Month: December 2009
Twitter Campaign to Free Chinese Human Rights Advocate Liu Xiaobo
For Immediate Release: Laogai Research Foundation Launches Twitter Campaign to Free Liu Xiaobo
Washington, DC, December 4, 2009- The Laogai Research Foundation has launched a Twitter campaign to free noted scholar and human rights advocate to Liu Xiaobo. Liu was one of the primary authors of Charter 08,, a peaceful online manifesto calling for practical democratic reform in China with over 10,000 signatories. To mark the one-year anniversary of Liu’s detention and the release of Charter ’08, LRF has launched a ten day Twitter campaign calling on advocates around the world to follow @freeliuxiaobo and re-tweet quotes from Charter ’08, in both English and Mandarin. At the conclusion of the campaign, the number of followers and re-tweets will be sent in a letter to President Obama, President Hu Jintao, the Chinese Embassy, and the Supreme People’s Procuratorate of China, calling for the release of Liu Xiaobo.
Building on momentum from October 1, 2009, when the U.S. House of Representatives (with the Senate concurring) passed House Congressional Resolution 151 stating, “That it is the sense of Congress that China’s Government immediately release Liu Xiaobo and begin making strides toward true representative democracy,” LRF hopes to spur global activism on behalf of Liu and Charter ’08. LRF Executive Director Harry Wu said the following of Liu, “Liu’s writings and criticisms of the CCP were pursued in a peaceful manner, and we cannot tolerate his detention.”
For more information on the campaign to free Liu Xiaobo, go to http://www.laogai.org/blog/free-liu-xiaobo and www.twitter.com/freeliuxiaobo.
For further inquiry please contact Laogai@laogai.org or (202) 408-8300. You can also follow the Laogai Research Foundation on Twitter @laogai.
The Laogai Research Foundation is a not-for-profit organization founded by former political prisoner Harry Wu in 1992. Its mission is to gather information on and raise public awareness of the Laogai–China’s extensive system of forced labor prison camps. For more information, please visit www.laogai.org, e-mail Laogai@laogai.org, or call +1-202-408-8300.
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The Laogai Research Foundation is launching a ten day Twitter campaign to advocate the release of Liu Xiaobo. A Chinese dissident who has long advocated for human rights and democracy inside China, Liu was one of the primary authors of Charter 08, an online manifesto promoting peaceful political reform in China that has accumulated 10,000 signatures since its initial launch on December 10, 2008. Liu was detained on December 8, 200, two days before the release of Charter 08, and held without charge until June of 2009, when he was charged with “Incitement to subversion of the state.” To this day Liu has not been granted a trial.
To mark the one year anniversary of Liu’s detention, we have initiated a ten day Twitter campaign. To join the campaign, click here and click retweet. We also encourage you to share this with your friends via Facebook, email, your personal blogs, even in person! At midnight on December 10, in honor of the one year anniversary of the release of Charter 08, we will count the number of retweets and followers we’ve had, and include that number in a letter advocating Liu Xiaobo’s release. The letter will be sent on December 11 to President Obama, President Hu Jintao of China, the Chinese Embassy, and the Supreme People’s Procuratorate of China.
Please help Liu Xiaobo by joining our campaign and spreading the word!

