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February 28, 2009

Saturday February 28th Project One - Divine Forces

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zerohour.com presents: 

Calling on L.A. County youth ages 14-18 — Rappers, Mcees, Singers, Songwriters, Poets, Beat Makers, and Musicians — We Want Your Songs!

Project: One aims to promote social justice through music and encourage LA County youth to promote peace and speak out against and learn about racism, classism, sexism, homophobia, xenophobia and overall hatred towards others. 

What: Project: One, a county-wide search for musically talented youth, ages 14-18.

Who: Calling on all Rappers, Mcees, Singers, Songwriters, Poets, Beat Makers, and Musicians.

When: Phase 1: “Music and Dialogue” sessions, where youth learn the power of using knowledge and life’s experience into the music they produce.  Hosted by Human Relations Specialists and professional recording artists and producers.  You must attend at least one Phase 1 session to apply and qualify for Phase 2.  All sessions are FREE.

6 Dates To Choose:

*January 24 and 31, 2009

*February 7, 14, 21, and 28, 2009

*10AM - 1PM / 9AM Registration

Phase 2: Songwriters’ Workshop, where selected students will create songs with Award winning Artists and Producers to inspire the ideals of understanding, mutual respect and human dignity.

*Saturday April 25, 2009 Time / Location TBA

Phase 3: Project One Concert, featuring music written and performed by youth from Project One and special guest artist performances. 

*June 2009

How: For info on locations, attending and to rsvp for Phase 1 call (213) 974-7615 or email: projectone09@gmail.com  Also log onto: www.zerohour.com/projectonela, www.myspace.com/projectonela, or zerohour Los Angeles as a friend on Facebook.

Project One is an initiative of zerohour: No Haters Here!

Los Angeles County Commission on Human Relations

Oneness

Power 106

DIVINE FORCES MEDIA
Fidel Rodriguez

“Yoga frees you from the drama,
the tragedy, the saga your mind
creates and allows you to
experience your True Self.”  Sutra 3

DIVINE FORCES MEDIA
divine forces radio
www.divineforces.org

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February 25, 2009

Wednesday February 25th Dj Kerry @ AC Club Santa Monica

Filed under Events

Wednesday Nights

Deep Soulful House Music

featuring

DJ KERRY www.djkerry.net

Air Conditioned Lounge
2819 Pico Blvd.
Santa Monica, CA
HAPPY HOUR: 6:00PM - 9:00PM

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February 23, 2009

Obama OKs about 17,000 more troops for Afghanistan

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Obama OKs about 17,000 more troops for Afghanistan
By ANNE GEARAN – Feb 17, 2009

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama approved adding some 17,000 U.S. troops for the flagging war in Afghanistan, his first significant move to change the course of a conflict that his closest military advisers have warned the United States is not winning. “This increase is necessary to stabilize a deteriorating situation in Afghanistan, which has not received the strategic attention, direction and resources it urgently requires,” Obama said in a statement.

That was an implicit slap at his predecessor, George W. Bush, whom Obama has accused of slighting urgent national security needs in Afghanistan in favor of war in Iraq.

The White House said the new commander in chief would send a Marine brigade and one additional Army brigade to Afghanistan this spring and summer. About 8,000 Marines are expected to go first, followed by about 9,000 Army troops. The United States has slightly more than 30,000 troops in the country now.

The new troops represent the first installment on a larger influx of U.S. forces widely expected this year. Obama’s move would put several thousand troops in place in time for the increase in fighting that usually occurs with warmer weather and ahead of national elections in August.

The additional forces partly answer a standing request from the U.S. commander in Afghanistan, Gen. David McKiernan, who has sought as many as 30,000 additional U.S. troops to counter the resurgence of the Taliban militants and protect Afghan civilians.

“There is no more solemn duty as president than the decision to deploy our armed forces into harm’s way,” Obama said. “I do it today mindful that the situation in Afghanistan and Pakistan demands urgent attention and swift action.”

