Jun 18, 2009

Inventory Uncovers 9,200 More Pathogens

By Nelson Hernandez
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, June 18, 2009

An inventory of potentially deadly pathogens at Fort Detrick's infectious disease laboratory found more than 9,000 vials that had not been accounted for, Army officials said yesterday, raising concerns that officials wouldn't know whether dangerous toxins were missing.

After four months of searching about 335 freezers and refrigerators at the U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases in Frederick, investigators found 9,220 samples that hadn't been included in a database of about 66,000 items listed as of February, said Col. Mark Kortepeter, the institute's deputy commander.

The vials contained some dangerous pathogens, among them the Ebola virus, anthrax bacteria and botulinum toxin, and less lethal agents such as Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus and the bacterium that causes tularemia. Most of them, forgotten inside freezer drawers, hadn't been used in years or even decades. Officials said some serum samples from hemorrhagic fever patients dated to the Korean War.

Kortepeter likened the inventory to cleaning out the attic and said he knew of no plans for an investigation into how the vials had been left out of the database. "The vast majority of these samples were working stock that were accumulated over decades," he said, left there by scientists who had retired or left the institute.

"I can't say that nothing did [leave the lab], but I can say that we think it's extremely unlikely," Kortepeter said.

Still, the overstock and the previous inaccuracy of the database raised the possibility that someone could have taken a sample outside the lab with no way for officials to know something was missing.

"Nine thousand, two hundred undocumented samples is an extraordinarily serious breach," said Richard H. Ebright, a professor at Rutgers University who follows biosecurity. "A small number would be a concern; 9,200 . . . at an institution that has been the focus of intense scrutiny on this issue, that's deeply worrisome. Unacceptable."

The institute has been under pressure to tighten security in the wake of the 2001 anthrax attacks, which killed five people and sickened 17. FBI investigators say they think the anthrax strain used in the attacks originated at the Army lab, and its prime suspect, Bruce E. Ivins, researched anthrax there. Ivins committed suicide last year during an investigation into his activities.

Kortepeter noted that since 2001 the lab has imposed multiple layers of security to check people entering and leaving, that there are now cameras in the labs, and that employees are subjected to a reliability program and random inspections.

"The bottom line is, we have a lot of buffers to prevent anybody who shouldn't be getting into the laboratory," Kortepeter said.

Sam Edwin, the institute's inventory control officer, said most of the samples found were vials with tiny amounts of pathogens that would thaw quickly and die once they were taken out of a freezer, making smuggling something off the base difficult.

The probe began in February, when a problem accounting for Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus triggered the suspension of most research at the lab. A spot check in January found 20 samples of the virus in a box of vials instead of the 16 listed in the institute's database. Most work was stopped until the institute could take a thorough inventory of its stock of viruses and bacteria.

Edwin said about 50 percent of the samples that had been found were destroyed. The rest were added to the catalog. Because the lab will now conduct an inventory every year, "it's really less likely that we will be in a situation like this again," he said.

Procedures have changed, too. Scientists who have worked at the lab said that in the past, departing scientists turned over their logbooks to their successors, but records were sometimes incomplete or complex. As generations of scientists passed through, the knowledge of what was in the freezers was lost. With a comprehensive database, every sample is now tracked until it is destroyed or transferred.

But some scientists are skeptical. Unlike uranium or chemical weapons, pathogens are living materials that can replicate and die. A small amount can easily be turned into a large amount. They said the strict inventories slow their work without guaranteeing security.

Persian News Network Finds New Life in Contested Iranian Election

By Mary Beth Sheridan
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, June 18, 2009

Voice of America beams a youth-oriented TV show into Iran each evening, usually a mix of Hollywood releases, music videos and tips on high-tech gadgets. This week's show featured a weightier topic: how to evade a crackdown on free speech.

"What we're seeing is a new level of cyber warfare," said producer Gareth Conway, referring to the Iranian government's blocking of text-messaging services and Internet sites, and Iranians' attempts to fight back. "We're trying to give viewers updates on technology, how they can continue to communicate with each other."

As protests have erupted over the heavily disputed reelection of Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, VOA's Persian-language TV network and a similar BBC service have emerged as a critical way for Iranians to share information. It is a moment of redemption for the VOA service to Iran, which grew rapidly during the Bush administration but has been dogged by problems.

Unlike some of the U.S. government's other Middle Eastern broadcasting efforts, VOA's Persian News Network is genuinely popular, according to analysts. Iranians have bombarded the satellite network this week with calls, e-mails and amateur videos of demonstrations. In a sign of their concern, Iranian authorities have tried to jam the VOA and BBC services.

And yet, some analysts say the Persian service has been slow to capitalize on the moment. For example, hours after the presidential voting ended in Iran on Friday, the VOA reported the initial results, then ended its live programming. It did not broadcast fresh material until 16 hours later.

"They could have done a much better job," said Mehdi Khalaji, an Iran expert at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy who once worked for the U.S. government's Radio Farda, which also broadcast in Farsi, or Persian. "It seems to me they don't understand the sensitivity of the time."

The Persian network is part of a shift at government-funded VOA from the days of Cold War shortwave broadcasts to an era in which U.S. officials are trying to blunt the influence of media-savvy Islamist extremists. As part of a U.S. broadcasting push into the Middle East and South Asia, the Persian service increased its live programming from one to seven hours a day in the past two years and more than quadrupled its staff, to about 200. The network had a budget of $16 million in 2008 and has a Facebook page, a dedicated YouTube channel and blogs.

Satellite dishes are technically illegal in Iran, where the domestic news media are largely under state control, but they exist by the millions. VOA estimates that 30 percent of Iranian adults tune in each week, based on a survey it commissioned in January.

And VOA officials say they think that number has jumped in recent days.

"It amazes me -- people in Iran are willing to speak, willing to identify themselves. They feel very strongly," said Alex Belida, the network's acting director.

That was evident this week on "Straight Talk," a Persian News Network call-in show. One Iranian after another called the studio in Washington to air opinions and describe what they were seeing.

"Today a lot of people were gathering downtown. They wanted to voice their objections. Police forces were trying to force the people, not let them into the streets," said one caller yesterday who identified herself as Saidi from Ahvaz.

"Students are all waiting to start fighting for their rights," Ramin, a university student from Isfahan, said Tuesday. "The situation is very chaotic in Isfahan. There are police forces everywhere."

As the callers spoke, the show broadcast jumpy amateur videos of demonstrators, fires burning in the street, and protesters showing off bloodied elbows and heels.

The one-hour show got about 2,000 e-mails Tuesday, five times the norm, and saw a sharp increase in its blog posts. "We're being used as an information conduit," said the executive producer, Susan Jackson.

