VIDEO: Janelle Monae performs Jackson 5's "I Want You Back" & more at Nobel Peace Concert [Video] > SoulCulture

Janelle Monae performs

Jackson 5′s “I Want You Back”

& more at

Nobel Peace Concert [Video]

 

December 18, 2011 by  

On December 11th, talented Hollywood actresses Helen Mirren and Rosario Dawson hosted the 18th annual Nobel Peace Concert in Oslo, Norway, held to honour the Nobel Peace Prize laureate.

This year artists Janelle Monáe, Jill ScottAngélique KidjoDavid GrayEllie Goulding and Evanescence were invited to perform some of their best known hits in honor of recipients Ellen Johnson SirleafLeymah Roberta Gbowee and Tawakel Karman. Below is footage of the incredible Janelle Monáe performing ”Cold War,” “Tightrope” and a special rendition of the Jackson 5 classic “I Want You Back.”

Watch: Janelle Monáe perform “I Want You Back”

Watch: Janelle Monáe perform “Cold War”

Watch: Janelle Monáe perform ”Tightrope”

[via OkayPlayer]

 

 

PUB: Submission Guidelines – Mail > Center for Literary Publishing

Submission Guidelines – Mail

If you prefer dealing with a physical manuscript, please follow these guidelines

 

More Info

  1. Manuscripts will be accepted between October 1, 2011, and the postmark deadline of January 14, 2012. The winner will be announced by May 2012.

  2. The winning book-length collection of poems will be published by the Center for Literary Publishing and distributed by the University Press of Colorado in the fall of 2012. The author receives a $2,000 honorarium.

  3. There is a $25 entry fee, which includes a one-year subscription to Colorado Review (to US addresses only). Make checks payable to Colorado Review. VISA, Mastercard, and American Express are also accepted (include card number, expiration date, and name as it appears on the card).

  4. This year’s final judge is Elizabeth Willis. Friends and students (current & former) of the final judge are not eligible to compete.

  5. Colorado State University employees, students, and alumni are not eligible to compete.

  6. Manuscripts may consist of poems that have been published, but the manuscript as a whole must be unpublished.

  7. Please do not include acknowledgments/publication credits; the judges do not see these.

  8. Include two title pages: top page with manuscript title and your name, address, e-mail address, and phone number; second page with manuscript title only. Your name should NOT appear anywhere else in the manuscript.

  9. Manuscripts may be double- or single-spaced. You may print front and back if you wish.

  10. Manuscripts should be at least 48 pages but no more than 100 pages.

  11. Manuscripts will NOT be returned. Please do not enclose extra postage for the return of your manuscript.

  12. You may enter more than one manuscript. Each manuscript requires the $25 entry fee. You may send multiple manuscripts in one package with one combined check, or you may send each entry separately—whichever method is more convenient for you. If you’d like the additional subscriptions sent to someone other than yourself, include that information (US addresses only). Otherwise, your subscription will be extended by one year for each additional entry.

  13. The theme and style are both open.

  14. Authors do NOT need to be residents of Colorado or the United States. (Note, however, that subscriptions can be sent only to US addresses.)

  15. Writers should enclose a self-addressed stamped envelope for contest results and a self-addressed stamped postcard for notification of the manuscript’s safe arrival.

  16. Send your entry to:
    Colorado Prize for Poetry – Center for Literary Publishing
    9105 Campus Delivery
    Dept. of English
    Colorado State University
    Fort Collins, CO 80523-9105

  17. Questions? Please call us at (970) 491-5449 or send an e-mail to
    creview@colostate.edu

 

 

PUB: Odyssey Convention Writing Contest Guidelines and Rules

Guidelines for 2012

Science Fiction & Fantasy Prose Poem/Flash Fiction Contest

Adult division: 18 and over, $10 entry fee per story/poem; multiple entries allowed
Prizes: $500 to first place; Odyssey Con membership and some cool books to top 3

Youth division: under 18 as of Jan. 1, 2012, NO entry fee, but send no more than one entry
Prizes: $50 to first place; Odyssey Con membership and some cool books to top 3

Deadline for 2012: January 15

Details: Send 500 words or less of speculative (SF&F) fiction or prose poetry (paragraph form). No previously-published work, but simultaneous submissions are allowed, and multiple adult submissions are encouraged. $10 entry fee must be paid for each adult entry submitted. Youth entries are free, but entrant must be under 18 as of January 1, 2012. Please do not enter before October 15. See definitions of "speculative," "prose poetry," and "flash fiction." Read the winning stories/poems from contests past!

2011 judge: Marion Boyer
2010 judge: John Rezmerski
2009 judge: Joe Haldeman
2008 judge: Bruce Boston

Judging process: Blind judging. Preliminary readers who are SF writers and fans will select the top manuscripts in each division to be sent to the final judge. All entries are read by several different readers. Convention committee members, their friends and families, and degree-program or professional students of the judge may not enter. Winners to be notified and results posted by March 1, 2012. Winning poems/stories will be read at Odyssey Con, published in the program book, and posted on the website.

Entering: pay one entry fee per story/poem via PayPal (click button below to pay), or mail a check payable to Odyssey Con to address below (postmarked by the deadline: January 15, 2012). E-mail your work (maximum length 500 words, excluding title), pasted into body of e-mail or attached as .doc or .rtf, to the Writing Contest Manager (see contact information below). Put last name, first initial, and CONTEST: Youth or Adult in the subject line. Be sure to include your name, date of birth if Youth entry, mailing address, phone number, and the name/e-mail under which payment was made, if not the one used to enter. Receipt will be acknowledged within 3 days. Please do not enter before October 15. <PUT LINK TO ONLINE FORM HERE>.

-->

F.J. Bergmann
OddContest Coordinator
Questions: e-mail me
To enter the writing contest, fill out this e-mail form: entry form

IMPORTANT NOTE!

