Saturday, November 29, 2008

Labour Party President Mike Williams is to resign this week



A party president’s job is to maximise the party vote at a general election. In mid 2007, Labour Party President did not believe that National had a significant coalition partner

It never needed one – because whoever gets the Maori seats on side is the government. Mike Williams badly miscued that one and he is now stepping down from the presidency . He failed to do his job. He failed to build a liaison with the Maori Party and he failed to engage his grassroots support – instead he tried to go for the rich people to give money to Labour. He also thought that a smear on John Key would be an election winner.

It was – for National. I wonder if Williams will be told to resign from the company boards he is representing the government on – a government headed by the man he tried to smear. The companies being:
Institute of Geological and Nuclear Sciences Limited
Genesis Power Limited
Auckland Regional Transport Authority (ARTA)
Transit New Zealand
Waitakere Enterprise
New Zealand Railways Corporation (Ontrack)
North West Auckland Airport Limited

TV&Satellte Week


It's obviously nearly Christmas as the TV mag stand is dominated by Doctor Who covers featuring David. Make sure you get hold of TV & Satellite Week which is available from today until Thursday.

Cathy Lynn Henderson Inches Closer to Possible New Trial

Cathy Lynn Henderson (pictured with Sr. Helen Prejean) has been back in the news as her case goes back before a Travis County Judge. As the Save Cathy Henderson site and Austin Legal reported last week, Judge Jon Wisser is holding a series of hearings to decide if Henderson should get a new trial. Six hearings take place throughout November. The prosecutors get their turn in January. At the heart of it: "Henderson's lawyers say new tests show Brandon may have fallen from Henderson's arms and was not intentionally smashed against a wall or floor."

She says it was an accident but the jury believed otherwise, making babysitter Cathy Lynn Henderson the only Travis County woman currently on Texas Death Row.

Just days before her scheduled Wednesday, June 13, 2007 execution, Henderson has been given a reprieve because new evidence might support her claims that 3-month old Brandon Baugh did die in an accidental fall in 1994.

At the Save Cathy Henderson web site you can read a PDF of the Affidavit of Roberto J. Bayardo, M.D.. Dr. Bayardo originally testified at Henderson's trial disputing her account of how the baby suffered his head injuries. He now says that in light of new evidence -- based on physics and biomechanics -- he "cannot determine with a reasonable degree of medical certainty whether Brandon Baugh's injuries resulted from an intentional act or an accidental fall." As reported in The Kansas City Star, Henderson says she was "swinging Brandon around in an attempt to soothe him when she lost her balance, and he flew from her arms."

Source: about.com, November 29, 2008

Iran : dialogue et indifférence

La semaine écoulée [article publié par iran-resist.org le 23 novembre 2008] s’est achevée sur des annonces fort déplaisantes d’une pendaison d’un espion du Mossad et de la condamnation à mort de 3 poseurs de bombes liés à la Grande-Bretagne.

Si l’authenticité du récit de la pendaison de l’espion du Mossad est discutable, on peut parier que les trois condamnés à mort de l’attentat très suspect de Shiraz seront pendus par les mollahs.

Téhéran affirme chaque jour sa violence, mais cela ne déclenche aucune protestation. Cela est sans doute dû aux efforts des lobbyistes occidentaux du régime qui recommandent sans cesse le dialogue avec Téhéran, un dialogue qui suppose la non ingérence dans les affaires du régime. Les mollahs recevaient d’ailleurs l’un de leur avocat, le justiciable Dominique de Villepin.

A peine Villepin reparti, Téhéran a annoncé la pendaison de l’espion du Mossad et la condamnation à mort de trois jeunes accusés d’un attentat qui a sans doute été perpétré par le régime lui-même. Voici leurs visages défaits par le verdict. Ils sont nés en Iran : ils savent qu’ils mourront pendus à un crochet de grue dans l’indifférence générale. Ils deviendront sans doute des héros malgré eux. Le simple fait de survivre en Iran est héroïque.


