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pMan, seems like everybody wants a piece of a
href="http://www.coldplay.com/"strongColdplay/strong/a these days... or is it the other way around?
The bombastic Brits were accused of a
href="/article/news/51319-coldplay-deny-stealing-melody-from-brooklyn-band"strongripping off
Brooklyn's Creaky Boards/strong/a back in June for their hit song a
href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dvgZkm1xWPE"strong"Viva la Vida"/strong/a, the
almost-title-track from their recent smash LP a
href="/article/record_review/51286-coldplay-viva-la-vida-or-death-and-all-his-friends"strongemViva
La Vida or Death and All His Friends/em/strong/a. Now, Coldplay have once again been accused of
ripping somebody off... for the very same song./p pAccording to Reuters (a
href="http://www.billboard.com/bbcom/news/joe-satriani-sues-coldplay-for-plagiarism-1003919842.story"strongvia
Billboard.com/strong/a), virtuoso guitarist a href="http://www.satriani.com"strongJoe
Satriani/strong/a filed a lawsuit Thursday in Los Angeles federal court claiming "Viva la Vida"
contains "substantial original portions" of his 2004 instrumental tune "If I Could Fly". Satriani
wants a jury trial, damages, and "any and all profits" from the song. Which would be a hell of a
lot./p pA little research-- okay, YouTube-- coughs up a video that plays a snippet of his noodly
"If I Could Fly" under the familiar verse melody from the Coldplay track, and, well... it's not
dissimilar. You can also hear an excerpt of the song a
href="http://media.satriani.com/media/Is_There_Love_In_Space/06_-_If_I_Could_Fly-ex.pls"stronghere/strong/a.br
/br / object classid="clsid:d27cdb6e-ae6d-11cf-96b8-444553540000" width="425" height="344"
codebase="http://download.macromedia.com/pub/shockwave/cabs/flash/swflash.cab#version=6,0,40,0"
param name="allowFullScreen" value="true" / param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always" / param
name="src" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/1ofFw9DKu_Iamp;hl=enamp;fs=1" /embed
type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="425" height="344"
src="http://www.youtube.com/v/1ofFw9DKu_Iamp;hl=enamp;fs=1" allowscriptaccess="always"
allowfullscreen="true"/embed /object br /br /The lawsuit comes just a day after Coldplay were a
href="/article/news/147911-grammy-nominations-surprisingly-relevant"strongnominated for Record of
the Year, Song of the Year, and Best Pop Performance by a Duo or Group With Vocalsnbsp;
Grammys/strong/a for the very song in question, and three others besides. Convenient timing, huh,
Satriani?/p pColdplay, whose a
href="/article/news/147811-coldplay-salute-world-aids-day-with-kylie-collab"stronghot-to-trot Kylie
Minogue collaboration/strong/a recently made its way to the 'net, are on the road right now.br
//ppa href="http://www.pitchforkmedia.com/node/147952" target="_blank"read more/a/p pa
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p iReston, Va. /i- Koofers, the developer of an online community where college students share old
exams, quizzes and class notes for use as study aids, has secured the first $500,000 of a planned
$2 million first round of funding, PEHub.com reported, citing a regulatory filing.pa
href="http://www.dmwmedia.com/news/2008/12/04/koofers-lands-%24500%2C000-student-quiz-sharing-site"read
more/a/pdiv class="feedflare" a href="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/dmwmedia?a=z0TxO"img
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By studying the immune systems of people with natural resistance to HIV, scientists have discovered
how their cells disarm the virus. The research could lead the way to an AIDS vaccine for the rest
of the population.br style="clear: both;"/ a style='font-size: 10px; color: maroon;'
href='http://www.pheedo.com/hostedMorselClick.php?hfmm=v3:b33c2e3f8188b73c5fca9930f5a4d9d3:bDcv7XnQSs1cbxdUmmHiXvT2xioWBkKZB5deIge5qpFzBmUTqQKXV4mNt%2BpR9lmy%2BsT4mEaz7pNeWA%3D%3D'img
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href="http://feeds.wired.com/~a/wired/index?a=bZLmAq"img
src="http://feeds.wired.com/~a/wired/index?i=bZLmAq" border="0"/img/a/pimg
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"Mayor Yuri Luzhkov, speaking at an HIV/AIDS conference in Moscow, also said there was no
scientific proof that condoms provided full protection against sexually transmitted diseases. 'We
have banned, and will ban, the propaganda of sexual minorities' opinions because they can be one
of the factors in the spread of HIV infection,' Luzhkov was quoted as saying by state-owned RIA.