All entries without a street address AND telephone number will be discarded (if you win, we mail you books). The information will not be used for anything other than this contest. We send receipt acknowledgment via e-mail; if you do not hear from us within 3 days of sending your entry, adjust your spam filter accordingly (does not come from contest e-mail address). If you have any questions about this process, feel free to contact:

F.J. Bergmann
OddContest Coordinator
Questions: e-mail me
To enter the writing contest, fill out this e-mail form: entry form

 

Postal mail: Please do not send postal entries unless you have absolutely no access to e-mail. All judging is done via electronic media, and the transcription process from hard copy is unreliable at best.

Mailing address (for checks):
Odyssey Con
OddContest
PO Box 7114
Madison, WI 53707

 

 

 

PUB: Bayou Magazine Fiction and Poetry Prize

FICTION AND POETRY EDITOR'S PRIZES
Contest Guidelines

 

SUBMIT ONLINE TO OUR 2011 CONTESTS               

 

 

2010 Jim Knudsen Editor’s Fiction Prize Announced

 

Bayou is pleased to announce that "Easy Living" by JoeAnn Hart is the winner of the 2010 James Knudsen Editor's Prize in FictionWe were particularly impressed by its complicated emotional landscape, strong sense of setting, and bittersweet end. “Easy Living” will appear in Bayou’s upcoming spring issue #55.

 

2010 Finalists:

 

Maggie Andersen's "Cypresses"
Lyle Roebuck’s “The Crab”
C.T. Pritchard's "Arizona"
Jendi Reiter's "The Away Team" 
Jim Reilly's "A House Divided"
Lyle Roebuck's "A Prayer of Humble Access"
Leslie Schwerin's "California”

 

      

    Bayou Magazine adheres to the CLMP Contest Code of Ethics which states:

    CLMP’s community of independent literary publishers believe that ethical contests serve our shared goal: to connect writers and readers by publishing exceptional writing. Intent to act ethically, clarity of guidelines, and transparency of process form the foundation of an ethical contest. To that end, we agree 1) to conduct our contests as ethically as possible and to address any unethical behavior on the part of our readers, judges, or editors; 2) to provide clear and specific contest guidelines—defining conflict of interest for all parties involved; and 3) to make the mechanics of our selection process available to the public. This Code recognizes that different contest models produce different results, but that each model can be run ethically. We have adopted this Code to reinforce our integrity and dedication as a publishing community and to ensure that our contests contribute to a vibrant literary heritage.

    via uno.edu

     

    VIDEO: Filmmaker Dana Verde: Watch Short Film "Lock and Key" Plus Director's Reel > indieWIRE

    Filmmaker Dana Verde:

    Watch Short Film

    "Lock and Key"

    Plus Director's Reel

    Video  by Vanessa Martinez | November 12, 2011 

    New York filmmaker Dana Verde's resume goes back to 1998. She completed her B.A. in Media Studies/Screenwriting from New School University in 2002. In years 2003 and 2004, Verde was a finalist at the Sundance Screenwriters Lab. She also attended London Film School in the UK. Verde's inspiration comes from the likes of filmmakers Darren Aronosky, Woody Allen and Martin Scorsese.

    Her short film Lock and Key, produced by Von Harris, will be featured next saturday 11/19 at the International Puerto Rican Heritage Film Festival. The film, which stars Jimmy Delgado and Irene DeLeon, centers around a locksmith, who "opens the door to his past when he unlocks the door of a young customer."

    You can watch Lock and Key in its entirety here now! Hopefully, you'll enjoy as I did. While you're at it, check out her director's film reel below the short. If interested in her work, follow Ms Verde on Facebook.

    For more information about the IPRHFF, which is screening 34 short films, click HERE.

    According to Verde, she is working on a long length feature film based on the short. Exciting news, I'll definitely follow up for any updates regarding that project.

    Meanwhile check out the short.

     

    ECONOMICS: 1 in 2 people are poor or low-income, census shows > NOLA.com

    1 in 2 people are poor

    or low-income, census shows

    Published: Thursday, December 15, 2011, 10:30 AM

    Zenobia Bechtol, 18, and her seven-month-old baby girl Cassandra, live in the dining room of her mother's apartment in Austin, Texas, Friday, Dec. 14, 2011, after Bechtol and her boyfriend were evicted from their apartment after he lost his job. Squeezed by rising living costs, a record number of Americans _ 1 in 2 _ have now fallen into poverty or are scraping by on earnings that classify them as low-income. The latest census data paint a bleak picture of a shrinking middle class amid persistently high unemployment and a fraying government safety net.   (Erich Schlegel, The Associated Press) 

     

    "Safety net programs such as food stamps and tax credits kept poverty from rising even higher in 2010, but for many low-income families with work-related and medical expenses, they are considered too 'rich' to qualify," said Sheldon Danziger, a University of Michigan public policy professor who specializes in poverty.

    "The reality is that prospects for the poor and the near poor are dismal," he said. "If Congress and the states make further cuts, we can expect the number of poor and low-income families to rise for the next several years."

    Congressional Republicans and Democrats are sparring over legislation that would renew a Social Security payroll tax cut, part of a year-end political showdown over economic priorities that could also trim unemployment benefits, freeze federal pay and reduce entitlement spending.

    Robert Rector, a senior research fellow at the conservative Heritage Foundation, questioned whether some people classified as poor or low-income actually suffer material hardship. He said that while safety-net programs have helped many Americans, they have gone too far, citing poor people who live in decent-size homes, drive cars and own wide-screen TVs.

    "There's no doubt the recession has thrown a lot of people out of work and incomes have fallen," Rector said. "As we come out of recession, it will be important that these programs promote self-sufficiency rather than dependence and encourage people to look for work."