VOA is facing stiff competition from the BBC, which many Iranians see as more objective. It has added five hours a day of live programming since the demonstrations began, for a total of 13. VOA has increased its programming by an hour. The BBC has recruited young journalists from Iran. In contrast, some of VOA's reporters left the country decades ago.

The State Department's inspector general blasted the VOA Persian TV service in March, saying morale was poor, the executive editors didn't speak Persian, and "maintaining quality presents a challenge."

VOA officials say that they are addressing the problems and that staff morale has improved.

"They're all psyched," Belida said. "It's a great story -- both as a journalist and as a Persian."

Correspondent Thomas Erdbrink in Tehran and staff researcher Julie Tate contributed to this report.

More Protests, Bitter Words As Iran Churns

By Thomas Erdbrink
Washington Post Foreign Service
Thursday, June 18, 2009

TEHRAN, June 17 -- The leader of Iran's protest movement accused the government on Wednesday of lies, fraud and murder, while the government turned its ire on the United States, declaring that the Obama administration is stirring the unrest over Iran's disputed election.

The increasingly bitter rhetoric came as supporters of Mir Hossein Mousavi defied a ban on unauthorized rallies and took to the streets again, as they have each day since Saturday, when the Interior Ministry declared that Mousavi lost the Friday balloting to President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in a landslide.

Mousavi, 67, a former prime minister who contends he won the election, demanded that the country's legal authorities stop plainclothes police and vigilantes from attacking his supporters. In a statement on his Web site, he said a march Monday by hundreds of thousands of his backers -- the largest unsanctioned demonstration in Iran since the 1979 Islamic revolution -- had "infuriated" the government and its paramilitary forces, which he called the "Disciples of Lies."

"They tried to make bitter the sweetness of this great gathering with their beastly attacks," he said, referring to the killing of seven protesters by a government-backed, volunteer militia known as the Basij, which fired into a crowd outside its local headquarters at the end of Monday's march. Mousavi called it "an appalling murder."

He also complained about the Basij in a separate letter to Iran's Supreme National Security Council. The paramilitary organization, which has about 8 million members, has violated the "freedom, order and security [which] are the intertwined rights of all citizens," Mousavi wrote in the open letter, referring again to the government and its shadowy forces as the "Disciples of Fraud and Lies."

The government, meanwhile, summoned the Swiss ambassador, who represents U.S. interests in Tehran, to complain of "intolerable" interference by the United States in Iranian internal affairs, state television reported. Iranian authorities had made similar complaints this week to the ambassadors of Germany, France, Britain and the Czech Republic.

In Washington, the State Department rejected the charge, saying the United States was in "good company."

"As the president has said, we are not interfering in the debate that Iranians are having about their election and its aftermath," said State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley. "This is not about the United States."

President Obama, who has come under criticism from some quarters in Washington for not speaking out directly on behalf of the Iranian protesters, said Tuesday that he hoped the Iranian government would affirm "the universal principles of peaceful expression and democracy" but that the United States was "not meddling" in the "amazing ferment taking place in Iran."

Efforts to clamp down on outside sources of information continued Wednesday as Iranian authorities blocked CNN's Web site and reportedly jammed some BBC satellite television broadcasts. Cellphone service, including text messaging, was turned off for the fifth day in a row, and social networking sites such as Facebook and Twitter remained partially blocked.

Word of mouth is the main way for Iranians to get information about the protests, and some Iranians said they feared a complete shutdown of all Internet services and satellite TV broadcasts. Adding to those fears, Iranian state television aired a program, titled "The Green Wave," that portrayed the protest movement as being fomented by foreign media, including the BBC and the Arabic station al-Jazeera.

The deputy head of Iran's National Security and Foreign Policy committee, Hossein Sobhaninia, called this week for steps against CNN and the BBC, whose Farsi-language satellite channel is hugely popular here. "Without a doubt, foreign media, and especially the BBC's Persian service and radio, are the main orchestrators of disorder in the country, guiding rioting elements that support neither the candidates nor the Islamic revolution," Sobhaninia said Tuesday.

Many Iranians took a break from politics Wednesday to watch the national soccer team play a World Cup qualifying match in South Korea. But several of the Iranian players, including the captain, came on the field wearing green wristbands, in apparent solidarity with Mousavi's supporters. Some fans at the game, which was televised from Seoul and ended in a 1-1 tie, also waved banners reading: "Free Iran."

Arrests of opposition leaders, which began over the weekend, continued Wednesday. Saeed Laylaz, a political analyst who often gives interviews to the Western news media, was among those arrested Wednesday, sources close to him reported.

Yet tens of thousands of protesters poured into the streets of the capital, Tehran, in defiance of a ban by the Interior Ministry, which is headed by a staunch supporter of Ahmadinejad. Foreign journalists were not allowed to attend the demonstration, but witnesses and participants interviewed afterward said police officers, wearing yellow vests, stopped traffic as the demonstrators walked silently and peacefully from the central Haft-e Tir Square to Enghelab ("Revolution") Street. Riot police, who have been ubiquitous in Tehran since Saturday, were nowhere to be seen.

According to those interviewed, the crowd's diversity reflected the broad movement demanding the annulment of the elections and a new round of balloting. Young women in traditional black chadors walked next to businessmen holding briefcases, while a mother pushing a baby stroller held up a placard bearing the words "Where is my vote?" in English.

Some of the marchers held up posters of the founder of the Islamic republic, the late Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, suggesting that they were protesting the election but not the Islamic system of governance.

Although green is the symbolic color of Mousavi's campaign, many of the protesters wore black shirts or black wristbands as a sign of mourning for the seven demonstrators who died Monday night. There have also been persistent but unconfirmed reports that five students were killed Sunday when members of the Basij raided dormitories at Tehran University, a focal point of unrest. The head of the university, Farhad Rahbar, who was appointed during Ahmadinejad's administration, issued a statement Tuesday denying any student deaths. But students continued to assert Wednesday that some of their classmates had been killed.

Elderly women waved in sympathy from balconies as the demonstrators walked in silence through streets normally bustling with traffic, witnesses said. Some marchers passed along leaflets saying the "green movement," a reference to Mousavi's campaign color, "must stay on the streets."

"The government has stolen our votes. We must continue to protest," said the leaflets, which suggested 12 forms of peaceful resistance, including sitting down in the street if attacked by the Basij or police. "Remember, police can attack a thousand people, but no police in the world can attack half a million," it said.

Staff writer Glenn Kessler in Washington and special correspondent Kay Armin Serjoie in Tehran contributed to this report.

Twitter Is a Player In Iran's Drama

By Mike Musgrove
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, June 17, 2009

The State Department asked social-networking site Twitter to delay scheduled maintenance earlier this week to avoid disrupting communications among tech-savvy Iranian citizens as they took to the streets to protest Friday's reelection of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

The move illustrates the growing influence of online social-networking services as a communications media. Foreign news coverage of the unfolding drama, meanwhile, was limited by Iranian government restrictions barring journalists from "unauthorized" demonstrations.

