For archives, these articles are being stored on TheWE.cc website.
The purpose is to advance understandings of environmental, political,
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9/11 Attacks Exploited To Break Law: Ebadi 
"Democracy should not be used to attack other countries, to launch military attacks against other countries," Ebadi said (AFP)
OSLO, December 10 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) — In her acceptance speech of the 2003 Nobel Peace Prize later Wednesday, December 10, Iranian rights activist Shirin Ebadi is expected to harshly criticized the U.S. for using the 9/11 attacks as an excuse to violate international law and human rights.

"In the past two years, some states have violated the universal principles and laws of human rights by using the events of September 11 and the war on international terrorism as a pretext," she will say, reported Agence France-Presse (AFP).

"The concerns of human rights advocates increase when they observe that international human rights laws are breached not only by their recognized opponents [...], but that these principles are also violated in Western democracies."

The Nobel laureate, 56, will confirm that the detainees held by the U.S. at Guantanamo base are deprived from "the rights stipulated under the international Geneva conventions, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the [United Nations] International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights".

'Null And Void'

During a press conference at the Nobel Institute in Oslo Tuesday, December 9, Ebadi further criticized the U.S. for trying to impose democracy by military force, warning that such attempts were "null and void".

"Democracy should not be used to attack other countries, to launch military attacks against other countries," she added, asserting she did not want to see a repetition in Iran of the U.S.-led war on Iraq.

"The realization of democracy is a national and patriotic duty of ours" and "any kind of military assault is futile," said Ebadi, recognized for her democracy-building efforts and her work to improve human rights and women's rights in Iran.

Double Standards

Ebadi also pointed to selective application of United Nations decisions, hinting at the U.S. double standards.

"Why is it that some decisions and resolutions of the U.N. Security Council are binding, while some other resolutions of the council have no binding force?" she asked, pointing to the different treatment of Israel and Iraq.

"Why is it that in the past 35 years, dozens of U.N. resolutions concerning the occupation of the Palestinian territories by the state of Israel have not been implemented properly," Ebadi continues.

"Yet, in the past 12 years, the state and people of Iraq were subjected to attack, military assault, economic sanctions, and, ultimately, military occupation?"

Defending Islam

Dressed in a pink pantsuit, with no hijab, the Iranian activist reaffirmed the compatibility of Islam and human rights.

"If innocent people are killed in the name of Islam, that's wrong," she said.

Ebadi had frequently defended Islam against charges that it is incompatible with the western concept of human rights.

"Islam is not incompatible with human rights and all Muslims should be glad of this prize. If you read the Qur’an you will see there is nothing in it that is against human rights

"For 20 years, I have been putting out the message that it is possible to be Muslim and have laws that respect human rights," she told a news conference in Paris last October after the prize announcement.

Ebadi, the first Muslim woman ever to receive the prestigious award, will receive the prize from chairman of the Nobel Committee Ole Mjoes.

King Harald V of Norway, who is usually present at the ceremony, sent his excuses this time, as he is recovering from surgery he underwent for bladder cancer on Monday, December 8.

The prize consists of a diploma, a gold medal, and a check for 10 million Swedish kronor [about 1.4 million dollars, 1.1 million euros].




Copyright © 1999-2003 Islam Online           All rights reserved





    Wednesday 10 December 2003
Busy day for peace prize winner

Nobel Peace Prize winner Ebadi Shirin had a hectic Wednesday, first taking part in the Save the Children celebration of the prize with Crown Princess Mette-Marit outside Oslo's city hall before rushing to an audience at the palace an hour before the prize ceremony.

Iranian lawyer and human rights advocate Shirin Ebadi receiving the Nobel Peace Prize from committee leader Ole Danbolt Mjoes at the ceremony in Oslo's City Hall.
PHOTO: TOR RICHARDSEN/SCANPIX


Ebadi met Queen Sonja, acting regent Crown Prince Haakon and Crown Princess Mette-Marit.

The busy schedule on Nobel award day also affected the royals, with the crown princess missing a photo session at the palace before the audience with Ebadi.

Ebadi told the French newspaper Le Figaro that she had decided to give the peace prize of SEK 10 million (USD 1.37 million) to human rights groups, particularly those championing the rights of children, journalists, prisoners of conscience and jailed students, in her homeland Iran.

"I plan to invest the money in humanitarian organizations I head in Iran," Ebadi told Le Figaro.

Ebadi said Iranian authorities still had a lot to do.

"Compared to the situation 25 years ago I can only see progress but in a range of areas freedom is still limited.

Freedom and democracy don't come on a silver platter, but is also not achieved with the help of American tanks," Ebadi told Le Figaro.

Conservative religious groups Basij warned that Ebadi's behavior was creating tension at home.

"Mrs. Ebadi has not just questioned Islam's decrees by appearing without a veil, she has also provoked the religious feelings of students by taking a man by the hand at Amir Kabir University.

This has created tensions at the university that have lasted weeks," student members of the Basij movement said in a statement.




(Aftenposten English Web Desk/NTB/AFP)

© Aftenposten Multimedia.






Iranian Activist Accepts Nobel Prize
Wednesday, 10-Dec-2003Story from AP
Copyright 2003 by The Associated Press (via ClariNet)

Nobel laureate Shirin Ebadi a human rights lawyer from Iran speaks to the press Tuesday Dec. 9, 2003 at the Norwegian Nobel Institute in Oslo, Norway.

Photo [Wed, Dec 10, 2003]
10-DEC-2003: Nobel laureate Shirin Ebadi a human rights lawyer from Iran speaks to the press Tuesday Dec. 9, 2003 at the Norwegian Nobel Institute in Oslo, Norway.

