organization:supreme court

  • The death penalty debate: An eye for an eye? - The Washington Post

    http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/special/outlook/death-penalty

    The botched execution of Clayton Lockett in Oklahoma on April 29 has reignited debate over the death penalty and prompted President Obama to request a review of how it is applied. Obama cited “significant problems — racial bias, uneven application ... individuals on death row who later on were discovered to have been innocent because of exculpatory evidence.” Here is a breakdown of the 1,379 people — responsible for killing more than 2,074 — who have been put to death in the United States since the Supreme Court reinstated the death penalty in 1976. Most cases involved torture, rape or another felony; Lockett shot a teenager and ordered an accomplice to bury her alive.

    #peine_de_mort #visualisation #états_unis

    • Étrange infographie !

      Déjà le concept de mettre en face des exécutions le nombre des victimes est plus que louche. Bon, c’est fait pour aller avec le titre Œil pour œil (même en forme interrogative, c’est décidément très louche).

      Mettre les victimes par année d’exécution de leur meurtrier, c’est débile quand on pense au délai qu’il peut y avoir entre la condamnation et l’exécution, par exemple. Mais ça évite beaucoup de boulot à l’infographie…

      Enfin, la solution proposée au problème d’échelle est encore plus débile : en dédoublant les bâtons pour certaines années. Ça permet de faire tenir les 250 victimes « de 2001 ».

      Et ça permet de masquer totalement le pic d’exécutions de 1999.

  • Hundreds of asylum cases set for appeal

    THERE are fears asylum seekers have been wrongly deported from Britain because of a controversial language-checking system heavily criticised by the Supreme Court.

    Hundreds of cases could be submitted for appeal after a panel of five of the UK’s most senior judges found serious fault with the Home Office’s use of reports compiled by Swedish firm Sprakab, which analyses the language and dialect of asylum applicants.

    The Supreme Court judgment focused on the case of two asylum seekers in Scotland. It calls for immigration officials to review the practice as too much weight had been given to the reports in asylum hearings.

    http://www.heraldscotland.com/news/crime-courts/hundreds-of-asylum-cases-set-for-appeal.24293909

    #langue #asile #migration #réfugié #Sprakab #dialecte
    –-> @reka : idées pour d’autres mots-clés ?

    • Hundreds of asylum seekers ‘wrongly deported’ after ‘inappropriate’ advice from Swedish linguistics firm

      Hundreds of asylum seekers may have been wrongly deported from Britain due to the Home Office’s reliance on a Swedish firm to analyse their language, it was claimed last night.

      Sprakab was criticised in a judgement handed down this week by the Supreme Court, which said its staff had given “wholly inappropriate” opinions to asylum tribunals on whether a claimant sounded convincing, instead of merely analysing the way they spoke. Critics told The Independent such behaviour was commonplace and may have negatively affected hundreds of asylum cases.

      http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/hundreds-of-asylum-seekers-wrongly-deported-after-inappropriate-advic

  • There is such a thing as ’Israeli’

    Haaretz Editorial | May 5, 2014 |
    http://www.haaretz.com/opinion/1.588976

    In October 2013, the Supreme Court rejected a petition by a group of Israelis who wanted to force the state to register them as members of the Israeli people, by changing their affiliation as recorded in the Population Registry from “Jewish” to “Israeli.” The reasoning for rejecting the petition was that the existence of “an Israeli people” had not been legally proven, Judge Hanan Melcer noted, and “it is not proper to encourage the creation of ‘slivers’ of new peoples.”

    Yesterday, six months after that verdict was issued, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu explained why he is promoting a new Basic Law: “The Nation State of the Jewish People.”

    “Israel’s status as the nation-state of the Jewish people is not given sufficient expression in our Basic Laws, and this is what the proposed Basic Law is meant to do.” Netanyahu subsequently claimed that the Jewish components of the state “are under relentless and increasing attack from abroad, and even at home.”

    Both the court ruling and the ceaseless parliamentary efforts to legislate such a law put forth a very narrow portrait of “Israeliness.” For 66 years now Israeliness” has attempted to gain recognition and win independence, and has been rejected repeatedly by the establishment. It has been described as the “slivers of peoplehood” whose existence has not been proven, while at the same time, no one seeks to legislate a law that will define and protect it. Again and again it is forced to bow before its “big sister,” the Jewish state.