The new units are a Marine Expeditionary Brigade unit from Camp Lejeune, N.C., and the 5th Brigade, 2nd Infantry Division, an Army Stryker brigade from Fort Lewis in Washington state.

Defense officials said they are still working out final numbers of Marines who will deploy with the 2nd Marine Expeditionary Brigade. A Marine Expeditionary Brigade can vary in size and makeup.

Among the forces recently notified of deployment is a Marine unit of infantry and ground troops from Camp Pendleton in southern California, said Kurt Bardella, a spokesman for Rep. Darrell Issa, a Republican who represents the congressional district where the base is located. He said a full Marine brigade that also includes air assault forces, electronic warfare and reconnaissance will leave for Afghanistan on May 30.

The withdrawal of troops from Iraq allows Obama to increase the numbers in Afghanistan. Last fall, the Pentagon announced that the Fort Lewis brigade was being ordered to go to Iraq.

Ahead of his first foreign trip this week, Obama told a Canadian news organization that the United States will seek a more comprehensive, diplomatic approach to Afghanistan, where the U.S. has been engaged in war since 2001.

“I am absolutely convinced that you cannot solve the problem of Afghanistan, the Taliban, the spread of extremism in that region solely through military means,” the president said in a White House interview with Toronto-based Canadian Broadcasting Corp.

Obama is scheduled to make a quick day trip to Ottawa on Thursday.

Obama agreed to a troop recommendation from Defense Secretary Robert Gates, the lone holdover from the Bush administration. Pentagon officials had been expecting a similar announcement for weeks, but the new Obama team took about a month choosing how and when to add forces to a war that has been sliding backward.

The president made his decision Tuesday, a senior White House official said. The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity ahead of the announcement, said Obama informed congressional leaders and Afghan President Hamid Karzai by phone.

The planned troop deployment does not preclude sending more forces in the future, the official said. Any others, however, would come as part of a broader strategic review of the entire policy in Afghanistan and Pakistan, not as a stand-alone troop decision, the official said.

That review should be completed sometime around the end of March, which coincides with a NATO summit in Europe.

The strategy review for the Iraq war is expected to be completed in about two weeks or so, with announcements expected then on troop drawdowns, the White House official said.

U.S. commanders have said they want to beef up the expeditionary units and trainers in Afghanistan’s southern region with enough new troops to stem the violence without becoming an occupying force that would alienate the population.

McKiernan has asked for more mobile forces and believes having a Stryker brigade will allow soldiers to move more easily along the rugged trails to the widely dispersed tribal enclaves.

Stryker brigades come outfitted with several hundred eight-wheeled, 19-ton Stryker vehicles, which offer greater protection than a Humvee and are more maneuverable than the heavily armored mine-resistant vehicles that are being used across Iraq.

Associated Press Writers Lolita C. Baldor, Anne Flaherty, Lara Jakes and Pamela Hess contributed to this report.

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Feds explore taking bigger stakes in shaky banks

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Feds explore taking bigger stakes in shaky banks
Published - Feb 23 2009 04:06PM PST

By JEANNINE AVERSA - AP Economics Writer
Citigroup Center is seen in New York, Monday, Feb. 23, 2009. Citigroup Inc. has approached banking regulators about ways the government could help strengthen the bank, including the stock conversion plan, according to people familiar with the discussions.
The government on Monday moved toward dramatically expanding its ownership stakes in the nation’s banks _ with Citigroup, the struggling titan of the industry, apparently at the top of the list. Wall Street responded as it has with the rollout of almost every other plan to fix the financial crisis, taking a big drop and sending the Dow Jones industrials to its lowest level in a dozen years.

The Treasury Department, the Federal Reserve and other banking regulators said they could convert the government’s stock in the banks from preferred shares to common shares.

The strategy, which could be applied retroactively to banks that received money in the first incarnation of the bailout, carries risks. But it avoids, at least for now, having to tap more taxpayer money or resort to full-fledged nationalization.