Lire la totalité de cet article sur le site de iran-resist.org

Source : iran-resist.org, 29 novembre 2008

France : un rapport prône la prison à 12 ans


Un rapport proposant d’avancer à 12 ans l’âge légal d’un possible placement en détention en France a suscité des critiques du Syndicat de la magistrature (SM), classé à gauche. Ce rapport, dont les conclusions sont publiées dans La Croix et Le Parisien, vendredi 28 novembre, a été rédigé par une commission de réflexion installée, en avril 2008, par Rachida Dati [ministre de la Justice] pour réformer l’ordonnance de 1945 sur la justice des mineurs. Déjà modifié trente-et-une fois, ce texte prévoit des peines atténuées pour les mineurs et déclare que l’éducatif doit primer sur le répressif.

Le rapport permet la prison à 12 ans en fixant la responsabilité pénale à cet âge, ce qui signifie qu’en-deçà ne seraient possibles que des mesures éducatives. Le système français actuel ne prévoit aucun âge, la responsabilité étant appréciée au cas par cas suivant le "discernement". Certains pays européens ont un âge déterminé pour l’âge minimal de mise en détention, d’où la réflexion, mais il est souvent à 14 ans. Le rapport propose même des dérogations possibles jusqu’à 10 ans. Il propose aussi des sanctions plus rapides et plus fermes. L’âge de la majorité pénale -le moment où le jeune délinquant encourt la même peine qu’un adulte- resterait à 18 ans, sauf pour les multirécidivistes où il passerait à 16 ans.

"Il est clair qu’on est dans cette politique du tout-pénal qui oublie complètement qu’un mineur peut être un délinquant, mais qu’il est surtout un être en construction. On ne peut pas dissocier la politique pénale de la politique éducative", a dit à Reuters la présidente du Syndicat de la magistrature, Emmanuelle Perreux. Selon Emmanuelle Perreux, les membres de la commission de réflexion sont divisés, ce qui explique le retard d’un mois pris pour la remise du rapport. Elle conteste les fondements de la réflexion. "Les mineurs sont les mêmes qu’hier. Ce qui change, c’est le contexte économique et social. Ce discours ambiant qui consiste à dire que la délinquance des mineurs augmente est un faux discours", a-t-elle dit. Des sociologues contestent en effet la thèse d’une supposée hausse de la violence chez les jeunes, estimant au contraire que leur part dans la criminalité générale baisse.

La ministre n’a pas souhaité s’exprimer sur les conclusions et ne le fera que pour la remise officielle du document, mercredi 3 décembre, a dit son porte-parole, Guillaume Didier. En avril, en installant la commission, la ministre se plaçait clairement dans la perspective d’une sévérité accrue, nécessaire, à ses yeux, pour répondre à ce qui est décrit comme une explosion de la délinquance des plus jeunes. Le contexte politique a changé, depuis l’installation de la commission. Une vague de suicides, notamment de plusieurs mineurs, a frappé ces dernières semaines les prisons [françaises], au bord de l’explosion avec 63 750 détenus pour 50 000 places. Rachida Dati a été par ailleurs vivement critiquée, jeudi 27 novembre, par le Conseil supérieur de la magistrature, pour avoir mis en cause à tort des magistrats après le suicide d’un détenu mineur, à Metz, en octobre 2008.


Ci-dessus : Une cellule à la prison pour mineurs de Meyzieu, France

Source : Reuters
Dessin de presse : Chimulus

China, Iran and Jamaica go against trend on executions

The execution of a Chinese scientist on Friday is the latest in a series of executions that are going against the global trend towards a moratorium on the death penalty.

Wo Weihan, a 59-year-old medical scientist who was found guilty of spying for Taiwan, spent 30 minutes with his family on the day before his execution. It was the 1st time he had been allowed to see his loved ones since being moved to a prison hospital in March 2005.

"He was surprised and very happy to see us. Because he did not know about a looming execution, he was hopeful and did not leave any final words or will with our family," said his daughter Ran Chen.

Wo, who holds several patents for biomedical discoveries, was denied access to a lawyer for 10 months after his detention and sentenced to death after a closed trial in May 2007.

"We, the family, have not been granted the most fundamental and universal right of information about what was happening with our father. The execution was carried out in secrecy while we hoped. Not only was my father put to death, but also our hope in the Chinese justice system," said Wo's daughters.

China is 1 of 3 countries continuing the policy of killing their own people, less than a week after a record number of countries in the UN supported ending capital punishment.