劳改基金会发起”释放刘晓波”Twitter运动
2009年12月4日华盛顿— 劳改基金会发起了一项Twitter运动,旨在敦促中国政府释放著名学者、人权活动家刘晓波。刘是著名网络民主宣言《08宪章》的主要起草人之一,该宣言 的签署人数现已超过一万。为纪念刘晓波被中国政府拘捕和《08宪章》发表一周年,劳改基金会发起了一个为期10天的Twitter运动,以中、英双语呼吁 国际社会积极响应@freeliuxiaobo 并转载《08宪章》的部分引文。在运动结束后,支持者人数将记录在一封公开呼吁信中,递交美国总统奥巴马、中国国家主席胡锦涛、中国驻美大使馆和中国最高 人民检察院,敦促中方释放刘晓波。
2009年10月1日,美国国会众议院通过(参议院附议)的151号决议指出,”国会认为中国政府应立即释放刘晓波,并开始真正的代议制民主”。劳改基金 会希望藉此发起一场声援刘晓波和《08宪章》的全球运动。劳改基金会执行主任吴弘达说:”刘晓波的著作和对中共的批评都采取和平的方式,我们不能容忍中国 政府对他进行拘押。”
欲了解更多有关”释放刘晓波”的Twitter运动信息,请访问 http://www.laogai.org/blog/free-liu-xiaobo和www.twitter.com / freeliuxiaobo连接。
如有任何问题,请联系Laogai@laogai.org或(202)408-8300。您也可以在
Twitter @laogai上支持劳改基金会。
劳改基金会是一个非营利性组织,由中国前政治犯吴弘达于1992年创立。它的任务是收集劳改资料和提高公众对此问题的关注。欲了解更多信息,请访问www.laogai.org,电子邮件laogai@laogai.org,或致电+1-202-408-8300。
R.E.A.L. Postings on Liu Xiaobo
Chinese intellectuals speak up for dissident Liu Xiaobo
Communist China accuses pro-democracy activist Liu Xiabo of inciting a rebellion
Communist China: Dissident writer Liu Xiaobo held after sentence ends
Communist China: Arrested Chinese dissident Liu Xiaobo to receive prestigious award
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White Supremacist Pendergraft Sisters’ Efforts to Promote Hate via Music
White Supremacist Pendergraft Sisters’ Efforts to Promote Hate via Music
— SPLC report on “Heritage Connection Band” –
— Pendergraft sisters say “Its time for an Aryan Awakening.”
— Pendergraft sisters “have shared the stage with a guitar-playing Derek Black, best known for his father’s racist Stormfront.org Web forum”
— Pendergraft sisters promote “Heritage Connection Band” of white supremacism

Switzerland: Our Human Rights Are Larger Than Any Structure
According to World Radio Switzerland (WRS), on Sunday, November 30, 2009, Swiss voters passed an initiative to ban Islamic minarets in Switzerland. WRS reported that a “strong majority – 57.5 percent – of voters accepted the initiative Sunday to ban the construction of new minarets… [and that] the “government and major political parties, with the notable exception of the Swiss People’s Party, had called for voters to reject the measure.” WRS further reported that the Swiss Federal Council stated that the “four existing minarets will remain, the statement said, assuring that it will still be possible to construct new mosques and that Muslims in Switzerland ‘are able to practice their religion alone or in community with others, and live according to their beliefs just as before.'”
The United Nations, UN Watch, and columnists in the Christian Post have objected to this decision by the Swiss people.
UN Watch issued a press statement including comments by its executive director Hillel Neuer that stated that:
“‘Singling out Muslims for differential and discriminatory treatment is bigotry, plain and simple, and may irreparably harm Switzerland’s historic reputation as a haven of religious liberty and tolerance,’ said Hillel Neuer, executive director of UN Watch.”
“‘The Swiss ban will almost certainly undermine efforts by the U.S., the EU and other democracies to counter the successful campaign at the United Nations, led by countries like Pakistan, Algeria and Egypt, to prohibit any criticism of Islam as a form of ‘defamation’ and ‘racism’,’ said Neuer. The General Assembly is soon to vote on a ‘defamation of religion’ resolution, while in Geneva an Algerian-led committee is seeking to amend the Convention on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination.”
“At a time when Saudi Arabia is being asked to finally end its ban on churches – where some 1.5 million Christians, many of them Filipino workers, are not allowed to worship publicly – Switzerland’s act of xenophobia marks a setback for the credibility of all international voices calling for tolerance.”
Some view that the towering Islamic minarets represent an architectural problem, a nuisance in terms of loud calls to Islamic prayer five times a day, and others view the minarets as symbols of political Islamic power where they are located. Others point out that the minaret ban vote does not impact Islamic mosques in Switzerland. Still others point to the failure of extremist states to have “reciprocity” in terms of allowing the building of churches and other non-Muslim houses of worship.
But none of these arguments address the point of the matter which is that the Swiss vote to call for a ban on Islamic minarets sends a signal that the Swiss people seek to be “situational” in their acceptance of the basic human right of religious freedom. This is the slippery slope that leads to the undermining of credibility for our universal human rights. Clearly some in Switzerland are stunned and disturbed by this decision, and I have also learned that there are plans underway for a new vote to be taken.
Certainly, some of those complaining the most about the Swiss decision also support some of the worst violations of human rights and religious freedom in the world.