    But while Netanyahu’s motivation can be explained by his obsessive desire to Judaize Israel and not to allow its minorities to “feel at home,” it is hard not to wonder what exactly the basis was for the court’s determination that there is no such thing as an Israeli nationality [with the Population Registry’s use of the term “nationality” referring not to citizenship but rather to ethnic identity]. Does it not suffice that a group of people lives together for decades in a country called Israel, to call this people “Israeli”? The creation of Israeli literature, Israeli art, Israeli music, Israeli theater, Israeli humor, Israeli politics, Israeli sports, an Israeli accent, Israeli grief – are all of these not enough to speak of an “Israeli people”?

    Israeli identity, which is still crystallizing, consists of a whole mosaic of faiths, opinions and tastes; it is not monolithic and homogenous and it is immersed in deeper-than-ever conflict that sometimes seems insoluble. But that is no reason to strike at the very existence of Israeli identity. On the contrary, these are its characteristics and these are precisely the contemporary definitions that sustain it. On the eve of Independence Day 2014, the citizens of Israel can and should be proud of it.

  • #Algeria's ailing president sworn in for fourth term
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/algerias-ailing-president-sworn-fourth-term

    Abdelaziz Bouteflika was sworn in as Algeria’s president for a fourth term Monday, a year after suffering a mini-stroke that was expected to end his 15-year grip on power. Sitting in a wheelchair and dressed in a navy three-piece suit and crimson tie, Bouteflika placed his right hand on the Koran as he repeated in a frail voice the oath read out by Supreme Court chief Slimane Boudi. read more

    #Abdelaziz_Bouteflika #Algerian_presidential_elections #Top_News

  • Supreme Court Strikes Down Aggregate Limits on Federal Campaign Contributions - NYTimes.com
    http://www.nytimes.com/2014/04/03/us/politics/supreme-court-ruling-on-campaign-contributions.html

    Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr., writing for four justices in the controlling opinion, said the First Amendment required striking down the limits. “There is no right in our democracy more basic,” he wrote, “than the right to participate in electing our political leaders.”

    Dissenting from the bench, Justice Stephen G. Breyer called the decision a blow to the First Amendment and American democracy. “If the court in Citizens United opened a door,” he said, “today’s decision may well open a floodgate.”

    #corruption_légale #Etats_unis

  • Israel to consider war crimes case - Features - Al Jazeera English
    http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/features/2014/03/israel-high-court-consider-war-crimes-case-201432864717613233.html

    For the first time Israel’s Supreme Court is set to consider evidence on April 2 that senior Israeli political and military officials committed war crimes in relation to major military operations in Gaza and Lebanon.

    Former Prime Minister Ehud Olmert and his Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni, the current justice minister, are among the high-level figures accused of breaking the laws of war when they launched attacks on Lebanon in 2006, and on Gaza in the winter of 2008-09.

    The allegations have been levelled by Marwan Dalal, the only Israeli lawyer to have served as a senior prosecutor in one of the international criminal courts at The Hague in the Netherlands.

    Dalal, who spent three years as a prosecutor at the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia, belongs to Israel’s Palestinian minority, which comprises a fifth of the country’s population.

    He said he had based his petition to the court on “strong factual and legal findings” from public sources, including the reports of Israeli official inquiries.

    His evidence includes statements from senior Israeli officials in which they appear to implicate themselves in actions - including killing, collective punishment and attacks on civilian infrastructure - not justified by military necessity. Such acts are breaches of the Fourth Geneva Convention as well as Israeli law.

    Dalal will argue before the court that the Israeli police are required to investigate the evidence in preparation for possible indictments for war crimes.

    “The evidence is in the public realm and obliges Israeli prosecutors to order investigations,” he said. “The failure to do so is unreasonable conduct and the court must rectify the matter.”

  • Israel to consider war crimes case

    Al Jazeera English
    http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/features/2014/03/israel-high-court-consider-war-crimes-case-201432864717613233.html

    For the first time Israel’s Supreme Court is set to consider evidence on April 2 that senior Israeli political and military officials committed war crimes in relation to major military operations in Gaza and Lebanon.

    Former Prime Minister Ehud Olmert and his Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni, the current justice minister, are among the high-level figures accused of breaking the laws of war when they launched attacks on Lebanon in 2006, and on Gaza in the winter of 2008-09.

