December 21, 2007

If you thought getting left in the dust by South Africa was bad….

There has been a recent boon for LGBT people abroad. Uruguay became first Latin American country to legally recognize gay couples.

Uruguay’s Congress legalized civil unions for homosexual couples Tuesday in the first nationwide law of its kind in Latin America.

Under the new law, gay and straight couples will be eligible to form civil unions after living together for five years. They will have rights similar to those granted to married couples on such matters as inheritance, pensions and child custody.

Meanwhile Hungary legalized same-sex domestic partnerships.

Hungary’s parliament passed a law late on Monday that allows same-sex couples to register a civil partnership with many of the rights and obligations of marriage.

Registered couples will have the same rights as married heterosexual couples in inheritance, taxation and other financial matters.

But they will not be allowed to adopt children, unlike married couples.

Most recently in Nepal:

Nepal’s Supreme Court has ordered the government to scrap laws that discriminate against homosexuals.

The court ordered that sexual minorities should be guaranteed the same rights as other citizens.

…..

In their ruling, two Supreme Court judges said: “The government of Nepal should formulate new laws and amend existing laws in order to safeguard the rights of these people.

So what has the USA done for us lately?

They dropped the Hate-crimes bill (a.k.a. Matthew Shepard Act).

“We don’t have the votes,” said one House Democratic aide, who spoke on condition of anonymity because conference negotiations on the defense bill were ongoing. “We’re about 40 votes short, not four or six.”

And what about the Employment Non-Discrimination Act (ENDA)? That passed, sort of. You see, it doesn’t include protection for transgendered people. Apparently the bigots put up so much of a stink over TG individuals having employment protections that they were nixed from the bill. Of course even ENDA-lite still has to get past GWB so it’s not entirely safe yet.

So as other nations march bravely into the 21st century the USA limps along in a continuous struggle against bigots who fight valiantly to return us to the dark ages.

Posted by: Buffy

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Filed under: Asia, Employment/ENDA, Hate Crimes, Latin America, Marriage Equality






September 29, 2007

India Court Denies HIV-Positive Mom Custody

Reports PlanetOut:

A court in Jaipur, India, has denied an HIV-positive woman custody of her 8-year-old daughter, a rights activist said Friday.

The woman, who was not identified to protect her privacy, married a soldier from northwestern Rajasthan state in the late 1990s without knowing that he was HIV-positive, said Kavita Srivastav, state convener of the People’s Union for Civil Liberties, a private rights group.

Her husband died four years ago. After his death her in-laws began treating the woman badly and took her daughter on the grounds that the mother had become HIV-positive, Srivastav said.

. . .

The court rejected her plea this week, ruling that she would not able to take care of her daughter because of her HIV-positive status, Srivastav said.

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Posted by: Sapphocrat

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Filed under: Asia, HIV/AIDS, Random Bigotry






September 13, 2007

Public Lesbian Wedding in Queer-Hating Nepal

Red saris are being brought out of cupboards along with red bangles and necklaces as women in Nepal get ready to celebrate Teej Friday, one of the rare festivals that are by, for and of women.

However, Kalpana Pariyar, a fresh-faced 21-year-old from Karabari village in the border district of Sunsari, and Sabi Bishwokorma, 32, also from the same region, have an additional reason to celebrate the festival, held during the monsoon.

The two, who have been living together for the last 15 months, decided to formalise their relationship by getting “married” in Kathmandu Thursday.

Disowned by their families, the defiant women came to Kathmandu this week looking for support from Blue Diamond Society (BDS), Nepal’s only gay rights organisation that last year organised the kingdom’s first public gay marriage.

Pariyar and Bishwokorma, both of whom belong to disadvantaged communities, have been drawing heart by the growing movement in the capital to wrest rights for the sexual minorities, who till the inception of the BDS in 2001, were forced to live in closets.

On Wednesday, hundreds of gays, lesbians and transgenders marched through the capital, chanting slogans.

