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  1. #1
    Al-khiyal is offline Super Moderator
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    ‘Abuses widespread in Arab world’

    Most governments in the Middle East and North Africa engage in widespread abuses of human rights, including torture of dissidents and harassment of activists who denounce them, rights groups said yesterday.

    “It’s impossible to speak openly about human rights in Maghreb and Gulf countries. Defending human rights is a quite sensitive issue in these areas,” said Antoine Madelin, a member of the International Federation of Human Rights Leagues.

    Madelin singled out Saudi Arabia, Iran, Bahrain and Libya for poor human rights records at a press conference for the 2006 annual report from the Observatory of the Protection of the Human Rights Defenders.

    The report outlined a grim picture of the human rights abuses in the region where governments stifle free speech, ban associations, bar gatherings and block other peaceful activities by civic and political groups.

    “Harassment is a common occurrence of our time. The situation is alarming in our prisons where torture is still practiced”, said Radhia Nasraoui, a Tunisian rights activists.

    Amine Sidhom, a member of rights advocacy S.O.S Algerie, accused the authorities in his country of abusing human rights on the pretence of protecting security.

    “Can we safeguard the nation by arresting people and torturing others?” asked Sidhom. People who complain risk prosecution, he added.

    Officials in Algiers and Tunis were unavailable to comment on the criticisms.

    Rights activists in the region want the EU to pressure governments in the hope of improving the situation.

    “Democracy, good governance and human rights respect are the basis of the relation between the European Union and its partners in the other Mediterranean rim,” said Beatrice Patri, a member of the European Parliament at the briefing.


  2. #2
    Bent_Bladi is offline Moderator
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    Quote Originally Posted by Al-khiyal View Post

    Rights activists in the region want the EU to pressure governments in the hope of improving the situation.

    “Democracy, good governance and human rights respect are the basis of the relation between the European Union and its partners in the other Mediterranean rim,” said Beatrice Patri, a member of the European Parliament at the briefing.
    .... Just as long as they don't get too involved. Be careful who you ask help from


    NEVER grow up
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  3. #3
    FORTUNATO is offline Registered User
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    Quote Originally Posted by Al-khiyal View Post
    ..........
    “It’s impossible to speak openly about human rights in Maghreb and Gulf countries. //////////////


    I think it is not limmited to only these countries, but is widely spread into the western countries as well, exept scandinavia the rest of the whole world in still under dark age yes Dark age /everything is relative

    The only defferance is leggaly abusing people in the west
    A government that robs Peter to pay Paul can always depend on the support of Paul.
    By: George Bernard Shaw

    I should add that a Gouvernment that robs Peter to pay Paul, will always depend on Peter to have his budget ...:-) In other world he need more Peter then Paul

  4. #4
    Al-khiyal is offline Super Moderator
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    A recent UNICEF report revealed the progress three Maghreb nations - Tunisia, Morocco and Algeria - have made in strengthening women's and children's rights. "With the exception of Tunisia, Algeria and Morocco, the rest of the countries of the Middle East and North Africa do not have a sense of responsibility towards empowering women politically," Moncef Moalla, an official at the UNICEF office in Tunisia said.

    UNICEF's annual report, which was distributed recently at the Centre for Arab Women Training and Research (CAWTAR), states that Tunisia ranks first in women's representation in Parliament, at 23%, followed by Morocco (11%) and Algeria (6%).

    Jean Michel Delmot, director of the UNICEF office in Tunisia, affirmed that this year was the organisation's first in dealing with gender equality "in order to offer evidence that one of the strongest restrictions impeding realisation of children's rights and realisation of the millennium development goals on the international level is the discrimination women face".

    Under the title Women and Children: The Double Dividend of Gender Equality, this year's UNICEF report renewed its assertion that, compared with other developing regions, the Middle East and North Africa region is behind in ensuring health services for mothers. Each year, 21,000 women in the region die as a result of complications during pregnancy and childbirth. Moreover, a quarter of the region's nations saw a maternal mortality rate of more than 200 deaths per 100,000 live births in 2000, the last year for which comprehensive data is available. The international standards aim for no more than five deaths per 100,000 live births.

    As for women's personal rights and freedoms in the Middle East and North Africa, the report relied on a thorough investigation UNICEF commissioned from US organisation Freedom House in 2003. Freedom House carried out a massive, far-reaching investigation over 20 months, relying on a team of 40 specialised researchers, analysts and experts. The investigation concluded with the following findings: While some governments in the Middle East and North Africa region made significant progress towards empowering women, "none of the countries evaluated can claim to meet internationally recognized standards for women's rights".

    According to Freedom House's 1-to-5 rating scale, Tunisia scored highest in the region in the area of women's personal rights and freedoms, with a rating of 3.6. It was followed by Morocco (3.2), Algeria (3) and Libya (2.3). Saudi Arabia ranked last with a rating of 1.2.

    The report also revealed that the earnings gap between women and men is substantial in the Middle East and North Africa region. "Women in some nations of the Middle East and North Africa earn less than 40% of men's income, with devastating consequences for women and their families."

    In 2005, a World Bank study noted that if women's earnings were commensurate with their level of education, "their earnings would increase by 45% in the private sector and 13% in the public sector".

    Women in Morocco ranked first in the region, with earnings at 40% those of men. This percentage drops to 37% in Tunisia and 31% in Algeria.

    The UNICEF report praises Morocco for its efforts in creating a "gender-responsive" national budget for 2006, which was the product of four years of co-operation between the Moroccan government and the UN Development Fund for Women (UNIFEM), the European Commission and the Belgian government. The budget integrates the plans of the ministries of finance, education, health, agriculture and rural development on national and local levels.


  5. #5
    Bent_Bladi is offline Moderator
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    Quote Originally Posted by FORTUNATO View Post
    I think it is not limmited to only these countries, but is widely spread into the western countries as well, exept scandinavia the rest of the whole world in still under dark age yes Dark age /everything is relative

    The only defferance is leggaly abusing people in the west
    lol @ "legally"


    NEVER grow up
    Al Imran 147 - BE OPTIMISTIC!!
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  6. #6
    Al-khiyal is offline Super Moderator
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  7. #7
    voltaire is offline Registered User
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    Quote Originally Posted by Bent_Bladi View Post
    .... Just as long as they don't get too involved. Be careful who you ask help from
    Yes... those damn Luxembourgian and Swiss Imperialists, with their human rights charters!



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