In Iran, ten people were hanged on Wednesday 26 November in a mass execution that took place in Tehran's Evin Prison. The executions were reported to have been for murder, robbery, and kidnapping and brought the total number of executions recorded by Amnesty International in 2008 to at least 296.

One of those hanged was Fatemeh Haghighat-Pajouh, whose conviction to qesas, or retribution a form of death sentence for the murder of her temporary husband had been upheld in 2006 following a review of the case by the Supreme Court. Courts had rejected her claim that she had acted to prevent her husband, who was a drug addict, from attempting to rape her then teenage [14-16 year old] daughter from a previous marriage. Apparently he had previously told her that he had lost the girl in a gambling match. Her lawyer was not notified 48 hours in advance of her execution, as is required under Iranian law.

Farzad Kamangar is a Kurdish teacher whose death sentence on the vaguely expressed charge of moharebeh, or enmity against God, often taken to mean armed insurrection, was upheld in July 2008. His first trial, prior to which he was tortured in a series of locations, was grossly unfair. He was removed from his cell on 25 November, raising alarm that he would be executed. His lawyer has stated that his case is under review by the Supreme Court and that it is not legally possible to execute him, but in the absence of any warning, as was the case with Fatemeh Haghighat-Pajouh, human rights activists remain concerned that he may be quietly and quickly executed at any time.

At the same time, reports emerged that the Supreme Court had confirmed, in August 2008, a verdict of death by stoning, passed on Afsaneh R by a lower court in Shiraz, southern Iran. Reports suggest that the verdict was reached relying on the knowledge of the judge, a provision in Iranian law that enables a judge to determine sentences in an arbitrary and subjective manner. Reports about the verdict cast doubt on the integrity of a statement by a judicial official, on the same day in August 2008, that execution by stoning had been suspended, as a result of which several women have had their sentences commuted. The Head of Irans judiciary had announced a moratorium in 2002, although a stoning took place in 2007. It remains to be seen whether, as the case of Afsaneh R will show, whether the announcement in August was a hollow promise.

In Jamaica, the vote on retaining the death penalty emerged in light of discussions around the new Charter of Rights and Freedoms Bill. The new Charter seeks to replace Chapter III of the Jamaican Constitution dedicated to the protection of fundamental rights and freedom of persons.

The purpose of the vote was to decide whether provisions allowing for the death penalty as an exception to the right to life should be retained or deleted from the Charter. Following the vote at the House of Representatives, the Senate will also shortly debate and vote the motion.

The last execution in Jamaica was carried out on 18 February 1988. There were more than 190 prisoners under sentence of death at the end of 1988. Currently there are 9 prisoners on death row.

"Although there appears little chance of Jamaica carrying out an execution in the near future, AI fears this vote signals the authorities' intention to resume hanging as soon as condemned prisoners pending legal appeals allow them to," said Amnesty International's Piers Bannister.

"As the world increasingly turns its back on capital punishment, AI urges Iran, China and Jamaica to re-examine their policies of judicial killings. At the UN General Assembly the international community has spoken with a clear voice that executions are unacceptable. Nations which retain capital punishment must heed this vital message." Bigger quote about what all of the above means for the world and a reference to the UN vote."

A large majority of states from all regions adopted a second resolution calling for a moratorium on the use of the death penalty in the UN General Assembly (Third Committee) on 20 November. 105 countries voted in favour of the draft resolution, 48 voted against and 31 abstained. A range of amendments proposed by a small minority of pro-death penalty countries were overwhelmingly defeated.

The draft resolution adopted on Thursday by the Third Committee of the General Assembly has still to be adopted by the General Assembly sitting in plenary in December.

Source: Amnesty International

Friday, November 28, 2008

Greens are hypocrites..again


Apparently the Green Party supports electoral reform in the hands of politicians only if they are the politicians having a disproportionate amount of influence.

The Greens supported the Electoral Finance Act only with the promise of a wide ranging review of electoral reform, driven by a citizens jury. That's not going to happen now. Instead of the Greens withdrawing support for the EFA, it is moaning that the panel has been disbanded.

The Greens supported partisan, self serving law making. If a citizens jury is appointed again, and National does not consult with other parties, the Greens will be the first to complain. But they didn't complain when Labour appointed the experts to that panel without consultation, because they thought they`d get more money from state funding of political parties.