    The allegations have been levelled by Marwan Dalal, the only Israeli lawyer to have served as a senior prosecutor in one of the international criminal courts at The Hague in the Netherlands.

    Dalal, who spent three years as a prosecutor at the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia, belongs to Israel’s Palestinian minority, which comprises a fifth of the country’s population.

    He said he had based his petition to the court on “strong factual and legal findings” from public sources, including the reports of Israeli official inquiries.

    His evidence includes statements from senior Israeli officials in which they appear to implicate themselves in actions - including killing, collective punishment and attacks on civilian infrastructure - not justified by military necessity. Such acts are breaches of the Fourth Geneva Convention as well as Israeli law.

    Dalal will argue before the court that the Israeli police are required to investigate the evidence in preparation for possible indictments for war crimes.

    “The evidence is in the public realm and obliges Israeli prosecutors to order investigations,” he said. “The failure to do so is unreasonable conduct and the court must rectify the matter.”

  • Israeli court grants ownership of disputed #west_bank building to settlers
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/israeli-court-grants-ownership-disputed-west-bank-building-settle

    An Israeli court on Tuesday ruled that settlers were the lawful owners of a long-disputed building in the heart of the occupied West Bank city of Hebron. The Supreme Court ruling ruled on a legal dispute lasting nearly seven years, after the Palestinian Rajabi family said its four-story building had been taken over by Israeli settlers. Israeli settlements on occupied land the Palestinians want for their future state have been a major source of tensions in US-brokered peace talks relaunched last year. The settlements are illegal under international law. read more

    #illegal_settlements #Israel #Palestine #Top_News

  • Iranian #bank sues UK govt for $4 billion over #sanctions
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/node/18665

    Iran’s largest private bank is suing the British government for almost $4 billion in damages after the Supreme Court quashed sanctions imposed against it over alleged links to Tehran’s nuclear program. Bank Mellat wants compensation for the “significant pecuniary loss” it sustained as a result of the sanctions that were placed in 2009, according to a claim filed in London’s High Court and seen by Reuters on Monday. read more

    #Iran #Top_News

  • Why Israel Fears the Boycott - Omar Barghouti
    http://www.nytimes.com/2014/02/01/opinion/sunday/why-the-boycott-movement-scares-israel.html

    The B.D.S. movement’s call for full equality in law and policies for the Palestinian citizens of Israel is particularly troubling for Israel because it raises questions about its self-definition as an exclusionary Jewish state. Israel considers any challenge to what even the Department of State has criticized as its system of “institutional, legal and societal discrimination” against its Palestinian citizens as an “existential threat,” partially because of the apartheid image that this challenge evokes.

    Tellingly, the Supreme Court recently rejected an attempt by Israeli liberals to have their nationality or ethnicity listed simply as “Israeli” in the national population registry (which has categories like Jew, Arab, Druse, etc.). The court found that doing so would be a serious threat to Israel’s founding identity as a Jewish state for the Jewish people.

    Israel remains the only country on earth that does not recognize its own nationality, as that would theoretically avail equal rights to all its citizens, undermining its “ethnocratic” identity. The claim that B.D.S., a nonviolent movement anchored in universal principles of human rights, aims to “destroy” Israel must be understood in this context.

    Would justice and equal rights for all really destroy Israel? Did equality destroy the American South? Or South Africa? Certainly, it destroyed the discriminatory racial order that had prevailed in both places, but it did not destroy the people or the country.

  • A Discredited Supreme Court Ruling That Still, Technically, Stands
    http://www.nytimes.com/2014/01/28/us/time-for-supreme-court-to-overrule-korematsu-verdict.html

    The Supreme Court’s 1944 decision in Korematsu v. United States was a disaster. In endorsing an executive order that required 110,000 Americans of Japanese ancestry to be removed from their homes and confined in detention camps, the court relied on wartime hysteria streaked with racism, sullying its reputation and damaging the constitutional principles it was meant to uphold.

    But Korematsu has never been overruled.

    #loi

  • Palestinians aim to win back right to appeal property confiscations in military court
    Palestinians could appeal confiscations in West Bank military courts until last month, when the Israeli army changed its stance.
    17th of January 2013
    Haaretz
    http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/.premium-1.569059

    Adalah, an advocacy group for Arab minority rights, wants to overturn the military order barring West Bank Palestinians from appealing the confiscation of their property in a military court.