    Mayors in 29 cities say more than 1 in 4 people needing emergency food assistance did not receive it. Many middle-class Americans are dropping below the low-income threshold -- roughly $45,000 for a family of four -- because of pay cuts, a forced reduction of work hours or a spouse losing a job. Housing and child-care costs are consuming up to half of a family's income.

    States in the South and West had the highest shares of low-income families, including Arizona, New Mexico and South Carolina, which have scaled back or eliminated aid programs for the needy. By raw numbers, such families were most numerous in California and Texas, each with more than 1 million.

    The struggling Americans include Zenobia Bechtol, 18, in Austin, Texas, who earns minimum wage as a part-time pizza delivery driver. Bechtol and her 7-month-old baby were recently evicted from their bedbug-infested apartment after her boyfriend, an electrician, lost his job in the sluggish economy.

    After an 18-month job search, Bechtol's boyfriend now works as a waiter and the family of three is temporarily living with her mother.

    "We're paying my mom $200 a month for rent, and after diapers and formula and gas for work, we barely have enough money to spend," said Bechtol, a high school graduate who wants to go to college. "If it weren't for food stamps and other government money for families who need help, we wouldn't have been able to survive."

    About 97.3 million Americans fall into a low-income category, commonly defined as those earning between 100 and 199 percent of the poverty level, based on a new supplemental measure by the Census Bureau that is designed to provide a fuller picture of poverty. Together with the 49.1 million who fall below the poverty line and are counted as poor, they number 146.4 million, or 48 percent of the U.S. population. That's up by 4 million from 2009, the earliest numbers for the newly developed poverty measure.

    The new measure of poverty takes into account medical, commuting and other living costs. Doing that helped push the number of people below 200 percent of the poverty level up from 104 million, or 1 in 3 Americans, that was officially reported in September.

    Broken down by age, children were most likely to be poor or low-income -- about 57 percent -- followed by seniors over 65. By race and ethnicity, Hispanics topped the list at 73 percent, followed by blacks, Asians and non-Hispanic whites.

    Even by traditional measures, many working families are hurting.

    Following the recession that began in late 2007, the share of working families who are low income has risen for three straight years to 31.2 percent, or 10.2 million. That proportion is the highest in at least a decade, up from 27 percent in 2002, according to a new analysis by the Working Poor Families Project and the Population Reference Bureau, a nonprofit research group based in Washington.

    Among low-income families, about one-third were considered poor while the remainder -- 6.9 million -- earned income just above the poverty line. Many states phase out eligibility for food stamps, Medicaid, tax credit and other government aid programs for low-income Americans as they approach 200 percent of the poverty level.

    The majority of low-income families -- 62 percent -- spent more than one-third of their earnings on housing, surpassing a common guideline for what is considered affordable. By some census surveys, child-care costs consume close to another one-fifth.

    Paychecks for low-income families are shrinking. The inflation-adjusted average earnings for the bottom 20 percent of families have fallen from $16,788 in 1979 to just under $15,000, and earnings for the next 20 percent have remained flat at $37,000. In contrast, higher-income brackets had significant wage growth since 1979, with earnings for the top 5 percent of families climbing 64 percent to more than $313,000.

    A survey of 29 cities conducted by the U.S. Conference of Mayors being released Thursday points to a gloomy outlook for those on the lower end of the income scale.

    Many mayors cited the challenges of meeting increased demands for food assistance, expressing particular concern about possible cuts to federal programs such as food stamps and WIC, which assists low-income pregnant women and mothers. Unemployment led the list of causes of hunger in cities, followed by poverty, low wages and high housing costs.

    Across the 29 cities, about 27 percent of people needing emergency food aid did not receive it. Kansas City, Mo., Nashville, Tenn., Sacramento, Calif., and Trenton, N.J., were among the cities that pointed to increases in the cost of food and declining food donations, while Mayor Michael McGinn in Seattle cited an unexpected spike in food requests from immigrants and refugees, particularly from Somalia, Burma and Bhutan.

    Among those requesting emergency food assistance, 51 percent were in families, 26 percent were employed, 19 percent were elderly and 11 percent were homeless.

    "People who never thought they would need food are in need of help," said Mayor Sly James of Kansas City, Mo., who co-chairs a mayors' task force on hunger and homelessness.

    Hope Yen, Associated Press

     

    via nola.com

     

    WOMEN: 'Living Hell': Somalia's Hidden Rape Epidemic > World Policy Institute

    'Living Hell':

    Somalia's Hidden

    Rape Epidemic

    By Taylor Hom

    Nadifa, a widowed mother of four, left her hut near Mogadishu, the capital of Somalia, to search for food. When she returned home hours later, she found a man raping her 11-year-old daughter. Nadifa tried to defend her daughter but was torn away by armed men as she screamed. The neighborhood watched helplessly as the men abducted Nadifa. She was pistol-whipped, kicked, punched, and scorched with burning plastic. 

    In Somalia, this is no anomaly. In a country torn by civil war, terrorism, and a mass famine, tens of thousands have died, and there has not been a functioning government for two decades. In mid-October, Kenya invaded Somalia, allegedly to fight al-Shabab, one of the world’s most fearsome terrorist organizations. With rising food prices, aid agencies like the UN’s World Food Program fear increased problems with food theft. While the world focuses on al-Shabab and food aid efficiency, the deteriorating situation has created an environment ripe for escalating gender violence. While the whole of Somalia carries the weight of the famine blistering the Horn of Africa, it’s women like Nadifa who bear the burden of the nation’s humanitarian catastrophe. Ensuring the safety of Somali women will pay long-term dividends for the stability of the country, and in the short-term, save thousands from the horrors of rape.

    Sinead Murray, a program manager for the International Rescue Committee, says there has been a four-fold increase in sexual violence since June. More and more women are being raped while fleeing to refugee camps, and even more tragically, once they are inside the camps as well. With no form of authority to punish the rapists, women fear menial tasks like walking to a bathroom. Establishing an efficient means of food aid in this corrupt nation is essential, but it won’t do much good if women have to fear leaving their homes. 

