Insight Afghan women fade from White House focus

May 17th, 2012

WASHINGTON/KABUL (Reuters) – Shortly after sending U.S. troops to Afghanistan in October 2001, President George W. Bush focused so intently on freeing Afghan women from the shackles of Taliban rule that empowering them became central to the United States’ mission there.

More than a decade later, as his successor Barack Obama charts a way out of the unpopular war, Afghan girls are back in school, infant and maternal survival rates are up and a quarter of the parliament’s seats are reserved for women who at least on paper have the same voting, mobility and other rights as men.

But Obama rarely speaks about that progress, delegating discussion of women’s rights to his secretary of state and other top diplomats so he can focus on narrower goals for Afghanistan: uprooting the militants there and getting out.

Obama’s lack of overt attention to Afghan women has led many to fear their hard-fought gains will slip away as the United States hands off security responsibility to Afghan President Hamid Karzai, with ever-present Taliban leaders still holding sway in much of the countryside.

Women’s issues are not on the formal agenda at the NATO summit the United States will be hosting in Chicago later this month. Afghanistan is poised to send an all-male delegation.

Suzanne Nossel, executive director of Amnesty International USA, said it was “really worrying” that Obama only made a passing reference to women on his trip to Afghanistan last week, when he affirmed a general need “to protect the human rights of all Afghans – men and women, boys and girls.”

Obama’s choice of words also was noticed in Afghanistan, which remains a conservative and male-dominated Islamic country. Gulalai Safi, a female member of parliament from northern Balkh province, said it was “somewhat of a shame” that he did not use the visit to underline women’s rights.

Amnesty is calling on Obama to spell out a plan to preserve the gains for women since the fall of the Taliban, which from 1996 to 2001 barred Afghan girls from schools and kept women from working and from leaving their homes unless they were accompanied by a male relative or spouse and were covered in a head-to-toe burqa.

For more than a year, the White House has been pursuing, with little success, reconciliation talks involving the Islamist group that could give it a share of power in Kabul.

“When you are negotiating with the Taliban, ensuring the rights of women is not a simple matter,” Nossel said. “In that sense you can understand why they are not talking about it but that is why it is doubly worrying.”

WOMEN AS BAROMETER

Bush did not mention Afghan women when he launched the war a month after the September 11, 2001, attacks that were orchestrated by al Qaeda militants based in Afghanistan.

But he soon broadened his rhetoric, saying that empowering women was essential to strengthen Afghan society and prevent al Qaeda from keeping a foothold there.

His wife, Laura Bush, also made Afghan women one of her signature issues. In November 2001 she delivered the weekly presidential radio address “to kick off a worldwide effort to focus on the brutality against women and children by the al Qaeda terrorist network and the regime it supports in Afghanistan, the Taliban.”

The former schoolteacher visited Afghanistan three times to support educational projects and efforts to tackle infant and child mortality rates, then the highest in the world next to Sierra Leone, and to inform women about their legal rights.

“Her effort really helped to sell to the American people why we needed to do what we were doing,” said Anita McBride, former chief of staff to Laura Bush.

Today’s White House has a more limited definition of that purpose, one that eschews his predecessor’s “nation-building.”

In February, White House spokesman Jay Carney stated that U.S. troops were in Afghanistan to root out al Qaeda militants and their training camps, accusing the previous administration of adopting a mission was “muddled and unclear.”

The Obama administration says women’s rights remain an important goal, even if not the focus of its public rhetoric.

“That refocusing of our efforts is reflected in our public messaging. When we talk about the U.S. mission in Afghanistan, you will hear us speak to that core goal,” said Caitlin Hayden, a National Security Council spokeswoman. But she said there was “absolutely no lessening of our attention or support to Afghan women from this administration.”

Gayle Tzemach Lemmon, an Afghanistan expert with the Council on Foreign Relations, said the American public was so tired of the war that today’s White House was reluctant to dwell on what is at stake with the U.S. departure.