    The order was signed on December 25 by the head of the military’s Central Command, Maj. Gen. Nitzan Alon.

    The order “is designed to harm the Palestinians and restrict their rights, without any legitimate justification,” Adalah wrote to the attorney general, defense minister and Alon. If the order is not revoked, the group will appeal to the Supreme Court, Adalah said.

    The military commander in the West Bank is authorized to confiscate property or money implicated in illegal or security-related activity. This clause lets the military and police seize funds believed to belong to terror groups. The authorities can also confiscate vehicles used to illegally transport laborers and equipment into Israel.

    Until December 25, Palestinians could appeal confiscations in West Bank military courts, which were authorized to consider such issues based on a 2010 decision by the Military Court of Appeals. In that decision, the court ordered the return of a pneumatic drill to a Palestinian after the police had confiscated it.

    Adalah wrote that the order issued last month infringes on property rights and violates international human rights and international humanitarian law.

    It said the order also violates Israeli administrative law and international law, which have been recognized in the occupied territories by several Supreme Court decisions. These principles have also been recognized by the International Court of Justice in The Hague, in its advisory opinion on the separation barrier, Adalah said.

  • The United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit has ruled in the case of Verizon et al. v. Federal Communications Commission (FCC) (PDF)
    http://www.cadc.uscourts.gov/internet/opinions.nsf/3AF8B4D938CDEEA685257C6000532062/$file/11-1355-1474943.pdf

    This regulation essentially provides an economic preference to a politically powerful constituency, a constituency that, as is true of typical rent seekers, wishes protection against market forces. The Commission does not have authority to grant such a favor.

    #Net_neutrality gets a kick in the teeth | ZDNet
    http://www.zdnet.com/net-neutrality-gets-a-kick-in-the-teeth-7000025154

    Think about it. #Netflix eats up more Internet bandwidth than any other Internet service. Netflix’s traffic keeps growing and it’s about to explode. Netflix has started broadcasting a handful of shows in 4K Ultra HD. These shows will require a speed of approximately of 15.6 megabits per second (Mbps).

    You don’t think #Verizon wants a piece of the action for providing the high-speed pipes 4K video will require? I sure would if I were in their shoes.

    We’ve also seen in just the last few days that the content providers aren’t happy about letting “free” content, such as over-the-air (OTA) TV on the Internet at all. Put these factors together and I see an Internet that’s far less open not just to entertainment, but to all kinds of content.

    None of this is set in stone yet. The next step for net neutrality is for the FCC to come up with a new set of rules. The Supreme Court must rule on the legality of OTA content being shared over the Internet.

    Across the pond, the European Union is dead set in favor of net neutrality, so some companies might decide to host their Websites in Europe to avoid the US’ regulations. I could see Google/YouTube or Netflix doing that.

    Sound crazy? I think it would be crazy like a fox. The EU is already trying to grab a big hunk of American cloud services business because of NSA privacy fears, so why couldn’t EU-based content delivery networks [#CDN] and website-hosting businesses host US regulation-free sites there as well? I’d consider it, if I were a content provider.

    There’s one good thing that might come of it. The US government may finally spell out how the Internet will be governed.

    As George Foote a partner at the law firm Dorsey & Whitney who works on FCC-related matters said, “The court has invited the FCC and Congress to finally come to grips with the digital, ubiquitous, riotous world of communications. The FCC’s attempt to use the common carrier rules to regulate the Internet would never work, despite the very good policy of ensuring fair and competitive communications service. The Internet simply cannot be regulated under rules written when there was a telephone monopoly. Congress is reviewing the whole Communications Act and there is a new FCC Chairman. The Court has asked them to get to work.” Let’s hope they do. 

    This is all speculation now of course. Still, if the Supreme Court rules against sharing OTA TV over the Internet and Verizon get the rules set up the way it wants, the top-level ISPs become the de facto gatekeepers of the Internet. They’ll decide what we can view and how much we’ll pay for it.