Amazing, when you consider:
Young Lesbians Released After Month Captivity By Maoists
Nepal gays ask UN to save arrested peers in Iran
Cops assault Nepal youths for carrying condoms

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Posted by: Sapphocrat

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Filed under: Asia, Marriage Equality






September 12, 2007

Is There Anything We Like About Singapore? Hmmm… Nope.

Windy City reports:

MCC’s Troy Perry banned from speaking in Singapore

Metropolitan Community Churches founder Troy Perry was banned from giving a speech at a meeting of gay rights and pride groups in Singapore last month.

. . .

Perry was allowed into Singapore, but instructed by the authorities to speak with people only one-on-one.

So, he went to the meeting as scheduled, but, instead of giving his speech, he answered questions for three hours, from one person at a time.

. . .

Singapore has been on a gay-ban spree of late.

On July 30, the Media Development Authority ( MDA ) prohibited an exhibition of 80 of photographer Alex Au’s pictures of gay people kissing. The censors said the exhibit would “promote a homosexual lifestyle and cannot be allowed.”

. . .

On Aug. 3, the authorities banned a pride forum at which retired Canadian law professor Douglas Sanders was to discuss “Sexual Orientation in International Law: The Case of Asia.” … A third gay pride event was partially banned Aug. 2.

See also:
More Singapore Pride woes: No jogging!

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Posted by: Sapphocrat

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Filed under: Asia, Free Speech, MCC






September 9, 2007

When Sir Ian Speaks, We Listen

In discussing his worldwide lobbying efforts, actor and Stonewall UK co-founder Sir Ian McKellen makes the case for equal rights in Singapore — and everywhere else, for that matter:

We heard it all before: “Gays should respect the views of those who condemn them.” “Government is powerless to move until society is ready for change.” “The law here that outlaws love between two grown men was left behind by the British.” I would have thought any self-respecting ex-colony would want to get rid of the colonizer’s laws. When I went to lobby Nelson Mandela while the postapartheid constitution was being drafted, I asked him to endorse making it illegal to discriminate on grounds of sexuality. I’d been warned that he might giggle if I mentioned homosexuality. But he got the point immediately and just said, “Yes, of course.” Perhaps a winning slogan might be: “What’s good enough for Mandela is good enough for us all.”

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Posted by: Sapphocrat

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Filed under: Africa, Asia, Celebrities, United Kingdom & N.I.






Not As Many Places Will Kill You for It Now

Pacific Ocean View, Cabo San Lucas, Baja, Mexico
Good! ‘Cause Baja is a great
honeymoon destination!

 

Newsweek checks the climate of same-sex equality in countries where you’d least expect to find it:

After eight years together, Gilberto Aranda and Mauricio List walked into a wedding chapel in the Mexico City neighborhood of Coyoacán last April and tied the knot in front of 30 friends and relatives. Aranda’s disapproving father was not invited to the springtime nuptials. For the newlyweds, the ceremony marked the fruit of the gay-rights movement’s long struggle to gain recognition in Mexico. The capital city had legalized gay civil unions only the month before. “After all the years of marches and protests,” says Aranda, 50, a state-government official, “a sea change was coming.”

. . .

The sweeping terms of the 2006 Civil Union Act placed South Africa in a select club of nations that have enacted similar laws and that, until last year, included only Canada, Belgium, Spain and the Netherlands. But there are glimmers of change in other nations. China decriminalized sodomy a decade ago and removed homosexuality from its list of mental disorders in 2001. Police broke up a gay and lesbian festival in Beijing in 2005 but took no action last February against an unauthorized rally in support of legalizing gay marriage. The Chinese Communist Party has established gay task forces in all provincial capitals to promote HIV/AIDS awareness and prevention. And in April a Web site launched a weekly hour-long online program called Connecting Homosexuals with an openly gay host. It is the first show in China to focus entirely on gay issues.

Tolerance, however, by no means spans the globe. Homosexuality remains taboo throughout the greater Middle East. In most of the Far East, laws permitting gay and lesbian civil unions are many years if not decades away. In Latin America, universal acceptance of homosexuality is a long way off. Jamaica is a hotbed of homophobia. Even in Mexico, the first couple to take advantage of Coahuila’s new civil-union statute were fired from their jobs as sales clerks after their boss realized they were lesbians. The new Mexico City law grants same-gender civil unions property and inheritance rights, but not the right to adopt children.