'Some home-grown democrats consider that sexual minorities are a major indicator and symbol of
democracy but we will continue to ban the spread of their views,' Luzhkov said. Luzhkov's
administration has banned several gay rights marches in Moscow in the interests, it argues, of
ensuring security and preventing public disorder."
img src="http://cdn.thesuperficial.com//bfm_gallery/2008/12/1204 Heidi
Montag/post_image/post_image-1204_heidi_montag_leopard_00.jpg" border="0"br Chins McJugs' mother
Darlene is throwing a hissy fit in the pages of a
href="http://www.usmagazine.com/news/heidi-montags-mom-i-give-them-six-months"Us Weekly/a and
claims Spencer Pratt drugged Heidi which a
href="http://thesuperficial.com/2008/11/heidi_spencer_got_married.php"caused her to elope/a.
Darlene gives the marriage six months and, God willing, will turn her anger into premeditated
murder: blockquote"He's manipulative and seems to have power over Heidi," Darlene Egelhoff, 46,
told Us in an exclusive interview from her home in Crested Butte, Colorado the day after Montag,
22, blew off Thanksgiving with her family to stay with Pratt in Cabo San Lucas., the site of her
Nov. 20 elopement. "I would like to see a blood test from Mexico. It wouldn’t surprise me if
he had her drugged."br "Spencer has tried to cut everyone out of her life," Egelhoff tells Us.
"I've been honest with Heidi, and it's caused our relationship to decline. I'm more devastated
about that than the marriage, because I'm confident the marriage won't work out."br "I think
Spencer wants to possess Heidi more than marry her." Adds Egelhoff - who famously fought with
Pratt, 25, on The Hills: "God says love your enemies, but I never expected it to be my
son-in-law."/blockquote Not ones to miss out on a drop of free press, Heidi and Spencer were, of
course, available for comment: blockquote"She should be happy I found someone I love," the bride
tells Us. "Some people go their entire lives without finding that."br Adds Pratt, who famously
calls Egelhoff "Stalker Mom": "I think her mom needs to take a real fat chill pill and be happy for
her daughter."/blockquote Okay, first off, Spencer Pratt should be beaten to death with a manhole
cover just for saying his mother-in-law needs to take "a real fat chill pill." That said, what a
giant fucking publicity scam on everybody's part. Here's how I know: 1. If you recall, Mommy
dearest was a href="http://thesuperficial.com/2008/05/heidi_spencer_mothers_day.php"involved in one
of the Douche Twins shitass photo shoots/a. 2. She's giving an interview with Us Weekly who
happened to purchase the exclusive rights to the wedding photos. 3. Heidi Montag came out of her
vagina. Am I perpetuating their little ruse by reporting on it? Hell to the fuck no. Because
shortly after this post goes live, you guys are going to rip me a new anus for even talking about
them thus making these jokers even less employable. Fingers crossed, this will lead to Heidi and
Spencer living on the streets where I will then selflessly offer them a blanket covered in
smallpox, AIDS and that really itch stuff that irritates your skin. What's it called again? Right;
napalm. div style="width: 425px; margin: 0 0 0 30px; padding: 0;"ul style="list-style-type: none;
display: block; width: 425px; margin: 0; padding: 0;"li style="display: block; float: left; width:
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href="http://thesuperficial.com/2008/12/heidi_montags_mom_accuses_spen.php" style="display: block;
width: 90px; height: 134px; background: #CCC; overflow: hidden; margin: 0; padding: 0;"img
src="http://cdn.thesuperficial.com//bfm_gallery/2008/12/1204 Heidi
Montag/gallery_thumb/gallery_thumb-1204_heidi_montag_leopard_00.jpg" style="display: block; border:
1px solid #cccccc; width: 88px; margin: 0; padding: 0;"/a/lili style="display: block; float: left;
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href="http://thesuperficial.com/2008/12/heidi_montags_mom_accuses_spen.php?bfm_index=1"
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1px solid #cccccc; width: 88px; margin: 0; padding: 0;"/a/lili style="display: block; float: left;
