Category Archives: International

US Psychologists Banned from Conference in Cuba

* US Psychologists Banned from Conference in Cuba

Agencia Cubana de Noticias (AIN)
http://ainch.ain.cu/mailman/listinfo/ingles

Havana, Oct 6 (ACN) The US Treasury denied over 200 US
and Puerto Rican medical doctors licenses to attend an
international scientific forum in Havana.

Just ten days prior to the conference, the doctors were
informed of the denial by the US government, which
included threats and sanctions against the regional
organization for having held its congress on the
island, said Dr. Guillermo Arias, the president of the
2nd Regional Congress of the Inter-American Psychology
Society organizing committee.

The threat was extended to Latin American professionals
who were told that those who travel to Cuba will not be
allowed in US territory for six months, said doctor
Arias.

On behalf of his US and Puerto Rican colleagues, Arias
relayed their message against the more than 40-year US
economic, commercial, financial and also scientific
blockade of Cuba.

More than 200 experts from 14 countries, including
guests from South Africa and Spain, are attending the
congress that winds up on Saturday at Havana’s
Convention Center. During the meeting, Cuban
specialists have presented Cuba’s achievements in areas
such as education, human development, sports and
clinical psychology, among others.

The specialized gathering has also considered problems
related to gender, family, identity, social, arts and
community psychology as well as the historic and
cultural approaches.

The Inter-American Psychology Society is one of the
oldest organizations in the Americas and has
contributed to the development of psychology as an
academic subject in this part of the world through
international and regional conferences, publications
and networking.

Academic boycott ‘wrong political tool’, says Israeli minister

The Guardian: Academic boycott ‘wrong political tool’, says Israeli minister

An Israeli cabinet member today warned the British education secretary, Alan Johnson, of the “tremendously dangerous” impact a boycott of Israeli universities would have on international academia.
Today’s meeting between Mr Johnson and the education minister Yuli Tamir was the first time ministers from the UK and Israel have met to discuss anti-Israeli sentiment on university campuses.

Universities try clocking in to stop students skipping classes

The Guardian: Universities try clocking in to stop students skipping classes

University students are being asked to “clock in” to lectures and tutorials in an attempt to ensure attendance and cut drop-out rates from courses.

An electronic monitoring system is being tested at two universities and nine more have expressed an interest in using it to track students. Its inventors insist they want to help students rather than enforcing a Big Brother approach, but the development coincides with some universities introducing good behaviour contracts which warn lazy students they could face disciplinary procedures or even expulsion if they fail to turn up for lectures.

Indigenous Teachers Defend ´A Just Cause´

NYC Indymedia.org: Indigenous Teachers Defend ´A Just Cause´

Teachers build and defend thousands of makeshift barricades throughout Oaxaca City

By John Gibler The Herald Mexico/El Universal
 October 07, 2006

OAXACA CITY – Every night streets here become battlefields in waiting. But behind the commandeered city buses, burned trucks, and coils of barbed wire, a group of atypical urban rebels stands guard.

Watching over a barricade where a small altar to the Virgin of Guadalupe rests between tangled wire and sand bags, six women ranging from their early 30s to their late 60s, none taller than 5 feet, huddle around a small fire in the street, wrapped in blankets and without so much as a club in sight.

For over a month these six women, teachers from the southern mountainous region of Oaxaca, have been poised on the front lines of a conflict that has seized this colonial city, paralyzed the state government, and come to dominate national headlines. And while they may not be threatening to a casual passerby, these women’s resolve to defend their barricade is implacable.

“If they kill us, then we were born to die,” says María, a Mixteca indigenous woman who teaches in Mixteco and Spanish in a rural elementary school, a five-hour walk from the nearest road.

“We are not afraid,” she adds, “because we are here defending a just cause.”