. . .

Tolerance is now the majority, at least among the young. A 2005 poll by the Mitofsky market-research firm found that 50 percent of all Mexicans between the ages of 18 and 29 supported proposals to allow gay marriage…

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Posted by: Sapphocrat

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Filed under: Africa, Asia, Canada, Europe, Latin America, Marriage Equality, Middle East






September 3, 2007

Once, Twice, Three Times a Lady(boy)

Men of ThailandPink News tells us:

Scores of teenage “lady boys” and male prostitutes have been involved in a three day “gay war” on the Thailand resort of Pattaya.

The resort is popular with British tourists where teenage rent boys and so transvestite “lady boys” are available for as little as £12. Although prostitution is illegal, police are often paid to turn a blind eye to the prostitution.

It’s understood that police arrested two young men, believed to be working as “lady boys”, following an arson attack on a club and a separate attack where another bar was ransacked.

More

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Posted by: Sapphocrat

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Filed under: Asia






August 9, 2007

Obama’s Lack of Full LGBT Support Isn’t the Only Worrisome Thing

From Sapphocrat:

Upon learning that Barack Obama’s campaign had added a new “pride” section to its Web site, I snarled:

Obama can bite me.

He’s got a whole section of his campaign site designed to pander to us:

http://pride.barackobama.com/page/content/lgbthome

You are NOT my ally, Obama, and until the day you recognize your privilege by denying me my rights, I won’t vote for you — even in the national election.

There, I said it: If by some horrible twist of fate Obama gets the nod, I will not be voting for the Democratic nominee for president, for the first time ever. He has nothing to offer that would offset his stubborn stance on marriage equality, or his revolting pandering to the fundies. A strong background in foreign policy might have convinced me to turn a blind eye one more time, but he sure hasn’t got that.

Even Hillary brings more to the table (she’s been there already, and yes, Bill is a strong plus for her in my eyes; no matter how much crap he pulled on LGBTs, his reign constituted the best eight years of my life as an American) — and as much as I dislike HRC, I will be able to hold my nose and vote for her.

But not Obama. Never Obama.

To paraphrase Tevye: “If I bend that far, I will break.”

swimboy asked me to elaborate the reasons I think Barack Obama would be a bad choice for President, and this was my answer:

In my mind, because there’s nothing to offset his stance on marriage equality. Meaning: If I thought this was the one person who could (and would) get us out of Iraq and begin to restore our nearly ruined reputation with the rest of the world, I’d consider taking yet another hit for the team in lieu of his full support for LGBTs.

But — and this is completely aside from the marriage issue — the idea of Obama as foreign-policy setter scares the hell out of me. This is the man who is open to the idea of bombing Iran, and, just a week or two ago, pissed off Pakistan when he said he’d consider attacking that country in order to go after global terrorists.

I can’t even begin to imagine the repercussions of attacking Iran — and attacking Pakistan is even more unimaginable; Pakistan is (and has long been) a nuclear power. I’m not worried about Pakistan launching a nuke at us — they wouldn’t have to; their best bet would be lobbing a nuke into New Delhi, and wiping out our strongest ally (and satisfying their own bloodlust against India in the same strike). If you think we’re in a mess in the Middle East now, just wait ’til the war games start up in South Asia.

And, speaking of Asia, if he’s so reckless with his threats while he’s still just a candidate, what in the world does he intend to do about North Korea? (Nothing, I hope, because if he puffs out his chest at NK, what can we expect from China?)

Bottom line for me is that he has less of a grasp on the concept of diplomacy (and just plain not pissing off countries that can destroy you) than I do. That scares me, a lot.

So, there’s that. He’s got nothing to offer (except a lot of potential chaos) to convince me that life will be better with him at the helm, or that I should give him an inch on LGBT issues in exchange for a safer, more secure America.

