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Kazemi Raped and Tortured - news report

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Right. Canada needs to provide JTF bodyguards for those Canadians stupid enough to venture into potentially hostile countries.

I suppose that one can't consider FAC warnings on potential issues sufficient, as it's certainly the gov'ts responsibility for one's safety if one decides to go to, say, North Korea and start photographing sensitive military sites.

By the way, Israel isn't the centre of the universe.

Acorn
 
Right. Canada needs to provide JTF bodyguards for those Canadians stupid enough to venture into potentially hostile countries.
I don't think anyone here is saying that. The problem lies in our government's responce to the situation. Reading through the foreign affairs travel report of Iran, it certainly does not sound like a potentially hostile country where no Canadian should venture.

I suppose that one can't consider FAC warnings on potential issues sufficient, as it's certainly the gov'ts responsibility for one's safety if one decides to go to, say, North Korea and start photographing sensitive military sites.
Kazemi was a photojournalist. She was taking pictures of a student protest, which happened to be outside a prison. Maybe bad judgement on her part.   So that means the government can wash its hand of all responsibility to her? Does that also include anyone else travelling outside the country in a similar situation?
 
Save the Women, Save Ourselves
Terror, inside and out.

Two summers ago, a middle-aged Iranian-Canadian journalist named Zahra Kazemi was arrested in Tehran while taking photographs of regime hoodlums beating up young people who were demonstrating for freedom. A few days later she turned up dead in a local military hospital. The regime denied requests from the family and the Canadian government to examine the body, insisted that she had fallen in her prison cell and died of injuries to her head, denied that anyone had beaten her, and hastily buried her without any proper autopsy.

The Kazemi family never believed the regime's story, but efforts to get at the truth were predictably fruitless. Until now. Dr. Shahram Azam, a medical doctor who has just been granted asylum in Canada, has presented a firsthand account of the terrible death of Zara Kazemi. He says he examined Kazemi in a military hospital in Tehran on June 26, 2003. He says he found horrific injuries to her entire body that demonstrated torture and rape. By the time he examined her â ” an examination limited by the Islamic republic's sexist restrictions that made it illegal for a male doctor to look at her genital area â ” Kazemi was unconscious and her body was covered with bruises. According to Dr. Azam, she had a skull fracture, two broken fingers, missing fingernails, a crushed big toe, a smashed nose, deep scratches on her neck, and evidence of flogging on her legs and back.

"I could see this was caused by torture," Azam told Canadian journalists. He added that the nurse who examined Kazemi's genitals told him of "brutal damage." He believes she was tortured and raped. If he is correct, we can add Zara Kazemi to a long list of women who have been brutalized by the mullah's torturers.

The Canadian government, which briefly recalled its ambassador to Iran to demonstrate its anger when Kazemi died, is now hastily attempting to look tough. Foreign Affairs Minister Pierre Pettigrew condemned Iran for not holding a legitimate trial. "This new evidence, while gruesome, simply reinforces our position that this was not an accident. The family needs answers, Canadians want answers and we will not stop pursuing this case until justice is rendered."

This is the sort of talk one hears from government officials who have no intention of doing anything serious. Listen to Canadian Justice Minister Irwin Cotler: "The Kazemi case is a case study of whether Iran is finally going to come clean, become accountable and show that is a citizen of the international community," Cotler said. "If they don't respond properly, and accountably in this instance then they will expose themselves for all the world to see as an outlaw nation."

The point, however, is that the mullahs have long "exposed themselves" as an outlaw nation. The question is whether the Western world, including the United States, is going to do the one thing required to render justice: Support those Iranians who want to free their people from the grips of this murderous regime.

The brutal treatment of Iranian women by the mullahcracy is a daily occurrence, not an isolated case. As "Iran Focus" reported on March 2, "at least 54 Iranian girls and young women, between the ages of 16 and 25, are sold on the streets of Karachi in Pakistan on a daily basis," according to "a senior women's affairs analyst...speaking to a state-run news agency." The analyst, Mahboubeh Moghadam, added that there are at least 300,000 runaway girls in Iran right now, the result, in Moghadam's words, of "the government policy which has resulted in poverty and the deprival of rights for the majority of people in society."

Professor Donna M. Hughes, at the University of Rhode Island, one of the few Western scholars courageous enough to keep reporting on these horrors, says that the enslaved women are typically sold to people in the Arab countries of the Persian Gulf, such as Qatar, Kuwait, and the United Arab Emirates. But the slave trade is not limited to the Islamic world:

    Police have uncovered a number of prostitution and slavery rings operating from Tehran that have sold girls to France, Britain and Turkey as well. One network based in Turkey bought smuggled Iranian women and girls, gave them fake passports, and transported them to European and Persian Gulf countries. In one case, a 16-year-old girl was smuggled to Turkey, and then sold to a 58-year-old European national for $20,000."

