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Thursday, February 28, 2013

Islamist’s Death Sentence Sets Off Riots in Bangladesh

Islamist’s Death Sentence Sets Off Riots in Bangladesh

DHAKA, Bangladesh â€" Violent clashes between protesters and security forces erupted across Bangladesh on Thursday, leaving at least 35 people dead, after a special war crimes tribunal handed down a death sentence to an Islamic leader for crimes against humanity committed 42 years ago, during the country’s 1971 war of independence from Pakistan.

The police used a baton on a protester in Dhaka on Thursday.

Delawar Hossain Sayedee is facing a death sentence.

The verdict against Delawar Hossain Sayedee, a leader of Jamaat-e-Islami, an Islamist party, resonated across the country. It was celebrated by the hundreds of thousands of young protesters who have taken to the streets in recent weeks to condemn Jamaat and demand justice in the war crimes cases against other party leaders, insisting that those who were convicted be hanged.

“This verdict is a victory for the people,” declared Imran H. Sarkar, a blogger and an organizer of the protests, during a rally on Thursday afternoon.

But followers of Jamaat reacted with fury, saying the case brought against Mr. Sayedee and others was politically motivated and tainted by judicial irregularities. Jamaat leaders called a nationwide strike on Thursday to protest the verdict, and by afternoon bloodshed had erupted across the country, as party workers fought with the police in the streets.

The protests for and against Jamaat have convulsed Bangladeshi politics, demonstrating that the country has still not healed from the bloody 1971 conflict, in which an estimated three million people were killed and thousands of women were raped. Before the war, Bangladesh was East Pakistan, separated from the rest of that country by a wide expanse of India. The war pitted Bangladeshi separatists against Pakistani soldiers and local collaborators, who were known then as the Razakar Bahini.

“As judges of this tribunal, we firmly hold and believe in the doctrine that ‘justice in the future cannot be achieved unless injustice of the past is addressed,’ ” Justice A. T. M. Fazle Kabir commented in a written summary of the judgment.

The war crimes tribunal has convicted three Jamaat leaders in connection with the war, and other cases are under way, including some against defendants not affiliated with the party.

Mr. Sayedee, 73, is a well-known religious speaker with a bright red beard who became a member of the Bangladeshi Parliament after the war. Prosecutors accused him of involvement in looting and burning villages, raping women and forcing members of religious minorities to convert to Islam during the war.

His defense lawyer, Abdur Razzaq, scoffed at the court’s verdict and accused the authorities of deliberately prejudicing the trial and preventing an important witness from testifying.

“This is unfortunate, and this is unexpected,” Mr. Razzaq said of the verdict and sentence in a telephone interview. “This is a perverse judgment. It is inconceivable that a court of law awarded him a conviction. This prosecution was for a political purpose.”

Jamaat leaders and other opposition politicians have said for months that the government was manipulating the war crimes process to go after political rivals, accusations that the authorities deny. The proceedings have already created dissent and some international criticism. The chief presiding judge resigned after reports, based on hacked Skype conversations, that the judge had improper contacts with a legal expert linked to prosecutors and the government.

But to many Bangladeshis, the real injustice has been that war criminals have remained free for decades. On Feb. 5, the tribunal convicted another Jamaat leader, Abdul Quader Mollah, and sentenced him to life in prison. Furious that the tribunal had not sentenced Mr. Mollah to death, protesters gathered in growing numbers, surpassing 200,000 on some days.

The protests have become known as the Shahbagh movement, named for a large intersection in central Dhaka where the main demonstrations have taken place. Many political analysts say the Shahbagh protests are the most significant spontaneous political movement in Bangladesh in decades. Though the movement may be suffused with idealism and proud nationalism, it also bears a hard edge, with demands for the execution of convicted war criminals.

Sultana Kamal, a prominent human rights leader in Dhaka, said that she disagreed with the calls for the death penalty, but that they reflected the cynicism of Bangladeshis who have seen war criminals evade punishment for decades. Many people were infuriated when Mr. Mollah flashed a victory sign after receiving his life sentence.