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style="display: block; width: 90px; height: 134px; background: #CCC; overflow: hidden; margin: 0;
padding: 0;"img src="http://cdn.thesuperficial.com//bfm_gallery/2008/12/1204 Heidi
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1px solid #cccccc; width: 88px; margin: 0; padding: 0;"/a/lili style="display: block; float: left;
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padding: 0;"img src="http://cdn.thesuperficial.com//bfm_gallery/2008/12/1204 Heidi
Montag/gallery_thumb/gallery_thumb-1204_heidi_montag_leopard_03.jpg" style="display: block; border:
1px solid #cccccc; width: 88px; margin: 0; padding: 0;"/a/lili style="display: block; float: left;
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href="http://thesuperficial.com/2008/12/heidi_montags_mom_accuses_spen.php?bfm_index=4"
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padding: 0;"img src="http://cdn.thesuperficial.com//bfm_gallery/2008/12/1204 Heidi
Montag/gallery_thumb/gallery_thumb-1204_heidi_montag_leopard_04.jpg" style="display: block; border:
1px solid #cccccc; width: 88px; margin: 0; padding: 0;"/a/lili style="display: block; float: left;
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style="display: block; width: 90px; height: 134px; background: #CCC; overflow: hidden; margin: 0;
padding: 0;"img src="http://cdn.thesuperficial.com//bfm_gallery/2008/12/1204 Heidi
Montag/gallery_thumb/gallery_thumb-1204_heidi_montag_leopard_05.jpg" style="display: block; border:
1px solid #cccccc; width: 88px; margin: 0; padding: 0;"/a/lili style="display: block; float: left;
width: 90px; height: 134px; margin: 0; padding: 0 10px 10px 0;"a
href="http://thesuperficial.com/2008/12/heidi_montags_mom_accuses_spen.php?bfm_index=6"
style="display: block; width: 90px; height: 134px; background: #CCC; overflow: hidden; margin: 0;
padding: 0;"img src="http://cdn.thesuperficial.com//bfm_gallery/2008/12/1204 Heidi
Montag/gallery_thumb/gallery_thumb-1204_heidi_montag_leopard_06.jpg" style="display: block; border:
1px solid #cccccc; width: 88px; margin: 0; padding: 0;"/a/lili style="display: block; float: left;
width: 90px; height: 134px; margin: 0; padding: 0 10px 10px 0;"a
href="http://thesuperficial.com/2008/12/heidi_montags_mom_accuses_spen.php?bfm_index=7"
style="display: block; width: 90px; height: 134px; background: #CCC; overflow: hidden; margin: 0;
padding: 0;"img src="http://cdn.thesuperficial.com//bfm_gallery/2008/12/1204 Heidi
Montag/gallery_thumb/gallery_thumb-1204_heidi_montag_leopard_07.jpg" style="display: block; border:
1px solid #cccccc; width: 88px; margin: 0; padding: 0;"/a/li/uldiv style="clear: left;"/div/div div
class = "credit"Photos: a href="http://www.splashnewsonline.com"Splash News/a/div pa
href="http://feedads.googleadservices.com/~a/JsOwP9rqsAfQp_HfSNetRdpAAag/a"img
src="http://feedads.googleadservices.com/~a/JsOwP9rqsAfQp_HfSNetRdpAAag/i" border="0"
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height="1" width="1"/
Recently Evan Roth from GRL put together a short video with
his idol Jay-Z for (RED). The video, shown above is for a new Kanye West produced Jay-Z song for
RED & the Global Fund
to Fight AIDS in Africa. It launched earlier this week on World AIDS Day at red.msn.com.
The entire video is composed only of the letters from the word BROOKLYN, and as far as we know
it's the first rap video to ever be released with open source code.
Last week, the World Health Organization published a provocative model that explores the
possibility of eliminating the HIV epidemic by annually testing everyone on a voluntary basis and
treating all infected people, regardless of their clinical status.brbrAuthor: Jon Cohen
The genome of a squirrel-sized, saucer-eyed lemur from Madagascar may help scientists understand
how HIV-like viruses coevolved with primates, according to new research from the Stanford
University School of Medicine. The discovery, to be published online on Dec. 1 in the Proceedings
of the National Academy of Sciences, could provide insight into why non-human primates
don’t get AIDS and lead to treatments for humans.