Moghadam suggested (and remember that this does not come from a samizdat network, but from a broadcast on national radio) "that such a task was very difficult to carry out without some sort of government green-light."

As I have lamented these many years, the one word that constantly recurs in accounts of life in Iran is "degradation." This degradation is both physical and moral, encompassing the steady breakdown of the national infrastructure (especially the roads), the health of the people, drug addiction, prostitution, and ubiquitous corruption, from government ministers on down. And as Natan Sharansky reminds us, the regimes that support terror also direct terror at their own people, and thus it is no accident that Iran is at once the world's leading supporter of international terrorism and one of the cruelest oppressors of its own people.

President Bush and his team of self-declared democratic revolutionaries have done a lot of talking about supporting the Iranian people, but they haven't delivered on their promises. As they talk, the toll mounts, from Americans killed in Iraq and Afghanistan to Canadians brutally murdered in Tehran, to the oppression and exploitation of the Iranian people, above all the women.

Faster, please. It's getting embarrassing, you know.

â ” Michael Ledeen, an NRO contributing editor, is most recently the author of The War Against the Terror Masters. He is resident scholar in the Freedom Chair at the American Enterprise Institute.
 
http://www.nationalreview.com/ledeen/ledeen200504040752.asp
 
I sincerely wish Canada could do something effective to the Iranian regime to address this travesty. The gov'ts lack of response is lamentable, but realistically there is nothing more than words (up to now pretty inadequate) that can be offered.

Anything else I have to say about dual citizenship and totalitarian countries is treading too close to the "blame the victim" sort of PC.

Acorn
 
Acorn said:
I sincerely wish Canada could do something effective to the Iranian regime to address this travesty. The gov'ts lack of response is lamentable, but realistically there is nothing more than words (up to now pretty inadequate) that can be offered.

We could send them a strongly worded letter which ends with the words "Please govern yourself accordingly." That ought to scare them. ::)
 
We could send them a strongly worded letter which ends with the words "Please govern yourself accordingly." That ought to scare them. 

How about they say: You had better stop that, or I will be forced to ask to you stop again!


http://www.cbc.ca/story/canada/national/2005/04/04/kazemi050404.html
Tories blast PM for 'spineless' response to Iran
Last Updated Mon, 04 Apr 2005 19:07:16 EDT
CBC News
OTTAWA - Conservative Leader Stephen Harper accused the Liberal government of acting in a callous and spineless way for re-establishing relations with Iran, despite knowing the details about the deadly injuries suffered by Canadian photojournalist Zahra Kazemi.


INDEPTH: Zahra Kazemi

Harper's accusations come as the doctor who examined Kazemi made public for the first time last week the extent of the injuries she suffered while in Iranian custody.

The government recalled the ambassador to Iran, Philip MacKinnon, in July 2003, just after Kazemi's death "for consultations after failures in the Iranian justice system with respect to the case of Zahra Kazemi." In November 2004, Gordon Venner was appointed as the new ambassador.

Monday was the first time the government faced questions in the House about the recent revelations about Kazemi after MPs returned from their Easter break.

"It turns out for months the prime minister knew the true extent of the brutality inflicted upon Ms. Kazemi. Instead of taking a firm stand against Iran, he sent our ambassador back to that oppressive regime," Harper said.

"What kind of callous, spineless government re-establishes normal diplomatic relations with this kind of regime?"

Last week, Dr. Shahram Azam said he examined Kazemi in 2003, and that she had had been flogged, repeatedly beaten and raped. He said she had a number of injuries, including a broken nose, a fractured skull, broken fingers and a smashed toe.


FROM MAR. 31 , 2005: Canadian tortured for days, says Iranian doctor

Kazemi had been arrested for taking pictures outside a prison during a student protest in Tehran.

While the Iranian government has since admitted she was beaten, officials say she died when she fainted and hit her head. An Iranian security agent was later charged but acquitted of killing her.

Conservative foreign affairs critic Stockwell Day said sending the ambassador back to Iran was "devoid of priniciple," and called on the government to send a clear message to Iran and again recall the ambassador.

Neither Prime Minister Paul Martin nor Foreign Affairs Minister Pierre Pettigrew responded to questions about recalling the ambassador, instead focusing on the fact the government granted Azam asylum so he could publicize what happened to Kazemi.

Pettigrew said they have sent a message to Iran, and that for two years they've been "telling the House and all Canadians that what happened in Iran was a murder."
 