“We have a problem in accepting that they are demanding the death penalty,” Ms. Kamal said in a telephone interview. “But we understand that it was from a nervousness among the people here that unless they are given the highest penalty in the land, these people will come back out.”

Julfikar Ali Manik reported from Dhaka, and Jim Yardley from New Delhi.

A version of this article appeared in print on March 1, 2013, on page A6 of the New York edition with the headline: Islamist’s Death Sentence Sets Off Riots in Bangladesh.

The Truthers of Pakistan

“As the security situation in Pakistan continues to deteriorate, trading conspiracy theories has become the new national pastime,” Hums Yusuf wrote in the Latitude Blog, “nothing is more popular on the airwaves, at dinner parties or around tea stalls than to speculate, especially about American activities on Pakistani soil.”

These rumors include speculations about the role of Indian spy agency R.A.W., which some Pakistani officials claim “funds and arms the Pakistani Taliban.”

Ms. Yusuf attributes this “penchant for conspiracy theories” partly to decades of military rule. “Mostly, however,” she wrote, “conspiracy theories persist because many turn out to be true.”

Read more »



After a College Visit, a Student Finally Knows What She Wants

Sush Krishnamoorthy, a student from New Delhi, is part of “The Choice” class that includes student-bloggers from Nairobi, Kenya; Topeka, Kan.; Seattle; Rogers, Ark.; Las Vegas; New York City; and Hunting Valley, Ohio. Her eighth post is below. â€" Tanya Abrams

Earlier this month, I was glad to receive an e-mail inviting me to the candidate weekend at N.Y.U. Abu Dhabi.

As part of the program, students were required to sign up for a sample class. Some classes I gave priority to were about genetics, water and the expansion of the universe. (I had recently read “The Emperor of All Maladies” by Siddhartha Mukherjee, which led to a sudden spike in my interest in biology.) I was assigned a class on patching damaged genes.

As excited as I was about this class on genetics, I ha not taken biology at school after class 10. What I learned in the subject was limited to Mendel’s experiment and conclusions, and a brief idea of Darwin’s voyage and theories. I was certainly unequipped for that sample class.

The class started with a description of the structure of DNA. Since we started with something I was familiar with, I was at ease. But soon, we ventured into codons, the genetic table, gene transcription and more.

Hearing these terms for the first time, I could only infer their meaning from the ongoing discussion in class. I gathered enough bits of information to understand the material presented in the rest of the class, perhaps because the professor spared us the details and proceeded unassumingly thereafter.

After the class, I went to redeem my gift voucher at the university bookstore. The first book that caught my eye was a textbook about genetics and human society. I flipped through the contents and figured that the b! ook was written for beginners. I decided to use my voucher on this book. Unfortunately, the cost of the book was more than four times the value of my voucher. In a moment of revelation, I understood the fuss about college textbooks. I made a mental note to find reliable Web sites for buying or renting used textbooks before college begins.

During the candidate weekend program, I realized that I want college to be a test of my limits. I look forward to a challenging experience that constantly pushes me to step out of my comfort zone. Be it in the form of a class in an unexplored subject or P.E. courses in swimming and scuba diving, I’m excited.

On a college review Web site, I found this comment about the undergraduate program of California Institute of Technology: “They bend you backwards to help you pursue your goals.”

As I approach the end of the college application process, I finally know exactly what I want from college.

Ms. Krishnamoorthy, a student at Sardar Patel Vidyalaya in New Delhi, is one of eight high school seniors around the world blogging about their college searches for The Choice. To comment on what she has written here, please use the comment box below.



‘Harlem Shake’ Protests in Tunisia and Egypt

The rapid evolution of the “Harlem Shake,” from a dance to a song to a viral video craze to a new form of Middle East protest, continued apace on Thursday. Hundreds of protesters danced outside the headquarters of the Muslim Brotherhood in Cairo, and students and ultraconservative Islamists known as Salafists clashed in Sidi Bouzid, the Tunisian town where the wave of uprisings in the Arab world began with a very different gesture of defiance.