“Now the question is how to get out, not to explain why we got in,” Lemmon said. But she stressed the risks of seeing women “as a pet project instead of a barometer for the society’s health.”

“How the war ends really does matter. The question is Office Stand-Alone Programs, will a Somalia be left behind in Afghanistan? And if it is, women will be the first to suffer,” she said.

DISCOURAGING HEADLINES

Obama often jokes that he is surrounded by women Windows Anytime Upgrade, sharing the White House with his wife, two daughters and mother-in-law and working closely with female advisers and cabinet members including Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.

He created the first White House Council on Women and Girls shortly after taking office to make sure the U.S. government “considers the needs of women and girls in every decision we make.” In December he signed an executive order and action plan telling U.S. diplomats to work to empower women as “equal partners” in conflict prevention and peace-making.

But neither he nor first lady Michelle Obama has used their tremendous attention-generating power to stress the needs of women outside the United States, including in Afghanistan.

That work has mainly been left to Clinton, herself a former first lady, who has visited Afghanistan three times as the United States’ top diplomat. Melanne Verveer, U.S. ambassador-at-large for global women’s issues, has been to Afghanistan twice.

In an interview, Verveer acknowledged the American public had lost track of the advances for Afghan women amid “discouraging” headlines about acid attacks on girls in school and violence against women that the United Nations has said remains at “near-pandemic levels.”

“But it is important to see just so much has been achieved, that there should not be a reversal in the investments and the progress that has been made, because that would be to the detriment of Afghanistan’s future,” she said.

Asked why Obama has not spoken more directly about the need to protect Afghan women, Verveer said the president had made clear he wants U.S. diplomats and military personnel to focus on women’s issues on the ground as they prepare for the transition.

‘NO SUPPORT’

In the talks with the Taliban, which are currently suspended, the White House has said it would only accept a reconciliation deal that requires respect for the Afghan constitution, which codifies equal rights for men and women.

But in Afghanistan, many women fear that Karzai could trade away their freedoms as he seeks to curry support in conservative parts of the country, including in rural areas where female illiteracy remains above 90 percent and child marriages are still widespread despite being illegal.

In March, Karzai backed recommendations from powerful clerics to segregate the sexes in the workplace and allow husbands to beat their wives under certain circumstances. Last year he sacked the deputy governor of southern Helmand province after two women performed without headscarves at a high-profile concert.

“This is a green light paving the way for extreme figures, including the Taliban, to come forward,” said Fawzia Koofi, a female member of parliament who has said she plans to run in the country’s 2014 presidential elections.

Senior Afghan peace negotiators have said the Taliban is now willing to soften its hardline ideology to regain a share of power. But a spokesman for the Taliban, Zabihullah Mujahid, said this week that “it is too early to discuss” whether the group now supported girls’ education.

Another Afghan lawmaker, Shukria Barakzai, said the shift in attention from the White House had decreased the pressure on Afghan leaders to take the status of women seriously.

“We are now getting the sense that in order to achieve women’s rights, we have to act alone … We feel like we have no support,” said Barakzai, who met Laura Bush during one of her trips to Afghanistan.

On a trip to Washington, Afghanistan’s health minister Suraya Dalil said women in the country were ready to stay politically active to prevent backsliding in health and other areas with the political changeover.

“Being a woman in Afghanistan today is different from being a woman in Afghanistan 11 years ago,” the Kabul-trained surgeon and mother of three girls said in an interview. “We want to be engaged in the peace process Office 2010 Key, in the transition, and decisions about the future of Afghanistan. In all of this we want to be engaged and we want our voice to be heard.”

There are also grassroots women’s movements emerging in Afghanistan and signs of change in the capital’s streets.

Kabul is now full of beauty parlors for women, unheard of during Taliban times, and girls in their white hijab and black uniforms are seen going merrily to and from school every day.

But there has been a dramatic spike in reports of violence against women, and very few perpetrators are getting punished for crimes including beatings, torture and brutal killings.