And it goes well beyond just marriage equality; his stance on that indicates to me a lack of basic understanding about the issue of church-state separation. He says that marriage “has religious and social connotations” (sure, only as long as it’s been a social fabrication; it was originally a business deal).

He’s all too willing to “leave it to the states” — even though he’s said that his own parents’ (interracial) marriage was illegal (in states other than Hawaii, where they married). How can he then justify “separate but equal” for us? What kind of double standard is that for someone who claims to support equal rights — for anyone?

IMO, Obama’s problem is that he never grew up under the full weight of discrimination in the U.S. himself; part of his childhood was spent in Kenya, and part in Hawaii — and Hawaii is not Wahoo, Kentucky. I’m not saying he’s “not black enough” (I’ll leave that to black commentators, who say it plenty; see the quotes below from Rev. Irene Monroe and Jasmyne Cannick, for just two), but I will say I don’t believe he has the frame of reference his generational contemporaries do. He is of a generation (mine, in fact) for whom the Civil Rights era is but a dim memory; yet even I have a greater advantage in understanding what it means to suffer not merely discrimination, but state-sanctioned discrimination, that he does not.

Should his race be an issue? No — unless he’s going to tout himself as a champion of the underdog. Because he doesn’t have the lifelong experience of a Jesse Jackson or an Al Sharpton, his race means nothing to me (if he had, then I would consider his race a plus, in that we shared some common thread; i.e., the lifelong effects of bigotry). AFAIC, he knows as much about my experience as Edwards or HRC… which is to say: nada.

OK, so what does his voting record have to say? It’s beautiful, really, on LGBT issues — it shows that he is not in favor of any bill that would strip us of any current protections, nor burden us with any further restrictions. But to me, that is the least any candidate can do, as opposed to fully supporting our equality, and actually doing something about it. His hypocrisy is even more glaring every time he pays lip service to us, while stubbornly refusing to give us the same — not special, but merely the same — rights he enjoys.

Whether it’s his religion getting in the way (which he says it is; he’s been quite clear that his religious beliefs are at odds with marriage equality), or whether it’s really that he doesn’t want to alienate Christian voters and other conservative Democrats, it doesn’t matter: He’s making religion a stumbling block for what it a simple, secular issue.

Finally, he took the same tack Hillary did when asked about Peter Pace’s comment that homosexuality was immoral: He hedged, he dodged… Even HRC tried to run damage control after John Edwards had the cojones to answer the question directly; I haven’t heard Obama even try to backtrack (although I may have missed it).

To round out my thoughts on Obama, here’s what a few other people have to say, and say better than I can:

What’s disappointing however, was Obama’s initial reaction to Pace’s remarks. According to the Tribune, a Newsday reporter asked Obama as he was leaving a speaking engagement if he thought homosexuality was immoral. Obama’s first answer was: “I think traditionally the Joint Chiefs of Staff chairman has restricted his public comments to military matters. That’s probably a good tradition to follow.” Asked a second time, he said: “I think the question here is whether somebody is willing to sacrifice for their country.” When asked a third time, the senator ignored the question, signed an autograph, posed for a photo and then jumped into a Lincoln Town Car. Obama later clarified his position, telling Larry King on CNN, “I don’t think that homosexuals are immoral any more than I think heterosexuals are immoral.”

A calculated response from Hillary is no surprise; we’ve come to expect her to tap dance around all kinds of issues. And although he has been taking heat from his supporters for it, Obama has been remarkably consistent with his position on gay marriage. During his 2004 U.S. Senate campaign, he said “I’m a Christian. … And so, although I try not to have my religious beliefs dominate or determine my political views on this issue, I do believe that tradition, and my religious beliefs say that marriage is something sanctified between a man and a woman.” While we may not agree with that analysis, he is certainly entitled to his beliefs. What’s disappointing is watching a man whose personal story, background and persona have the power to unite a nation that is clearly worn down by the politics of division and false choices try to find an answer that will satisfy everyone. We aren’t convinced that Obama actually believes that homosexuality is immoral. But what his reaction did demonstrate is that his commitment to equality goes only as far as political expediency will allow.