The clashes in Tunisia came one day after conservative Salafists had tried and failed to stop the recording of a “Harlem Shake” video at a language school in the capital, Tunis.

A “Harlem Shake” video recorded at a language school in Tunis on Wednesday.

On Monday, Agence France-Presse reported, Tunisia’s education minister ordered an investigation into another video made over the weekend at a school outside Tunis that included the mockery of Islamists.

A “Harlem Shake” video recorded in Tunisia last weekend, in which some dancers wore fake beards and robes to imitate conservative Islamists.

The rally by about 400 activist dancers in Cairo on Thursday night, outside the offices of President MohamedMorsi’s Muslim Brotherhood, was streamed live to the Web by activists and caught on video by the news site Egyptian El Badil.

A video report on the “Harlem Shake” protest outside the headquarters of the Muslim Brotherhood in Cairo on Thursday.

The protest in Egypt followed the arrest last week in Cairo of four pharmaceutical students. They were charged with violating the country’s decency laws by dancing in their underwear to emulate the Australian “Harlem Shake” video that sparked the craze and has been viewed more than 18 mi! llion tim! es in the past four weeks.

Before the arrests, one popular remix of the video in Egypt appeared to show police officers getting in on the act.



Video of Turkish Premier Comparing Zionism to Anti-Semitism and Fascism

One day after Turkey’s prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, told a United Nations forum the world should consider Islamophobia a crime against humanity, “just like Zionism or anti-Semitism or fascism,” his Israeli counterpart lashed back. “I strongly condemn the remarks made by Prime Minister Erdogan of Turkey, comparing Zionism to fascism,” Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu replied on Twitter.

Ask About the Papal Transition

Pope Benedict XVI attends a meeting with his cardinals during a farewell ceremony in the Clementine Hall of the Vatican's Apostolic Palace on Thursday in Vatican City.L’Osservatore Romano Pope Benedict XVI attends a meeting with his cardinals during a farewell ceremony in the Clementine Hall of the Vatican’s Apostolic Palace on Thursday in Vatican City.

Pope Benedict XVI formally resigned at 8 p.m. Thursday night in Rome, leaving the Vatican by helicopter to begin his new life as pope emeritus. As our colleague , Benedict will stay at the papal summer residence in Castel Gandolfo for the first months of his retirement, until workers complete the restoration of “more permanent lodgings in a convent inside the Vatican where he will live out his life.”

More than 100 cardinals will gather for a conclave next month to elect the next leader of the Roman Catholic Church.

The Times wants to hear your questions concerning the transition to a new pope, the future of the Catholic Church and the plans for the first retired pope in modern times. Are you curious about what to call Benedict Want more details on how a conclave operates Are you wondering how the role of pope might change in its next incarnation Post a comment below with your question or send us a tweet using the hashtag #AskNYT. Next week we will publish 25 questions and answers to them from reporters or experts on the! papacy on The Lede.



India’s Budget Targets Women

Girls at a shelter for women in Kadapa, Andhra Pradesh.Nicky Loh/Getty Images Girls at a shelter for women in Kadapa, Andhra Pradesh.

At a time when India’s commitment to women’s rights is under scrutiny, the government’s annual budget released Thursday proposed a number of measures for women, including increased spending to improve their safety and a bank only for women.

These provisions are part the Congress-led United Progressive Alliance government’s broader focus on “inclusive” growth, through collecting more taxes from the country’s super-rich and increasing social spending. Finance Minister Palaniappan Chidambaram on Thursday stressed the need to lift up groups that “will be left behind” unless they receive “speial attention,” as he allocated greater funds for programs for women, lower castes and tribes and India’s rural poor.

On Thursday, Mr. Chidambaram set aside 971 billion rupees ($18 billion) for what is known as the “gender budget,” a concept introduced in the 2005-06 fiscal year, which reflects the total spending on programs likely to benefit women. This represents a more than 10 percent increase from last year.

The central government will contribute 10 billion rupees to a fund to provide better security and safety for women, called “Nirbhaya,” or “fearless,” the name used by the media to refer to a victim of a gang rape in Delhi in December, whose death prompted thousands to take to the streets to demand greater rights for women.