    Mais pour les membres du think tank #libertarien TechFreedom, le problème est ailleurs :

    The Feds Lost Net Neutrality, But Won Control of the Web | Wired Opinion | Wired.com
    http://www.wired.com/opinion/2014/01/one-talking-comes-net-neutrality

    To some extent, the FCC’s newfound sense of restraint is required by the court’s decision, which hinged on a provision of the Communications Act barring the Commission from imposing “common carriage” obligations on Title I “information services” like broadband. Instead, the FCC has to leave room for “individualized negotiation” between ISPs and so-called edge providers (Netflix, Google, etc.). But the FCC can still require that, for example, premium carriage agreements be “commercially reasonable” and non-discriminatory — as it did when requiring wireless carriers to provide data roaming to their competitors’ customers (which the D.C. Circuit recently upheld). This would prevent the clearest potential problems (like, say, degrading Netflix just to favor an ISP’s own video service) while still allowing pro-consumer deals (like guaranteeing quality of service for video providers).

    In short, the FCC now has vast discretion, and seems unwilling to give that up.

    Cela n’empêche pas les papiers sur le caractère crucial de la #neutralité_du_net de fleurir à nouveau :

    Net Neutrality and the Future of #Journalism | Free Press
    http://www.freepress.net/blog/2014/01/15/net-neutrality-and-future-journalism

    For newsrooms the decision means that a company like AT&T or Verizon could decide where their uses can go for news and what stories get buried or blocked online. Verizon could strike a deal with CNN and hamper their users’ ability to access alternative news sources. Comcast could slow access to Al Jazeera, because it wants to promote its NBC news offerings*.

    That’s why, in 2010, Senator Al Franken argued that “Net Neutrality is the First Amendment issue of our time.”

    PS : je suis du coup passé par la page WP de la FCC et j’ai découvert ce bandeau que je n’avais jamais vu :
    https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Federal_Communications_Commission

    #prévision https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cat%C3%A9gorie:%C3%89v%C3%A9nement_%C3%A0_venir

    #actualité #média #wiki https://fr.wikinews.org/wiki/Accueil

  • Supreme Court justices question size of buffer zones around Mass. abortion clinics
    http://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/supreme-court-justices-question-size-of-buffer-zones-around-mass-abortion-clinics/2014/01/15/834f21c4-7e02-11e3-95c6-0a7aa80874bc_story.html

    Supreme Court justices on Wednesday aggressively questioned whether a Massachusetts law that creates buffer zones around abortion clinics unconstitutionally inhibits the free-speech rights of antiabortion activists.

    Several justices made clear in their questioning that they felt the law’s restrictions on who can enter a 35-foot space around a facility’s entrance unfairly targets those who want to hand out leaflets or speak to the women planning abortions.

    #ivg

  • POLITICS - Kurdish MP and HDP co-chair may lose parliamentary seat after top court approves sentence Turkey

    http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/kurdish-mp-and-hdp-co-chair-may-lose-parliamentary-seat-after-top

    The co-chair of the Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP) Sebahat Tuncel may lose her parliamentary seat after the Supreme Court of Appeals approved on Dec. 28 an eight-year sentence against her for membership in the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK).

    Elected from the Peace and Democracy Party’s (BDP) list during the 2011 general elections, Tuncel recently joined the HDP, an umbrella party formed by leftist movements and supported by the Kurds, along with two other prominent BDP lawmakers, Ertuğrul Kürkçü and Sırrı Süreyya Önder.

    Tuncel may lose her parliamentary seat and immunity after the Supreme Court of Appeal’s eight-year, nine-month sentence is read out in the General Assembly, according to reports. 

    Tuncel noted the ruling came only two weeks after the court refused to release five deputies of the BDP, despite having approved the release of Republican People’s Party (CHP) deputy Mustafa Balbay.

  • Difference Engine: Obituary for software patents | The Economist
    http://www.economist.com/blogs/babbage/2013/12/difference-engine-0?fsrc=scn/tw_ec/obituary_for_software_patents

    defying expectations, the House of Representatives passed (by an overwhelming majority) the Innovation Act, a bill aimed squarely at defanging so-called “#patent_trolls”. (...)

    Second, the Supreme Court agreed to rule on the most contentious issue of all: namely, what inventions are actually eligible for patent protection. In particular, do the #trolls’ favourite cudgels—the ridiculously vague and overly broad business-process and software patents granted by the US Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) over the past decade—really qualify?