The Chicagoist

As an African-American woman who is also a lesbian, I have a lot to weigh in making my final decision for who I am going to support. I obviously want someone who is going to do more than pay lip service to African-Americans but I also want the same concerning gays.

I like Obama, I really do. I went to hear him speak when he came to L.A. for his book signing. In fact, I have his autographed book on my bookshelf in my living room and every now and then, I glance at it and think, he may be the next President.

But with all of Obama’s audacity, he hasn’t been able to stand up and say yes, I agree that separate isn’t equal and gays and lesbians deserve to be treated equally under the law with the same rights and privileges as America’s heterosexual citizens. Now that would truly be audacity!

But that hasn’t happened and I fear that what is happening is that in this mad dash rush to get the support of the Black community, via the Black church, Obama is trying to ignore the fact that I don’t have all of my rights and that I am not treated equal. And if he can stand up and speak out against the war he should be able to stand up and face the Black church and say that while he may not agree with the idea of lesbians and gays getting married, that they do contribute to society like everyone else, including paying taxes and therefore deserve to be treated equally.

By the same token, showing up at Black churches and “talking Black” to the Blacks and showing up at gay organizations talking in circles about what you’re going to do if elected, which if you read between the lines isn’t really anything, doesn’t impress me either. Nor does trying to use your husband’s strange popularity with Blacks to boost your standings in the African-American community.

There’s a lot riding on this next election. It’s not just about the war, Social Security, universal healthcare, and the economy. It’s also about putting an end to lawful discrimination and having the guts to take a real position, the right position, on unpopular issues. It’s about reparations and America apologizing for slavery as much as it’s about my rights as a lesbian to marry the woman of my choice…legally.

So in other words, if you want my vote, you’re gonna have to work for it. Being Black isn’t going to be enough, nor is being a woman. And paying lip service on Sunday’s isn’t going to get it either.

I want the next President of the United States to be able to stand up on the right side of all of the issues, not the just the popular ones.

Jasmyne Cannick

“He’s my favorite because he beats his kids with his hand instead of a stick,” is not what Bishop Gene Robinson said of Presidential would-be Barack Obama. On marriage equality, he might as well have.

Blue Mass Group

As a supposedly bipartisan politician who understands and reconciles opposing views, and a non-doctrinal Christian whose personal identity and life journey shaped his lens to include those on the margins, why then, I ask, is this presidential hopeful not united with lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer voters on the issue of marriage equality?

“I was reminded that it is my obligation not only as an elected official in a pluralistic society, but also as a Christian, to remain open to the possibility that my unwillingness to support gay marriage is misguided,” Obama wrote in his recent memoir, The Audacity of Hope.

But Obama’s audacity is not only his unwillingness to support the issue, but also his misunderstanding and misuse of the term “gay marriage.” The terminology “gay marriage” not only stigmatizes and stymies our efforts for marriage equality, but it also suggests that LGBT people’s marriages are or would be wholly different from those of heterosexuals, thus altering its landscape, if not annihilating the institution of marriage entirely.

But Obama’s remarks in a recent interview with Tim Russert on NBC’s Meet the Press spoke somewhat encouragingly about granting LGBTQ couples not marriage equality but certainly civil union rights.

However, having lived outside of America during its turbulent decades of the Jim Crow era and legal segregation, Obama may not know on a visceral and lived experienced level what those decades had been like for African-Americans.

But he ought to know, as a civil rights attorney, that granting LGBTQ Americans only the right to civil unions violates our full constitutional right as well as reinstitutionalizes the 1896 U.S. Supreme Court decision Plessy v. Ferguson. As a result of that decision, the ’separate but equal’ doctrine became the rule of law until it was struck down in the 1954 Brown v. Board of Education decision.

. . .

Although not a cradle Christian, Christianity became Obama’s newfound religious identity late in his life. And his affinity to conservative Christian beliefs not only informs his decision on the issue of marriage equality, but it also solidifies his decision about us in a community of believers like himself.