“Recent incidents have cast a long, dark shadow on our liberal and progressive credentials,” Mr. Chidambaram said Thursday. “As more women enter public spaces â€" for education or work or access to service! s or leisure â€" there are more reports of violence against them.”

Some women’s rights advocates welcomed the additional resources for safety. “I think it is extremely encouraging and high time that the government moves towards ensuring a focus and priority on women’s issues,” said Pinky Anand, a lawyer in the Supreme Court who has worked on rape and sexual assault laws.

More important than the amount is “the fact that the government has chosen to put these issues on top of the list of priorities,” she said.

Others criticized the government for not doing enough. Jayati Ghosh, a professor of economics at the Jawaharlal Nehru University, called the sum “peanuts,” dismissing it as a “grandstanding gesture” rather than a serious measure.

“Security of women is a basic responsibility of the state,” Ms. Ghosh said, rather than something that should be addressed with a special fund.

The All India Democratic Women’s Association said in a statement that the scpe of the fund remained undefined, which showed that the government was “keen to make a hasty political move to garner the trust and confidence of the women protesters without taking any specific and concrete steps to implement the Justice Verma Committee recommendations.” The group was referring to a report released in January that recommended sweeping changes in India’s police and judicial system.

Mr. Chidambaram also proposed a new state bank for women, which would employ mostly women. The bank, which will start with a capital of 10 billion rupees, will lend to women, women’s self-help groups and women-owned business.

Again, women’s rights activists were divided. Ms. Ghosh called the idea of a women’s bank “almost offensive,” and said the government should give women better access to all banks instead. “It is this ghettoization I have a problem with,” she said.

Ranjana Kumari, the director of the Center for Social Research in Delhi, called the idea an act of â! €œpolitic! al symbolism.” “Nevertheless,” she said, “it is a good development because this is the first time that women are being formally engaged in the financial sector.”

The budget also allocated 2 billion rupees for programs to combat sexual discrimination, especially in the workplace. On Feb. 26, Parliament passed a bill that aims to prevent, prohibit and punish sexual harassment of women in the workplace, the first comprehensive law on such harassment.

The budget didn’t go far enough, said the All India Democratic Women’s Association, which criticized the government for not dedicating enough money to women’s issues and failing to come up with specific measures to address pressing issues like health care and employment for women.

On Feb. 8, several women’s organizations, including the All India Democratic Women’s Association and the All India Women’s Conference, submitted a report to the financ minister requesting he address certain concerns in the budget, including a rise in violence against women, which they said could be traced back to growing economic disparities.

“The lack of recognition of women’s contribution to the economy and its underestimation are issues that are central to the increasing discriminatory trends,” the report said.

Among their demands were increased spending for the effective implementation of laws protecting women, greater safety in public transport, improved sanitation, the rehabilitation of victims of violence and an allocation of resources for the creation of jobs for women.

The finance minister did not meet with women’s groups despite repeated requests, Ms. Kumari said, and the budget did not reflect their demands.



India’s Budget Targets Women

Girls at a shelter for women in Kadapa, Andhra Pradesh.Nicky Loh/Getty Images Girls at a shelter for women in Kadapa, Andhra Pradesh.

At a time when India’s commitment to women’s rights is under scrutiny, the government’s annual budget released Thursday proposed a number of measures for women, including increased spending to improve their safety and a bank only for women.

These provisions are part the Congress-led United Progressive Alliance government’s broader focus on “inclusive” growth, through collecting more taxes from the country’s super-rich and increasing social spending. Finance Minister Palaniappan Chidambaram on Thursday stressed the need to lift up groups that “will be left behind” unless they receive “speial attention,” as he allocated greater funds for programs for women, lower castes and tribes and India’s rural poor.

On Thursday, Mr. Chidambaram set aside 971 billion rupees ($18 billion) for what is known as the “gender budget,” a concept introduced in the 2005-06 fiscal year, which reflects the total spending on programs likely to benefit women. This represents a more than 10 percent increase from last year.