"One of the areas where people are able to get out the word is through Twitter," a senior State Department official said in a conversation with reporters, on condition of anonymity. "They announced they were going to shut down their system for maintenance and we asked them not to."

A White House official said "this wasn't a directive from Secretary of State, but rather was a low-level contact from someone who often talks to Twitter staff." The official said Iran's Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, tweeted, according to news reports. "Twitter is simply a medium that all Iranians can use to communicate," the official said.

Twitter did not respond to a request for comment yesterday.

It is hard to say how much twittering is actually going on inside Iran. The tweets circulated by expatriates in the United States tend to be in English -- the Twitter interface does not support the use of Farsi. And though many people may be sending tweets out of Iran, their use inside Iran may be low, some say.

"Twitter's impact inside Iran is zero," said Mehdi Yahyanejad, manager of a Farsi-language news site based in Los Angeles. "Here, there is lots of buzz, but once you look . . . you see most of it are Americans tweeting among themselves."

However, an Iranian-American activist in Washington said that tweets from a handful of students have been instrumental in getting information to people outside Iran. She spoke on condition of anonymity citing concern that authorities in Tehran could block her from receiving transmissions.

"The predominant information is coming from Twitter" since foreign reporters' movement has been limited, she said. "They are relying on Iranians and others who are Twittering to get this information out to the mainstream media. A lot of people are coining what is happening in Iran as a Twitter revolution."

Users around the world following the election drama in Tehran found that it was listed as the most popular discussion topic on Twitter yesterday and Monday. Many users, logging on from outside Iran, said they changed their account's location listing to Tehran, in a move to confuse government censors who might be trying to shut down communications from Iran.

Since Friday, Iranian expatriates have kept one another apprised of events by forwarding to Facebook "tweets" containing information that often appeared to have originated in Iran.

"My friends are being held against their will in the university," wrote one. "Rasoul Akram hospital has medics outside, go there for help," advised another. Some uploaded pictures and videos of police violence against protesters to sites such as Flickr and YouTube.

Some information tweeted about planned gatherings, or about the shooting of a protester, has been confirmed by mainstream media. Other reports have been debunked or have proven impossible to verify.

Though Twitter wasn't the only Web service used by supporters of defeated presidential candidate Mir Hossein Mousavi as Iran's election strife played out, Iranian government officials were more successful in shutting out access to Web sites such as Facebook than they were with Twitter, where entries are limited to 140 characters or less.

Tech industry analyst Rob Enderle said Twitter might be more resistant to the Iranian government's attempts to block access because users can post updates via a cellphone's text-messaging service, or SMS.

"Twitter is a unique property because it works easily with SMS," Enderle said. "That gives it a resiliency that isn't shared by other online-only sites," such as Facebook, he said. To block Twitter use, he said, Iran would either have to shut down text messaging on a one-to-one basis, a tedious and time-intensive process, or shut down text messaging throughout the country.

In a blog entry posted Monday, Twitter co-founder Biz Stone cited users in Iran as a reason for delaying "a critical network upgrade" but did not mention any contact from State Department officials. The maintenance, as originally scheduled, would have disrupted Twitter service for users in Tehran yesterday morning.

The State Department's request contrasts with recent comments from President Obama saying that the United States would not get involved in the matter. Obama said earlier this week that he and other world leaders have "deep concerns" about the Iranian election, but that he did not want the United States to be seen as meddling.

Protesters have often used new technologies to evade government attempts to stifle dissent, said Tim Bajarin, with the Silicon Valley research firm Creative Strategies. In the last days of the Soviet Union, dissenters used underground fax services to spread information, he said.

This is not the first time Twitter users have employed the service toward serious ends. Last year, an American journalism student was arrested in Egypt for taking photographs at a protest. After typing a single word -- "arrested" -- into his cellphone, which relayed it to his Twitter account, the student's friends and family contacted the State Department in the hopes of pressuring the Egyptian government for his release.

Staff writers Tara Bahrampour, Liz Heron, Glenn Kessler and Scott Wilson contributed to this report.

A Karzai Victory Is Just the Ticket for Regional Commanders

By Griff Witte
Washington Post Foreign Service
Wednesday, June 17, 2009

MAZAR-E SHARIF, Afghanistan -- President Hamid Karzai is considered a strong favorite to win reelection when Afghans go to the polls this summer. But here in northern Afghanistan, one of the country's most peaceful regions, there is little doubt who will be in control when the elections are over, and it's not Karzai.

Rather, it is the same men who have ruled this territory off and on for decades, regional commanders who have divvied up the land into personal fiefdoms and transformed central government institutions, including the police, into instruments of their will.

With two months to go until the vote, most of these commanders -- critics call them warlords -- are lining up to endorse the president's reelection bid. Analysts say that if Karzai secures another term, the commanders who supported the president are likely to be rewarded with a guarantee of continued power.

The enduring influence of these strongmen reflects the fragility of the U.S.-backed government, which remains a government in name only across vast stretches of the country, even those not beset by Taliban insurgency. Indeed, the commanders' loyalty to the president seems to owe less to Karzai's strength as a leader than to his weakness.

"Who else would they support? They've lived a life of luxury under his government," said Golalai Nur Safi, a member of parliament who represents an area just outside Mazar-e Sharif, a desert metropolis on the Central Asian plains. "They see personal advantage in supporting him."

Safi is backing Karzai's reelection because she thinks he "is a good man who has a bad team" and because she sees no viable alternative. She is an outspoken critic of the commanders and of Karzai's pattern of caving in to their demands whenever he wants to shore up his position.

It was clearly illustrated this spring when Karzai picked two regional strongmen to serve as his running mates. The selection of one in particular, Mohammed Fahim, rankled critics. It was a direct reversal of Karzai's decision before the 2004 election to dump from his ticket the much-feared Tajik commander, who was then considered so power-hungry that U.S. officials worried he would launch a coup.

At the time, purging Fahim from the government was hailed as a watershed decision by the president to take a stand against Afghanistan's decades-long tradition of warlordism. Now, it strikes many observers as a rare moment of courage amid a much longer record of appeasing a rogues' gallery of human rights abusers.

"Where we stand today with the political landscape is not much different from where we started, and in some respects it's looking even worse," said Ahmad Nader Nadery, head of the Afghan Independent Human Rights Commission. "These so-called leaders are able to tell the disillusioned people that there's no other way, that 'we have access to the president, and you have to listen to us.' "

A Karzai spokesman, Hamid Zada, defended his leader's vice presidential picks as a way of bringing reconciliation to the long-fractured country. In a nation bitterly divided by ethnicity, Karzai's ticket includes a Pashtun (himself), a Tajik (Fahim) and a Hazara (Karim Khalili). "The president makes all his decisions based on the national unity of Afghanistan," Zada said.

