Society's Child
When Dr Hillary Mabeya visited a condemned home in Eldoret, Kenya in 2009 and said, "This kitchen is going to be an operating room," he raised more than a few eyebrows.
Yet last month, Mabeya performed his thousandth surgical operation in that kitchen, which is now part of the Gynocare Fistula Centre. Mabeya is the only surgeon at Gynocare, a centre that performs the most fistula surgeries in Kenya, at no cost to the patient.
May 23 marks the second annual International Day to End Obstetric Fistula. Fistula is a tear in a woman's bladder or rectum that causes her to constantly leak urine or feces. At least two million women suffer from the condition, with 50,000 to 100,000 new cases occurring each year. The main causes are prolonged labour, botched Caesarean sections and sexual assault.
"I've heard women say to me: 'I wish I could have died in childbirth rather than live with this condition,'" Lindsey Pollaczek told Al Jazeera. Pollaczek works in Kenya as a senior programme manager for Direct Relief, an international organisation that supports Gynocare's work.
Most women with fistula live in remote areas, and are unaware that they can be healed with surgery. "They can't participate in family life, in social life, they can't go to church, no one will buy their vegetables," said Pollaczek. "Because they smell like urine, they become pariahs in their society, they lose a lot of self-respect, they feel like they've done something wrong to deserve this," she said of the devastating condition.
Comment: My goodness! If we need crime income to boost GDP projections, then surely the end is near.
According to CNN, Justice Department prosecutors indicted 16 current and former police officers on Thursday, stating they "used their affiliation with law enforcement to make money through robbery, extortion, manipulating court records and selling illegal narcotics."
As noted by Reuters, drug division officers from three separate areas were part of the arrests. Some officers allegedly offered armed protection to drug dealers in exchange for bribes. Others reportedly planted evidence against innocent individuals before extorting them for money and release. US Attorney Rosa Emilia Rodriguez-Velez, meanwhile, said officers also arrested civilians and confiscated drugs that were later sold illegally.
The suspects "not only betrayed the citizens they were sworn to protect, they also betrayed the thousands of honest, hard-working law enforcement officers who risk their lives every day to keep us safe," she told Fox News.
If convicted, the officers could land in jail on life sentences.
The recently announced arrests are yet another blow to a police force that many groups, including the Justice Department, have criticized for various drug- and corruption-related reasons. In 2010, federal officials detained scores of Puerto Rican police in what was billed then as the largest corruption case in FBI history. A total of 130 arrests were made, 89 of which were law enforcement officials.
Comment: Interesting that the US is arresting police for corruption in Puerto Rico while it systematically ignores blatant corruption and brutality on its own shores. Apparently the PRPD is following the example set here:
Police States of America: Americans killed by cops now outnumber Americans killed in Iraq war
Militarization of American police: Skyrocketing SWAT team raids causing needless deaths of innocent suspects
Why have police in America turned into such ruthless thugs?
Police state Amerika: Call the cops at your peril

Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, top, seen during a judo training at a sports school in St. Petersburg, Russia, Friday, Dec. 18, 2009.
Vladimir Putin, perhaps the world's most famous judo black belt, is passionate about his sport --and not just in the dojo, but in the Kremlin. Welcome to the age of the "judocracy" in Russia, where the thinking seems to be: Those who spar together, stay together.
The most recent example of this played out on May 12, when Putin appointed Col. Gen. Viktor Zolotov to be the first deputy interior minister and commander of the Internal Troops. A close associate of the president's, Zolotov was the head of his personal security detail for 13 years -- and, of course, he was one of Putin's sparring partners. (So too was Igor Sidorkevich, once president of the St. Petersburg Judo Federation and now head of the military police.) With Zolotov's promotion, Putin brings in the security forces even closer to him, and he is making sure that they are led by a man with the focus and determination he believes judo inspires.
To a judoka, as Putin said in 2012, "success depends on mastering what is within." And that could almost be the motto of Putin's Internal Troops. It is a distinctively Russian force, a parallel army trained and equipped specifically for security operations at home. Its 180,000 troops range from ill-disciplined local reserves that secure nuclear power stations and police soccer matches, to the Independent Special Designation Brigades that bore much of the brunt of the fighting in Chechnya. The Internal Troops's First Independent Special Designation Division is based in Moscow as an elite force for the security of the Kremlin.
Comment:
The Great Tribes of Libya have responded and you will see their response below.
"If you had to put people, Senators - if they had to go for their V.A. to get care, it would probably get fixed," Luttrell said on "Fox and Friends" Wednesday morning.
He also suggested a more realistic solution to address the inadequate care some of the nation's veterans are currently receiving.
That's not in the same league as the fury nature unleashed on Krakatoa or beneath what is now Lake Taupo, but the 15-megaton blast - codenamed Castle Bravo - has been exceeded artificially only once, by the Soviets' 50-plus megaton Tsar Bomba in 1961.
What happened next was one of the great nightmares of the nuclear age. Fallout from Castle Bravo drifted over the inhabited atolls of Rongelap, Rongerik and Utirik.
On Rongelap, children played in highly radioactive incinerated coral, thinking it was storybook snow.
An hour after the explosion, the per-hour radiation level on the islands was 130 roentgen (R); 50 hours on, it was 175R. Normal background exposure is about 20R in a lifetime.
The host of the event, Professor Jan Nederveen Pieterse, began by noting that there would be, the next day, "a party celebrating the 1 percent."
"We live in an era," he continued, "when Hollywood celebrates idiots as culture heroes - The Great Gatsby, The Wolf of Wall Street. So is there good news for the 99 percent, and [if there isn't] what kind of news would you be looking for?" Pieterse asked.
"The good news is that there are people like you," Chomsky replied. "People committed to overcoming the narrowness of the spectrum of political discussion and the enormous oppression and inequities of society. That there are people trying to end the extremely ominous threat of nuclear war or environmental catastrophe - that is good news."
"But that's always the good news," he continued. "Class war goes on all the time, it's usually just one-sided. The business classes are very dedicated to class war. Constantly fighting it, so the question is whether there will be an opposition."
"When you see rising opposition, that's the good news."
When asked about the fate of those in a capitalist society who are living "a precarious existence," Chomsky said that "from the point of view of those conducting the class war - part of the business classes and the government - the best thing would be to have a population which is living a precarious existence."
In the world of pen vs. gun, we would all benefit from putting the Arab proverb "The enemy of my enemy is my friend" to good use. If women's rights are a security threat to violent extremists, then women's rights must be the asset we protect.
Osama bin Laden, Al-Zarqawi, Mullah Omar: we know these names because they were on a kill list, a targeted roster the United States uses to pursue and kill people who are a threat to our national security.
But have you heard of Najia Sediqi, Hanifa Safi, or Malalai Kakar? They were on a list we don't talk about, the one that violent extremists use to target people who are a threat to their security.
Sediqi, Safi and Kakar have three things in common: they were women, they were Afghan public officials and they refused to participate in a political project that does not recognize the human rights of everyone. Instead, they held prominent public positions in the new Afghan government as ministers and police.














Comment: Millions of young girls who are still children are married each year. This barbaric practice often results in internal injuries and trauma to these vulnerable children. In addition, millions of girls are abused by the practice of female genital mutilation which is still widespread many African countries, as well as in Yemen, Iraq, Malaysia, Indonesia, South America and even some immigrant communities in the West.
Child marriages: 39,000 every day
Child Marriage a Scourge for Millions of Girls
Sickening: 8-year-old Yemeni girl dies from internal injuries after marriage to man more than five times her age
Global Alliance Against Female Genital Mutilation Greatly Needed
Say 'No'! to Female Genital Mutilation