The central government will contribute 10 billion rupees to a fund to provide better security and safety for women, called “Nirbhaya,” or “fearless,” the name used by the media to refer to a victim of a gang rape in Delhi in December, whose death prompted thousands to take to the streets to demand greater rights for women.

“Recent incidents have cast a long, dark shadow on our liberal and progressive credentials,” Mr. Chidambaram said Thursday. “As more women enter public spaces â€" for education or work or access to service! s or leisure â€" there are more reports of violence against them.”

Some women’s rights advocates welcomed the additional resources for safety. “I think it is extremely encouraging and high time that the government moves towards ensuring a focus and priority on women’s issues,” said Pinky Anand, a lawyer in the Supreme Court who has worked on rape and sexual assault laws.

More important than the amount is “the fact that the government has chosen to put these issues on top of the list of priorities,” she said.

Others criticized the government for not doing enough. Jayati Ghosh, a professor of economics at the Jawaharlal Nehru University, called the sum “peanuts,” dismissing it as a “grandstanding gesture” rather than a serious measure.

“Security of women is a basic responsibility of the state,” Ms. Ghosh said, rather than something that should be addressed with a special fund.

The All India Democratic Women’s Association said in a statement that the scpe of the fund remained undefined, which showed that the government was “keen to make a hasty political move to garner the trust and confidence of the women protesters without taking any specific and concrete steps to implement the Justice Verma Committee recommendations.” The group was referring to a report released in January that recommended sweeping changes in India’s police and judicial system.

Mr. Chidambaram also proposed a new state bank for women, which would employ mostly women. The bank, which will start with a capital of 10 billion rupees, will lend to women, women’s self-help groups and women-owned business.

Again, women’s rights activists were divided. Ms. Ghosh called the idea of a women’s bank “almost offensive,” and said the government should give women better access to all banks instead. “It is this ghettoization I have a problem with,” she said.

Ranjana Kumari, the director of the Center for Social Research in Delhi, called the idea an act of â! €œpolitic! al symbolism.” “Nevertheless,” she said, “it is a good development because this is the first time that women are being formally engaged in the financial sector.”

The budget also allocated 2 billion rupees for programs to combat sexual discrimination, especially in the workplace. On Feb. 26, Parliament passed a bill that aims to prevent, prohibit and punish sexual harassment of women in the workplace, the first comprehensive law on such harassment.

The budget didn’t go far enough, said the All India Democratic Women’s Association, which criticized the government for not dedicating enough money to women’s issues and failing to come up with specific measures to address pressing issues like health care and employment for women.

On Feb. 8, several women’s organizations, including the All India Democratic Women’s Association and the All India Women’s Conference, submitted a report to the financ minister requesting he address certain concerns in the budget, including a rise in violence against women, which they said could be traced back to growing economic disparities.

“The lack of recognition of women’s contribution to the economy and its underestimation are issues that are central to the increasing discriminatory trends,” the report said.

Among their demands were increased spending for the effective implementation of laws protecting women, greater safety in public transport, improved sanitation, the rehabilitation of victims of violence and an allocation of resources for the creation of jobs for women.

The finance minister did not meet with women’s groups despite repeated requests, Ms. Kumari said, and the budget did not reflect their demands.



Bina Kumari, the Farm Worker from Bihar

Bina Kumari.Courtesy of Raksha Kumar Bina Kumari.

Why do millions of people, from entire Indian villages to urbane middle managers to foreign tourists, brave the crowds at the Kumbh Mela During this year’s 55-day pilgrimage, to Allahabad, Uttar Pradesh, an estimated 100 million Hindus and others are expected to take a holy dip in the Ganges River to wash away their sins. India Ink interviewed some of them.

Bina Kumari, 32, a farm worker from Buxar, Bihar, was one among them. This is what she had to say.

Q.

Why did you come to the Kumbh Mela this year Is it your first time

A.

We came to see Ganga maiya, or Mother Ganges. Just getting to see her in this maddening crow is a great achievement; taking a dip in her is a bigger achievement.

Q.

How have you found it so far

A.