The selections, he added, are also intended to pay tribute to the millions of Afghans who resisted Soviet occupation during the 1980s. "Fahim and Khalili represent a significant group of Afghans who fought the Soviets and paid the price," he said.

Karzai himself has never been a commander. Before his selection to lead Afghanistan in December 2001, he was a tribal chief and a diplomat who was known for his ability to mediate conflicts, not order men into battle.

In Afghanistan, where anyone younger than 30 has known only war and where the man with the most guns usually calls the shots, Karzai's lack of military bona fides is considered a liability. His Western backers -- the United States most particularly -- have encouraged his ties to the regional commanders to bolster his rule as the government combats a vicious Taliban insurgency.

The logic is that commanders who support the government and who inspire fierce loyalty among their followers can be useful in maintaining the security of areas that might otherwise be vulnerable to instability. By some measures, the strategy may have worked: Afghanistan's north and west, where the commanders are strongest, have also been the safest regions of the country.

But Karzai's reliance on the commanders has undeniably stunted the government's development, limiting its ability to extend its reach beyond Kabul, the capital. Afghanistan's central government has struggled throughout history to assert itself, with little success. The result has been a power vacuum filled by local leaders, most of whom are heavily subsidized by foreign governments that need vehicles through which to exert their influence in Afghanistan.

The enduring strength of the commanders has bred resentment among Afghans who see their government favoring the interests of the powerful. That has happened before: When the Taliban swept to power in the 1990s, deep disillusionment with the commanders' reign was a major reason why.

Ashraf Ghani, the technocratic former finance minister who is running against the president, said Karzai's choice of allies would backfire, arguing that after three decades of subjugation by men who have delivered no improvement in people's lives, Afghans have grown tired of the warlords.

"These people are not what they used to be," he said.

Many of the commanders are notorious for their brutality: One Karzai backer, the Uzbek strongman Abdurrashid Dostum, once ordered hundreds of prisoners packed into metal shipping crates, then left them to suffocate under the hot desert sun, human rights groups have reported.

Dostum has been in Turkey for six months but is not expected to stay away. Despite vocal criticism of Karzai over the years, Dostum has endorsed the president and is widely thought to be angling for control over Mazar-e Sharif after the election. This city, one of Afghanistan's largest, used to be Dostum's territory. He was pushed out by a rival commander, Attah Mohammed, several years ago and has wanted to get back in ever since.

The election could be his ticket. Mohammed is thought to be backing a Karzai challenger, former foreign minister Abdullah Abdullah, a gamble that could cost him the governorship of this province if Abdullah loses.

Technically, Mohammed is a Karzai appointee who represents the central government. In reality, locals say, Mohammed takes few cues from Kabul. Although all private militias were supposed to be disarmed years ago under an internationally mandated program, Mohammed retains an arsenal of tens of thousands of weapons, according to officials here.

Dostum and others have also maintained their arsenals, according to Gen. Mohammed Ali Razai, deputy police commander for northern Afghanistan.

"The people who had weapons in the past, they didn't hand them over. They still have their weapons, and they use them to their advantage," Razai said.

The internationally trained and funded Afghan National Police, he indicated, is still too small and is ill-equipped to challenge the commanders' power.

Residents say that the police are a problem and that many have been co-opted by Mohammed.

A local Pashtun tribal elder, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he said his life is under threat, accused Mohammed of using the police to silence critics and to persecute ethnic minorities, especially Pashtuns. The elder said the police have killed Pashtun leaders who challenge the authority of Mohammed, who is Tajik. He said the police then falsely claim that the dead Pashtuns were Taliban.

"These warlords have killed thousands of Muslims. Their hands are covered with the blood of innocent people," the elder said. "We have suffered for 30 years under these warlords, and we are suffering still."

Jun 17, 2009

The Gallup Coexist Index 2009: A Global Study of Interfaith Relations

Coexist Index 2009

The Gallup Coexist Index 2009

A Global Study of Interfaith Relations

The Gallup Coexist Index 2009: A Global Study of Interfaith Relations offers insight into the state of relations between people of different religions around the world. Created in partnership with the Coexist Foundation, it marks Gallup's first report of public perceptions concerning people of different faiths. In addition, the report provides an in-depth analysis of attitudes regarding integration among Muslims and the general public in France, Germany, and the United Kingdom.

Click here to download a PDF of the full report.

Click here to download a PDF of the press release.

Who Speaks for Islam?

What a Billion Muslims Really ThinkWho Speaks for Islam?Based on the largest and most in-depth study of its kind, this book presents the remarkable findings of the Gallup Poll of the Muslim World.
Learn More

Gallup Center for Muslim Studies

Gallup source page at http://www.gallup.com/consulting/worldpoll/26410/gallup-center-muslim-studies.aspx but see also closely related Muslim West Facts Project at http://www.muslimwestfacts.com/MWFHOMEPAGE/home.aspx

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The Gallup Center for Muslim Studies is a nonpartisan research center dedicated to providing data-driven analysis, advice, and education on the views of Muslim populations around the world. It will draw upon Gallup's unprecedented global research initiative, the Gallup World Poll and the Gallup Poll of the Muslim World*, to enable global leaders, institutions, and the public to make more informed decisions.

At the heart of its business, the Center for Muslim Studies will make its research available through educational and consulting services, as well as through written publications. Its groundbreaking course based on findings from the Gallup Poll of the Muslim World will examine evidence-based analysis of contemporary trends addressed by the poll of Muslim populations. For the general public, the Center will release highlights from its study by hosting discussion forums and through special reports and articles available on Gallup's Web site or in the mass media.

Core Learnings From the Muslim World

Gallup's Poll of the Muslim World asks Muslims about their beliefs regarding education, religion, democracy, culture, financial prosperity, and the media. Poll findings include insights into what Muslims think the West can do to improve relations with the world's Muslim populations, and what they think Muslims can do to improve relations with the West.

Learn more about an intensive course based on the Gallup Poll of the Muslim World.

Learn more about Gallup's collaborative effort with the Coexist Foundation.

Bios

* Gallup's self-funded Poll of the Muslim World is conducted in 40 predominantly Muslim nations and among significant Muslim populations in the West. It is the first set of unified and scientifically representative views from 1.3 billion Muslims globally, and will provide the basis for the Center's unique analytical perspective.

The Poll of the Muslim World is part of Gallup's larger World Poll, a self-funded effort aimed at consistently measuring the well-being of 6 billion world citizens (a sample representing 95% of the Earth's population) on a wide range of topics for the next 100 years.