    International forces have given money and various forms of aid to the Transitional Federal Government in Somalia and neighboring Kenya, who hosts thousands of Somali refugees in Dadaab camp, the world’s largest refugee site. It is time these international forces, alongside the Somali and Kenyan governments, make protecting women a priority. Rape has become not just a tactic of war but a devastating social norm. Amid so many other problems, women’s rights have been placed on the backburner. If gender violence continues unnoticed and unpunished, beside the scars of starvation and war, there will be a fear embedded in the women of Somali that no level of international aid can heal. Gender violence undermines any potential success in the region.

    Somalia is one of the world’s worst places to be a woman, according to a recent survey by Trust Law, a project of the Thomson Reuters Foundation. Somalia’s minister for women's development and family welfare, Maryan Qasim, says she is “completely surprised” that Somalia isn’t number one (it currently ranks behind Afghanistan and the Democratic Republic of Congo), calling the nation a “living hell” for females. 

    Since women rarely report sexual violence and a rape victim in Somalia is taboo, the statistics are at best fuzzy. Al-Shabab considers a woman that reports her own rape to be a criminal. In 2008, Amnesty International released a report of a 13-year-old girl who was killed after her family reported she was raped. A number of eyewitnesses say she was brutally beaten to death in front of 1,000 spectators, buried neck high and pelted with stones. Allegedly, during the stoning, nurses were sent to check if the girl was still alive. They reported yes, so they removed her from the ground and continued to beat her until she died.

    Rape has become an everyday crime that wriggles itself free from any form of justice. Sexual violence is seldom reported because many  women “fear that their families will blame them, communities will reject them or simply because they feel ashamed to talk about it,” says Ann Burton, a senior public health officer at the United Nations Refugee Agency.

    It is important that along with food aid, support is given to clinics that aid victims of rape, paving the way towards some kind of justice, showing that rape doesn’t have to be a fact of life. Organizations like Sister Somalia, which established the first sexual violence hotline, should be supported and encouraged. They also provide medical service, counseling, and business starter kits for rape survivors. But Sister Somalia currently only serves 300 women a year--among them Nadifa--but this is just a small fraction of the nation's victims. 

    Women travel hundreds of kilometers with their children to find peace at camps like Dadaab in Kenya, now the word’s biggest refugee site. Here, gangs of men have found opportunity. In the 50-mile stretch from Mogadishu to the border, bandits wait for refugees where they often rob men and rape women. 

    Once in the Kenyan refugee camp of Dadaab, the majority of the families are female-headed, according to the UN. Many husbands have died, been killed, or simply abandoned their families, leaving women to lead their families through drought, famine, and civil war, alone. As the camp continues to grow, sexual violence has increased drastically. Women fear leaving the safety of a large group for such quotidian tasks as retrieving firewood, since groups of men often lurk in the woods waiting for a lone woman.

    "Some women interviewed during (the IRC) survey said they witnessed women and girls being raped in front of their husbands and parents, at the insistence of perpetrators described as 'men with guns.' Others were forced to strip down naked, and… they were raped by multiple perpetrators," says Murray.

    Dadaab camp now constitutes Kenya’s third largest city, and some reports claim that Somali citizens employed by the Kenyan government to protect the border against al-Shabab are often rapists themselves. Kenya receives millions in aid from the U.S. If Kenya has enough troops for an invasion into the southern portions of Somalia, they should be able to provide some sort of protection around the refugee camps.

    Kenya is right—al-Shabab needs to be eliminated. But protecting women cannot wait until terrorists, famine, and disease are defeated entirely. Protection for women must be implemented simultaneously. If millions of dollars, countless pounds of food, arms, and drones are devoted to Somalia by western powers, then they can afford to emphasize the plight of women, especially in and around the refugee camps. 

    The UN and other aid agencies say that the hundreds of millions of dollars in aid has not been wholly effective. While much of it is lost in the corrupt and disorganized political system, it’s also impossible to ensure food reaches the female-headed households if women are afraid to leave their huts. Making sure that women feel safe, especially in and near refugee camps, will do wonders to improve the efficiency of aid delivery.

    The country is in shambles, and helping Somalia will not be simple. Many analysts are worried that in the coming rainy season diseases like malaria, cholera, and measles could ravage an already weak population. But we cannot wait for the many ails of Somalia to be cured before the Somali women are noticed. Right now, there is an unacknowledged war being waged and rape epidemic has become an emblem of Somalia’s chaos. The shattered nation is in desperate need of organized governance. To address the plight of women would not only be a step towards justice, but towards the rebuilding of a cohesive and functioning society.

                                                             *****

                                                             *****         

    Taylor Hom is an editorial assistant at the World Policy Journal.

    [Photo courtesy of Flickr user IHH Humanitarian Relief Foundation/Turkey's photostream]

     

    WOMEN: The brave women of the Middle East

    Day of shame

    in the Middle East:

    Female protesters beaten

    with metal poles

    as vicious soldiers

    drag girls through streets

     

     

    By Inderdeep Bains

     

    Shocking images revealing the brutality of Egypt’s armed forces in quelling protests caused outrage around the world yesterday.  

    In a video broadcast on the internet, security forces dressed in riot gear are seen chasing a woman and beating her to the ground with metal bars before stripping her and kicking her repeatedly. One soldier stamps his foot hard on her chest.

    Other images showed women beaten unconscious. 

     

    Brutal: This shocking image shows Egyptian army soldiers dragging this helpless woman on the ground and kicking her hard in the chest after ripping her clothes from her body

     

     

    Outnumbered: This woman screams in pain as she is surrounded by five male soldiers during protests in the Egyptian capital and beaten with poles

    Outnumbered: This woman screams in pain as she is surrounded by five male soldiers during protests in the Egyptian capital and beaten with poles

    After being viciously beaten by the ten-strong mob, the woman lies helplessly on the ground as her shirt is ripped from her body and a man kicks her with full force in her exposed chest.

