Signal, No Noise

August 18, 2010

Venezuela’s Communists want ‘Carlos the Jackal’ repatriated

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CARACAS, Venezuela | Venezuela’s Communist Party has urged the government to seek the repatriation of convicted terrorist “Carlos the Jackal,” who is serving a life sentence in France for murder.

Party representative Pedro Eusse said President Hugo Chavez’s administration should ask France to let “Carlos” serve the remainder of his sentence in his homeland.

The Venezuelan-born prisoner, whose real name is Ilich Ramirez Sanchez, is not getting adequate health care in France, and authorities there are denying his right to communicate with lawyers, Mr. Eusse charged.

“They have violated his human rights, he’s been incommunicado,” he said at a news conference on Monday.

Mr. Eusse described Ramirez’s health as “delicate,” without giving any details.

There was no immediate comment from France’s government about Mr. Eusse’s charges or from officials in Mr. Chavez’s administration on the Communist Party’s petition.

Ramirez is serving a life sentence for the 1975 murders in Paris of two French investigators and Michel Moukharbal, a Lebanese man who was an informant for the French government.

He also has been blamed for a series of Cold War-era bombings, assassinations and hostage dramas, including the 1976 hijacking of an Air France jet en route to Uganda.

He has testified that he led a 1975 attack that killed three people at the headquarters of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries in Vienna, Austria. Venezuela’s then-Oil Minister Valentin Hernandez Acosta was one of the 70 hostages seized by the attackers and later freed in Algeria.

Ramirez was captured in Khartoum, Sudan, in 1994 and hauled in a sack to Paris by French secret service agents. Venezuela’s government has questioned whether Ramirez’s rights were violated when he was abducted and whisked away to France.

It wasn’t known how Mr. Chavez’s administration would react to the Communist Party’s petition. Telephone calls to Venezuela’s Foreign Ministry seeking comment from government officials went unanswered.

Mr. Chavez has praised Ramirez in the past as a “revolutionary fighter,” saying he selflessly joined the Palestinian struggle as a member of the Palestine Liberation Organization. The comment raised concerns among Jewish groups such as the Simon Wiesenthal Center, which said Mr. Chavez condoned terrorism by eulogizing Ramirez.

October 27, 2009

Animal Activists in Spain, France Strike 4 Farms, Release 20,000 Animals

Filed under: Europe,France,Southern Europe,Spain,Terrorism,Western Europe — mungurk @ 08:47

source

Published Oct 25, 2009 by ■ Stephanie Dearing

Animal activists struck at least four different fur farms in Spain and France earlier in October, releasing approximately 20,000 of the animals. Some mink were recaptured.

The mink farmers who were targeted now say they have lost their livelihoods. There were two different raids, according to Bite Back magazine, one during the night of October 15, with the other occurring sometime overnight October 19. In both attacks, cages were opened, water systems vandalized and fencing cut to allow and encourage the animals to escape. The mink are grown for two purposes — breeding stock and fur coats. Spanish police believe the Animal Liberation Front (ALF) was behind the raids. The ALF is a controversial group which has engaged in tactics that some have characterized as violent, in order to protect animals used in laboratory testing. The group advocates volunteering at animal shelters, letter writing campaigns and becoming a vegetarian among other steps a person can take to help animals. The ALF has posted the information on the mink release as reported to Bite Back, which is a reporting site for ALF. Mink in Sweden, Denmark and Italy were also targeted in October by animal activists. On October 2, activists in Italy burned a pelt shed and destroyed breeding records, as well as liberating the captive mink. Mink have been farmed in the United States for 135 years. The United States is the world’s fifth largest mink fur producer. Denmark, China, the Netherlands and Poland produce the most mink. Canada also has a few mink farms. A bill to ban mink farming in Europe has passed a second vote. If approved, the ban will take effect in 2018. Farmers say the ban is “immoral.” Mink are harvested for their fur when they are approximately five to six months old. Mink is very popular for coats. Prices range, depending on the size of the coat. The European Fur Breeders Association issued a release earlier this month showing a decline in world mink production.

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