Amnesty International Report 2009

Download, buy, or read whole report or selected country reports online from http://thereport.amnesty.org/en/

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Africa

Africa

Soldiers wearing red berets travelled 300 kilometres north from the Guinean capital Conakry, to Khoréra, near Boké. They were looking for Karamba Dramé, a youth leader in the town. When they found him, one of the soldiers shot him. He died before he reached hospital on 31 October 2008.



Americas

Women queuing outside a health centre in rural Huancavelica, Peru, 26 September 2008.

The Enxet Indigenous communities of Yakye Axa and Sawhoyamaxa in the Bajo Chaco region of Paraguay have been living at the side of the Pozo Colorado-Concepción highway formore than 15 years. Despite rulings in their favour by the Inter-American Court of Human Rights, they remain excluded fromtheir lands. Deprived of their traditional livelihood and way of life, without adequate health care or sanitation, and dependent on irregular government food supplies, they face an insecure present and an uncertain future.



Asia And The Pacific

Displaces civilians moving to safety in the kilinochchi District, Wanni, Sri Lanka.

On 20 May, in Kawhmu township, near Yangon, the Myanmar authorities prevented desperate survivors of Cyclone Nargis from coming out onto the street to beg while punishing people who tried to help them– effectively cutting them off fromany informal assistance. Almost three weeks earlier, the cyclone had devastated much of southern Myanmar, killing tens of thousands of people and displacing hundreds of thousands more from their homes and livelihoods.



Europe And Central Asia

Bombed building in Gori, Georgia, 29 September 2008.

At the beginning of August 2008, two European states went to war for the first time in almost a decade. Since the conflicts of the early 1990s, Europe had assumed a degree of stability in terms of its economy, security and embedding the rule of law, but these events showed how potentially fragile the security assumptions underpinning post-Cold War Europe could be. And how – as so often – civilians and their human rights pay the price when such assumptions fail.



Middle East And North Africa

Women from surrounding areas converge on Rabat, Morocco, for International

On 27 December, as 2008 drew to a close, Israeli jets launched an aerial bombardment of the Gaza Strip, where 1.5million Palestinians live, crowded into one of the most densely populated areas of the planet. In the following three weeks,more than 1,400 Palestinians were killed, including some 300 children, and some 5,000 were wounded. Israeli forces repeatedly breached the laws of war, including by carrying out direct attacks on civilians and civilian buildings and attacks targeting Palestinian militants that caused a disproportionate toll among civilians.



Making Honesty a Policy in Indonesia Cafes

Kemal Jufri for The New York Times

Students deposited money inside a box, on the honor system, at the honesty cafe at their high school on the island of Borneo.


New York Times, Samarinda, Norimitsu Onishi, June 15 - A country not known for its transparent practices in business, politics and many other areas, Indonesia is pressing ahead in its long-running anticorruption drive by opening up cashier-free “honesty cafes” across the archipelago.

During a break at a high school here one recent morning, Selica Erlindi, 15, a 10th grader who wants to be a pediatrician, picked a drink and a bag of spicy cassava chips from the local honesty cafe’s shelves. Then, in keeping with the cafe’s goal of nurturing probity among its customers and society at large, she deposited, on the honor system, the equivalent of 60 cents inside a clear plastic box.

“This motivates us to be honest,” Selica said. “Especially since there is a lot of cheating in class, at least we’re learning to be honest with money. I think it’s also important for society because corruption is a big problem in Indonesia.”

As part of a national campaign led by the attorney general’s office, the provincial government here on the eastern shore of the island of Borneo opened a dozen honesty cafes last month alone in schools and government offices. By 2010, the provincial government here plans to have more than 1,000 such cafes in operation, including in private establishments.

The attorney general’s office says the honesty cafes will nip in the bud corrupt tendencies among the young and straighten out those known for indulging in corrupt practices, starting with civil servants. By shifting the responsibility of paying correctly to the patrons themselves, the cafes are meant to force people to think constantly about whether they are being honest and, presumably, make them feel guilty if they are not.

“We know there are many factors behind corruption, like the environment and economic needs, and honesty is just one factor,” said Syakhrony, an official at the attorney general’s office in Samarinda, the provincial capital of East Kalimantan, who, like many Indonesians, uses only one name. “But as law enforcement, we have repressive and preventive measures. These honesty cafes are a preventive measure in our fight against corruption.”

The honesty cafes are just a part of the government’s larger campaign begun in late 2007 to tackle endemic corruption in Indonesia, a country that ranked 126th out of 180 nations last year in a corruption perception list compiled by Transparency International, a private organization that monitors corruption across the globe. The widely praised anticorruption campaign has removed Indonesia from the lowest rungs of the annual index and contributed to the popularity of Indonesia’s president, Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono.

Recently, though, the campaign suffered a blow after the head of the Corruption Eradication Commission was arrested on suspicion of involvement in the murder of a prominent businessman over a love triangle involving a golf caddie. Indonesia’s House of Representatives, which Transparency International calls the most corrupt institution in the country, tried unsuccessfully to use the arrest to stop any further commission inquiries into lawmakers.

Since the attorney general’s office started the campaign, some 7,456 honesty cafes have opened in 23 provinces in Indonesia, according to the National Youth Group, which is working with the office. The group expects 10,000 honesty cafes to be operating in 26 provinces by the end of the year before eventually reaching all 33 provinces.

So far, the cafes have been running successfully, said the group’s chairman, Dody Susanto. But he said about 5 percent had run into difficulties because of “poor management or dishonest behavior.”

In Samarinda in East Kalimantan, a province as rich in natural resources as in potential graft, officials pushed ahead despite recent problems in Jakarta. High School No. 1 spearheaded the local campaign by opening its honesty cafe last October, offering snacks and drinks for the school’s 1,050 students.

Eni Purwanti, an English teacher who heads the cooperative responsible for the cafe, said the plastic cash box was left unguarded, though large bills were removed regularly “so as not to tempt the students.”

One time, after a week’s investigation, officials found that a school administrator had been taking snacks without paying. “She said she didn’t know how to pay for the items,” Ms. Purwanti said.

No students have been caught cheating, she said, adding that the cafe’s monthly receipts showed a healthy profit.

“What’s important is that it’s had a positive effect on the students,” said Suardi, the principal. “Judging from the reports I’ve received from the teachers, cheating in class has decreased.”

Some students, though, were not so sure the system was working.

“Some of my friends don’t pay the right amount,” said Okirin Derkaranto, 16.

Okirin agreed that corruption was widespread in Indonesia, saying that some of his friends routinely bribed their way out of traffic violations by slipping police officers money.

Zairin Zain, a spokesman for the East Kalimantan government, said officials would evaluate the honesty cafes’ performance after six months. So far, he said, they seem to be working well in schools but have met some “resistance” in government offices, like his own.