     

     

     

    Moments earlier she had been struck countless times in the head and body with metal batons, not content with the brutal beating delivered by his fellow soldier, one man stamped on her head repeatedly.

    She feebly tried to shield her head from the relentless blows with her hands.

    But she was knocked unconscious in the shameful attack and left lying motionless as the military men mindlessly continued to beat her limp and half-naked body.

    Before she was set upon by the guards, three men appeared to carry her as they tried to flee the approaching military.

    But they were too slow and the soldiers caught up with them, capturing the women and knocking one of the men to the ground.

    The two other men were forced to abandoned their fellow protestors and continued running, looking helplessly back at the two they left behind being relentlessly attacked as they lay on the ground.

     

     

    Brutally injured: More than 50 men and women were injured on Saturday in violent clashes between rock-throwing protesters and military police

    Brutally injured: This woman is left barely conscious and splattered in blood after being beaten the military in violent clashes between rock-throwing protesters and military police

     

     

    Violent: Egyptian army soldiers use brutal force to arrest this female protester and drag her by her hair during clashes with military police near Cairo's Tahrir Square

    Shameless: Egyptian army soldiers use brutal force to arrest this female protester and drag her by her hair during clashes with military police near Cairo's Tahrir Square

     

     

     

    Shameless: The heavy handed Egyptian army soldiers drag the arrested a woman protester off by her hair

    Violent: The heavy handed Egyptian army soldiers drag the arrested a woman protester off by her hair

    This is just one of the hundreds of shameful injustices seen in Cairo's Tahrir Square where Egypt's military took a dramatically heavy hand on Saturday to crush protests against its rule.

    Clashes with security forces continued for a third day yesterday near Egypt’s parliament. Soldiers erected huge concrete barricades, but an exchange of stones and firebombs continued. The army also used water tanks to spray the crowd and fired gun shots in the air.

    At least ten have been killed in the violence, including two children aged 12 and 13. Two died after their skulls were fractured by stones thrown during the battles and at least six were shot dead, despite army and government claims that no live fire was being used.

    In Tahrir Square,  centre of the violence, demonstrators demanding an end to military rule have been camped out for the last few weeks. A 14-year-old girl pushed back her headscarf  to reveal a bloodied bandage. She was struck on the head by a stone thrown by a soldier on a rooftop.

    Her mother said they had come every day to protest against the brutal methods of the military council which has controlled the country since President Hosni Mubarak was ousted following mass street protests last February. ‘There is no justice in Egypt any more,’ she said.

    Aya Emad said that troops dragged her by her headscarf and hair into the Cabinet headquarters. The 24-year-old said soldiers kicked her on the ground, an officer shocked her with an electrical prod and another slapped her on the face, leaving her nose broken and her arm in a sling.

    Man-handled: Egyptian soldiers clash with this female protester and two male protestors near Cairo's Tahrir Square

    Man-handled: Egyptian soldiers clash with this female protester and two male protestors near Cairo's Tahrir Square

     

     

     

    Protection: A female and two male Egyptian protester use a metal sheet as a shield as they throw rocks at military police, unseen, behind the gates and inside the Parliament building near Cairo's Tahrir Square

    Protection: A female and two male Egyptian protester use a metal sheet as a shield as they throw rocks at military police, unseen, behind the gates and inside the Parliament building near Cairo's Tahrir Square

     

     

    Brave: Two women join protesters as they shout anti-military council slogans near the cabinet in Cairo

    Brave: Two women join protesters as they shout anti-military council slogans near the cabinet in Cairo

     

    Mona Seif, an activist who was briefly detained Friday, said she saw an officer repeatedly slapping a detained old woman in the face.

    'It was a humiliating scene,' Seif told the private TV network Al-Nahar. 'I have never seen this in my life.'

    In Bahrain a similar pictured was emerging with a video clip showing a female human rights activist being hit by a policewoman during clashes between police and anti-government protestors.

    Police fired teargas to break up a demonstration by several hundred people on the outskirts of the capital, Manama where several women staged a sit-in protest trying to block a main road.

    After nearly 48 hours of continuous fighting in Egypt's capital more than 300 were left injured and nine dead, many of them shot dead.

    The most sustained crackdown yet is likely a sign that the generals who took power after the February ouster of Hosni Mubarak are confident that the Egyptian public is on its side after two rounds of widely acclaimed parliament elections, that Islamist parties winning the vote will stay out of the fight while pro-democracy protesters become more isolated.

    Still, the generals risk turning more Egyptians against them, especially from outrage over the abuse of women.

    'Do they think this is manly?' Toqa Nosseir, a 19-year old student, said of the attacks on women. 'Where is the dignity?'

     

    Grief: A woman mourns slain Egyptian protesters who were killed during the latest clashes with Egyptian soldiers, while they wait to receive their bodies in front of the morgue in Cairo

    Grief: A woman mourns slain Egyptian protesters who were killed during the latest clashes with Egyptian soldiers, while they wait to receive their bodies in front of the morgue in Cairo

    Under-fire: Pro-reform female protesters run for cover as heavy-handed police try to disperse them with tear-gas, in Abu Seba village, north of Manama, Bahrain

    Under-fire: Pro-reform female protesters run for cover as heavy-handed police try to disperse them with tear-gas, in Abu Seba village, north of Manama, Bahrain

    Nosseir joined the protest over her parents' objections because she couldn't tolerate the clashes she had seen.

    'No one can approve or accept what is happening here,' she said.

    'The military council wants to silence all criticism. They want to hold on power ... I will not accept this humiliation just for the sake of stability.'