    #brevets

  • Hyderabad Inc. to withdraw gay support? - Times Of India
    http://articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2013-12-15/people/45215839_1_sc-verdict-support-group-lgbt-community

    Hyderabad Inc. to withdraw gay support?
    Apuurva Sridharan & Sarah Salvadore, TNN Dec 15, 2013, 01.15PM IST
    Tags:

    Supreme Court|
    Ronak|
    Mogli|
    LGBT|
    Hyderabad Inc.

    (Hyderabad Inc. to withdraw…)

    With the SC verdict on Sec 377, a few companies have now suspended their gay support groups, which safeguarded the rights of the LGBT community in corporate Hyderabad.

    It begins with a snide remark, passed off as a ’water cooler joke’. Then comes the mimicking, which is supposed to be taken in good humor. But being ’open’ about your sexuality at the workplace is a daunting task, what with the so-called ’straight’ colleagues dealing with it in an insensitive manner. In a bid to reduce workplace bullying and discomfort, many corporate giants based in the city have, over the years, put in place inclusive HR policies for the LGBT community. But post the Supreme Court upholding the validity of Section 377, many companies have withdrawn their queer support groups, or have indirectly imposed a gag order on gay employees.

    Vijay Mogli, member of a community-based organisation in the city, who used to work with one of the corporates, reveals that post the SC verdict, his company has rolled back their ’queer support group’. “We had approached a particular company and pointed out to them that they stand to lose good employees, if they don’t have a support group for the community in place. We gave them the examples of two other organisations which had LGBT friendly-policies. The company then began a gay support group. But post the SC verdict, the organisation has suspended the group till ’further notice’.”

    Ronak, an employee of the corporate giant, confirms the news. “In Hyderabad, not many employees support the LGBT-friendly policies, which are meant to provide us with a safe environment. I am the only person from Hyderabad who is part of the group,” says Ronak.

    “During the pride walk in Pune, my company had supported it wholeheartedly. But now, I don’t think they can do that anymore,” expounds Ronak. This paradigm shift in policy can be mostly termed as a kneejerk reaction. “These companies need to operate based on the law of the land. And if the law criminalises homosexuality, they are forced to withdraw support,” explains Vijay.

    This also puts a question mark on the various benefits enjoyed by a gay employee and his partner. “A few multinationals have insurance policies that also cover the gay employee’s partner. This progressive step was welcome and other corporates too could have followed suit. However, given the nature of the situation now, it seems highly doubtful,” says Vijay.

    But what comes as a surprise is the unsaid diktat of ’no speaking to the media’ that has been issued to employees by the companies. While being homosexual is a personal preference, companies fear that ignorance on the issue could lead to this personal aspect spilling to the workplace, which could result in the organisation coming under legal hassles. Manas*, an IT professional says, “Our company does not have issues with us being homosexuals. But in accordance to company policies, we aren’t allowed to publicly comment on this issue. If we do, we risk being fired from our jobs.” And this is precisely the reason why Rohit* has been refraining from showing his support even on social media. “A lot of my friends from the community have been asking me why am I not showing support to the group online. While many of us want to show our support, at least via our social media, company policy dictates we can’t speak publicly on the issue. I can’t really explain to my gay friends why I’m mum on the issue, but the fact remains that I have a job to keep,” he shares.

    With the umbrella of legal safety off their heads, the LGBT community in corporate India find themselves in a vulnerable position. It’s the water cooler they fear the most.

  • Daily chart: Grim to be gay | The Economist

    http://www.economist.com/blogs/graphicdetail/2013/12/daily-chart-15?fsrc=scn/fb/wl/dc/grimtobegay

    Where countries prohibit homosexuality

    IT HAS been a bad week for gay rights. An Australian court struck down a recent state law allowing same-sex marriage. In India the Supreme Court upheld an 1860 law that criminalises homosexual acts, overruling a 2009 judgment by a lower court. The guilty face a possible maximum sentence of life imprisonment. Worldwide, countries are increasingly providing legal protections for people to chose with whom they wish to be intimate. Still, more than 80 countries criminalise homosexuality. A majority are former European colonies, particularly of Britain, which exported its anti-gay laws. (India’s 1860 act is a legacy of British rule; the government says it is looking at how to restore the 2009 decision.) Russia penalises homosexuality as part of its “anti-propaganda” rules. In five countries and areas of Nigeria and Somalia, people face the death penalty for sharing private moments with those of the same sex.

