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-   -   Interesting News (http://www.ironworksforum.com/forum/showthread.php?t=100562)

thecarrotdude 03-22-2009 01:29 AM

Re: Interesting News
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Firestormalpha (Post 1227783)
Cool articles, maybe include headlines? Just a thought, interesting articles all the same.

whoops, haha I added them.

Variol (Farseer) Elmwood 03-22-2009 06:32 AM

Re: Interesting News
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by thecarrotdude (Post 1227782)
Rights group: 1,000 seized in Gambia 'witch-hunt'
http://edition.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/af...aft/index.html

Saudi Arabia to lift ban on women drivers
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worl...n-drivers.html

I'm not sure if "interesting" is the right word for the first one..

thecarrotdude 03-26-2009 01:33 AM

Re: Interesting News
 
'Miracle fruit' turns sour things sweet
http://www.cnn.com/2009/HEALTH/03/25...oss/index.html

Variol (Farseer) Elmwood 03-26-2009 07:44 AM

Re: Interesting News
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by thecarrotdude (Post 1227899)
'Miracle fruit' turns sour things sweet
http://www.cnn.com/2009/HEALTH/03/25...oss/index.html

This fruit was in one of the CSI episodes.

Variol (Farseer) Elmwood 04-01-2009 06:29 AM

Re: Interesting News
 
..not the most fitting thread for this, but I did not want to start a new one. ..maybe there should be though.

New Afghan law forcing sex draws outrage from Canada

Quote:

Canadian officials contacted the Afghan government Tuesday to express concern about controversial new legislation that would reportedly force women to have sex with their husbands.

The Canadian government reacted with outrage following reports that the administration of President Hamid Karzai has approved a wide-ranging family law for the country's Shia minority.

Various reports say the legislation would make it illegal for Shia women to refuse their husbands sex, leave the house without their permission or have custody of children.

Canadian officials contacted the Karzai's office, and Foreign Affairs Minister Lawrence Cannon spoke to two Afghan cabinet ministers Tuesday seeking clarification.

Karzai's office has so far refused to comment on the legislation, which has been criticized by some Afghan parliamentarians and a UN women's agency but has not yet been published.

Critics say Karzai's government approved it in a hurry to win support in the upcoming election from ethnic Hazaras — a Shia Muslim minority that constitutes a crucial block of swing voters.

"If these reports are true, this will create serious problems for Canada," said International Trade Minister Stockwell Day, who fielded questions in the House of Commons.

"The onus is on the government of Afghanistan to live up to its responsibilities for human rights, absolutely including rights of women.

"If there's any wavering on this point from the government of Afghanistan, this will create serious problems and be a serious disappointment for us" Day said.

Late Tuesday, Canadian officials said they had learned the law was not yet in effect but that they remained "very concerned."

The Afghan constitution guarantees equal rights for women, but also allows the Shia to have separate family law based on religious tradition.

Some international monitors have avoided discussing the issue, for fear of feeding the impression that exists among Afghans that their government takes its marching orders from the West.

Female parliamentarians in Afghanistan have condemned the legislation, as has the United Nations Development Fund for Women.

They were joined Tuesday by the NDP, which has opposed the Afghan military mission.

"How can we say that our soldiers are there to protect women's rights when the Western-backed leader of this nation pushes through laws like this?" said NDP MP Dawn Black.

"Allowing women to be treated like a piece of property … is this what we're fighting for? Is this what our people are dying for in Afghanistan?"

Variol (Farseer) Elmwood 04-05-2009 02:28 PM

Re: Interesting News
 
Ontario man found guilty in HIV murder trial

Quote:

An HIV-positive Ontario man has been found guilty of first-degree murder in the deaths of two of his sex partners in what was considered a precedent-setting trial in Canada.

The jury also convicted Johnson Aziga, 52, on 10 counts of aggravated sexual assault and one count of attempted aggravated sexual assault.

Aziga, of Hamilton, had been accused of endangering the lives of 11 women by recklessly exposing them to the virus that causes AIDS.

Seven women became infected with HIV, two have since died of AIDS-related cancer, and four tested negative.

The first-degree murder charges made this case the first of its kind in Canada.

In his instruction to jurors, Justice Thomas Lofchik said they need not find that Aziga planned and deliberately killed the two Toronto women for him to be found guilty of first-degree murder.

The deaths of S.B., 51, and H.C., 49, would automatically be first-degree murders if the jury found they were committed as the result of an aggravated sexual assault, Lofchik said.

During the six-month trial, the Crown described Aziga, a former employee of the Ministry of the Attorney General, as a callous and arrogant person who lied about his HIV status.

Prosecutors alleged that Aziga failed to tell his partners of his HIV-positive status, even though he had been aware of it since 1996 and was under public-health orders to do so.

The defence argued Aziga was depressed and ill and did not have the state of mind to deliberately endanger the lives of his sexual partners.


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