RAID BACKFIRES

The conflict in Oaxaca began on May 22 as a teachers strike for better wages and a higher budget to provide impoverished school children with uniforms, breakfasts, and basic school supplies. After refusing to negotiate with the teachers union, Gov. Ulises Ruiz sent the state police into Oaxaca City’s central plaza on June 14 to remove the teachers´ protest camp with tear gas and police batons.

Hundreds were injured in the pitched battle that resulted, and after a few hours the teachers, supported by outraged local residents, forced the police out of town. They have not been back since.

The teachers and members of the Oaxaca People’s Assembly (APPO) that formed after the failed police raid decided to suspend the teachers´ original list of demands and focus all their efforts on forcing the removal of Gov. Ruiz.

Since June 14, they have subjected Oaxaca City to increasingly radical civil disobedience tactics, such as surrounding state government buildings with protest camps, covering the city´s walls with political graffiti, and taking over public and private radio stations.

Their struggle has led to a severe drop in tourism and the economic impact of the empty restaurants and sidewalk cafes has polarized the community, leading many who are sympathetic to the teachers´ cause to clamor for an end to the movement’s grip on the city.

“We do agree with some things the teachers demand, but this is affecting too many people, ” says Mercedes Velasco, a 30-year-old resident who sells banana leaves in the Mercado de Abastos in the southern reaches of the capital.

TENSION INCREASES

The tension shot up in late August when a convoy of armed gunmen opened fire on the protesters´ camp outside Radio Ley, killing 52-year-old Lorenzo Cervantes. From that night on, striking teachers and members of the APPO, have built massive barricades across all the streets surrounding the radio station and other strategic points near protest camps around the city.

Shortly thereafter, the U.S. State Department issued a warning to U.S. citizens considering Oaxaca as a potential vacation spot.

“U.S. citizens traveling to Oaxaca City should consider carefully the risk of travel at this time due to the recent increase in violence there,” states the announcement, which was extended to expire on Oct. 30.

Despite the announcement, there have been no reported incidents of violence against tourists during the conflict.

Since the shooting on Aug. 22, teachers and local citizens take to the streets every night between 10 and 11 p.m. to reinforce their barricades.

Walking the desolate streets at night, fires are visible at every intersection, as figures gather around holding vigil.

The visual impact is alarming: at many barricades men with clubs and Molotov cocktails stand in the shadows with their faces covered by bandanas or cheap surgical masks.

As rumors of a federal police or military intervention intensified this week, teachers and APPO protesters extended their barricades throughout the city, making it impossible to navigate the streets of Oaxaca by automobile at night.

But this is no ordinary battlefront. Rather than tanks making rounds, in this labyrinthine conflict zone one finds instead families winding through the predawn streets, carrying large stew pots filled with steaming coffee and hot chocolate for the night guards.

The barricade guards are at times skittish, but not hostile. They ask pedestrians where they are going, and then tell people walking alone to be careful and not to walk down dark streets.

A well-dressed couple returning home in the middle-class Colonia Reforma gave the barricade guards near their house directions to their back door saying: “if anything happens, our house will be open.”

At the barricade near Niños Héroes Avenue, the six Mixteca and Zapotec women stay up all night discussing their favorite topic: education.

“I have to walk six hours to get to my school,” says Estela, a Mixteca woman who has been teaching in mountainside communities for 30 years, “And then when I get there, I find that half the kids have not had breakfast and the other half don’t have pencils or notebooks. I use my salary to buy these supplies, to prepare bread and tortillas. How do you expect children to learn if they have not had breakfast?”

OFFENDED BY REPRESSION

Estela and the other women expressed outrage and offense at Ruiz´s use of violence to answer their call for a greater education budget, and that outrage fuels their long nights at the barricades.

“Ulises made a mistake when he attacked us on June 14,” says María as she leans away from the smoke of the street fire where she warms her hands. “He thought that he was going to repress a small organization, but the teachers union is large, and resilient.”