It’s been horrible. I have been separated from my family. We were 11 of us; now I am all alone. Thankfully, I have some money. Will quickly go and take a dip and rush back to my village and wait for the rest of them.

Q.

Describe your journey to the Kumbh. Did you travel alone How long did it take

A.

We had a nice journey by bus. We were all together. We sang and entertained each other during the journey. But I got separated from them at the bus stop. I was trying to get my luggage when they must have all moved forward.

Q.

Do you consider yourself a religious person

A.

If I were not religious, I wouldn’t have come here. Every single person who wants to take a dip is religious. They b! elieve in the central idea of Hinduism, which is internal cleansing. If we are clear-hearted, if everyone in this world is clear-hearted, then the world will be a better place to live in.

Q.

Who do you think is going to win the 2014 election

A.

I come from a politically charged part of the country. If I say anything it might be held against me. Let me just say that we have been through a tough decade, and hope things will be better in the future.

(The interview was conducted in Hindi.)



Image of the Day: Feb. 28

A woman going through an iris scan as part of the Unique Identification (UID) enrollment process, at a village in Rajasthan. The UID program is aimed at creating a national database which relies on biometric identification.Mansi Thapliyal/Reuters A woman going through an iris scan as part of the Unique Identification (UID) enrollment process, at a village in Rajasthan. The UID program is aimed at creating a national database which relies on biometric identification.

Image of the Day: Feb. 28

A woman going through an iris scan as part of the Unique Identification (UID) enrollment process, at a village in Rajasthan. The UID program is aimed at creating a national database which relies on biometric identification.Mansi Thapliyal/Reuters A woman going through an iris scan as part of the Unique Identification (UID) enrollment process, at a village in Rajasthan. The UID program is aimed at creating a national database which relies on biometric identification.

Video of Man Being Dragged Behind Police Van Prompts Murder Inquiry in South Africa

An independent police review board in South Africa opened a murder investigation into the death of a man in custody this week after video of the arrest obtained by a newspaper showed officers dragging the man behind a police van.

According to a statement issued by the Independent Police Investigative Directorate in Pretoria, two officers said they first approached the man, a 27-year-old taxi driver, because he was “obstructing traffic” at a market in Daveyton township east of Johannesburg on Tuesday evening. The officers claimed that the man assaulted one of the officers and grabbed his gun, before the other officer “overpowered the taxi driver and handed the firearm back to his colleague.”

Video recorded by a witness and posted on Facebook

About two hours after the arrest, the review board said, the taxi driver was found dead at the police station where he had been driven. At a post-mortem on Wednesday, “the cause of death was found to be head injuries with internal bleeding.”

The dead man was identified by The Daily Sun as Mido Macia, an immigrant from Mozambique. The newspaper’s report on the incident quoted unnamed witnesses at both the market and the police station who accused the officers of ! brutality. “They killed him,” an unnamed prisoner at the police station in Daveyton said. “They beat him up so badly in here.”

“He was in pain, he cried and asked the cops to stop but they continued anyway,” a woman at the market said of the arrest. A man added: “If he was parked on the wrong side of the road, they were supposed to give him a ticket, not kill him.”

In a television interview, a spokesman for the review board, Moses Dlamini, said that investigators “need to speak to the person who took the footage and have the footage authenticated” to use it in court.

A South African television report on the death of a suspect in police custody this week.

Mr. Dlamini added that the officers had filed routine paperwork calling for a reviw board investigation before the video came to light, but “the report that we got from the police is totally different from what â€" the statements that we are getting from members of the community who are witnesses, who witnessed this incident, so we changed that inquest docket to a murder docket.” The spokesman added, “we are shocked ourselves,” by the video in part because it appears to show the officers had no fear that they might be held accountable for torturing a man in broad daylight in front of dozens of witnesses. On the evidence of the clip, Mr. Mr. Dlamini said, “the police don’t even care that there are people who are watching, there are witnesses.” As of Wednesday, he added, the officers involved in the incident remained on duty.