Over the past year, the volunteer group Young Women For Change glued more than 700 posters around Kabul showing a woman’s veiled face that read: “don’t grab my hair/don’t throw stones in my face/I can stand on my own two feet/I can build this country with you together.”

Almost all the posters were torn down within days.

(Additional reporting by Miriam Arghandiwal in Kabul and Missy Ryan in Washington; editing by Warren Strobel and Mohammad Zargham)

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Washington Post Finishes Digg Deal

May 17th, 2012

The Washington Post has closed its deal to acquire some of Digg’s technology staff replica watches, who will go to work for SocialCode replica watches, a Washington Post subsdiary that helps marketers buy ads on Facebook and Twitter. AllThingsD had previously reported that the Digg hires would work alongside the team that built the paper’s Social Reader; that team works for WaPo Labs replica watches, a different subsidiary.

Facebook buys photo-sharing Instagram for $1 billi

May 17th, 2012

NEW YORK — Facebook is spending $1 billion to buy the photo-sharing company Instagram in the social network’s largest acquisition ever.

Instagram lets people apply filters to photos they snap with their mobile devices and share them with friends and strangers. Some of the filters make the photos look as if they’ve been taken in the 1970s or on Polaroid cameras.

“This is an important milestone for Facebook because it’s the first time we’ve ever acquired a product and company with so many users,” CEO Mark Zuckerberg wrote on his Facebook page. “We don’t plan on doing many more of these a Tattoo Gun, if any at all.”

Facebook said it plans to keep Instagram running independently. That’s a departure from its tendency to buy small startups and integrate the technology — or shut them down altogether just so it can hire talented engineers and developers.

“We think the fact that Instagram is connected to other services beyond Facebook is an important part of the experience,” Zuckerberg wrote. “We plan on keeping features like the ability to post to other social networks Tattoo Supplies sale, the ability to not share your Instagrams on Facebook if you want Eyebrow tattoo supply, and the ability to have followers and follow people separately from your friends on Facebook.”

Facebook is paying cash and stock for San Francisco-based Instagram and hiring its roughly 10 employees. The deal is expected to close by the end of June.

Menlo Park, Calif.-based Facebook is expected to complete its initial public offering of stock next month. Getting Instagram is big win for Facebook as it works to harness people’s growing obsession with their mobile devices and sharing every moment of their life.

Instagram was only available on Apple devices until recently. An app for Android devices was released last week.

In Most Censored Countries, Internet Is Hamstrung

May 17th, 2012

By Danny O’Brien/CPJ Internet Advocacy Coordinator

One big reason for the Internet’s success is its role as a universal standard, interoperable across the world. The data packets that leave your computer in Botswana are the same as those which arrive in Barbados. The same is increasingly true of modern mobile networks. Standards are converging: You can use your phone, access an app, or send a text, wherever you are.

But in CPJ’s new report Tattoos Ink, The 10 Most Censored Nations, communications networks are constructed
not to live up to that ideal, but to fit the limitations of press freedom in
each country. The Internet and mobile phones may be transforming how the news
is covered, but CPJ’s list shows the extent to which controls on news-gatherers
distort and hamper the growth of the Internet and cellphone use.

The pattern is different in each country, reflecting local
priorities in silencing the independent press. In Belarus and Syria, the Net is
home to unlawful but state-sanctioned hacking and surveillance. In Saudi Arabia, Internet users are
subject to the same harsh controls that are applied to
traditional news media. In Uzbekistan, Internet access is growing Best Tattoo Machine, but
censorship is still draconian. In Equatorial Guinea, Internet
and mobile censorship is minimal, but so is the infrastructure.

In fact, the simplest solution many of these countries have
found — including North Korea, Burma, Cuba, and Eritrea — is to simply deny
their people access to any modern communications infrastructure at all. The
Internet in these nations is nonexistent, or profoundly limited: in some cases
because of these countries’ struggle with poverty, but also because these
governments are suspicious of the dangers of a free and open Net.

