14 January 2007

La Hanau a'u Ki'i

Here's some photos from my hulariffic birthday. I hope you enjoyed them as much as I enjoyed myself! A big 'mahalo' to everyone for making it so great! Mwah!

Some people don't like their photo on the internet
Here's a good way to get around that. Seriously though, if anyone else on here is cyber-shy, just let me know.
Memories of Chinatown birthday dinners past
Birthday Hula Triptych
Let's all join in a rousing game of Pin-the-Fire-Torch-on-the-Tiki-Dancer.
Next stop; Beautiful Guam! With the world's biggest Kmart and the highest per capital ratio of Louis Vuitton outlet stores and shooting ranges, it's a shoe-in for next global vacation hotspot.
Birthday Hula Triptych II, ft. hot upstairs neighbour
Best garnish ever!

China rapped over rights

Writers, lawyers came under attack as conditions worsened significantly in 2006, report says
January 12, 2007
Maureen Fan
SPECIAL TO THE STAR

BEIJING–Human rights conditions in China deteriorated significantly in 2006, with about 100 activists, lawyers, writers and academics subjected to police custody, house arrest, incommunicado confinement, pressure in their jobs and surveillance by plainclothes police, Human Rights Watch says.

Several widely publicized cases involving journalists and rights lawyers were cited in the report as evidence of a severe crackdown, prompted in large part by fears that individual cases of unrest might lead to regional instability. There were 39,000 cases of "public order disruptions," or large protests, in the first half of 2006, four times as many as 10 years ago, according to data from the Public Security Ministry.

Authorities fired and jailed journalists, shut down more than 700 online forums and ordered eight Internet search engines to filter "subversive and sensitive content" based on 10,000 key words, according to the report, which was released yesterday by the New York-based watchdog group. Lawyers who represented peasants protesting mistreatment were badly beaten, detained and arrested. In March, new restrictions were announced requiring protestors' lawyers to report to judges in cases involving 10 or more plaintiffs.

In an indication of official attention being paid to perceived agitators, China's top security chief last weekend toured Shandong province, where a blind activist was jailed after revealing abuses stemming from China's one-child-only policy. Luo Gan, a member of the Communist Party's Politburo Standing Committee, ordered judicial departments to deal with "discordant elements" at their source.

"Last year, the environment for rights defenders worsened,'' said Liu Shaobo, a leading intellectual and writer. "The government increased its crackdown on lawyers and also its controls on the Internet and the media. I saw more wronged cases last year than in previous years under President Hu Jintao's governance. And dissidents were under closer surveillance.''
Contributing factors include China's growing economic power and Washington's diminished clout with regard to human rights, Kenneth Roth, executive director of Human Rights Watch, said in an introduction to the report.

Liu said there were examples of increased openness last year. Newspapers in China's south were allowed to push the envelope more often than the mainstream state-run media. Analysts have noted that as preparations for the 2008 Olympics continue, officials appear eager to demonstrate China is modernizing. The government recently said journalists can travel without obtaining permission from local officials, although they stressed officials might not be aware of the new rules.

"On the one hand, they consider rights defenders a challenge to authority and a threat to stability, but on the other hand, they want to build up a good international image for the Olympics," Liu said.

WASHINGTON POST

10 January 2007

So Cute It Hurts

They're asleep together and they're holding hands! If these things were any freakin cuter they would cause seizures in Japanese schoolgirls and old people.


Best animal *ever*!!