    Nearby in Tahrir, protesters held up newspapers with the image of the half-stripped woman on the front page to passing cars, shouting sarcastically, 'This is the army that is protecting us!'

    'No one can approve or accept what is happening here,' she said.

    'The military council wants to silence all criticism. They want to hold on power ... I will not accept this humiliation just for the sake of stability.'

    Nearby in Tahrir, protesters held up newspapers with the image of the half-stripped woman on the front page to passing cars, shouting sarcastically, 'This is the army that is protecting us!'

    'Are you not ashamed?' leading reform figure and Nobel Peace laureate Mohamed ElBaradei posted on Twitter in an address to the ruling military council.

    Egypt's new, military-appointed interim prime minister defended the military, denying it shot protesters. He said gunshot deaths were caused by other attackers he didn't identify.

    He accused the protesters of being 'anti-revolution.'

    The main street between Tahrir Square, the epicenter of the anti-Mubarak protests, and the parliament and Cabinet buildings where the clashes began early the previous morning looked like a war zone on Saturday.

    Military police on rooftops pelting protesters below with stones and firebombs and launched truncheon-swinging assaults to drive the crowds back.

    Young activists put helmets or buckets on their heads or grabbed sheets of concrete and even satellite dishes as protection against the stones hailing down from the roofs.

    The streets were strewn with chunks of concrete, stones ,broken glass, burned furniture and peddlers' carts as clashes continued to rage after nightfall Saturday.

     

    Detained: Activist Zainab al-Khawaja (Right) screams while being arrested during a protest in Abu Seba village, north of Manama

    Detained: Activist Zainab al-Khawaja (Right) screams while being arrested during a protest in Abu Seba village, north of Manama

     

     

    Heavy-handed: A Bahraini policewoman drags activist Zainab al-Khawaja across the floor after arresting her fo taking part in sit-in protest

    Heavy-handed: A Bahraini policewoman drags activist Zainab al-Khawaja across the floor after arresting her fo taking part in sit-in protest

    The clashes began early on Friday with a military assault on a 3-week-old sit-in outside the Cabinet building by protesters demanding the military hand over power immediately to civilians.

    More than a week of heavy fighting erupted in November, leaving more than 40 dead – but that was largely between police and protesters, with the military keeping a low profile.

    In the afternoon, military police charged into Tahrir, swinging truncheons and long sticks, briefly chasing out protesters and setting fire to their tents.

    They trashed a field hospital set up by protesters, swept into buildings where television crews were filming and briefly detained journalists. They tossed the camera and equipment of an Al-Jazeera TV crew off the balcony of a building.

    A journalist who was briefly detained told The Associated Press that he was beaten up with sticks and fists while being led to into the parliament building. Inside, he saw a group of detained young men and one woman.

    Each was surrounded by six or seven soldiers beating him or her with sticks or steel bars or giving electrical shocks with prods.

    'Blood covered the floor, and an officer was telling the soldiers to wipe the blood,' said the journalist.

     

    Defiant: A brave woman shouts anti-government slogans as she stands amidst tear gas fired by riot police to disperse a sit-in at a roundabout on Budaiya Highway, west of Manama

    Defiant: A brave woman shouts anti-government slogans as she stands amidst tear gas fired by riot police to disperse a sit-in at a roundabout on Budaiya Highway, west of Manama

    As night fell in Tahrir, clashes continued around a concrete wall that the military erected to block the avenue from Tahrir to parliament.

    In Bahrain, Zainab al-Khawaja, 27, was arrested and dragged across the floor by her handcuffs after police fired teargas to break up a demonstration by several hundred people on the outskirts of the capital, Manama.

    Ms al-Khawaja and several other women staged a sit-in protest trying to block a main road. The other women fled the scene but Ms al-Khawaja refused.

    Riot police fired tear-gas at the women, with dozens requiring hospital treatment after the incident.

    A report by a panel of human rights experts in November found that Bahraini security forces had used excessive forces and carried out the systematic abuse of prisoners, including torture, when the regime sent in troops to crush the uprising in March.

    Watch Video here: WARNING GRAPHIC CONTENT

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

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    THE GIRL

    The picture of this girl has been a major topic of debate on Egyptian talk shows tonight — with some SCAF defenders arguing it was photoshopped — and is on the cover of tomorrow's Tahrir newspaper. Below is the video that shows her and a companion being chased, then beaten by soldiers.

    Reader Comments (8)

    Are you sure this is the army? Or is it the police?

    Dec 18, 2011 at 12:07 AM | Unregistered CommenterWesse van Rensburg

    Wesse, this is the military police, who are part of the military forces.

    The clueless media and the horrible translators have done a terrible job of explaining what is going on to the outside world.

    The police (usually in white uniforms) are one group and they are civilians.

    The Central Security Forces (al-Amn al-Markezy) are usually the ones who look like "riot police" and have been labeled "police" by the media and the poor translations from Egyptians, but they are part of the Ministry of Interior. Their job is to protect the state, not the people, which is why calling them police is a poor translation.
    Also part of the Ministry of Interior are the State Security Investigations (Amn al-Dawla) who are usually plainclothes and are the ones kidnapping and doing most of the secret torturing. Their job is also to protect the state; usually they do this by oppressing Egyptians.

    The Military Police (al-Shurta al-'Askeriyya) are usually in green military uniforms but have also been seen in "riot gear" and they are part of the military/army (the translations really depend on context since they are not always used the same way in all languages.) But they are part of the military complex and answer to the Supreme Council of the Armed Forced, abbreviated by many as SCAF.

    We in democratic nations are fortunate enough to not have these forces used internally. This would be like the FBI, CIA, National Guard, and special forces all being used to oppress Americans in the US rather than protect the people.

