters Zionist’. Within Israel and around the world, Jewish and non-Jewish revulsion at Zionist human rights abuses expresses itself in many ways, including support for BDS. For instance, the website of B’Tselem, The Israeli Information Centre for Human Rights in the Occupied Territories, explains that it: “has championed human rights in the West Bank and Gaza Strip for over two decades, promoting a future where all Israelis and Palestinians will live in freedom and dignity”.

Driven by its Zionist founding ideology, Israel claims to speak and act in the name of all Jews. Any Jew who opposes Zionism (the range of Jewish viewpoints regarding Zionism is vast) is branded as ‘self-hating’ by Zionist extremists and although many secular and religiously observant Jews long ago rejected Israel’s propaganda, others continue to support it. Shalom Kiwi would do well to widen its perspective.

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Us and Them: The Fatal Divisions of Exploitative Culture

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OURS IS NOT JUST A RAPE CULTURE: it’s a Kill Culture, a Rip-off Culture and a Lie Culture as well. But, rather than attempting to reconcile ourselves to living in a multiplicity of malign cultures, it is probably more helpful to think of ourselves as inhabiting a single Exploitative Culture. One in which human-beings are consistently treated as means to another’s end – not as ends in themselves.

The trick to running a successful Exploitative Culture, therefore, lies in defining who is – and who is not – a member of it. Or, to put it another way: who is included in the idea of “Us”, and who belongs with “Them”.

Generally speaking the smaller the “Us”, the greater the power. If you’re a member of the “One Percent”, for example, it not only means that you are obscenely wealthy and powerful, but also that 99 percent of your fellow human-beings are, in one way or another, exploitable.

Exploitation is always and everywhere associated with actual physical violence, or the threat of it. Without violence people simply would not consent to being treated as the means to someone else’s ends – they would rebel. Exploitative Culture (which is to say all culture) may thus be further defined as the organisation of, and the devising of justifications for, purposive social violence.

We thus return to “Us” and “Them”: which may now be thought of, respectively, as those who must be protected from the imposition of purposive violence; and those upon whom such violence may be inflicted with impunity.

Consider the current controversy surrounding “Operation Burnham” the botched, or exemplary (depending on whether you believe journalists Nicky Hager and Jon Stephenson, or the Chief of the New Zealand Defence Force, Lt-General Tim Keating) attack on settlements in the Tirgiran Valley in Northern Afghanistan.

What happened in the Tirgiran Valley could not have happened if its inhabitants were regarded by the New Zealand soldiers taking part in the operation as members of “Us”. To listen to Lt-General Keating deliver his media briefing on Monday afternoon (27/3/17) was to hear a man doing everything within his power to make sure that the men under his command continued to be regarded by the New Zealand public as “Us”; and that the villagers of the Tirgiran Valley, “the insurgents”, as he called them, were seen as “Them” – our enemies.

In the eyes of the New Zealand Defence Force (NZDF) Hager and Stephenson are guilty of engaging in the most basic prohibition of all Exploitative Cultures: attempting to redefine the meaning of “Us” and “Them”.

The whole purpose of their book, Hit & Run, is to make the reader see the victims of Operation Burnham as people like themselves: hard-working farmers; a trainee schoolteacher home for the holidays; parents and grandparents; a three-year-old girl called Fatima. And the more successful the authors are at transforming “Them” into “Us”, the more outrageous Operation Burnham seems to the New Zealand public.

The subtitle of Hit & Run refers to the “meaning of honour”. The reference shows considerable insight on the part of Hager and Stephenson, because the concept of “honour” is inseparable from what it means to be a soldier – a warrior.

The military virtues are all “hard” virtues: valour, prowess, discipline, loyalty. They need to be, because bodies of armed men, willing to inflict injury and death on command, are the ultimate guarantors of Exploitative Culture. Crucial to the success of these hard military virtues is the continual and favourable contrast provided by the justifiers of exploitation with the “soft” virtues of civilian life: wisdom, creativity, tolerance, solidarity.

Significantly, Exploitative Culture assigns almost identical combinations of qualities to the constructs of masculine and feminine. Strength and masculinity is pitted against weakness and femininity in what can only be described as the primal social dichotomy: the first and most destructive reduction of human-beings from ends-in-themselves to means-to-an-end.

For ordinary men to accept their subordination to stronger, richer and more powerful men, Exploitative Culture supplies them with their own inexhaustible supply of subordinates – women and children. And since there can be no exploitation – no power – without violence, the maintenance of this primal dichotomy is of necessity achieved through the unremitting application of physical and emotional coercion. Domestic violence, rape, child abuse: these are not just the products of the masculine/feminine dichotomy, they are also the most tragic expression of the “Us” and “Them” divide.

The non-consensual penetration of a young woman at a party; the invasion of a distant river valley by airborne special forces; both are symptoms of the same dreadful disease.

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Community joins the picket line as car part workers strike – First Union

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Community joins the picket line as car part workers strike

 

Disgruntled distribution centre workers at BNT (Brakes and Transmission), the Australian-owned car parts supplier, took their sixth round of strike action today alongside approximately seventy supporters from the Auckland community.

 

“Our members were blown away,” said FIRST Union organiser Emir Hodzic.

 

“It’s really encouraging to know that the local community supports our fight for better wages and conditions.”

 

The show of community supports comes a month after the Australian-based chief executive described ongoing strike action at the company as merely a “pimple on a pumpkin.”

 

However, in the last week the dispute has escalated with workers taking their fifth and now sixth round of strike action and an internal memo revealing the company is struggling to get products to the market as a result.

 

“Our members want to get the job done, but that’s becoming harder and harder as their wages and conditions fall further and further behind their colleagues at other distribution centres in Auckland,” said Hodzic.

 

“If BNT wants to clear the backlog, if they want to get products to customers faster, the solution is pretty simple. Get back to the bargaining table. Offer distribution centre workers a wage they can support their families on.”  

 

“BNT have been dragging negotiations out for months. They’re one of the poorest-paying employers in the industry and our members are left with no choice but to take action,” said Hodzic.  

 

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MUST WATCH: An Inconvenient Truth 2 – An Inconvenient Sequel: Truth To Power | official trailer

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