Citigroup Inc. _ perhaps the biggest name in American banking _ has approached the regulators about ways the government could help strengthen the bank, including the stock conversion plan, according to people familiar with the discussions. They spoke on condition of anonymity because they are not authorized to speak on behalf of the government or the company. A Citigroup spokesman declined comment.

The stock conversion could be available for other banks as well, the same sources said.

Regulators, reinforcing what the White House has said, insisted that keeping banks private is a priority. But federal officials are walking a difficult line because the government could still have huge stakes in banks.

Citigroup already has received $45 billion in bailout money, plus guarantees to cover losses on hundreds of billions of dollars in risky investments.

“What we are doing here is we’re creeping our way toward nationalization,” said Terry Connelly, dean of Golden Gate University’s Ageno School of Business in San Francisco.

The conversion plan would give the government greater flexibility in dealing with ailing banks. It would give the government voting shares, and therefore more say in a bank’s operations.

But common shares absorb losses before preferred shares do, which means taxpayers would be on the hook if banks keep writing down billions of dollars’ worth of rotten assets, such as dodgy mortgages, as many analysts expect they will.

On the other hand, common stock in banks is incredibly cheap, and taxpayers would reap gains if the banks come back to health and the stock price goes up.

Sen. Charles Grassley of Iowa, the top-ranking Republican on the Senate Finance Committee, demanded more details from Treasury about the stock-conversion option.

“This move could expose taxpayers to even more risk,” he said. “We all need to know what Treasury hopes to accomplish here and whether the risks are worth any benefits,” he added.

Citigroup stock rose about 10 percent Monday, its first gain in eight days. The bank has posted five straight quarterly losses, including $8.3 billion in the fourth quarter. It is working to cut expenses, sell assets and return to a profit.

The broader market sold off. The Dow lost 250 points, closing at about 7,115. At its peak less than a year and a half ago, the Dow stood at nearly twice that. Monday’s close for both the Dow industrials and the broader Standard & Poor’s 500 was the lowest since 1997.

Some economists did not seem much more optimistic than investors.

“I don’t think this is the end solution. It is a very haphazard way of trying to deal with the problems and simply postponing the inevitable _ more bank failures and takeovers by the FDIC,” said Simon Johnson, former chief economist to the International Monetary Fund and a professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Sloan School of Management.

It is also far from clear whether the Obama plan would entice private companies to step forward and invest in banks. Obama’s treasury secretary, Timothy Geithner, has said using both public and private money to restore the banks to health is the plan.

“A lot of money has been thrown at the financial sector. The hope is that we’re spending that money wisely and not just throwing money at basket cases, which remains to be seen,” said David Ely, a banking professor at San Diego State University.

Friedman, Billings, Ramsey & Co. analyst Paul Miller said while the move toward some sort of nationalization might be a “scary proposition for investors,” it is likely to provide the quickest and cheapest option to help rid banks of bad assets.

The conversion plan would eliminate the 5 percent dividend that banks already receiving bailout money are currently paying the government on its preferred shares, allowing the banks to hold on to more cash.

It also could bring banks closer to the mix of capital that the government will want to see when it starts conducting its “stress tests” on Wednesday to determine the health of banks, experts said.

A government switch to common shares would also reduce the value of shares held by existing stockholders in the bank.

Everyday bank customers probably would not notice a difference. They would be able to go about their normal banking business, and their deposits would still be federally insured up to $250,000.

On Friday, regulators closed a small bank in Oregon _ the 14th federally insured institution to fail this year. In 2008, the government seized 25 banks, more than in the previous five years combined.

Of the first $350 billion in bailout funds, roughly $250 billion was pledged to provide cash injections to banks. The Obama administration has not said how much of the second $350 billion will be used for that purpose.

Monday’s statement, issued by the Treasury, the Fed, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., the Office of Thrift Supervision and the comptroller of the currency, did not name specific banks.

“Currently, the major U.S. banking institutions have capital in excess of the amounts required to be considered well-capitalized,” the regulators said.

Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke, who goes to Capitol Hill on Tuesday to provide lawmakers with an update on the economy, is likely to face tough questions over the government’s bank rescue program.

The Fed last week provided a gloomy assessment on the economy, warning that any recovery would be gradual and unemployment _ now at 7.6 percent, the highest in more than 16 years _ would stay higher than normal into 2011.

The White House again played down persistent speculation that banks could be effectively nationalized.

“The president believes that a privately held banking system regulated by the federal government is the best way to go about this,” White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said Monday.

___

AP Business Writers Christopher S. Rugaber in Washington and Madlen Read in New York contributed to this report.

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Guantanamo detainee freed after 4 years in prison

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Guantanamo detainee freed after 4 years in prison
Published - Feb 23 2009 03:07PM PST

By PAISLEY DODDS - Associated Press Writer
Binyam Mohamed, 30, foreground, a British resident who has been held at Guantanamo Bay for more than four years, covers his face as he leaves RAF Northolt in west London Monday Feb. 23, 2009, after nearly seven years in U.S. captivity _ the first inmate from the U.S. prison camp freed since President Barack Obama took office. The Ethiopian-born detainee has been held at Guantanamo since September 2004 after his arrest in Pakistan, accused by U.S. officials of being part of a conspiracy to detonate a ‘’dirty bomb'’ on American soil.
The first Guantanamo detainee released since President Barack Obama took office returned to Britain on Monday, saying his seven years of captivity and torture at an alleged CIA covert site in Morocco went beyond his “darkest nightmares.”

Binyam Mohamed’s allegations _ including repeated beatings and having his genitals sliced by a scalpel _ have sparked lawsuits that could ensnare the American and British governments in protracted court battles.

Looking frail from a hunger strike, Mohamed, who once was accused by U.S. authorities of being part of a conspiracy to detonate a bomb on American soil, stepped off a charter plane and was whisked away by police, border control agents and immigration officials.

The 30-year-old Ethiopian refugee, who moved to Britain as a teenager, was freed after four hours of questioning.

Attorney General Eric Holder, who traveled Monday to Guantanamo Bay as the Obama administration weighs what is needed to shut the facility, thanked Britain for its cooperation in the case.

“The friendship and assistance of the international community is vitally important as we work to close Guantanamo, and we greatly appreciate the efforts of the British government to work with us on the transfer of Binyam Mohamed,” he said.

Lawyers for Mohamed are seeking secret U.S. intelligence and legal documents they say will prove the Bush administration sent Mohamed to Morocco, where it knew he would be tortured. They claim the documents also prove Britain was complicit in the abuse.

Unlike in the U.S., Britain’s leaders don’t have a past government to blame _ Prime Minister Gordon Brown’s Labour Party has been in power for more than a decade.

But the case is also a test for Obama. While he has promised Guantanamo’s closure and an end to torture, he has not yet publicly explained how his government will change the process of extraordinary renditions, which involve sending terror suspects to foreign countries to be interrogated.

CIA Director Leon Panetta has told Congress renditions could continue, but that prisoners won’t be handed over to countries where they are likely to be tortured _ which has always been the stated U.S. policy.

The Bush administration’s extraordinary rendition program was much criticized, in part because some prisoners were handed over to countries with documented histories of human rights abuses. Morocco was one such country, according to an Amnesty International report.

The United States refuses to account for the 18 months Mohamed says he was in Morocco.

In a statement released Monday by his attorneys, Mohamed said: “I have been through an experience that I never thought to encounter in my darkest nightmares.”

“Before this ordeal torture was an abstract word to me … It is still difficult for me to believe that I was abducted, hauled from one country to the next and tortured in medieval ways all orchestrated by the United States government.” He said he would not make any media appearances until he had recovered from his ordeal.

Britain’s Foreign Secretary David Miliband said he was pleased with Mohamed’s return. The British government has been fighting for his release since 2007.