Despite a large banner proclaiming the start of the anticorruption campaign, one of the provincial government’s honesty cafes did not appear to live up to its name, as more than one customer mentioned during one recent lunch hour. Most patrons paid at a cash register, and an employee sat at a table with two plastic cash boxes for those opting to pay on the honor system.

“Corruption is a big problem, but I don’t want to comment,” Eko Antarikso, 62, the cafe’s manager, said with a laugh that perhaps explained why she had yet to transform her establishment into a full-fledged honesty barometer.

One customer, Lukman, a government worker specializing in purchasing, sounded skeptical about the honesty cafes.

“The real problem in Indonesia is that there are flaws in the system, the procurement process, for example, that give people the chance to steal,” Mr. Lukman said, mentioning obscure procurement lists with padded prices.

Companies bidding on contracts routinely deploy thugs to harass procurement officials like himself to win bids, he said. He added that he and his colleagues holed up at a hotel when the time came to award bids so as to avoid the “stress” of having bidders visit them at the office.

“I guess the honesty cafes are O.K.,” he said. “But, you know, this is Indonesia.”

Indonesia's Corruption Court in Fight for Existence

Reuters, Jakarta, Olivia Rondonuwu, June 17 - It has put central bankers and government officials behind bars and is easily Indonesia's most feared judicial body. But the corruption court, an important weapon in the fight against graft, is now under threat itself.

Politicians, some of whom have much to fear from the court, are meddling with the panel of judges and even trying to close it down completely.

That could threaten one of the more successful anti-graft campaigns in a Southeast Asian nation that year after year ranks among the world's most corrupt.

Widespread graft deters investors who otherwise might pour billions of dollars into developing Indonesia's abundant oil, gas, and mineral deposits or improving its shoddy infrastructure. That is one reason Indonesian economic growth tends to languish behind economic behemoths like China and India.

"The battle against corruption is still a long way from over, but at least the public can see it has gone in the right direction," said Emerson Yuntho of Indonesia Corruption Watch.

Set up in 2004, the court -- housed in a shabby building in central Jakarta with broken glass windows and damp, smelly courtrooms -- has a number of features that have made it far more effective in punishing the corrupt than Indonesia's regular court system has been.

One is its system of appointing three ad hoc, or outside, judges out of a total of five on the panel. These ad hoc judges are picked from outside the court system and include academics and other professionals.

In a country where the judiciary itself is rated among the most corrupt institutions, these outsiders are considered more independent.

Armed with dossiers of evidence from the Corruption Eradication Commission, or KPK, the corruption court has had a 100 percent conviction rate. The average sentence, for the 90 or so defendants who have been tried. is about four years, according to Indonesia Corruption Watch (ICW).

By contrast, the normal courts treat corruption cases much more leniently. Last year, 62 percent of those charged with corruption were let off by the public courts, up from 57 percent in 2007 and 31.4 percent in 2006. Sentences are generally lighter, with an average of just under six months, ICW said.

"We need the (corruption) court, because the public court is ineffective," said Budi Effendi, an unemployed man in Jakarta.

"But maybe we should follow China's example, recover the stolen money and sentence the corrupt to death to serve as a deterrent."

NO LONGER UNTOUCHABLE ?

Scores of senior officials, who under previous governments would have been considered virtually untouchable, have been sentenced by the corruption court including a former governor of Aceh province, Abdullah Puteh, and a leading prosecutor, Urip Tri Gunawan, who took bribes to drop a graft case involving a tycoon.

Several senior central bankers including a former governor, Burhanuddin Abdullah, were found guilty of making illegal payments from a foundation to several members of parliament in order to influence amendments to legislation.

And on Wednesday, the corruption court sentenced one of President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono's in-laws, former central bank official Aulia Pohan, to four-and-a-half years in prison for his role in approving illegal payments to members of parliament.

Eight members of parliament have been sentenced by the corruption court, and others still await verdicts. That, many suspect, is why parliament has delayed passing the key legislation required to ensure the court continues to exist.

However, a member of parliament in charge of discussing the bill denied any deliberate move to thwart the court.

"There is absolutely no attempt from the parliament to slow down or to intentionally not finish (the legislation)," Dewi Asmara, the head of a special committee discussing the bill, told Reuters.

She said issues holding up the bill include whether to keep the current ratio of three ad hoc judges to two career judges, or whether to reverse the numbers which, many believe, would make the panel less independent.

President Yudhoyono, often known by his initials SBY, was elected in 2004 on promises to fight graft and is seeking re-election on July 8 in a campaign where his track record in tackling corruption is under scrutiny.

The Wednesday decision against his in-law could help Yudhoyono's campaign by showing a commitment to fight such crimes regardless of who is involved.

"Of course Aulia Pohan's detention, followed by a charge and a sentence, will increase SBY's reputation in fighting graft and law enforcement," said Arbi Sanit, an academic at the University of Indonesia.

Yudhoyono has said he would issue a presidential decree to ensure the court's continued existence if parliament fails to pass the legislation before October.

Without that, the prime anti-corruption agency, or KPK, would be powerless when it comes to prosecuting suspects, and the public courts would once again take over such cases.

"I suspect, like others, that this bill will not be approved by its deadline of December 19. Why? Because how could parliament do that? It's like digging their own grave," said Teguh Hariyanto, a judge at the corruption court.

"If SBY whose selling point is corruption eradication got elected again, he should at least have the guts to do something if this corruption court law is not approved," he added.

(Editing by Sara Webb and Jerry Norton)

Facebook Readies Rival to Twitter Search

Mashable, June 16, 2009 08:05 PM PDT

Facebook is testing a realtime search engine for users’ news feeds that will challenge Twitter search, the company revealed on its blog today.

Let’s face it: Facebook Search really isn’t all that impressive of a tool. It does a good job of searching for people, groups, and apps, but doesn’t fare well at all if you search a general term like “Iran Election.” With all of the information available on Facebook, wouldn’t it be nice to find images, videos, links, and status updates relevant to a search keyword? Meanwhile, the lack of such a feature means that Twitter search has become the go-to place for realtime information.

Facebook isn’t blind to the issue. The world’s largest social network revealed today that it’s experimenting with a new type of search that could actually make it a social alternative to Google, Bing, and other major search engines. Most importantly, however, it can begin to challenge Twitter in realtime search. Soon, when you search for a recipe or the latest on the Iran crisis, related status updates and photos from friends and public Facebook profiles will appear. In fact, it’s already active for a small group of users.