As The Guardian notes, Amnesty International’s 2012 annual report on the state of human rights in South Africa revealed that the police oversight body, “reported a 7 per cent decline between April 2010 and March 2011 in recorded deaths in custody and resulting from’“police action.’” Still, the report said, there were 797 such deaths in that one-year period.



Video of Man Being Dragged Behind Police Van Prompts Murder Inquiry in South Africa

An independent police review board in South Africa opened a murder investigation into the death of a man in custody this week after video of the arrest obtained by a newspaper showed officers dragging the man behind a police van.

According to a statement issued by the Independent Police Investigative Directorate in Pretoria, two officers said they first approached the man, a 27-year-old taxi driver, because he was “obstructing traffic” at a market in Daveyton township east of Johannesburg on Tuesday evening. The officers claimed that the man assaulted one of the officers and grabbed his gun, before the other officer “overpowered the taxi driver and handed the firearm back to his colleague.”

Video recorded by a witness and posted on Facebook

About two hours after the arrest, the review board said, the taxi driver was found dead at the police station where he had been driven. At a post-mortem on Wednesday, “the cause of death was found to be head injuries with internal bleeding.”

The dead man was identified by The Daily Sun as Mido Macia, an immigrant from Mozambique. The newspaper’s report on the incident quoted unnamed witnesses at both the market and the police station who accused the officers of ! brutality. “They killed him,” an unnamed prisoner at the police station in Daveyton said. “They beat him up so badly in here.”

“He was in pain, he cried and asked the cops to stop but they continued anyway,” a woman at the market said of the arrest. A man added: “If he was parked on the wrong side of the road, they were supposed to give him a ticket, not kill him.”

In a television interview, a spokesman for the review board, Moses Dlamini, said that investigators “need to speak to the person who took the footage and have the footage authenticated” to use it in court.

A South African television report on the death of a suspect in police custody this week.

Mr. Dlamini added that the officers had filed routine paperwork calling for a reviw board investigation before the video came to light, but “the report that we got from the police is totally different from what â€" the statements that we are getting from members of the community who are witnesses, who witnessed this incident, so we changed that inquest docket to a murder docket.” The spokesman added, “we are shocked ourselves,” by the video in part because it appears to show the officers had no fear that they might be held accountable for torturing a man in broad daylight in front of dozens of witnesses. On the evidence of the clip, Mr. Mr. Dlamini said, “the police don’t even care that there are people who are watching, there are witnesses.” As of Wednesday, he added, the officers involved in the incident remained on duty.

As The Guardian notes, Amnesty International’s 2012 annual report on the state of human rights in South Africa revealed that the police oversight body, “reported a 7 per cent decline between April 2010 and March 2011 in recorded deaths in custody and resulting from’“police action.’” Still, the report said, there were 797 such deaths in that one-year period.



Fraternity Raises Money Online for a Brother’s Transgender Operation

Fraternity brothers of the Emerson College sophomore Donnie Collins raised money for his gender reassignment operation through Indiegogo, a crowd-financing Web site.Facebook Fraternity brothers of the Emerson College sophomore Donnie Collins raised money for his gender reassignment operation through Indiegogo, a crowd-financing Web site.

Fraternities are not typically considered to be champions of the L.G.B.T. community, but members of Phi Alpha Tau at Emerson College in Boston appear to have shaken the stereotype with a successful online fund-raising appeal to help one of their brothers cover the cost of top surgery, a procedure that is part of a female-to-male transgender transition.

Donnie Collins, a sophomore at Emerson who was born female, was told this month that his university-backed health insurance plan would not cover the cost of the procedure, a double mastectomy and chest reconstruction that is common among female-to-male transgender people who opt for surgery. In a video posted to YouTube, he said the insurance company’s decision left him distraught. “I cried in front of an H&M in the middle of the street,” he said in the video. “It was awkward.”

Mr. Collins began rushing his college’s chapter of Phi Alpha Tau on Feb. 3 and received news that his insurance would not pay for the procedure only three days later. Nevertheless, his new fraternity brothers responded to the situation by raising money for the operation on Indiegogo, a popular crowd-sourced fund-raising Web site.