What Internet infrastructure does exist often mirrors
political realities on the ground. In Burma, the countries’ Internet is effectively divided into three, self-contained
systems: one for the people, one for the government, and one for the military. North
Korea’s citizens (unlike the ruling elite) have as much access to the World
Wide Web as they have to any independent media — which is to say none. And
while Cuba has seen some improvement in availability and
affordability of mobile telephones, the country is still struggling to catch up
after a history of banning private cellphone and computer ownership.

Eritrea stands as a stark example of how a government’s uncompromising
approach to media has obstructed the spread of modern communications. In a
continent where mobile telephony has transformed local reporting and economies,
the regime has been slow to allow mobile phones — (permission was granted only in
2004). The Internet was made available in Eritrea in 2000; the Net on mobiles
is still largely unavailable. All mobile communications pass through EriTel,
the state provider, and the government requires all ISPs to use the
government-controlled Internet gateway.

When a country with advanced systems clamps down on press
freedom, that too affects the state of its communication networks. In the six
years since CPJ last published a list of most censored countries, Iran’s media,
and foreign correspondents based there, have suffered increasing setbacks as
hardliners tried to choke off local reporting. At the same time, Iran has been
investing in technology and personnel with the explicit intent of restricting
Internet access. Officials have repeatedly discussed plans to create a national Where To Buy Tattoo Ink, or “pure,” Iranian
Internet, and Iranians face frequent
slowdowns in Internet access. A member of the Iranian parliament’s
Net filtering committee described the Internet as “an uninvited guest” in the
country, saying that “because of its numerous problems, severe supervision is
required.”

The working Internet is alike, the world over. Every
censored, silenced, and filtered national network is broken in its own way. Each
country on our list has found a unique way to hamper the spread of journalism
online: the end result has been to punish its own citizens with online isolation
and silence.

San Francisco-based CPJ Internet Advocacy Coordinator Danny O’Brien has worked globally as a journalist and activist covering technology and digital rights.

Follow CPJ on Twitter: @pressfreedom

Follow CPJ on Facebook: @committeetoprotectjournalists

My Epic Love Affair With The Soap Opera

May 16th, 2012

My obsession with the soap opera was in full blossom by the time I entered junior high school.  When I wasn’t interested in cartoons or escaping into the woods with my cousins in my hometown Stuckey, Florida, I would sit with my grandmother and watch the stories. By the time I got to high school, I had been bitten by the acting bug. I was always artistically inclined as a child, but the soap opera is what nurtured my acting (or dare I say… dramatic aspirations). In 1994, at the age of 16, I created my first soap opera for my Environmental Science class.

I continued creating my soap opera videos throughout high school and college. In 2000, I had decided I would pursue a career in entertainment.  I partnered with another student and we created an independent soap opera called “The Winding Road.”

That same year I was accepted into graduate school at the University of South Florida where I received my BA and MFA, the work changed dramatically.

It wasn’t until about a year ago that I realized my 2000 effort “The Winding Road” had a direct connection to my 2010 appearance on “General Hospital” other than the obvious.

I know the summer of 2010 is the summer I experienced perfect peace. I knew I was in alignment with my dream and a higher power was at work. After surfing the web, it came to my attention that my first big write up on “The Winding Road” was printed on April 19, 2000.

The Winding Road (St. Petersburg Times)

The final was printed on July 23, 2000.

The Winding Road (The Orlando Sentinel)

The first write-up was printed on James Franco’s birthday and the final was printed on mine. I was excited the “General Hospital Soap at MoCA” episode aired on my 33rd birthday and thought it was a nice coincidence to be able to watch myself on TV and celebrate a dream come true. I knew I had been blessed. But who wouldn’t see it as a blessing? Looking back at the dates on these two write ups, it seems this project that felt organic, may have indeed been orchestrated by the gods in heaven.  It is a blessing I will never take for granted and whenever I begin to lose faith…this is an experience that reminds me…the impossible can happen. James (Franco) and I had no idea the other existed in 2000.  He was starring in Freaks and Geeks and I decided to apply to graduate school, after realizing I wasn’t quite ready for the big time. We were worlds apart.

