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Prison teacher victim of new McCarthyism in Belgium

By IRR European News Team
LucVervaet

The Platform for Free Expression in Belgium is demanding to know why a language teacher at Saint-Gilles prison in Brussels, who has spoken out against anti-terror laws and the demonisation of Muslims, has been banned from prisons on security grounds.

Four university professors have launched a petition to support 57-year-old Luk Vervaet who, on 10 August, was informed by phone by administrators at the prison of Saint-Gilles that he no longer had access to the prison where he had taught Dutch to prisoners for over five years. No reason was given, except that the decision ‘didn’t come from them’ but from ‘above’.

A week later, on 17 August, his employer, the association which organises the courses in prison, received a letter from the General Director of the Belgian Prison Service, Hans Meurisse, saying that Luk Vervaet was forbidden for ‘security reasons’ from access to all Belgian penitentiary institutions.

Secret evidence

During Vervaet’s five years of teaching in prisons, there has never been a complaint by the prison authorities about his work, nor has he ever been accused of breaching security. On the contrary, his relations with the prison governor, the prison guards and the student prisoners were all good. Luk has no right to know the basis of the ban, nor can he defend himself, despite the fact that he will be forced to quit his job and lose his livelihood.

A financial appeal has been launched to help Luk Vervaet fund a judicial review of the state’s action, which supporters see as a modern-day version of McCarthyism.

It looks as though those who campaign against anti-terror laws and racism could be hounded out of public service, in much the same way as Communists were dismissed in the US, as well as in Germany under the Berufsverbot decree. (There were also similar measures against Communists and left-wing sympathisers in Switzerland until the 1990s).[1]

Vervaet’s lawyer, Olivia Venet, has made an application for the release of his administrative file, as in Belgium, the state keeps a file on all workers in any kind of public service.[2]

She has received an answer familiar to UK campaigners against anti-terror laws. While the state agreed to release the file, pages 1-3 would have to be removed on national security grounds. Secret evidence is now being used against an individual – this time not a Muslim terror suspect but a Belgian citizen who happens to teach in prisons.

The truth about Belgian prisons

Belgium prisons are so medieval, overcrowded and unhygienic that international bodies such as the Council of Europe Anti-Torture Committee (CPT) have repeatedly denounced conditions, drawing attention to the growing number of suicide-attempts (particularly amongst juveniles).

Belgians of a migrant background (mainly Moroccans and Turks) are also heavily over-represented in prisons. Luk Vervaet had attempted to draw attention to racism and the social crisis in prisons through writing occasional columns in national newspapers like La Libre, Le Soir, De Standaard and De Morgen.

He has also collaborated with academic research into prison conditions, high suicide rates, proposals to build ‘Titan’ prisons as well as the general demonisation, and criminalisation of young people from migrant backgrounds. He had also been active in several campaigns against the Belgian anti-terror laws, speaking out against the deportation of terror suspects to countries such as Morocco and the US that practise torture and/or the death penalty.

His was also one of the few voices in Belgium prepared to argue that the proposed extradition to the United States of ex-footballer Nisar Trabelsi comprised a form of double punishment, as he is already serving a ten-year prison sentence in Belgium for a terrorist offence. What is particularly strange is that in 2009 the Belgian prison authorities granted Vervaet permission to visit Trabelsi in Lantin prison and no objections were raised.

During his visits, Luk had been helping Trabelsi write a book and an appeal against his proposed extradition.

Defending human rights – a threat

‘Do his troubling questions and his numerous public declarations about the intolerable situation in Belgian prisons pose a security risk?’ ask the four university professors, whose petition has now been signed by an impressive array of supporters, from Socialist and Green parliamentarians, to artists, film-makers, musicians, journalists to academics working in the field of criminology, anthropology and medicine.

Luk Vervaet, they argue, is nothing more than ‘a human rights activist for detained persons … Apparently today, someone who maintains contacts with or defends the fundamental rights of persons suspected of terrorism, becomes a suspect himself.’

__________________
[1] In 1950, a decree made loyalty to the German Constitution a condition for public service employment; by 1978, the Berufsverbot decree had banned communists from employment in government service.

[2] In 1990, in the face of mass campaigning which involved 350,000 people applying for access to their personal files, the full facts of the Swiss states’ Cold War information-gathering and surveillance of Communists or left-wing sympathisers as well as foreign residents became known. Many of those who successfully applied for the release of their files finally understood the reasons why their professional careers had faltered for apparently inexplicable reasons. In 1991, as a result of the protests and the call for a parliamentary commission into the surveillance scandal, the Committee ‘No State Snooping in Switzerland; (Schweiz ohne Schnüffelstaat) was formed. It still exists today.