In a blog announcement, the social networking giant explained that it believes our friends are a strong source of relevant information. If I care about the season finale of Lost, it stands to reason I would want to know how my friends felt about it. This new search feature would do just that. From the Facebook blog:

Those of you in the test group will see new layouts for search results that will continue to include people’s profiles, Facebook Pages, groups and applications, and some entirely new Search features. With the test, you will be able to search your News Feed for the most recent status updates, photos, links, videos and notes being shared by your friends and the Facebook Pages of which you’re a fan. You will also be able to search for status updates, posted links and notes in Search from people who have chosen to make their profile and content available to everyone. As always, you can control what content you’re sharing by editing your privacy settings here.

The people around us are a powerful source for finding information about new and interesting information — from the latest on last night’s episode of “The Office” and suggestions on what to do for your next vacation to current events.


Facebook Search Image

In short: Facebook is testing this feature with only a small group of users, the feature searches status updates, links, notes, photos, and videos, and it can search both your friends and anybody who has a public profile (like mine). This puts it in direct competition with Twitter search: a realtime search of public messages.

The key question is whether Facebook has waited too long to get into the realtime search game.

Indonesia, Timor-Leste Naktuka Border Dispute

From Dili Insider website, published June 16.

The Jakarta Globe

June 13, 2009

Village Warns of Violence If Border Issue Not Settled

by Eras Poke

Kupang

The leader of a remote subdistrict bordering East Timor says his people are ready to take up arms if the ownership of a disputed piece of land isn't settled.

The Armed Forces (TNI) has barred a community in East Amfoang subdistrict, East Nusa Tenggara, from using the land in disputed Naktuka village.

But Robby J. Manoh, a village head on the Indonesian side of the border, said he did not understand why the East Timorese were allowed to remain in Naktuka.

People from East Timor are starting to plant on Naktuka soil, but our government has done nothing to stop them," Robby said.

This is not fair. If this injustice continues, we have no choice but to force [the Timorese] to leave the area."

Police in East Amfoang confirmed the Timorese presence in Naktuka, but were told last month by the military that such cases were common along the border.

Daud Saul Ndaumanu, the subdistrict chief of police, said that the problem had persisted since 2006.

Regulation has it that [Naktuka] should be clear of any establishments or activities initiated by either country," Ndaumanu said.

But for some reason, that hasn't stopped the people of East Timor from staying in these disputed areas. I think the government should intervene in this matter."

Robby also appealed to authorities to look into the situation. We're in a tough position because we cannot take care of our own land," he said. "We've brought this up with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, but nothing has been done to settle this issue."

Kupang district police and the governor's office have not reported any violence in the area.

The Jakarta Post

Saturday, June 13, 2009

TNI Told To Evict Disputed Border Settlers In NTT

KUPANG: Legislators in East Nusa Tenngara (NTT) have urged Indonesian military (TNI) to expel hundreds of Timor Leste people who have "unilaterally" built settlements along a
disputed area bordering Indonesia and its former province.

"The TNI should act firmly. If there is already an agreement that the neutral zone still under the status of dispute should be clear of any civilian activities, the two countries mustabide by it," senior NTT legislative council member Jonathan Kanan said Friday.

Jonathan, deputy chairman of the council's security affairs commission, said that unless the TNI took firm action, the disputed 1,069-square-meter area, "rich of mining resources", could be occupied by Timor Leste.

"An international court only recognizes the ownership of a certain area if there are activities there. Never allow for the case of Sipadan and Ligitan [islands that Indonesia lost to Malaysia] to recur," he said.

Council deputy speaker Kristo Blasin asked the Foreign Ministry to pay serious attention to the issue.

"Never let bloodshed break out. This problem can actually be settled through diplomacy," he said.

Kristo called on the two countries to involve communities in finding a solution to the disputed border at Naktuka village in East Amfoang subdistrict in the NTT capital of Kupang. Timor
Leste claims the area as part of its Oecusi district.

Earlier, Indonesia's security border force lodged a protest with Timor Leste police, which had allowed its citizens to build settlements in the disputed area. - JP

Indonesia Hands Down Convictions in Graft Case

Wall Street Journal, Tom Wright, June 18 -- A relative of President Susilo Bambang Yudhonoyo was among four former central-bank officials convicted of corruption and sentenced to prison on Wednesday, in a further sign that Indonesia is taking action against graft.

Mr. Yudhoyono promised to clean up government since becoming the nation's first democratically elected president in 2004.

The trial of Aulia Pohan -- a former Bank Indonesia deputy governor whose daughter is married to Mr. Yudhoyono's son -- for his role in the misuse of 100 billion rupiah ($10 million) in central-bank funds drew scrutiny from antigraft campaigners and the media because of the defendant's ties to the ruling elite.

Mr. Pohan and three other defendants tried with him were convicted for their roles in channeling central-bank funds to lawmakers in a bid to influence banking legislation.

Indonesia's anticorruption court, a special institution set up to try graft cases outside the country's legal framework, sentenced Mr. Pohan to 4½ years in prison and ordered him to pay 200 million rupiah in fines. The other defendants all received the same fine, as well as prison sentences of four years or 4½ years.

Mr. Pohan's lawyer said his client will appeal the ruling. The other three defendants said they will appeal the verdicts, according to Reuters.

In October, the court sentenced former central-bank governor Burhanuddin Abdullah to five years in prison for his role in the corruption scandal. In February, Indonesia's high court rejected Mr. Abdullah's appeal and extended his sentence by six months.

Mr. Yudhoyono is seeking re-election in a July 8 national vote and is the front-runner, in large part due to the popularity of his antigraft campaign, which has resulted in convictions and prison terms for lawmakers, regional governors and central-bank officials.

The president will go after higher-profile suspects if he wins re-election, said Dino Djalal, a spokesman for Mr. Yudhoyono.

Efforts to weed out graft, which remains endemic in many Indonesian institutions including the parliament, police and judiciary, according to watchdog Transparency International, face roadblocks from vested interests.

The anticorruption court, set up in 2004, has a record of convictions. Its mandate expires in December and the parliament, some of whose members face continuing corruption probes, has yet to pass legislation needed to ensure its continued existence.

Afghan Election Campaign Starts

Abdullah Abdullah (L), Hamid Karzai and Ashraf Ghani Ahmadzai (R)
Mr Karzai faces a series of challenges from a wide range of candidates

Campaigning has begun in Afghanistan for presidential elections in August.

BBC, June 16 - President Hamid Karzai is seeking another term in office and is facing challenges from 40 other candidates.

Posters promoting the rivals have begun to appear, while vehicles with loudspeakers have been circulating the capital, Kabul, urging people to vote.

The elections - which were postponed from April because of security and logistical problems - come as the US reinforces troops to fight the Taliban.

Supporters of some of the leading presidential candidates are gathering in the capital, Kabul, including those of President Karzai.

He won the first election in 2004 and is the clear front-runner to win these polls as well, even though his reputation has been damaged by his failure to tackle corruption and the worsening conflict with the Taliban.