When James Franco invited me to appear of “General Hospital,” he was already exploring performance art through a character given his name (Franco) and I was using the soap opera format to create my own video and performance art in the context of the art world. I dreamt of being on a daytime soap opera Cheap Marc Jacobs Dresses, but never really thought it would happen, until it did.

Random, coincidence or not?  I know what I experienced in my life was a miracle. Miracles often happen when we get out of the way and allow things to naturally align and fall into place.  When we try to control things too much, they tend to fall apart. 

It feels much better living in my destiny, which is why I hesitate to try and analyze the experience too much. So…here’s to my epic love affair with the soap opera!!! The season finale of “Melody Set Me Free” 2012 Christian Audigier Clothing sale!!!!

James Franco on WhoSay

Here’s the link to Francophrenia (or: Don’t Kill Me, I Know Where the Baby Is),, my big screen feature debut, currently being screened at the 2012 Tribeca Film Festival. From my point of view… Francophrenia is an experimental film that falls somewhere between the female melodrama of Joan Crawford’s Possessed and Mildred Pierce and the male melodrama of James Dean’s Rebel WIthout Cause. All shot during a taping of General Hospital’s Soap at MoCA episode in 2010. Directed by James Franco and Ian Olds.

What are your thoughts on experimenting with soap operas and films in the context of video and performance art or vice versa?

‘Labor hero’ Carr supports PMConroy

May 15th, 2012

Senior cabinet minister Stephen Conroy has laughed off suggestions that Bob Carr could one day be the party leader Tattoo Supplies, saying his “Labor hero” supported Julia Gillard 200 per cent.

Senator Conroy said former NSW premier Bob Carr was a fabulous addition to the federal Labor party, demonstrated by his attack on Opposition Leader Tony Abbott this week as “a cheapskate hypnotist in a rundown circus”.

“He's always been one of my Labor heroes,” Senator Conroy told the Nine Network on Thursday.

“Bob brings a certain intellectual rigour, a certain panache to the job.

“I think you'll see many, many more demonstrations of why we were so keen to get him, and why he will continue to expose Tony Abbott just wanting to say no.”

Senator Conroy laughed off suggestions that Labor's charismatic new foreign affairs minister could take over as party leader, saying Mr Carr fully supported Julia Gillard as prime minister.

“I think Bob is very, very happy to be in the Senate, very happy to be foreign affairs minister and very happy not to do anything other than support Julia Gillard 200 per cent Tattoo Supplies,” he said.

Chrysler to launch four Special Editions in first

May 13th, 2012

Much has been made of Chrysler’s apparent lack of new products for the 2010 model year. Suffice it to say Imitation Bvlgari Watches, while there are big things in store for Chrysler Fake Calvin Klein Watches, they will take at least another year to get into production. For instance, while removing the unsightly strakes from the hood of the unloved Sebring sedan and convertible is a nice gesture Wyler Replica Watches, it’s not nearly far enough to make the car suddenly competitive with its chief rivals in the ultra competitive mid-size sedan arena.

Not entirely surprisingly then, Chrysler is trying its best to add a few reasons to purchase its current models before the major changes happen in the next few years. Each of Chrysler’s current nameplates – 300 Imitation Maurice Lacroix Watches, Town and Country, Sebring and PT Cruiser – get Special Editions that will hit the market in the first quarter of 2010.

First Replica Hublot Watches, the 300 is slated to get a complete redesign later on in 2010, probably as a 2011 model vehicle. Regardless, the current 300 will get a Sport Edition that’s targeted at the youth market before the reboot button is officially pressed. The Town and Country gets a Fashion Edition and the Sebring gets an Ocean Edition (we have no idea what that means).