. . .

Obama’s The Audacity of Hope is not a must-read for LGBT voters because he fails to fully comprehend or sincerely commit to the issue of social justice for all Americans. He does not tackle head-on how the religious rhetoric of this political era has played an audacious role in discrimination against LGBT people, leaving us with little to no hope, his rhetoric included.

“In years hence, I may be seen as someone who was on the wrong side of history. I don’t believe such doubts make me a bad Christian,” Obama writes.

As LGBT voters, our job is neither to judge nor vote for Obama on whether he is a good Christian. It is, however, for us to judge and vote on whether he is a good statesman.

If he should run for president, he wouldn’t get my vote.

Reverend Irene Monroe

 

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Posted by: Sapphocrat

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Filed under: Asia, Barack Obama, Christianity, Election 2008, Hillary Clinton, Iran, John Edwards, Marriage Equality, Race/Ethnic Issues, Radical Religious Right






April 28, 2003

Something to Send Your Right-Wing Friends

Nope, I didn’t write it — it’s an e-mail forward, courtesy of DU’s talkinghand. But I love it — I’m copying and pasting it into an e-mail for all my misguided RW acquaintances, and encourage you to do the same — they’ll hate it, but they won’t be able to argue with it (that is, if they get it)!

As mindless liberals reflexively attack our elected wartime President, George W. Bush, over his brilliant and inspired handling of the near-crisis brought about by the sinister North Korean communist regime and the inept foreign policy of the failed Clinton administration, it is important that we true conservatives remember the nature of the Korean dictator and charter member of the Axis of Evil.

He is the pampered and spoiled product of his country’s ruling elite and the son of his country’s former leader. Born to the wealth and high social standing of his family’s political dynasty, he has enjoyed a life of privilege far removed from concerns of his exploited countrymen. Despite an obvious lack of merit, talent or aptitude, he received the best accommodations his country could offer. He was a notorious playboy and immoral rake until he reached an age at which most men have matured. He produced nothing and accomplished nothing unconnected to his family’s name, and owes his current political position to solely his father’s cronies.

Surrounded by sycophants and toadies, he adheres to a discredited ideology that most of his countrymen would reject if they were not routinely and massively propagandized. He is unconcerned with the economic devastation his party’s ideology has visited on his country, except as to avoid complete disaster and cynically manipulate each crisis to the passing advantage of his party and the ruling elite.

Paranoid and contemptuous of foreign opinion, he has alienated almost the entire world with disjointed, bellicose, but often colorful rhetoric that most other nations find frightening. His erratic foreign policy consists solely of slogans intended to further propagandize a fearful domestic audience rather than assure his neighbors. Often, he unpredictibly reverses his own national policy and acts unilaterally to further a political ideology that is incompatible with democracy.

These are the differences between Kim Jong Il and our own beloved and respected leader. Liberals are blind to those differences.

Posted by: Sapphocrat

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Filed under: Asia, George W. Bush, Humor






March 20, 2003

The Sleeping Giant Has Awakened

The Chinese have a saying: May you live in interesting times.

It is not meant as a blessing, but as a curse.

Let’s fast-forward to March 20, 2003, and see what China is saying today:

In a phone conversation late Thursday, Chinese State Councilor Tang Jiaxuan told U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell that China “strongly urged an end to military actions against Iraq so as to avoid hurting innocent people,” the official Xinhua News Agency reported.

Tang also told Powell that China is “deeply worried about humanitarian disasters, regional turbulence” and other ramifications of the war, the report said. … [Foreign Ministry spokesman Kong Quan] didn’t immediately say what, if anything, China’s leaders might do in protest, but stressed that they would “take their own actions to reflect” the country’s goals. … China’s response had a milder tone than it could have had, said Zhang Yebai, a government adviser on U.S. policy with the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences in Beijing.

Washington Post
March 20, 2003

Sounds pretty ominous, doesn’t it?

Posted by: Sapphocrat

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Filed under: Asia, Colin Powell, Iraq






 

 
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