Oaxaca Teachers Agree to Continue Protest Until Gov. Ulises Ruiz Falls

NarcoNews.com: Oaxaca Teachers Agree to Continue Protest Until Gov. Ulises Ruiz Falls

In a city permeated by tension in the face of widespread rumors of immanent attacks by Institutional Revolutionary Party-aligned “shock troops” and corresponding intervention by federal police, the state teachers’ union agreed to continue its struggle “in a massive and united fashion… until the fall of the tyrant Ulises Ruiz Ortiz is achieved, and only then begin the school year.” Enrique Rueda Pacheco, general secretary of the local Section 22 of the National Union of Education Workers, publicized the agreements through a new consultation with the rank-and-file on the continuation of the strike, which began 129 days ago.

China Reduces Imprisoned Scholar’s Sentence, Raising Hopes of Early Parole

The Chronicle: China Reduces Imprisoned Scholar’s Sentence, Raising Hopes of Early Parole

A Chinese court has approved a nine-month reduction in the sentence for a Western-educated academic convicted of stealing state secrets, a human-rights foundation announced on Tuesday. Xu Zerong, who was sentenced to 13 years in prison in 2001, could have his eligibility for parole considered as early as December.

New Zealand: Threatened university staff attack review

The Press: Threatened university staff attack review

The head of the University of Canterbury’s threatened student services unit has broken her silence on the scathing review released this week.

Turkish Court Acquits Professor Accused of Insulting Turkishn

The Chronicle: Turkish Court Acquits Professor Accused of Insulting Turkishn

A University of Arizona professor was acquitted on Thursday by an Istanbul court of the charge of “denigrating Turkishness” in her latest novel. Elif Shafak had been charged with the offense under a controversial provision of Turkey’s penal code.

UK: Lecturers to get counselling helpline

The Guardian: Lecturers to get counselling helpline

The first dedicated national counselling telephone support line for university and college lecturers is being set up to meet an increased demand for such a service.

Italy’s Higher-Education Minister Calls for Major Changes in University Governance

The Chronicle:

Italy’s minister of universities and research on Tuesday called for sweeping changes in the governance of his country’s higher-education system, describing the current governance system as a “big bordello,” with lax standards for the accreditation of new institutions and degree programs.

Cambodian Professor Is Fired and Jailed for Teaching His Anti-Government Textbook

The Chronicle: Cambodian Professor Is Fired and Jailed for Teaching His Anti-Government Textbook

A Cambodian professor who has written a book criticizing the country’s political leaders has been fired from his job, arrested, and charged with criminal disinformation.

Taking Notes in Oaxaca, Mexico

Upsdie Down World: Taking Notes in Oaxaca, Mexico

Oaxaca is wide awake. While many of us seem to be in a deeply unconscious state, oblivious to the world’s realities of violence, exploitation and oppression, the people of Oaxaca are rising up. Tired of their historical suffering under policies of domination, the people have organized a liberation movement that is opening eyes around the world. The movement in Oaxaca is a current, inspiring demonstration of popular power, and although every people’s struggle must create its own path, Oaxaqueños are offering us valuable lessons about organization, solidarity, and resistance.

Iran’s Ahmadinejad calls for purge of liberal university teachers

International Herald Tribune: Iran’s Ahmadinejad calls for purge of liberal university teachers

Iran’s hard-line President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad urged students Tuesday to push for a purge of liberal and secular teachers from universities, in another sign of his determination to stamp a strong Islamic fundamentalist revival on the country.

Hundreds Protest Chinese University’s Crackdown on Certificate Courses

The Chronicle: Hundreds Protest Chinese University’s Crackdown on Certificate Courses

Angry students and parents demonstrated in front of Shanghai’s Fudan University over the weekend after the university withdrew support for a series of courses in a certificate program offered by one of its departments and expelled 700 to 800 students who had enrolled in them. The protest was at least the second in recent months as Chinese universities have tightened control over academic credentials issued under their names.