    #homosexualité #droits_humains #cartographie #représentation

  • Contraception. From the beginning of the “birth control movement,” Christian conservatives fought to keep women from being able to have sex without getting pregnant. Devout Christian Anthony Comstock successfully convinced Congress in 1872 that contraception was ungodly, leading to a federal ban on sharing birth control information across state lines. This was finally repealed in 1936. In 1963, the Supreme Court ended anti-contraception laws for married women. Finally, in 1971, the Supreme Court also eliminated the last of the god-bothering anti-contraception laws banning birth control for single people. Nowadays, 99 percent of sexually active women have used contraception at some point in their lives.

    http://www.alternet.org/belief/10-things-traditional-christians-got-terribly-wrong?page=0%2C2
    #conservatisme #sexisme #segregation

  • freedetainees.org – Can Guantanamo detainees challenge confinement conditions ?
    http://www.freedetainees.org/2013/10/19/can-guantanamo-detainees-challenge-confinement-conditions

    Can Guantanamo detainees challenge confinement conditions?
    October 19, 2013 - By: LGHR - Forced Feedings, Hunger Strike - No Comment // 98 Views

    WASHINGTON — Force-feeding of Guantanamo Bay detainees confronted federal judges Friday with complicated questions including how far judicial review can stretch for hunger strikers.

    In a case closely watched by inmate advocates nationwide, a three-judge appellate panel pushed back against an Obama administration claim that courts are powerless to review the complaints of Guantanamo detainees who refuse to eat as a form of protest. But the judges also puzzled over whether they have the legal authority to consider such cases.“This is a unique situation,” Judge Thomas Griffith said, adding that “Guantanamo is a different sort of prison.”

    The 45-minute oral argument Friday before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit marked the latest, and potentially most significant, in a series of legal challenges to force-feeding. Prison authorities in California and other states, as well as the federal authorities at Guantanamo, support the tactic when faced with inmates on extended hunger strikes.

    In August, a San Francisco-based federal judge approved plans to force-feed California inmates, if necessary, who were taking part in a long hunger strike to protest solitary confinement conditions. The appellate judges on Friday cited the California developments several times, though the Guantanamo circumstances aren’t strictly comparable.

    Guantanamo “is a facility in which even more deference should be accorded (the government), given the nature of the detainees,” Justice Department attorney Daniel J. Lenerz told the court Friday.

    Guantanamo is also a facility that Congress has tried, in several ways, to put beyond the traditional reach of U.S. courts. During Friday’s oral arguments, held before a standing-room-only audience, judges seemed at least a little uncomfortable with that legal isolation.

    “Does the government always prevail . . . by saying, ‘It’s obvious to us that hunger strikes have a corrosive effect on inmate morale?’” a skeptical-sounding Griffith asked, further questioning whether the government’s assertion is really “the end of the inquiry.”

    In a prior case, the Supreme Court ruled that Guantanamo detainees enjoy the constitutionally protected right to file a habeas corpus petition challenging their detention. On Friday, Judge David Tatel noted that the high court left open the scope of that right. In particular, the question is whether it entails an ability to challenge the conditions of confinement.

    “Isn’t the core question whether the condition that’s being complained of is unconstitutional?” Tatel added.

    The court spent almost no time Friday discussing an auxiliary argument that the force-feeding – blandly called “enteral feeding” by Lenerz – violated the detainees’ religious rights. Judges also avoided the details of the painful feeding process, as they focused on the technical but essential gateway question of whether the case can be heard.

    The Military Commissions Act of 2006 says “no court, justice or judge shall have jurisdiction” to consider legal actions concerning the treatment or “conditions of confinement” of those who “have been properly detained as an enemy combatant.” Two federal judges in July said the law prevented them from issuing preliminary injunctions to stop the Guantanamo force-feeding.

    At the same time, one of the judges – U.S. District Judge Gladys Kessler – used her July 8 decision to denounce the practice she said she was powerless to stop.

    “It is perfectly clear . . . that force-feeding is a painful, humiliating and degrading process,” Kessler wrote, adding that the detainees “set out in great details in (their) papers what appears to be a consensus that force-feeding of prisoners violates Article 7 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, which prohibits torture or cruel, inhumane and degrading treatment.”