In their coverage of World AIDS Day, several media outlets, including CNN, The Washington
Post, The Indianapolis Star, and The Wall Street Journal, praised or
uncritically reported praise of the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR). However,
none of those outlets noted criticism of PEPFAR's requirement that starting in fiscal year 2006, 33 percent of funds set aside for
prevention under the act that created PEPFAR be spent on abstinence-until-marriage education -- a
provision the Bush administration
reportedly lobbied Congress to add. According to many of the government officials responsible
for managing PEPFAR abroad, as well as the Institute of Medicine (IOM), this requirement hindered PEPFAR's effectiveness in
preventing the spread of AIDS. Congress removed the requirement when it reauthorized PEPFAR in 2008.
The following media outlets praised or uncritically reported praise of Bush's AIDS relief
efforts:
On the December 1 edition of CNN Newsroom, CNN correspondent Kathleen Koch stated
that Bush's AIDS policy is "something that the president is quite proud of" and that "[t]he
strides that the U.S. has helped make globally in the fight against HIV/AIDS" are "a really
important part of his legacy."
A December 2 Washington Postarticle reported that "Bush called his program to combat HIV/AIDS 'one of
the most important initiatives of my administration' and praised it as a resounding success."
The Post added: "The administration's HIV/AIDS initiative is a particular point of
pride for Bush, who has received praise at home and abroad for his leadership on the issue."
In a December 2 article, The Indianapolis Star uncritically reported that U.S.
global AIDS coordinator Randall Tobias said that under Bush, the "U.S. has led the global fight
against AIDS with the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief."
A December 1 post on The Wall Street Journal's Washington Wire blog reported
that "[t]he White House is expected to roll out a series of retrospectives on President George
W. Bush's achievements throughout the month of December" in order to "burnish" his "record."
The post went on to report that "in remarks at the White House, Bush started with a recap of
his substantial accomplishments on AIDS relief" and also uncritically reported Rev. Rick
Warren's assertion that "[n]o man in history, no world leader has ever done more for global
health than President George W. Bush, and I think we need to recognize that and I thank you for
that."
None of these reports mentioned criticism of PEPFAR's abstinence-until-marriage requirement.
According to a 2007 IOM report, "the abstinence-until-marriage budget allocation ... hampers ... PEPFAR's ability to meet the [prevention] target":
PEPFAR's approach to achieving the prevention target involves planning and implementing
prevention programs and activities that are evidence-based, harmonized with country plans and
priorities, and appropriate to each country's unique epidemiologic and cultural context. However,
the abstinence-until-marriage budget allocation in the Leadership Act hampers these efforts and
thus PEPFAR's ability to meet the target. Despite the efforts of the Office of the U.S. Global
AIDS Coordinator to administer the allocation judiciously, it has greatly limited the ability of
Country Teams to develop and implement comprehensive prevention programs that are well integrated
with each other and with counseling and testing, care, and treatment programs and that target
those populations at greatest risk.
IOM further found
that "the Committee has been unable to find evidence for the position that abstinence can stand
alone or that 33 percent is the appropriate allocation for such activities even within integrated
programs."
Moreover, in a 2006 report, the Government Accountability Office
(GAO) noted the assessments of the "focus country teams" made up of the "U.S. agency officials responsible for
managing PEPFAR in the focus countries." According to the GAO, "about half of the focus country teams told us that meeting the
[abstinence] spending requirement can undermine the integration of prevention programs":
Satisfying the Leadership Act's abstinence-until-marriage spending requirement presents
challenges to most country teams. Several focus country teams indicated that they value the ABC
model [Abstain, Be faithful, or use Condoms] as an HIV/AIDS prevention tool and noted the
importance of AB [abstinence/faithfulness] messages, particularly for certain populations.
However, about half of the focus country teams told us that meeting the spending requirement can
undermine the integration of prevention programs by forcing them to isolate funding for AB
activities. Further, 17 of the 20 PEPFAR teams required to meet the spending requirement unless
they obtain exemptions from it reported that the spending requirement presents challenges to
their ability to respond to local epidemiology and cultural and social norms.
Additionally, in a November 2006 report
titled "Bush's AIDS Initiative: Too Little Choice, Too Much Ideology," the Center for Public
Integrity stated that Bush's AIDS relief policy "has enabled his administration to funnel tens of
millions of dollars to Christian faith-based organizations that support his ideology and form his
political base." The report quoted Dr. Paul Zeitz, executive director of the Global AIDS
Alliance, asserting that PEPFAR "is failing to stop the global spread of AIDS and failing to help
lead the world to stop this deadly disease. ... We have a flawed framework with flawed policies
that have kept us from being where we should be by now."