Mohamed has few remaining ties to Britain, and authorities say there’s no guarantee he’ll be allowed to stay since his residency expired in 2004. He will have to report regularly to police and volunteered to other restrictions that will limit his foreign travel.

Mohamed’s parents are back in Ethiopia and his siblings live in the United States. His sister, Zuhra Mohamed, traveled to Britain for her brother’s release and said: “I am so glad and so happy, more than words can express.”

It is unlikely any of Mohamed’s accused interrogators will be prosecuted because the worst abuse allegedly occurred in Pakistan and Morocco. But any British or American officials found to have known about his rendition or any mistreatment could face civil or criminal charges.

Mohamed has said he was interrogated by at least one British security agent from MI5 in Pakistan and that British intelligence officials fed material about his time in Britain to his interrogators in Morocco.

“Many have been complicit in my own horrors over the past seven years,” his statement said Monday. “The very worst moment came when I realized in Morocco that the people who were torturing me were receiving questions and materials from British intelligence.”

According to Mohamed’s account, which The Associated Press obtained from his lawyers in 2006, he converted to Islam in 2001 and went to Afghanistan and Pakistan, where he said he wanted to experience a traditional Islamic society and get away from a bad circle of friends in London as he tried to kick a drug habit.

He was arrested in Pakistan in 2002 for trying to return to Britain on a false passport and held in Karachi for three months, during which time he said he was beaten, hung by his wrists from a leather strap and questioned by at least one MI5 agent.

Mohamed claims the Americans then sent him to Morocco, where he endured 18 months of torture, including the genital mutilation. He was then sent to another alleged CIA detention site in Afghanistan before arriving in Guantanamo in 2004.

He was charged in May 2008 with conspiring to fill U.S. apartments with natural gas and blow them up _ charges he said he only confessed to after more than two years of torture.

The charges were dropped without explanation in October 2008 _ but only after the prosecutor in his planned military trial quit and accused the U.S. government of withholding evidence. Lawyers in Britain filed a lawsuit for the disclosure of 42 secret U.S. intelligence documents they said would prove any evidence was obtained under torture.

Two British judges have reopened the case and Britain’s attorney general is investigating whether there was criminal wrongdoing on the part of Britain or the MI5 agent who interrogated Mohamed in Pakistan.

Several other lawsuits are under way in the United States against a Boeing subsidiary that allegedly supplied planes for rendition flights to Morocco and for the disclosure of Bush-era memos on renditions and interrogation tactics.

Some criticized Mohamed’s release, saying Monday that no detainees should have been freed before their status was reviewed under an executive order Obama issued last month.

“President Obama ordered a 180-day review to determine the status of the detainees, so it’s unclear to me why Mr. Mohamed has been released without such a review,” said retired Navy Cmdr. Kirk Lippold who was in charge of the USS Cole when it was attacked by suicide bombers in 2000.

“Everyone is interested in the rights of detainees but where are the rights for the families of my 17 sailors who were killed?”

___

Associated Press Writer Pam Hess contributed to this report from Washington.

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February 22, 2009

Sunday February 22nd Looking Sharp presents Selassie Sunday

Filed under Events

Looking Sharp Productions
          Presents
     Selassie Sunday
A gathering of All Nations, Ages and Cultures
         
Featuring
  

I-Trinity  Bi-Lingual Roots Reggae (myspace.com/itr…)
      
      

Libra Project  Hip Hop Roots Band(myspace.com/lib…)
        and other special guests of the Looking Sharp Family
@ Industry Cafe and Jazz
6039 Washington Blvd.
Culver City, CA.  90232
Doors Open 8pm
$ 5 Cover
All ages
www.industrycafeandjazz.com
Exquisite Ethiopian/Eritrean Cuisine, Service, and Hospitality

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Unrest in Caribbean has roots in slavery past

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Unrest in Caribbean has roots in slavery past
Published - Feb 22 2009 04:51PM PST

By JONATHAN M. KATZ and DANICA COTO - Associated Press Writers

Relatives carry the coffin containing the body of union representative Guadeloupe’s Jacques Bino during his funeral in Pointe-a-Pitre, French Caribbean island of Guadeloupe, Saturday, Feb. 21, 2009. Bino was shot dead Wednesday in a crossfire while driving his car near a roadblock manned by armed youths, who opened fire against police, officials said.
Protests that have nearly shut down the French Caribbean islands of Guadeloupe and Martinique are not just about demands for lower prices and higher wages: For demonstrators they are no less than a battle against the vestiges of slavery.