Video posted by members of the Phi Alpha Tau fraternity at Emerson College as part of a fund-raising appeal to pay for an operation for their transgender fraternity brother Donnie Collins.

The initial goal was to raise $2,000 to contribute toward the cost of the roughly $8,000 operation, a target they met in the first week and a half, according to a video statement posted to YouTube by Mr. Collins on Monday. By Wednesday afternoon, the campaign raised over $17,000, a figure that climbed higher and higher as the hours ticked past.

Chuck Bergren-Aragon, a member of Phi Alpha Tau who appeared in the video, described Mr. Collins in atelephone interview as “a great guy who always puts other people above himself,” and said that his situation provided the fraternity, which he said is focused in part on “philanthropy, giving back and community service” with a chance “to really show the Emerson community and people everywhere what we stand for, which is brotherhood.”

How does he feel about the amount of money they have raised so far “The word we are using right now is overwhelmed,” he said.

In the video posted Monday, Mr. Collins appeared at a loss for words in the face of his friends’ efforts. “I don’t even know what to say because the word, thank you, doesn’t even do it anymore,” he said. “What to get out of this is if you are coming out and you are needing support right now, like, find the people who are willing to give it and just accept it.”

A Human Rights Watch video report on the aftermath of apparent missile strikes in Syria’s largest city, Aleppo.

Human Rights Watch investigators who visited Aleppo, Syria’s largest city, have concluded that the Syrian government fired at least four ballistic missiles into civilian neighborhoods there last week, killing more than 141 people, including 71 children. As my colleague Anne Barnard explained, the rights group released details of the four documented strikes, and video of aftermath of one attack, on Tuesday.

On Wednesday, opposition activists added Engish subtitles to an emotional account of the devastation caused by one missile strike on Aleppo from a young boy who said he survived the bombing, but lost several family members and neighbors.

A video interview with a young boy who said that he had survived a missile attack on a civilian neighborhood in Aleppo, Syria’s largest city.

The original interview with the boy was posted on YouTube on Monday by Orient News, a private Syrian satellite channel that began broadcasting from Dubai before the anti-government uprising began. Within a week of the first protests in Syria, Ghassan Abboud, the Syrian businessman who owns the channel, told a Saudi broadcaster that senior government officials had threatened to kidnap his journalists if they did not stop covering demonstrations against President Bashar al-Assad.

The boy’s testimony was subtitled by the ANA New Media Association, a group of opposition video activists led by Rami Jarrah, who blogs as Alexander Page.

The new reports come weeks after experts told The Lede that video of a huge explosion at Aleppo University last month suggested that the campus had been hit by a ballistic missile.

When Liz Sly of the Washington Post visited Aleppo’s Ard al-Hamra neighborhood after two missile strikes, residents gave similarly graphic accounts of pulling the mangled bodies of victims from wrecked buildings. The scenes of devastation, she wrote, “more closely resembling those of an earthquake, with homes pulverized beyond recognition, people torn to shreds in an instant and what had once been thriving communities reduced to mountains of rubble.”

Ole Solvang, a Human Rights Watch researcher who helped document the damage in Aleppo, drew attention to video posted online by opposition activists, said to show the desperate search for survivors in the immediate aftermath of the strike on Ard al-Hamra.

Video said to show a neighborhood in Syria’s largest city, Al! eppo, aft! er a missile strike last week.

As Mr. Solvang assessed the wreckage in person on Thursday and Friday, he described the damage to the Aleppo and a neighboring town in words and images posted on Twitter.

Late Tuesday, an Aleppo blogger who supported the uprising but has been critical of the armed rebellion on his @edwardedark Twitter feed, reported that another huge blast shook the city.

Ms. Sly reported on Twitter Wednesday night that two more missiles were fired at rural Aleppo. “They landed in fields,” she observed. “That’s how accurate they are. Seems a bit pointless.”

Late Wednesday, Mr. Solvang pointed to video posted on YouTube by opposition activists, showing what they said were distant images of a missile being launched from Damascus in the direction of Aleppo.

Video said to show a missile being fired by Syrian government forces outside the capital, Damascus, on Wednesday night.