A February 21 New York Timesarticle reported that amid Democratic efforts to remove the abstinence
spending requirement from PEPFAR, Bush "defended the requirement":
[F]or the first time on the trip, Mr. Bush faced tough questioning from an African reporter about
his administration's requirement that one-third of the AIDS initiative's prevention funds be
spent on programs promoting abstinence.
The independent Institute of Medicine has said the abstinence requirement is hindering prevention
efforts. Democrats in Congress, debating reauthorization of the initiative, want it dropped.
Mr. Bush's questioner on Wednesday told the president that the requirement was not realistic,
because "multiple sexual relationships or partner relationships is the reality" in African
societies, "though it's not spoken of in public."
As he has in the past, Mr. Bush defended the requirement, but he then went a step further.
"I monitor the results," he said. "And if it looks like it's not working, then we'll change. But
thus far I can report, at least to our citizens, that the program has been unbelievably
effective. And we're going to stay at it."
Additionally, a February 18 article on the San Francisco Chronicle's website reported:
"It is a balanced program. It is an ABC program: abstinence, be faithful and condoms. It's a
program that's been proven effective," he [Bush] said, speaking at a news conference with
Tanzanian President Jakaya Mrisho Kikwete, an enthusiastic supporter of the effort.
"I understand there's voices on both ends of the political spectrum trying to alter the program,"
Bush said. "I would ask Congress to listen to leaders on the continent of Africa ... analyze what
works, stop the squabbling and get the program reauthorized."
Congress subsequently passed the reauthorization bill, and Bush signed it on July 30. According to a 2008 GAO report, the bill "removes the abstinence-until-marriage spending requirement and
calls for the Global AIDS Coordinator to ensure that abstinence and fidelity programs are
evidence-based and country-based."
From the 11 a.m. ET hour of
the December 1 edition of CNN Newsroom:
HARRIS: Today, World AIDS
Day. Take a look at this. That means four people will be infected while I'm on your television
screen. Today is the 20th World AIDS Day. Globally, 33 million people are believed to be infected
with HIV. CNN's Kathleen Koch is at the White House, where a gigantic red ribbon decorates the
North Portico. Kathleen, good morning to you. Quite a sight.
KOCH: Yes indeed, Tony. This very same ribbon actually graced the North Portico, if you'll
remember, last year on World AIDS Day. And it's important to point out that this is a really --
something that the president is quite proud of, the strides that the U.S. has helped make
globally in the fight against HIV/AIDS, a really important part of his legacy. And he and the
first lady came out on the North Lawn about an hour and a half ago underneath this great, huge
ribbon that's gracing the North Portico.
And the president talked about how his President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, known in the
shorthand version as PEPFAR most of the time -- how it finally has reached the goal that it set
back in 2003, when it started, of increasing the number of people who are receiving
anti-retroviral treatment for HIV/AIDS from 50,000 -- that was the number in 2003 -- to 2 million within just five
years.
BUSH [video clip]: When
PEPFAR began, only 50,000 people living with HIV in all of sub-Sahara Africa were receiving
anti-retroviral treatment. Around the world, we've also supported care for more than 10 million
people affected by HIV, including more than 4 million orphans and vulnerable children. More than
237,000 babies had been born HIV-free thanks to the support of the American people for programs
to prevent mothers from passing the virus on to their children.
KOCH: Now, for the last hour or so, the president has been participating across town in a civil
forum in global health here in Washington. And the president receiving a touching video tribute,
not only from U.N. -- the head of the U.N., Ban Ki-moon, but from Bono, from Bill Gates. The
president also reflected on how he got involved in fighting this global pandemic of AIDS, and he
talked about, if he'd done nothing about it, how he would have, quote, "disgraced the office of
the presidency." And he also discussed how he was surrounded by people who felt this was just
such an important cause for the United States to take up, people including Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice.
Now, looking at the program, the president did just in July sign legislation that will authorize
another $48 billion, Tony, to expand the program.
HARRIS: All right, Kathleen Koch. Wow, that's quite a figure right there.
KOCH: Quite a lot.
HARRIS: Yeah. At the White House for us, Kathleen, thank you.