Israel:Teachers’ union cancels school strike

Jerusalem Post: Teachers’ union cancels school strike

he school year will open on schedule Sunday, after the teachers’ union reached an agreement Friday with Education Minister Yuli Tamir and the Finance Ministries on layoff benefits and teacher rehiring.

On Thursday, the Education and Internal Security Ministries reached an agreement on school security, under which the ministries would jointly finance the balance of the sum needed for providing security at some 700 schools. The amount in question was about NIS 30 million. Following the agreements, teachers decided to drop the strike, union representatives said.

Oaxaca’s Social Movement Develops Radical Vision for a National Government of the People

Narco News Bulletin: Oaxaca’s Social Movement Develops Radical Vision for a National Government of the People

The fifth Oaxaca Mega-March called by the Popular Assembly of the People of Oaxaca (APPO in its Spanish initials) for Friday, September 1, passed a fixed point for an hour and a half, with a total number of participants that I estimated to be at least 50,000. (The newspaper Las Noticias estimated more than 300,000.) The march began in the affluent San Felipe del Agua neighborhood, where normally one might really believe the refrain of Governor Ulises Ruiz Ortíz (“URO”) that “no pasa nada” (“nothing is happening”).

Palestinian Teachers Begin New School Year on Strike

The New York Times: Palestinian Teachers Begin New School Year on Strike

Palestinian schoolteachers went on strike in protest over wages for government employees who have gone largely unpaid for nearly six months.

Who’s in Charge in Oaxaca?

Los Angeles Times: Who’s in Charge in Oaxaca?

A teachers strike has bred chaos: Camped-out protesters have shut down government offices, and a strange flag flies over City Hall.

Mexico teachers extend protests

BBC: Mexico teachers extend protests

Striking teachers seized 12 private radio stations in the southern Mexican city of Oaxaca and set buses on fire, as a long-running protest worsened. They acted after unidentified gunmen opened fire on a government radio station already under their control.

The strikers used the stations to tell parents to ignore Monday’s start of the school year and keep children at home. Teachers have been striking since May to demand higher wages and Oaxaca Governor Ulises Ruiz’s resignation.
Roads blocked

The shooting began at a government-owned radio station already in the hands of the striking teachers. A number of rounds were fired by unknown gunmen, and the teachers say one of their members was injured. The attack prompted a violent retaliation by the teachers, and a number of buses were overturned and set on fire.

Dozens of the protestors also took over the privately-run radio stations and started broadcasting messages of defiance. Others armed with crude weapons blocked off some of the main roads into Oaxaca.

A spokesman for President Vicente Fox blamed the state government for attempting to take back the radio station by force. He said the attack on the was carried out without consulting the federal authorities and described it as a unilateral decision by the governor of Oaxaca, Ulises Ruiz.

Widening protest

Governor Ruiz has become a key target for the teachers.

Although their dispute started out in May as a campaign for more pay, it has since transformed into an attempt to get the governor to resign from office. The teachers say he is guilty of rigging the state election two years ago and of using heavy-handed tactics to deal with the strikers.

The governor, who belongs to the former ruling party, the PRI, has refused to step down. Last week a number of people were taken hostage by activists after gunmen opened fired on a teachers’ march.

They were later released.

The protests have also taken on a much wider context and have become woven into the continuing row over who won Mexico’s presidential election. Four months into this round of tension and parts of Oaxaca are starting to look ungovernable, and that could be a real challenge for the country’s new leader.

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/americas/5272462.stm

3 Egyptian students missing after NYC arrival are in U.S. custody

Newday: 3 Egyptian students missing after NYC arrival are in U.S. custody

Three Egyptian students who were being sought for failing to turn up for an exchange program at Montana State University were taken into custody Wednesday, more than a week after they arrived in New York.

One student was arrested in Minnesota, and two others surrendered to authorities in New Jersey. They were among 11 students being sought by law enforcement after they failed to attend a monthlong program on the English language and U.S. history and culture in Bozeman, Mont., the FBI said.