(AP Photo/John McConnico)
[Photo copyright 2003 by AP and YellowBrix]
Iranian democracy activist Shirin Ebadi, the first Muslim woman to win the Nobel Peace Prize, said Wednesday her award would inspire other women in the Islamic world to seek their rights and denounced leaders in the region who use religion as a pretext for dictatorship.

Ebadi, Iran's first female judge, appeared at the award ceremony without the headscarf that Iran requires women to wear in public, in what many viewed as a silent expression of her battle for freedom.

The Oslo ceremony came as the 10 other Nobel winners in 2003, including six Americans, were in Stockholm, Sweden, receiving the awards for medicine, physics, chemistry, literature and economics.   Afterward, the laureates were to attend the traditional Nobel banquet with the Swedish royal family and a host of dignitaries including former Vice President Al Gore.

An audience of hundreds, including members of the Norwegian royal family, rose to give Ebadi a standing ovation after she was given the coveted Nobel gold medal and diploma.

The award "inspires me and millions of Iranians and nationals of Islamic states with the hope that our efforts, endeavors and struggles toward the realization of human rights and the establishment of democracy ... enjoy the support, backing and solidarity of international civil society," Ebadi said in a speech after receiving the $1.4 million award.

"Undoubtedly, my selection will be an inspiration to the masses of women striving to realize their rights, not only in Iran but throughout the region," she said, speaking in Farsi.

Criticized war on terror as pretext

Ebadi also criticized the United States for using the war on terror as a pretext for violating human rights, pointing to the detention of hundreds of Muslim men at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, without access to lawyers.

The 56-year-old lawyer, author and activist was named the 2003 Nobel peace laureate for her work in fighting for democracy and the rights of women and children.   She is the first Muslim woman to win the prize.

In 2000, she was jailed for three weeks on charges of slandering government officials and banned from working as a lawyer after riling her nation's theocratic rulers.

Since winning the Nobel, Iranian reformers have looked to Ebadi to rally opposition to unelected hard-liners who oppose any change to the conservative Islamic system of running the country.   Hard-liners have denounced her as a "Western mercenary," and she recently was given police bodyguards after receiving numerous death threats.

Last week, about 60 female hard-liners prevented Ebadi from making a speech at a women's university in Tehran.

Children sing surrounded by snow

Ahead of the ceremony outside Oslo City Hall, thousands of children sang for the laureate, with snow surrounding the building.

Ebadi, wearing a light-colored skirt and blouse, spoke during a solemn one-hour ceremony before an audience that included members of Ebadi's own family and Academy Award winning actors Michael Douglas and Catherine Zeta-Jones.   The ceremony also featured music performed live by an Iranian-Kurd folk music group.

"If the 21st Century wishes to free itself from the cycle of violence, acts of terror and war ... there is no other way except by understanding and putting into practice every human right for all mankind regardless of race, gender, faith, nationality or social status," she said, according to an English translation of her speech.

In her acceptance speech, Ebadi said despotism was incompatible with Iranian and Islamic traditions.

"Some Muslims, under the pretext that democracy and human rights are not compatible with Islamic teachings and the traditional structure of Islamic societies, have justified despotic governments and continue to do so," Ebadi said.

She said the plight of women in Islamic states and the lack of freedom and democracy is caused by "the patriarchal and male-dominated culture prevailing in these societies, not in Islam."


On the Net:

Nobel Peace Prize: http://www.nobel.no

Photo [Wed, Dec 10] 10-DEC-2003: Iranian activist Shirin Ebadi, right, receives the 2003 Nobel Peace Prize during a ceremony in Oslo's City Hall, Wednesday, Dec. 10, 2003 from chairman of the Norwegian Nobel Committee, Ole Danbolt Mjos.

Shirin Ebadi accepted the prize on Wednesday on behalf of her fellow Iranians, Muslim women everywhere and those who struggle for human rights.

(AP Photo/John McConnico)
[Photo copyright 2003 by AP and YellowBrix]








Unspeakable grief and horror
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                        ...and the circus of deception killing continues...
Most recent 'Circus of Killing' click here
— 2010
— 2009
— 2008
He says, "You are quite mad, Kewe"
And of course I am.
Why, I don't believe any of it — not the bloody body, not the bloody mind, not even the bloody Universe, or is it bloody multiverse.
"It's all illusion," I say.   "Don't you know, my lad, my lassie.   The game!   The game, me girl, me boy!   Takes on interest, don't you know.   T'is me sport, till doest find a better!"
Pssssst — but all this stuff is happening down here
Let's change it!
 
 





























































































































The stovepipe — instructions [were sent] from the Top Man [Saddam]—“give them everything.”




       Civilian Death Toll in Iraq May Top 1 Million     
            —  ORB, a British polling agency, September 2007          





China EU countries Russia Japan lending money to US to the tune of $2 billion (2,000,000,000.00) daily
— Bleeding Bush strategy





US debt




Am I going insane?




Kennedy slams CIA chief        
  Iraq analysis wildly inconsistent        
     Senator we did not clear the document





Trailers




Cheney: Assessment done by department of defense




Iraq analysis wildly inconsistent




Flames of war spread into Pakistan




Murder, though it hath no tongue.





 
 





 
 




Faith Fippinger




South Africa — Story of South African political emancipation




The Book of Merlyn




The beating of the drum




 
 





 
For archives, these articles are being stored on TheWE.cc website.
The purpose is to advance understandings of environmental, political,
human rights, economic, democracy, scientific, and social justice issues.