Afro-Caribbean islanders _ most of whose forbears toiled in the sugarcane fields under the yoke of slavery more than 160 years ago _ not only resent France’s handling of the global economic crisis, they have long resented that slaveholders’ descendants control the economy on both islands.

They also suspect that businesses earn too high a profit on goods, most of which are imported.

This resentment against the primarily white, elite slaveholder descendants, known as bekes (bay-KAY), has lent an especially sharp edge to weeks of demonstrations that at times have erupted in gunfire, arson, looting, and the death of one activist in Guadeloupe.

“They’ve got the money, they’ve got the power, they’ve got Guadeloupe,” snapped protester Lollia Naily. “This is not a race thing. It is a money thing and it is a power thing.”

Protesters in Martinique also have rejected the bekes, with frequent chants of “Martinique is ours, not theirs!” Bekes own most industries in Martinique _ but represent only about 1 percent of the island’s 401,000 residents.

Deep economic and social disparities divide France from its overseas possessions: Unemployment in Guadeloupe is about 23 percent, compared with 8 percent on mainland France, and 12 percent of islanders live in poverty, compared with 6 percent of mainlanders, according to the most recent statistics.

The conflict extends beyond the Caribbean: Islanders living in mainland France are relegated to low-level jobs and are absent from senior positions in business, the military and government, revealing a “color fracture in French society,” said Patrick Lozes, head of the Representative Council of Black Associations.

Islanders demand that France treat them as equals _ wherever they are living _ and question why food is more expensive here than on the mainland.

“My ID says I’m French,” said 28-year-old Philippe Delag. “Guadeloupe is part of France.”

The island certainly looks the part: French flags fly from government buildings, and tiny Citroens and Peugeots whiz along well-maintained highways. Residents switch easily from Creole to French in conversations.

On one concrete median divider in Guadeloupe is the spray-painted message, “We want 200 euros,” reflecting protesters’ demands for a 200-euro ($250) monthly raise for low-paid workers, who now make roughly euro900 ($1,130) a month.

The French government, which has insisted that any salary increases must come from the private sector, announced it could provide extra government benefits totaling nearly euro200 ($250) extra a month for low-income workers.

And both sides in Martinique have reached an agreement that would lower prices on 100 products by 20 percent. Protest leaders and government officials are still negotiating to lower the costs of housing, gasoline, water and electricity.

But the problems extend beyond economics, protesters say.

Serge Romana, president of an association that commemorates the abolition of slavery in the French territories, said French President Nicolas Sarkozy “must absolutely abolish all traces of neocolonialism and vestiges of slavery in the overseas regions.”

Sarkozy himself _ who raised islanders’ hackles when as interior minister in 2005 he endorsed a bill requiring textbooks to recognize the “positive role” of colonialism _ acknowledged last week that old wounds still fester.

“I know the feeling of injustice that you have, given the inequalities and the discrimination,” the president said in a television appearance on Thursday aimed at quelling the unrest. “How can we justify monopolies, overly high profits … and, why not say it, forms of exploitation that should not have any place in the 21st century?”

In Paris, thousands of people took to the streets on Saturday to show their support for striking workers and to pay homage to Jacques Bino, the labor-union activist killed in Guadeloupe last week.

Despite such signs of solidarity, most of France doesn’t understand the islanders’ demands, Lozes said.

“They don’t see it as a demand for justice, but rather as a demand for charity,” he said.