For example, the Egyptian Islamic clerics, led by Grand Sheik Ali Gomaa who have criticized the Swiss decision are certainly questionable sources for defending human rights. This is the same Egypt, where Coptic Christians human rights are abused on a regular basis, where churches are burned to the ground, where mobs of 3,000 intimidate Christians, and where Coptic Christian girls are kidnapped and forced to convert to Islam. Egyptian critic Sheik Ali Gomaa is also known for his threats against moderate Egyptian Muslims, his defense of wife-beating, and his denials of freedom of religion.
Another critic of the Swiss decision is the anti-freedom organization, Hizb ut-Tahrir. While Hizb ut-Tahrir criticizes the Swiss decision, it ignores that it promotes an anti-freedom ideology of extremism that consciously denies religious freedom. At Hizb ut-Tahrir’s Chicago event, I saw HT brochures handed out to 700 attendees that called for the “death penalty” for “traitors” who leave Islam. Once again, the anti-freedom Hizb ut-Tahrir organization (that explicitly calls for an end to democracy and liberty) is hardly a credible source for defending religious freedom.
It should be a wake up call for all those who support human rights when the likes of Sheik Ali Gomaa and Hizb ut-Tahrir are given a platform to call for “religious freedom.”
The arguments by Ali Gomaa and Hizb ut-Tahrir for “religious freedom” are reminiscent of those white supremacists who used the argument of “white rights” to mask their goals in defying equal opportunities for all people and seeking preferential treatment for white Americans.
We must not give such groups that promote extremism the moral high ground on our universal human rights.
Freedom can be unpopular, freedom can be annoying, freedom can seem threatening, and freedom can be inconvenient.
But despite all of this and because all of this, consistency on freedom is essential.
To those who find such towering minarets intimidating, I ask you to consider – can’t the human spirit rise above any structure?
Our power and our strength comes from within humanity, a humanity that has traveled into space, and walked on the moon. A humanity that has sent vehicles out to the stars.
As viewed from our shared Earth, how can any structure cast a shadow on the human spirit?
We are bigger people than that.
In fact, it is the indefatigable human spirit which defends our shared human rights and our shared dignity for one another which gives us the endless hope that…
Love Wins.


Pakistan Christians Fear More Violence After Militant Attacks
Pakistan Christians Fear More Violence After Militant Attacks
— BOSNews reports:
— “Christians in several volatile areas of Pakistan feared more violence Monday, November 30, amid reports that Christians are hiding after attacks by angry Muslims in which at least one person died.”
— “Tensions remained high in Pakistan’s largest province Punjab where details emerged that a Christian security guard of a factory was allegedly shot dead by his Muslim colleague following a dispute over his Christian faith.”
— “Irfan Masih, 20, was killed at the packaging manufacturing plant in the Green Town area of the provincial capital Lahore after a 12-hour shift when he woke up guard Ishfaq Niazi from his sleep, a factory official told BosNewsLife.”
— “Niazi, 31, allegedly shot the Christian in the early morning hours of October 5. “When he touched the Muslim guard, Niazi got furious and said: ‘how dare you Christian untouchable to touch my foot?’ He pulled his gun and shot multiple times at Irfan Masih, who died on the spot,’ a factory spokesperson said.”
Iran: 1,000 Days Later: Ex-FBI Agent Robert Levinson Still Missing After Disappearing in Iran
Egypt: Human Rights Activists Call for Banning Extremist Television Channels
AINA reports: “Egyptians Protest ‘Islamic Hate Channels'”
— “Egyptian human rights advocates demand the government remove provocative television channels from the air.”
— “Egyptian human rights activists submitted a report to the Egyptian government this week demanding it ban aggressive religious Islamic channels from broadcasting.”
— “The activists, who include lawyer and human-rights activist Nagib Gabriel, described these channels as extremist and said they were disseminating ‘subversive ideas that call for discrimination against women and Copts and lean towards radical behavior that is far from the spirit of Islam,’ according to a report in the Kuwaiti Al-Jarida.”
— “Gabriel, who heads the Egyptian Union for Human Rights, expressed concern about these channels and stressed the need to ‘close any channel that fuels internal strife and threatens the social peace, whether among Christians or Muslims.’ ”
— “The activists demanded that the Egyptian satellite operator Nilesat stop carrying these ‘extremism channels,’ naming stations such as A-Nas, A-Rahma and Al-Hafiz.”

— see also: “Salafi satellite TV in Egypt “
Iran arrests scores of student activists
Iran arrests scores of student activists
— Washington Times reports:
— “Iranian authorities have rounded up scores of student activists in a bid to head off what several young people said will be massive demonstrations on university campuses across the country Monday.”