    Guantanamo detainees began a broad-based hunger strike in about March, protesting conditions that included intrusive searches and indefinite detention. At the hunger strike’s peak earlier this year, U.S. military authorities declared that 106 of Guantanamo’s detainees were participating, with 46 designated for force-feeding. There are currently 164 detainees, and the number of those on a hunger strike has sharply fallen.

    During force-feeding, the detainee is restrained while a two-foot long feeding tube is passed via the nasal passage into the stomach. The tube is secured to the nose with tape, and liquid nutrients are pumped in over a period of about 20 to 30 minutes.

    The specific challenge considered Thursday is being pressed by three detainees, each of whom has been cleared for release but nonetheless remain confined.

    “Force-feeding is unethical, it’s inhumane (and) it’s a violation of international law,” Oakland, Calif.-based attorney Jon B. Eisenberg, representing the detainees, told the court. He added that “these are unlawful conditions of confinement, these are unlawful restraints . . . (but) the threshold question is, does this court have jurisdiction?”

    Source

  • A defeat for Israeliness -
    Les Israéliens n’existent pas affirme la cour suprême en Israël
    Haaretz 4th of October
    http://www.haaretz.com/opinion/.premium-1.550428

    The Supreme Court’s refusal on Wednesday to approve the petition of 21 Israeli citizens who sought to be recognized as members of the “Israeli” nation rather than the Jewish one, and to change the way their nationality is recorded in the Population Registry accordingly, is yet another indication that the civic struggle over the nature of the State of Israel has so far failed. Sixty-five years after the state’s establishment, its authorities still don’t recognize an Israeli nationality independent of religious or ethnic affiliation.

    In contrast to then-Jerusalem District Court Judge Noam Sohlberg, who rejected the petitioners’ request six years ago on the grounds that it was an ideological, historical and political issue, but not a legal one, the Supreme Court justices agreed to discuss the issue of nationality and citizenship and concluded that it was justiciable.

    But in their ruling, the justices denied the existence of an Israeli nationality, saying the petitioners failed to prove that an Israeli nationality unconnected to religious or ethnic affiliation had actually been created. Justice Hanan Melcer went even further, saying the worldview that distinguishes between citizenship and nationality is anchored in Israel’s constitutional status as a Jewish state. In other words, uniting different nationalities into one Israeli nationality would contradict the state’s Jewish character, and even its democratic character.

    The distinction between the element of citizenship and the element of nationality reflects the state’s relative failure, ever since it was established, to grant equal treatment to all its citizens. The Supreme Court did stress in its ruling that the state was obligated to treat equally all its citizens, residents and others under its rule, but such equality has little chance of being realized as long as the state identifies itself as Jewish and maintains a preference for one group over other groups when it comes to labeling its citizens.

    The democratic solution is eliminating the “nationality” line item in the Population Registry. The state and its legislators must relate to all its citizens as Israeli citizens. Their identity as Jews, Arabs or members of any other nation should be a matter of self-definition, not of forced registration by the state. Jews in other countries would object to their Judaism being registered in their local population registries and ID cards, and this subject is not relevant in a democratic nation. It is fitting that Israel behave this way as well.

  • N.S.A. Gathers Data on Social Connections of U.S. Citizens - NYTimes.com
    http://www.nytimes.com/2013/09/29/us/nsa-examines-social-networks-of-us-citizens.html?emc=edit_na_20130928&_r=0&

    A new policy that year, detailed in “Defense Supplemental Procedures Governing Communications Metadata Analysis,” authorized by Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates and Attorney General Michael B. Mukasey, said that since the Supreme Court had ruled that metadata was not constitutionally protected, N.S.A. analysts could use such information “without regard to the nationality or location of the communicants,” according to an internal N.S.A. description of the policy.

    The documents show that significant amounts of information from the United States go into Mainway. An internal N.S.A. bulletin, for example, noted that in 2011 Mainway was taking in 700 million phone records per day. In August 2011, it began receiving an additional 1.1 billion cellphone records daily from an unnamed American service provider under Section 702 of the 2008 FISA Amendments Act, which allows for the collection of the data of Americans if at least one end of the communication is believed to be foreign.

    The overall volume of metadata collected by the N.S.A. is reflected in the agency’s secret 2013 budget request to Congress. The budget document, disclosed by Mr. Snowden, shows that the agency is pouring money and manpower into creating a metadata repository capable of taking in 20 billion “record events” daily and making them available to N.S.A. analysts within 60 minutes.