The Institute of Race Relations is precluded from expressing a corporate view: any opinions expressed are therefore those of the authors.

Jail threat for donkey bloggers

The donkey clip was a satire on press freedom

Two bloggers from Azerbaijan are facing up to five years in jail after posting a video of a donkey giving a news conference on YouTube.

Shortly after the video was released, Adnan Hajizade and Emin Milli were held on hooliganism charges following a scuffle in a restaurant

continued here

What Youtube Finds Offensive

“Feeling the hate in Jerusalem,” the video by Max Blumenthal and Joseph Dana, that has been seen almost a half a million times in the last few weeks, and has spawned international controversy, was removed by Youtube for “offensive content.” Oh, sure, if you go to Youtube, you can still see it, because folks are always putting it back on for as long as they can. But Max has posted the video here.

Of course, I was offended by Max and Joseph’s video, as were many people, left, right, and center, leaving only the morally-challenged unaffected.

But I am more offended by the video that Youtube also removed, only after Haaretz brought it to the light. See this before youtube takes it down. I am hoping that somebody who captures the video puts it on another site.

Filed under comedy: a Palestinian forced to slap himself and sing how about he loves the Border Police.

Video no longer on YouTube, but you can see it here

The End of Free Speech?

Criminalizing Criticism of Israel

By PAUL CRAIG ROBERTS

On October 16, 2004, President George W. Bush signed the Israel Lobby’s bill, the Global Anti-Semitism Review Act. This legislation requires the US Department of State to monitor anti-semitism world wide.

To monitor anti-semitism, it has to be defined. What is the definition? Basically, as defined by the Israel Lobby and Abe Foxman, it boils down to any criticism of Israel or Jews.

Rahm Israel Emanuel hasn’t been mopping floors at the White House.
As soon as he gets the Hate Crimes Prevention Act of 2009 passed, it will become a crime for any American to tell the truth about Israel’s treatment of Palestinians and theft of their lands.

READ ON

Journalists under attack on World Press Freedom Day

Monday, May 04, 2009

Editor’s note: The following statement was issued by Navi Pillay, the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, and Frank La Rue, the UN Special Rapporteur on the Promotion and Protection of the Right to Freedom of Opinion and Expression, on the occasion of World Press Freedom Day, May 3, 2009.
World Press Freedom Day serves as an occasion to celebrate the fundamental principles of press freedom; to evaluate the benefits of a free and independent press; and to defend the media from attacks on their independence. Sadly, on this day we must also pay tribute to media professionals worldwide who have lost their lives in the daily struggle to disseminate the news. In the last year, over 60 journalists have been killed in the line of duty. Their sacrifice should further strengthen our efforts in promoting press freedom and the protection of journalists everywhere from ongoing harassment and threats.

READ ON

The Voltaire Network

The Voltaire Network is in danger and needs your support

By Valja — 20/05/2008 – 21:11

Ever since it was created, the Voltaire Network has relentlessly opened debates and triggered controversies. Its foes have launched smearing campaigns aimed at intimidating its members and discrediting its activities. Today, they would like to see it disappear.

Me : it looks like it has

Thierry Meyssan lokte veel controverse uit als eerste met zijn vraag hoe een vliegtuig in zo een klein gat (foto) gevlogen kan zijn in het Pentagon.
Zijn boek was een bestseller in vele talen. Toch is zijn uitgeverij bijna op de fles en heeft deze uitmuntend journalist het land moeten verlaten uit veiligheidsoverwegingen…met zijn servers.
http://eldib.wordpress.com/2007/12/10/thierry-meyssan-nest-plus-protege-…

During the past six years, the U.S. Defense Department has forbidden mainstream media from reporting our activities, threatening to lift journalist accreditations; the State Department has included us among “the main anti-american misinformation sources in the world” (probably a tribute vice pays to virtue); envoys from the U.S. National Security Council have attempted to bribe us; a specialized Tsahal team hacked our website; contracts were made on our president and some of our South-American contributors. However, until May French authorities had guaranteed our physical security, freedom of circulation and expression. Today this is over: pressure is mounting, extending to our relatives, and we can no longer rely on France’s benevolence.

Not only our main Paris-based collaborators’ communications were tapped, but they were also closely and extensively investigated in order to track down our sources of information. From peer to peer, this surveillance was eventually extended to our families and friends.