Remote corners

The BBC's Bilal Sarwary in Kabul says the front runners in the vote are President Karzai, former finance minister Ashraf Ghani, former foreign minister Abdullah Abdullah and former deputy speaker of the lower house of parliament, Mirwais Yasini.

Afghan man looks at presidential campaign posters
Many of the 44 candidates are not well-known across the country

Our correspondent says that the candidates can broadly be be divided into five groups: those who are only well known in their home communities, those who are better known in the country but have little chance of winning, those who want significant political change and want to alter the country's constitution, those standing on a conservative agenda and those wanting Nato forces to leave the country.

Two women are among the candidates, our correspondent says, in addition to several people who critics say should not be on the list as they do not have the qualifications or profile to stand for office.

Campaigning will last for two months, giving the candidates enough time to travel to the most remote corners of this country. But because of the war, many areas might remain out of bounds.

There are fears that the insurgents could try to attack the polls, so thousands of Nato troops are arriving to reinforce the soldiers already in the country.

The Special Representative of UN Secretary-General for Afghanistan, Kai Eide, appealed to candidates to campaign "with dignity and fairness".

Mr Eide said that "intimidation, inflammatory language and violence of any sort" had no place in the campaign and that it was "critically important" that all candidates conduct their campaign freely and without interference.

"The Afghan people continue to suffer from conflict, hardship and poverty," he said, "however the strength and legitimacy of a future government and provincial authorities depends on the active participation of people in these elections."

Jun 16, 2009

Trafficking in Persons Report 2009

Source - http://www.state.gov/g/tip/rls/tiprpt/2009/index.htm

"The ninth annual Trafficking in Persons Report sheds light on the faces of modern-day slavery and on new facets of this global problem. The human trafficking phenomenon affects virtually every country, including the United States. In acknowledging America’s own struggle with modern-day slavery and slavery-related practices, we offer partnership. We call on every government to join us in working to build consensus and leverage resources to eliminate all forms of human trafficking."
--Secretary Clinton, June 16, 2009




The Report
The report is available in PDF format as a single file [PDF: 22 MBGet Adobe Acrobat Reader]. Due to its large size, the PDF has been separated into sections for easier download: Introduction; Country Narratives: A-C, D-K, L-P, Q-Z/Special Cases; Relevant International Conventions. To view the PDF file, you will need to download, at no cost, the Adobe Acrobat Reader.

-06/16/09 Remarks at Release of the Ninth Annual Trafficking in Persons Report Alongside Leaders in Congress; Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State; Benjamin Franklin Room ; Washington, DC
-06/16/09 Ambassador CdeBaca's Remarks at Release of the 2009 Trafficking in Persons Report; Luis CdeBaca, Director ; Washington, DC
-PDF Version: Trafficking in Persons Report, June 2009
-Introduction (PDF) [5071 Kb]
-Country Narratives: A-C (PDF) [4074 Kb]
-Country Narratives: D-K (PDF) [3889 Kb]
-Country Narratives: L-P (PDF) [4036 Kb]
-Country Narratives: Q-Z and Special Cases (PDF) [3868 Kb]
-Relevant International Conventions (PDF)

HOW TO: Track Iran Election with Twitter and Social Media

Source - http://mashable.com/2009/06/14/new-media-iran/

Mashable, Ben Parr, June 14 - On June 12th, Iran held its presidential elections between incumbent Ahmadinejad and rival Mousavi. The result, a landslide for Ahmadinejad, has led to violent riots across Iran, charges of voting fraud, and protests worldwide. How can you best keep up with what’s happening in real-time, and what web tools can help us make sense of the information available?

This guide breaks down the best new media sources for real-time information, photos, and videos of the Iran situation, as well as ways to organize and share it with others.

If you have suggestions for additional online news sources and tools related to the Iranian election, please do leave a comment.


1. Track Iran-related hashtags and keywords on Twitter



Iran Twitter Image

Twitter is, far and away, the best social media tool for second-by-second information on what’s happening in Iran. People on-the-ground and across the globe are chatting about every breaking update, every news item, and every story they find. However, all this chatter can be overwhelming – here are some tips to help organize the noise:

Know your hashtags: The top hashtags and keywords being used by people talking about the Iran situation are #IranElection, Ahmadinejad, Mousavi, and Tehran. Track these keywords first.

Twitter Search: You can go to the source and search Twitter for keywords.

Monitter: One of our favorite tools, Monitter goes a step beyond Twitter search and allows you to watch the Twitter conversation around keywords in real-time. Create multiple columns or even embed them with a widget. This makes it much easier to consume all the information at once.

Please note that while Twitter is the fastest source of breaking news, it’s also sometimes a source of misinformation, and has a poor signal-to-noise ratio.


2. YouTube is your ally



Everybody’s favorite social video site YouTube (YouTube) has been a central distribution medium for the Iran riots. Iranians have been posting videos nonstop of what’s happening on the ground. This really is the best way to see what’s happening without any filters.

Now, how to find the videos? We’ve picked out key YouTube accounts and search terms to track for the latest videos out of Iran:

- Iran Riots

- Associated Press YouTube Channel

- Iran Protests (sorted by newest videos)

- Irandoost09’s channel

- Iran Election 2009 (sorted by newest videos)



3. Blogs moving faster than the news


While most news sources are now picking up on the Iran situation, the blogosphere has been far quicker with news and multimedia from Iran. Thus, your best bet for organizing all of this blog chatter is via Google Blog Search. Compliment this with Google News and you’ll have a fuller picture of the situation on the ground. Google (Google)’s algorithms have already pushed Iran election stories to the top of the pile, but you can dig deeper with specific searches for the Iran Riots, Ahmadinejad and Mousavi.

Extra Note: One blog stands out for its Iran coverage: Revolutionary Road has been bringing constant updates on the Iran Riots from the front lines. We rely on citizens like these to get us news from the ground.


4. Flickr images really tell the story



Iran Riots
Image Credit: TheStyx via Flickr

The social media photo site Flickr (Flickr) is brimming with some eye-popping and gut-wrenching imagery from the ground. Beatings, protests, military photos from the election…it’s all there, in full color.

Once again, search terms like Iran Elections and Iran Riots 2009 will help you pinpoint the most relevant images.


5. Final notes


Social media comes fast, and because of that, the information can be overwhelming. Use filters and tools to help you understand what’s happening in real-time. If you’re looking for background on the situation, get yourself up-to-speed using Wikipedia (Wikipedia) (Iranian presidential elections 2009 and 2009 Iranian election protests are being constantly updated).

Finally, if you want to help bring awareness to the situation, then share! Share the videos you find via Twitter (Twitter), blog about the situation, email your friends: everybody can play a part in this new media ecosystem.