— “Monday is National Students Day, named for the day in 1953 when armed forces entered the campus of Tehran University and killed three students protesting the government of Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi.”
— “Hadi Ghaemi, a spokesman for the International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran, said at least 90 students have been arrested in the past three weeks. Milad Asadi, a member of the Central Council of the Student Union to Foster Unity, Iran’s main student organization, was arrested at his home Tuesday.”
Egypt: Voice of the Copts Open Letter to Coptic Pope
Egypt: Voice of the Copts Open Letter to Coptic Pope
by Dottore Architetto Ashraf Ramelah
His Holiness Pope Shenuda III, Patriarch and Bishop’s President of the great Alexandria, I am certain that this open letter will meet various disappointments in the Coptic community. I am certain that you will understand that the only reason I write is my concern for the Coptic situation and your relationship to the Church as its leader. I believe that our Lord wanted you to guide his Church. Meanwhile this does not mean that everything you do meets his will.
For some time, I have been observing the Church leaders’ statements on various occasions, and I regret to admit that certain reports were against Copts, the Coptic Church, and overall, against Bible teaching.
In all these years, the reports issued by the Church leaders contradicted the facts about Copts and had the goal to help the regime in painting a nice picture for those outside the country so that it appeared without discrimination against the Copts in Egypt.
His Holiness; I can hear your voice whisper, “Son, the Church must say certain things for the sake of peace and to protect its sons.” The question that comes to mind is how many Copts were killed, or jailed? How many Copts lost their homes and businesses? How many Coptic girls continue to suffer as a result of being kidnapped? How many girls were forced to change their faith? Did the Church’s statements serve to save any Coptic life, home or business? Or more likely, just help Mubarak’s regime to attack the human rights of Copts?
His Holiness; The Lord teaches us to stand against the bad without fear, but now it seems that our Church is trying to please a dictatorial regime instead of standing beside its children. For more than 40 years our Church has been under clear attack. We have never heard any Church strong statement condemning any of those barbaric acts!
The sad reality is that all the years the Church covered up the regime’s acts of oppression and discrimination against Copts it served to discredit any Coptic human rights issues bringing the suffering of Copts to the international body.
All Copts need to hear straight forward answers from church leaders to the following questions:
– Are Copts living under a regime that oppresses and discriminates against them or is the information reported in various websites, local and international news media incorrect and the Coptic in the Diaspora trying with their false information to discredit the great democratic leader ruling the country for the last 28 years?
– Was the government action to massacre more than 600,000 pigs owned by Copts a plan to damage Coptic income and to force more than two millions Copts to go hungry or to change their faith? The massacre of those animals violated basic animal’s rights and basic humanity.
– Did the Church create a list of the kinds of food to be eaten that people have to follow? Christ gives us our freedom and no one can take it away. It is written, “Not that which entereth into the mouth defileth the man; but that which proceedeth out of the mouth, this defileth the man.” Matt 15:11.
The statement issued at the time of the pig massacre indicating that Copts do not eat pork meat is an example of political correctness. The Copts have been subject to the political correctness method for more than 1400 years. Furthermore, to make such a statement goes against Christ’s teaching in the following scripture, which says, “Let your ‘Yes’ mean ‘Yes,’ and your ‘No’ mean ‘No.’ anything more is from the evil one.” Matt 5:37. However, we all know that David, Samson, and Solomon were all chosen of God and each made mistakes.
– When are we going to stand up and ask for our rights as Egyptian citizens and not as Christians living in Egypt? It is both basic and elementary that a human being be treated with respect and treat others with respect.
My final concern is related to a strange comment made by Your Holiness when referring to the candidacy of a Copt for president in the upcoming presidential election. You said that it is not good that one from a minority group become president of a majority group.
I would like to mention something you have forgotten, that of the requirements for making a bid for president:
– The candidate must be Egyptian.
– Copts are Egyptian and they never minded being governed by the non-Coptic.
– The President has to be honest and care about his own country.
In the USA the president today is African-American and African-Americans are a minority in America. They are a smaller percentage of US population than the Coptic minority is in Egypt.
Dottore Architetto Ashraf Ramelah
President
Egypt: Torture ‘systematic’ in Egypt
Egypt: Torture ‘systematic’ in Egypt
— AFP reports: “Egypt has been operating under a state of emergency since the 1981 assassination of president Anwar Sadat, which has been renewed repeatedly since then despite protests from rights groups and regime opponents.”


