Society's Child
'Knocked out with metal bars for lack of anesthesia' - report details collapse of Syria's healthcare
A 13-page report released on Monday describes the devastating transformation of Syria's health system since the start of the war three years ago. The nation's healthcare went from "a middle-income country, with child survival statistics to match" to 60 percent of Syria's hospitals being damaged or destroyed and almost half the country's doctors fleeing the country.
"The rights of men being held in Guantánamo are being completely ignored, and the hunger strike is the only option they have left to protest their indefinite detention, which has lasted more than 11 years without charges for some of them," said Dr Vincent Iacopino, of Physicians for Human Rights. "By allowing the cruel and degrading practice of force-feeding to continue, the court has essentially authorized the continuation of an abusive tactic that violates human rights and fundamental medical ethics."
The detainees being forced-fed are being held in indefinite detention, which is in itself a violation of human rights, according to the PHR. A preliminary injunction would have at least stopped force-feeding, which constitutes ill-treatment and could rise to the level of torture.
However, two of the three judges said the detainees did have a right to challenge the practice in court, paving the way for a continuing legal battle over the issue. The judges also pointed that "force-feeding is a painful and invasive process that raises serious ethical concerns."
The US Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency (ICE) announced on Saturday that 750 detainees had refused their meals on Friday at the Northwest Detention Facility in Tacoma, saying they were on a hunger strike. However, supporters of the strikers say up to 1,200 are currently participating in the act of protest.
The attacker approached a main checkpoint at a northern entrance to the largely Shia Muslim city and detonated the minibus, a police officer said on condition of anonymity.

Riot police stand guard in front of a regional government building as pro-Russian demonstrators take part in a rally in Kharkov March 5, 2014.
In Donetsk, the city that once used to be the stronghold of the ousted President Viktor Yanukovich, people are protesting against the new governor appointed by Kiev last Sunday.
"Getting that information [on plan cancellations] and having good data as to who votes, who doesn't vote, voter registration, party affiliation, consumer characteristics, cross-referenced with that kind of information, I think, is important for us to have," Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus told the Washington Examiner after his CPAC panel presentation Saturday morning.
It's early in the process, though, because the cancellations are still taking place.
Princesses Sahar, 42, and Jawaher, 38, said that they are being kept against their will in a guarded villa in the royal compound in Jeddah.
Their claims shed light into the usually secret world of royal family of a country where women are effectively treated as second-class citizens.
Saudi Arabia is the only country in the world that prohibits women from driving. It scored 130th out of 134 countries analysed by the World Economic forum in a 2009 report on gender parity.
But the restrictions allegedly placed on Sahar and Jawaher go well beyond what is allowed under Saudi law.

People wave Russian and Crimean flags during a pro-Russia rally in Simferopol's Lenin Square on March 9, 2014
The rival rallies in Simferopol were peaceful, in contrast to the Crimean port city of Sevastopol, where about 100 pro-Russians with clubs and whips attacked some 20 people who were guarding a pro-Ukraine rally.
William Jeffrey Dumas, who was originally convicted of two counts of rape and one count of sodomy, was sentenced to 25 years in prison. The story should have ended there, but for the work of Appeals Court Judge Christopher McFadden, who felt that the man didn't do it. There was no hard evidence that exonerated the man that hadn't come up in the trial in which he was convicted, but the judge just had a feeling.
According to an order justifying his decision, McFadden cited that the victim lacked an "exhibited visible distress," in being around the defendant immediately following the alleged rape incidents. He also said that Dumas didn't appear very remorseful for the crime so therefore wasn't likely too have committed it. So in McFadden's court room, if you remain indignant about a crime you have been charged with, he will side with you. A new development in legal theory which, if made universal, would prevent the conviction of roughly every single person ever charged with a crime.
"At no time prior to her outcry ... did (the victim) behave like a victim," McFadden wrote in his decision. "Nor did Mr. Dumas behave like someone who had recently perpetrated a series of violent crimes against her. ... It requires more than that bald argument to satisfy this court that it should ignore the fact that, until the outcry, neither of them showed any fear, guilt or inclination to retreat to a place of safety."Victims often behave in different ways and what a rape victims does immediately after the rape is not an indicator of whether or not it occurred (although defense attorneys have argued that it is, of course.) Part of what researchers of sexual assault call "Rape Trauma Syndrome" is that people respond to it differently. These aren't always obvious, either. In many cases, for example, the victim won't show outward signs of distress. This can be seen as part of the coping process with what is a major physical and psychological trauma.
A group of Israeli teenagers has sent an open letter to Prime Minister Netanyahu declaring their opposition to being drafted into the military because of Israel's policies surrounding West Bank settlements, which they view as "human rights violations."
The letter was signed by 50 teens and published on the Facebook page of an Israeli pacifist group called Yesh Gvul, which means 'There is a Limit.'
"The main reason for our refusal is our opposition to the occupation of the Palestinian territories by the army," the teenagers wrote, as quoted by AFP.
The teenagers pointed out that the army plays a huge role in what Israel does in the West Bank, adding that it has a negative effect on both Palestinians and Israeli society.
"There are actions that are considered war crimes according to international law on a daily basis such as assassinations - extrajudicial killings, building of settlements on the Palestinian territories, administrative detentions, torturing, collective punishment and unequal distribution of resources such as water and electricity," the teens wrote.
"The problem in the military system is not limited to the confines of its effect on the Palestinian society, but seeps into the daily lives of the Israeli society as well."













Comment: Most western media outlets carrying these stories of the collapse of the healthcare system in Syria tend to blame the Assad government for deliberately targeting doctors and hospitals. Yet this report describes pre-war Syria as "a middle-income country, with child survival statistics to match". Are we to believe that Assad suddenly turned into a heartless dictator overnight, or is it more likely that the insane, Western-sponsored Islamic fundamentalists are to blame?