Acorn said:
I sincerely wish Canada could do something effective to the Iranian regime to address this travesty. The gov'ts lack of response is lamentable, but realistically there is nothing more than words (up to now pretty inadequate) that can be offered.
...
Acorn

I think what surprised many people in both PMO and DFAIT was that no one, none of our friends and allies, stood up and supported us.  A great many people, very senior people were blissfully unaware of the fact â “ and I submit that it is a fact â “ that Canada has no power and powerless nations are also friendless nations.

Had something like this happened thirty-five years ago there is no doubt that both the UK and USA would have jumped up and expended their political capital and soft power on our behalf.  Not now, not in 2005; Iran is important to both the UK and the USA for other reasons â “ reasons which are far more important than Canada.  That is a sad and sorry fact of life â “ you can thank that puffed-up ignoramus Pierre Elliot Trudeau for that; he, almost single-handedly, emasculated this country; he was, without a shadow of a doubt the greatest, most dangerous enemy Canada ever had â “ and we rolled over and begged for more!

The UK and the USA have enormous soft power â “ a wee tiny bit of it would suffice to resolve this issue to Canada's satisfaction.  They will not use it.

Canada has no, zero soft power.  Soft power exists only when a nation has and is willing and able to use hard power.  No hard power: no soft power; that's what Nye said but Pink Lloyd Axworthy and the other Liberal mental  midgets didn't read the whole book â “ lazy, incompetent pretenders.

</rant>


 
Edward Campbell said:
That is a sad and sorry fact of life â “ you can thank that puffed-up ignoramus Pierre Elliot Trudeau for that; he, almost single-handedly, emasculated this country; he was, without a shadow of a doubt the greatest, most dangerous enemy Canada ever had â “ and we rolled over and begged for more!

That's what I've always said - I didn't understand the public pouring forth lamentations when he passed away when you consider that he was a turd.   Combine that with the fact that he skated through law school while our fathers and great-grandfathers were fighting to liberate Europe; Greatest Generation eh?

One of my main goals in life is to somehow get Montreal's Airport changed back into Dorval.

Canada has no, zero soft power.   Soft power exists only when a nation has and is willing and able to use hard power.   No hard power: no soft power; that's what Nye said but Pink Lloyd Axworthy and the other Liberal mental   midgets didn't read the whole book â “ lazy, incompetent pretenders.

Ouch, the truth hurts - but there it is....
 
Infanteer said:
Ouch, the truth hurts - but there it is....

What? You mean there are people in the world who can't be reasoned with? That negotiate in bad faith? That don't respond to carefully worded diplomatic letters?? I'm shocked!! Has anyone informed the utopianist, left-leaning academic elite that push this soft power nonsense?
 
You know, the Liebrals constant canonization of good ole Pierre remind a little bit of how the Kremlin boys always poured on the love for old Papa Joe... he was the greatest thing to happen to humanity. The bad stuff and rumours were just blowng thing out of proportion, you know. Erg.
 
I remember listening to Lloyd boy talk about it, but he yammered on about being a satrapy of the United States.  I guess being a victim is better, hey Lloyd?
 
Don't worry. Lloyd is grooming a new batch of young diplomats at UBC.

Acorn
 
Nope - that is where I had the "fortune" to hear him speak - he is now in Winnipeg (UofM?)
 
My bad. I don't follow his movements, and last heard he was at UBC.

Either he can't hold a job, or he's preaching to a broader audience.

Oh well.

Acorn
 
Acorn said:
Either he can't hold a job, or he's preaching to a broader audience.

My money, judging by his excellent letter to the US Secretary of State, is on Option 1.... :)
 
Infanteer said:
I remember listening to Lloyd boy talk about it, but he yammered on about being a satrapy of the United States.   I guess being a victim is better, hey Lloyd?

I guess Lloyd is as good of a historian as he is a diplomat or minister of the Crown.
 
No, I meant that Lloyd's description of Canada as a Satrapy of the United States shows a profound misunderstanding of what a Satrap was in the Persian Empire.

A Satrap can be variously translated as Governor or Proconsul, and had a bit of both flavors. The Satrap ruled his province and was expected to send a certain amount of taxes and tribute to the Great King in Persopolis. Since we pay no taxes to the government of the United States, nor is there a viceroy or procouncil to extract tribute from us to send to the President, then the analogy is entirely incorrect.

I should note that if China ever becomes the ascendant power in the world, their ownership of companies in Canada's natural resource industry will quickly translate into Canada being in a tributary relationship, and the Chinese Proconsul will have a mission to extract as much heavy oil, coal, lumber, mineral ore, fresh water and wheat from Canada as humanly possible.
 
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