    Dec 18, 2011 at 2:06 AM | Unregistered CommenterForever Student

    I'm afraid citizens of one such democracy are feeling a little less fortunate these days:

    Aljazeera English: US lawmakers legalise indefinite detention
    http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/features/2011/12/201112773810926474.html

    "The bill is a big deal," said Christopher Anders, the ACLU's senior legislative counsel. "It would authorise the president to order the military to capture civilians and put them in indefinite detention without charge or trial, with no limitation based on either geography or citizenship. The military would have the authority to imprison persons far from any battlefield, including American citizens and including people picked up in the US."

    Dec 18, 2011 at 4:05 AM | Unregistered Commenterakkadia

    At 0:30 you see a man in white shirt and two ladies in red trying to calmly walk their way out on the right side of the street. At 1:45 they are assaulted with indescribable violence. This is one of the strongest evidence I've seen of the indiscriminate nature of the attacks.

    Dec 18, 2011 at 12:13 PM | Unregistered CommenterBen

     

    >via: http://www.arabist.net/blog/2011/12/17/the-girl.html

     

    __________________________

     

    Bahraini activist&nbsp;Zainab al-Khawaja was arrested Thursday during an &#8220;illegal gathering&#8221; in Manama. Watch the video of her arrest here, where she appears to be handcuffed and dragged away by police officers.&nbsp; Arguably the most&nbsp;noticeable voice against the Bahrain regime today,&nbsp;al-Khawaja is best known as @angryarabiya on Twitter. Though she has been arrested several times, her prominent voice has received mainstream media attention lately: she appeared on the New York Times&#8217;s Lede Blog two weeks ago and again in an interview with the Times&#8217;s Nicholas Kristof on Thursday. Her father, a well-known opposition leader, is currently serving a life sentence in prison. Her husband and brother-in-law are also in jail. Read more at the Lede Blog. [Photo:&nbsp;A Bahraini police officer spoke to Zainab al-Khawaja during a rally Thursday near a highway leading to the capital, Manama. Credit: Reuters]

    Bahraini activist Zainab al-Khawaja was arrested Thursday during an “illegal gathering” in Manama. Watch the video of her arrest  here, where she appears to be handcuffed and dragged away by police officers. 

    Arguably the most noticeable voice against the Bahrain regime today, al-Khawaja is best known as@angryarabiya on Twitter. Though she has been arrested several times, her prominent voice has received mainstream media attention lately: she appeared on the New York Times’s Lede Blog two weeks ago and again in an interview with the Times’s Nicholas Kristof on Thursday.

    Her father, a well-known opposition leader, is currently serving a life sentence in prison. Her husband and brother-in-law are also in jail.

    Read more at the Lede Blog.

    [Photo: A Bahraini police officer spoke to Zainab al-Khawaja during a rally Thursday near a highway leading to the capital, Manama. Credit: Reuters]

    >via: http://pantslessprogressive.com/post/14288554866/bahraini-activist-zainab-al-...

     

     

     

     

     

    __________________________The Lede - The New York Times News Blog

     

     

    December 15, 2011, 7:39 PM

    Bahrain Activist’s Arrest

    Caught on Video

    Video said to show the arrest of Zainab Alkhawaja, an activist and blogger, in Bahrain on Thursday.

    A blogger and human rights activist who called Bahrain “a dictatorship” in an interview with The New York Times this week was arrested on Thursday during a protest.

    Video posted online by opposition activists showed the blogger, Zainab Alkhawaja, being handcuffed and dragged away from a traffic circle in the capital, Manama. At one stage in the clip, a female police officer, apparently angered that Ms. Alkhawaja was practicing passive resistance, appeared to crouch down and punch her.

    Bahrain’s interior ministry reported on Twitter that Ms. Alkhawaja and a second woman were arrested for taking part in an “illegal gathering” and calling on others to do so too. The authorities also claimed that “one of the women “attacked” a female police officer. Although the security forces were seen recording the protest on video themselves, no images of any attack on an officer have been released so far.

    2 ladies were arrested for taking part & calling for illegal gathering& one of them attacked public security female employee near Busaiba

     

    The arrest came just hours after The Times published a video report featuring Ms. Alkhawaja’s conversation with Nicholas Kristof, an Op-Ed columnist. Two weeks ago, she was similarly outspoken about the crackdown on dissent in her country in an interview with The Lede via Skype.

    Shortly before her arrest, Ms. Alkhawaja reported to followers of her Angry Arabiya Twitter feed that she and some other women were taking part in a protest activists called “Occupy Budaiya Street.”

    Sitting in a roundabout on budaiya street, shouting down down Hamad. Until now riot police don't seem to know what to so

     

    Maryam, Abu Deeb, an activist who recorded some of the protest on her phone, posted this photograph online of the small sit-in by Ms. Alkhawaja and a few other women before the police moved in.

    A picture which clearly shows Masoma , the lady arrested along with @angryarabiya raising victory sign pic.twitter.com/kS6zefvL

     

    The activists were also filming as the security forces fired tear gas in and around the traffic circle to disperse protesters.

    The protest took place just outside the Country Mall in Manama. Anothervideo clip posted online by the activists showed tear gas wafting in to the mall’s Costa Coffee shop, which is located on the edge of the traffic circle.

    Later on Thursday, two Times journalists who were working outside the coffee shop reported that the security forces fired more tear gas at people there, even though the protest had ended. Adam Ellick, who produced Mr. Kristof’s video report, wrote on Twitter that gas was “fired directly at 15 guys sipping coffee outside. None were protesting.”

    Lauren Bohn, a multimedia journalist, was photographing a group of womenflashing the victory sign when the security forces attacked.

    Lauren Bohn, a journalist on assignment for The Times in Bahrain, photographing female activists just before tear gas was fired at the groupMaryam Abu Deeb, via YfrogLauren Bohn, a journalist on assignment for The Times in Bahrain, photographing female activists just before tear gas was fired at the group.