Jean-Luc de Laguarigue, a beke, said tensions have festered over generations because France and its islands have not explored the painful past. He said he knows of no slavery museum in France. The subject is generally taboo in schools.

But Laguarigue insisted that bekes no longer represent power and colonial force, and suggested that the islands _ not Paris _ should decide what is best for them.

The protests are “not a call for war, but for dignity,” he said.

On Sunday, mourners dressed in white packed a gymnasium in the cane-growing town of Petit-Canal to hear poems about struggle and rousing songs in homage to Bino, the dead labor-union activist, whose body has been displayed in an open casket on the island for two days.

“We want respect,” said Adele Goram, 50, an islander from a nearby town who attended. “We live in France and there should be no difference between France and Guadeloupe.”

As Bino’s casket was closed, the 3,000 or so mourners sang the new movement’s anthem _ “Guadeloupe is Ours” _ with their right fists held high.

Several islanders blame the arrival of 450 French riot police for the violence that has erupted during protests _ and say it shows how France treats the islands like colonies.

Martinican painter and intellectual Victor Permal described Paris’ proposals as “general and blurry” and criticized the decision to send force, saying France has often overreacted when problems arise on the islands.

“The people are starting to gain a clear notion of what belongs to them,” Permal said. “So they become conscious that it is not France who should define their path and needs.”

Danica Coto reported from San Juan, Puerto Rico. Associated Press writers Jenny Barchfield and Dheepthi Namasivayam in Paris contributed to this report.

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Geronimo’s kin sue Skull and Bones over remains

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Associated Press

Geronimo’s kin sue Skull and Bones over remains
Published - Feb 18 2009 02:36PM PST

By STEPHANIE REITZ - Associated Press Writer

 

Geronimo’s kin sue Skull and Bones over remains
Published - Feb 18 2009 02:36PM PST

By STEPHANIE REITZ - Associated Press Writer

Geronimo’s descendants have sued Skull and Bones _ the secret society at Yale University linked to presidents and other powerful figures _ claiming that its members stole the remains of the legendary Apache leader decades ago and have kept them ever since.

The federal lawsuit filed in Washington on Tuesday _ the 100th anniversary of Geronimo’s death _ also names the university and the federal government.

Geronimo’s great-grandson Harlyn Geronimo said his family believes Skull and Bones members took some of the remains in 1918 from a burial plot in Fort Sill, Okla., to keep in its New Haven clubhouse, a crypt. The alleged graverobbing is a longstanding legend that gained some validity in recent years with the discovery of a letter from a club member that described the theft.

“I believe strongly from my heart that his spirit was never released,” Harlyn Geronimo said.

Both Presidents Bush, Massachusetts Sen. John Kerry and many others in powerful government and industry positions are members of the society, which is not affiliated with the university.

After years of famously fighting the U.S. and Mexican armies, Geronimo and 35 warriors surrendered to Gen. Nelson A. Miles near the Arizona-New Mexico border in 1886. Geronimo was eventually sent to Fort Sill and died at the Army outpost of pneumonia in 1909.

According to lore, members of Skull and Bones _ including former President George W. Bush’s grandfather, Prescott Bush _ dug up his grave when a group of Army volunteers from Yale were stationed at the fort during World War I, taking his skull and some of his bones.

Harlyn Geronimo, 61, wants those remains and any held by the federal government turned over to the family so they can be reburied near the Indian leader’s birthplace in southern New Mexico’s Gila Wilderness.

Their lawsuit also names President Barack Obama, Defense Secretary Robert Gates and Army Secretary Pete Geren as defendants.

“I want them to understand we mean business,” said Harlyn Geronimo, who lives in New Mexico. “We’re very serious. We’re tired of waiting and we’re coming after them.”
Neither members of Skull and Bones, who closely guard their secrecy, nor the Russell Trust Association, the organization’s business arm for tax purposes, could not be reached for comment.

Justice Department spokesman Andrew Ames said the government will “review the complaint and respond in court at the appropriate time.”