Lastly, the long-in-the-tooth PT Cruiser gets a Final Edition (finally final? Promise?) and the nameplate is not scheduled to live on past the 2010 model year. So, if you want one… better hit your local dealer post haste. As a parting note, Chrysler never actually mentioned it, but take a good look at the new Chrysler 300 brochure at the top right of the image above – that doesn’t look like the current 300 grille, does it? Hint Replica Ulysse Nardin Watches, hint.

VIDEOXtreme shadow puppets sell the VW Phaeton

May 13th, 2012

This spot is as amazing as the fact that the Phaeton actually made it into production. Of course Replica Girard Perregaux Watches for Cheap, its run didn’t pan out (at least in the U.S.) Fake Harry Winston Watches, but you have to admit the Phaeton’s a hell of a car no matter the badge on the grille. This commercial is truly incredible Replica Patek Philippe Watches, as well. The expressiveness Fake Breguet Watches, detail and natural-looking motion these shadow puppets achieve just boggles the mind. Actually Emporio Armani Replica Watches, it makes us wonder if it was a real spectacular feat shot in a single take with many talented performers who had rehearsed it until they were doing it in their sleep; or if it was a digital creation. Either way has its challenges Replica A Lange & Sohne Watches for sale, but we’re more impressed with the former, so that’s the story we’ll continue to tell ourselves.

Video after the jump

[Source: YouTube via Fresh Creation]

Tony Stewart looking at making a return to Chevrol

May 13th, 2012

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Recent spots for Armor All that feature NASCAR’s perpetually unshaven Tony Stewart almost make one forget what emblem is now placed on the front of his race car. The television commercials show Stewart staring longingly at a shiny Chevrolet Corvette Replica Wyler Watches, despite the fact that he now rolls around the track in a bestickered-to-look-like-a Toyota Camry. Even though Stewart’s contract with Joe Gibbs racing extends through 2009; rumor has it that he has been in talks with Haas CNC Racing to put him back behind the bowtie logo by next year. The team gets its Chevy engines and race support through Hendrick Motorsports. There is also an indication that Stewart is interested in a 50-percent stake in the Haas CNC team.

A more controlling team role seems like one that would better suit a vocal driver like Tony Stewart U Boat Replica Watches, as he would only have himself to yell at after one of his media outbursts. Plus Fake Movado Watches, any problems with team management would be between he and himself. The situation’s likelihood is still a bit far fetched at this point though Replica Breguet Watches, as Joe Gibbs Racing seems unwavering in releasing Tony Stewart from his contract early.

[Source: Star Tribune Where buy best Replica Corum Watches, Photo by Rusty Jarrett/Getty]

Spy ShotsLamborghiniJotaMurci茅lago replacement ca

May 13th, 2012

Lamborghini “Jota” Murciélago replacement – Click above for high-res image gallery
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Unfortunately Replica Dolce & Gabbana Watches, the Lamborghini Murciélago can’t last forever. Despite producing a number of special versions to keep it fresh, including the LP640, LP 650-4 Roadster and LP 670-4 SuperVeloce Fake Girard Perregaux Watches, Lamborghini will eventually replace its most super of supercars.

Our spy photographers have caught up with Lamborghini engineers testing what could be the Murciélago’s replacement in Scandinavia. Rumored to revive the “Jota” nameplate MB&F Replica Watches, this new car appears to be similar in size to the Murciélago. We’re told to expect a new direct-inject V12 engine producing around 700 horsepower and a lighter overall weight thanks to extensive use of carbon fiber and aluminum. All-wheel-drive is a given, though this time around Lamborghini may use a new system developed in conjunction with Haldex. As for what it look like Movado Replica Watches, expect inspiration to come from the Reventón Tissot Replica Watches, another Lambo based on the Murciélago.

Related GallerySpy Shots: Lamborghini “Jota” Murcielago replacement