Last July 17th and August 1st, George W. Bush signed two executive orders (# 13438 and 13441) criminalizing opponents to his Iraq and Lebanon policies. Bank accounts belonging to our Middle-Eastern collaborators were immediately frozen, they and their families were banned from entering U.S. territory. According to our information, last August, under the pretext of mutual defense agreements, U.S. authorities asked their French counterparts to take identical measures against members of our French team who were already banned from U.S. territory.

During the months of August and September, French and U.S. officials, abusively resorting to laws against money laundering and terrorism financing, lead investigations to try and identify our regular donators and pressure them.

Furthermore, some of our writers were addressed spoken, yet credible threats by individuals working for the French and U.S. governments.

As a result of all this, we had to undertake serious and costly measures in order to guarantee the safety of our contributors and correspondents, and make sure the identity of our donators remained confidential. The interruption of all financial support during the months necessary to implement our new system has threatened the continuation of our Europe, Arab world and Latin America-based activities.

Ever since the September 11th, 2001 attacks, we have been denouncing the instrumentation and use of terrorism by the United States to justify outside military aggressions and domestic repression. Our work has set its mark in the long term and was met by a large public (between 2 and 2.5 million unique visitors every month on the main website Voltairenet.org, and 92 000 subscribers to the free mailing lists). Our grid of analysis is now used all over the world, including in the U.S., despite all the efforts to talk us down.

The Voltaire Network is an international tool in the fight against propaganda and for spiritual emancipation. It works in Europe, but also from and for South countries whose economical ressources are less. Our readers from the South need the Voltaire Network to exist as it is. As a reader from a northern country, you are not only supporting the Voltaire Network for yourself: you also do it for citizens of much poorer countries than yours.

Voltairenet.org is a citizen’s initiative financed solely by its readers’ support. Only your support in the form of contributions can help it carry on its information and analysis work.

Hence we are asking you to make a special effort and help us in these difficult times.
Make a donation to the Voltaire Network

http://www.voltairenet.org/article157052.html
SORRY PEOPLE / VOLTAIRENET.ORG HAS BEEN CUT OFF THE NET SINCE JUNE
FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION YOU KNOW

The noose tightens around the Internet

From here

… Meanwhile, the noose is increasingly tightening around the Internet, one of the last places where there is still some semblance of free speech. Under the guise of protecting copyrighted materials, many countries around the world are getting tough on the ‘illegal’ downloaders, with penalties ranging from barring broadband access to heavy fines.

The irony is that the artists, the very people those Orwellian measures purported to protect, are quick to criticize the Orwellian measures.

In another more extreme, if not ridiculous, example, AP news agency goes after a little known blogger for publishing fragments of their news articles and reports.

It seems that their lies and propaganda get exposed so often by the army of bloggers that they have now chosen to resort to such blatant intimidations – the move of a liar protecting his lies.

Alongside the intimidations, major ISPs are throttling users with high bandwidth usage.

Some ISPs even hire a company to monitor and hijack websites that these users visit. All those measures serve to do one thing: discourage users from accessing the Internet. And where will they turn for news if not from the web?

The TV with ‘fair and balanced’ Fox News, of course!

In the background, the wiretapping measures continue to be enacted.

The US Congress has just passed the new surveillance bill, which combines the worst of all alternative bills.

It both allows retroactive immunity to the telecoms and gives sweeping surveillance power to the government. Even Sweden, the country that hosts controversial sites such as Wikileaks and The Pirate Bay, has passed a bill that allows wiretapping, cross-border, of all telephone and Internet communications.

Russia cracks down on bloggers

by Kim Zigfeld

It looks like the beginning of the end for Russia’s celebrated blogosphere.

On February 15, 2007, a 21-year-old Russian artist and blogger named Savva Terentyev (pictured above) located in the northern Russian city of Syktyvkar posted a comment on the blog of a local journalist named Boris Suranov. Suranov’s post dealt with a raid by local police officers on a local opposition newspaper called Iskra (“the spark”), a raid which Suranov believed was politically motivated and illegal. As such, the raid would have been part of a pattern of such attacks on independent media by the Vladimir Putin’s Kremlin, a pattern that had been underway since Putin first took office.

READ ON

Reading in the morning

Blogosphere censorship

From Al Jazeera

And this incredible Iraqi woman :

Arab woman news

Uncensored arabwoman blues

Arab woman blues

and listen to this

Wadih el-Safi + Jose Fernandez

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