    One of the activists who recorded the protest reported on his Alhojairy Twitter feed that he was interrogated at a police station later and the authorities confiscated both of his phones.

    2- A police came to me and start hitting my car with his stick and said to me: I saw you filming ! I said: yes, so what ?

     

     

     

    >via: http://thelede.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/12/15/bahrain-activists-arrest-caught-o...

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    HISTORY: Weeksville, a 19th-Century Black Settlement in Bed-Stuy > NYTimes.com

    In Fast-Gentrifying Bed-Stuy,

    a Celebration of

    Early Black Settlers

    Jennifer Scott, vice director and director of research, left, and Emily Bibb, collections manager, in the basement where the collection is mostly held of the Weeksville Heritage Center. (Eric Michael Johnson for The New York Times) 

     

    On a clear spring day in 1968, residents of Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn, including retirees and Boy Scouts, were on their hands and knees, digging underneath the intersection of Troy Avenue and Dean Street in what would become a major neighborhood archaeological excavation.

    What they found were the remnants of a village called Weeksville, one of the country’s first free-black communities where blacks owned property and ran businesses, a hospital and a school as nearby states like New Jersey continued to sanction slavery.

    Many of the houses were torn down by the New York City Housing Authority to make way for public housing. But a remaining few were restored by a group called the Society for the Preservation of Weeksville and Bedford-Stuyvesant History that worked to unearth and preserve the village. The society later became the Weeksville Heritage Center, an organization that promotes African-American history.

    The traces of a place that has been largely forgotten are finally resurfacing as the center prepares to display artifacts from over 50 years of excavations. The objects, most of which have been in storage for decades, will be on permanent rotation at the heritage center’s new $30 million extension, a building that will have space for more arts and educational offerings when it opens next year.

    “This was a history that was lost, and part of our mission is to make sure that doesn’t happen again,” said Jennifer Scott, research director at the Weeksville Heritage Center.

    The original Weeksville was discovered when a community-survey class at the nearby Pratt Institute studied old maps and directories of New York, and noticed the existence of a black colony. They decided to see if physical vestiges remained. An instructor for the class, Jim Hurley, had been researching Bedford-Stuyvesant and wanted to investigate a cluster of houses in the neighborhood that he suspected were from the 19th century, when Weeksville was established. He met Joseph Haines, a Metropolitan Transportation Authority engineer and pilot who was interested in his effort, and they rented a propeller plane to fly over the area looking for architectural evidence.

    Within the cluster, they discovered four houses that were not aligned with the street, an oddity that suggested to Mr. Hurley that the houses’ construction predated the modern street grid. Mr. Hurley verified through property deeds and tax documents that the houses were part of the historic village. After learning that the city was going to tear down the houses, he and neighborhood residents mounted a successful campaign to save what became known as the Hunterfly Road Houses.

    A donated map of the Weeksville area, one of the country's first free black communities where blacks owned property and ran businesses.
    A donated map of the Weeksville area, one of the country’s first free-black communities where blacks owned property and ran businesses. (Eric Michael Johnson for The New York Times)

     

    The history of Weeksville stretches back to 1838, when a black longshoreman, James Weeks, who was a well-known leader in the black-suffrage movement, bought property from a black landowner to gain citizenship and voting rights.

    At the time, black men could not become citizens or vote without owning at least $250 worth of property. Mr. Weeks bought $1,500 in land, and a few other other free black men did so as well and founded Weeksville. Mr. Weeks and his partners divided the land into plots and sold them to other black families, many of whom had come from the South. They placed ads in several newspapers recruiting new residents. At its height, Weeksville was home to 700 families.

    Some of the artifacts from Weeksville are already on display at the Hunterfly Road Houses, including photographs from the late 1800s of well-dressed residents at social clubs, playing cards, sports and music. Other items, including remarkably intact China, glass inkwells, tintypes of nattily attired men and women, and illustrated dance cards, will be shown when the center opens. There will also be recorded oral histories, film clips and newspaper articles.

    The heritage center’s ambitious campaign to preserve the neighborhood’s history has inspired residents who are working to protect the neighborhood from gentrification.

    “We get a lot of calls for advice on how to get where we are today from people who want to landmark other sites in Bed-Stuy,” Ms. Scott said.

    In recent months, residents have petitioned the city’s Landmarks Preservation Commission to expand the existing Stuyvesant Heights Historic District and to establish new ones, including a district called Bedford Corners.

    A rope bed (from the same time period as the Weeksville double house 1840-80's) on display in one of the homes at Weeksville.
    A rope bed (from the same time period as the Weeksville double house 1840-80s) on display in one of the homes at Weeksville. (Eric Michael Johnson for The New York Times)

     

    “These blocks are a catalog of fine architecture through the 19th century,” said Claudette Brady, the chairwoman of the Bedford Corners Historic District Joint Block Association, as she walked down a block of Hancock Street on a recent day. Elegant, neo-brick brownstones in browns, lavenders, creams and reds were adorned with stone carvings, glimmering metalwork, terra cotta tiles, wrought-iron railings and stained glass.

    An amateur architectural historian, Daniel Thompson — Ms. Brady joked that he was “possessed by the ghost of a little old Victorian woman who used to live in his house” — accompanied her. “What’s surprising is that these buildings have remained so intact through the years with no protection, but development is much more aggressive now,” said Mr. Thompson, who has lived in Bed-Stuy for 11 years. “Some of this architecture, you won’t find in Manhattan. So if it’s lost here, it’s lost forever.”

    The Weeksville Heritage Center is also applying to have two churches, a school and a public art sculpture that fall within the historical boundaries of the original Weeksville community declared landmarks.

    Residents want to hold on to the past because the story of Weeksville and many parts of Bedford-Stuyvesant is “really rare,” said Elissa Blount-Moorhead, director of programs and exhibitions at the Weeksville Heritage Center. “There’s no other narrative like this.”