Fort Sill spokeswoman Nancy Elliot declined to discuss the lawsuit, but said officials have always maintained there is no evidence supporting the descendants’ claims.

Yale officials declined to comment Wednesday, saying they had not yet seen the lawsuit. Spokesman Tom Conroy noted the Skull and Bones crypt is not on Yale property.

Membership into Skull and Bones marks the elite of the elite at the Ivy League school. Only 15 Yale seniors are asked to join each year.

Members swear an oath of secrecy about the group and its strange rituals, which include devotion to the number “322″ and initiation rites such as confessing sexual secrets and kissing a skull. The atmosphere makes Skull and Bones favorite fodder for conspiracy theorists.

Its most enduring story is the one concerning Geronimo’s remains, and in 2005, Yale historian Marc Wortman discovered a letter written in 1918 from one Skull and Bones member to another that seemed to lend validity to the tale.

The letter, sent to F. Trubee Davison by Winter Mead, said Geronimo’s skull and other remains were taken from the leader’s burial site, along with several pieces of tack for a horse.

“The skull of the worthy Geronimo the Terrible, exhumed from its tomb at Fort Sill by your club and Knight Haffuer, is now safe inside the T _ together with is well worn femurs, bit and saddle horn,” Mead wrote.

Wortman, however, has said he is skeptical the bones are actually Geronimo’s.

 

Geronimo’s descendants say in their lawsuit that they want to uncover any information that people know, but have been keeping to themselves.

“To assure that all existing remains of Geronimo and funerary objects are recovered by Geronimo’s linear descendants, the Order of Skull and Bones and Yale University must account for any such articles that are or have been in their possession, or on their property, and persons with knowledge must provide any facts known to them concerning the claims,” the descendants’ lawsuit says.

If the bones at Yale aren’t those of Geronimo, Harlyn Geronimo believes they belonged to one of the Apache prisoners who died at Fort Sill. He said they should still be returned.

Harlyn Geronimo wrote to President George W. Bush in 2006, seeking his help in recovering the bones. He thought that since the president’s grandfather was allegedly one of those who helped steal the bones, the president would want to help return them.

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Oveous Maximus “Oscar, Grant Me a New Future”

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Oveous Maximus & Anthony “Thosh” Collins
“Oscar, Grant Me a New Future”
prod by Papa Relleno
for the “Future Intentions” album
Link to mp3 file:
http://www.mocaarts.com/freemusic

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Ts Box - Jazzy Jeff - House of Tribe

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Jazzy Jeff
House of Tribe (Incl. Terry Hunter & Kenny Dope Mixes)
Ts Box TB007 - release date: Feb/19/2009 
# Track    Price    
01 Jazzy Jeff’s Main Mix (5:38)  House  $3.99$3.99$4.74  
02 Jazzy Jeff’s Reprise (5:37)  House  $3.99$3.99$4.74  
03 T. Hunter Main Mix (6:42)  House  $3.99$3.99$4.74  
04 T. Hunter Beats (3:21)  House  $3.99$3.99$4.74  
05 K-Dope Main Mix (5:47)  House  $3.99$3.99$4.74  
06 K-Dope Beats (4:41)  House  $3.99$3.99$4.74  
 
Buy all mixes    $7.98$7.98$12.48  
 

The one and only DJ Jazzy Jeff delivers T’s Box Records next SMASH … House of Tribe!

Jazzy Jeff
“House of Tribe”

Written by: J. Townes
Published by: Touched by Jazz (ASCAP)
Produced, Mixed and Arranged by Jazzy Jeff
Additional keys James Poyser
Vocals by Terry Hunter
Vocal Chop by Kenny Dope
Recorded at Portside Studio
Executive Producer: Terry Hunter

For Licensing inquiries: tsboxmusic@gmail.com

TO L ISTEN OR PURCHASE TRACK GO TO:

http://www.traxsource.com/index.php?act=show&fc=tpage&cr=titles&cv=30277 

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