From his early years as a medical student at Harvard University to his job as the director of the
HIV/AIDS unit at the World Health Organization (WHO), Jim Yong Kim has worked toward building
health care systems to provide care for poor people on a global scale. In the late 1980s, Kim
worked with a team of doctors from the Cambridge, Massachusetts–based nonprofit Partners in
Health to upend conventional wisdom on treatment for drug-resistant tuberculosis in the
shantytowns of Lima, Peru. The team's campaign brought the price of tuberculosis drugs down about
90%. Kim, a physician who also has a doctorate in medical anthropology, says that the success
helped overturn the notion that the disease could not be treated in such a poor setting. While at
the WHO, he turned his attention to AIDS. In 2003, amid much skepticism, his team launched the
global '3 by 5' campaign, an ambitious movement aimed at providing antiretroviral drugs to 3
million people worldwide by 2005. Today, Kim leads the François-Xavier Bagnoud Center for
Health and Human Rights at the Harvard School of Public Health, where he oversees programs to
address health issues plaguing poor childrenóespecially those afflicted with AIDS. Kim
discussed the current state of universal AIDS treatment and the role of biomedical research in
promoting social justice with Prashant Nair.
a href="http://www.theglobalfund.org/html/accesstolife/en/"Eight Magnum photographers portray
people in nine countries around the world before and four months after they began antiretroviral
treatment for AIDS./a br /
December 1st is observed around the world as AIDS Day and the occasion is largely publicized.
Unlike the attention World AIDS Day receives, World Disability Day barely registers on the world
media’s radar.
Celebrated every year on December 3rd, World Disability Day honors the contribution made to our
world by those with physical and mental handicap. In case of South Asia, there is severe stigma
attached any kind of physical and mental handicap. World Disability Day is an opportunity to
spread awareness about the rights of the handicapped and that being differently able is not a sin
or something to be ashamed of.
In India, activist Javed Abidi, the country’s leading
advocate for the rights of the handicapped, will lead an event called “Dilli Chalo”
or “Lets go to Delhi” to mark the occasion. It will be held at the historic India
Gate.
Mr. Abidi says that India has made some progress in securing rights of the disabled but
more needs to be done.
“Now, in India, as we are aware, we have had the Disability Act for the last 12 years. Last
year we thought was a momentous year for two reasons. One was that our country ratified the UN
Convention, and the second was that we also got the XI Plan. And in the XI Plan.....for the first
time, there is a distinct chapter or a section on disability. And we thought that things were
going to change. ......if we were look at the last one year, we find that things have not really
moved the way we had expected them to move....”
Along with addressing legal issues related to the rights of the disabled and the opportunities
they deserve, efforts are also needed to help those living in abject poverty because of their
physical condition.
A news report published by the The National shows
how urgently India’s poor disabled citizens need their government to take steps to insure
that they are able to live in dignity.
Shaikh Azizur Rahman reported this November that an elderly father taking care of two
severely disabled bed ridden daughters has asked the Indian President that they be allowed to be
euthanized. He said that he is too poor to take of his daughters who need round the clock care
and attention. Fatema, one of his daughters, says that she too wants her life to end.
“I told my father many times to bring poison for me. Nobody is helping me to kill
myself.”
Across the border in Pakistan, there is still the mountain of odds facing citizens with
disability. Writing for Dawn, Zahid
Abdullah, who works for the Center for Peace and Development in Islamabad, says that country
still has a long way to go before those with different ability can feel that society values them
too. He also expresses frustration at slow pace of legal reform regarding the rights of the
disabled.
Like in India and Pakistan, the society in Nepal too views physical and mental handicaps as a
result of past life’s sins. Handicapped are usually treated as sub human; they have very
limited access to education and meaningful employment. Often you can see a person with physical
disability begging on the streets to sustain life.
Meen Raj Panthi says that
families hide those with a disability to protect their honor and prestige:
“The notion that people with disabilities have equal rights and duty as any other
individual, is largely absent from the popular mindset.”
“While her parents work at fields, she is often locked in her own room and tethered with
rope by her parents because she has no one to look after her at home. But her elder brother and
sister go to school.”
The Cameroonian Association For The Protection and Education of the br / br / Child (CAPEC) is a
non-profit making NGO based in Cameroon. Asbr / a non-profit, we can't afford to provide any
financial support to ourbr / volunteers but we don't charge them any fees. All we require is forbr
/