After Egypt’s revolution, a long search for the missing:
CAIRO — Mohamed Sadiq’s last words before walking down the staircase of his family’s modest apartment building on Jan. 25, 2011, gave his mother chills.
“I am not coming back until Mubarak is gone,” she recalls the 25-year-old saying as he set out to join the growing protest movement that 18 days later spelled the end of President Hosni Mubarak’s autocratic reign.
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Daily news, analysis, and link directories on American studies, global-regional-local problems, minority groups, and internet resources.
Sep 7, 2012
Palestinians protest high cost of living
Palestinians protest high cost of living:
RAMALLAH, West Bank — Attaf Abu Ali, who drives a taxi van, had a hand-lettered sign on his vehicle Thursday that said: “Car for sale, with driver.”
“I can’t live off of this,” Abu Ali said of his work, ticking off a list of operating expenses, the most onerous among them the rising price of diesel fuel.
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RAMALLAH, West Bank — Attaf Abu Ali, who drives a taxi van, had a hand-lettered sign on his vehicle Thursday that said: “Car for sale, with driver.”
“I can’t live off of this,” Abu Ali said of his work, ticking off a list of operating expenses, the most onerous among them the rising price of diesel fuel.
Read full article >>
Federal judge blocks restriction of lawyer access to Guantanamo detainees
Federal judge blocks restriction of lawyer access to Guantanamo detainees:
A federal judge on Thursday blocked the government from restricting lawyers’ access to detainees at the U.S. military prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, ruling that proposed measures would violate the detainees’ right to challenge their confinement in the courts.
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A federal judge on Thursday blocked the government from restricting lawyers’ access to detainees at the U.S. military prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, ruling that proposed measures would violate the detainees’ right to challenge their confinement in the courts.
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Bail allowed for Christian girl accused of blasphemy in Pakistan
Bail allowed for Christian girl accused of blasphemy in Pakistan:
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — A Pakistani court granted bail Friday to a young Christian girl whose jailing on a blasphemy charge three weeks ago spurred an international outcry over the treatment of religious minorities.
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ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — A Pakistani court granted bail Friday to a young Christian girl whose jailing on a blasphemy charge three weeks ago spurred an international outcry over the treatment of religious minorities.
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Moonshine flourishes in unlikely areas of Pakistan
Moonshine flourishes in unlikely areas of Pakistan:
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — There is just one legal brewery in all of Pakistan, where the Muslim-majority population has been prohibited from drinking alcohol for 35 years. Yet the alcohol business is thriving in unlikely places, including Peshawar, the religiously conservative metropolis that abuts Pakistan’s tribal frontier.
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ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — There is just one legal brewery in all of Pakistan, where the Muslim-majority population has been prohibited from drinking alcohol for 35 years. Yet the alcohol business is thriving in unlikely places, including Peshawar, the religiously conservative metropolis that abuts Pakistan’s tribal frontier.
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Sep 6, 2012
Hackers Target Uyghur Groups
Hackers Target Uyghur Groups:
More than 10 exile Uyghur associations have suffered a viral hacking attack, one of the groups said Thursday, blaming the Chinese government for the blitz.
Dolkun Isa, head of the Munich-based World Uyghur Congress (WUC), said that his organization’s website had been crippled in recent days—though the site has since been functioning normally—and that its servers had been forced to distribute fake emails targeting activists from related organizations.
“More than 10 organizations have been affected by the recent virus,” Isa told RFA, adding that he had reason to believe that the attack was state-sponsored and had originated from China.
“It is likely related to the upcoming executive committee meeting,” he said, during which the WUC will discuss the ongoing situation in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region—where many Uyghurs chafe under Chinese rule—and the group’s future organizational strategy.
The WUC Executive Committee Meeting is scheduled to be held Sept. 21-23 in Amsterdam.
He said fellow activists and colleagues from outside the WUC who would not normally be sent an invitation had been receiving infected emails regarding the event.
Earlier on Thursday, the WUC had released a statement warning of a “recent rise of emails purportedly sent from the WUC aimed at tricking recipients into opening infected attachments.”
It said that “at least four” different emails had been identified that were “targeting Uyghur activists, colleagues and friends from other NGOs [nongovernmental organizations] and international organizations.”
“In view of many similar attacks in the past and the sophistication of these fake emails, the WUC believes that the infected emails are state-sponsored efforts by China to disrupt the work of the WUC,” the statement said.
It said the emails were being sent from addresses that exhibited “minor alterations” from real WUC addresses and contained information related to the group’s current work.
“These fake emails therefore illustrate a particularly worrying trend by China to specifically monitor the WUC and other Uyghur organizations with the sole purpose of disrupting peaceful activism to secure and promote the fundamental human rights of Uyghurs in [Xinjiang] and abroad,” the statement said.
“In doing so, China is exporting its efforts to curtail alternate discourse to that of official narrative.”
Activists targeted
The WUC noted that Chinese human rights activists, including those from the Uyghur and Tibetan ethnic minorities, have been the target of several incidents of cyber attacks in the past—particularly around the time of sensitive anniversaries of mass protests against Chinese rule.
The WUC sustained a crippling distributed denial of service (DDoS) attack in June and July of 2011, around the time of the second year anniversary of the July 5 government crackdown on Uyghur protesters in the Xinjiang capital Urumqi.
A DDoS attack attempts to flood a server or system with so much data that it becomes difficult or impossible to reach for legitimate traffic due to the overload.
According to the WUC, the 2011 attack blocked office phone lines and mobile phone numbers via repeated incoming calls and thousands of emails being sent to WUC accounts over a two-day period, rendering them inaccessible.
In June this year, Russian firm Kapersky Lab discovered a Mac-based Trojan attack targeting Uyghur rights groups which involved emails written in Uyghur carrying ZIP files which would open a backdoor intended to connect command and control servers located in China.
The file would allow attackers to list and transfer files, in addition to executing commands on the infected machine.
Dolkun Isa condemned the recent attack, which he said was part of a concerted effort by Chinese authorities to silence the Uyghur community outside of the country.
“The Chinese government must stop these types of personal attacks on Uyghur organizations, which they have incorrectly accused of carrying out terrorist activities,” he said.
China has accused exile Uyghur activists of inciting terrorism in Xinjiang and has exerted diplomatic pressure to prevent other WUC meetings, the group has said.
Uyghurs say they are subjected to political control and persecution for seeking meaningful autonomy in their homeland and are denied economic opportunities stemming from Beijing's rapid development of the troubled region.
In August last year, China rejected suggestions that it was behind a massive cyberspying initiative reported earlier that month by security firm McAfee.
McAfee said in a report titled "Operation Shady RAT" that hackers compromised computer security at more than 70 global organizations, including the U.N. and U.S. government bodies.
The report sparked speculation that China was behind the hacking, although cyber attacks often cannot be definitively attributed to a specific entity or government.
Reported by Joshua Lipes.
More than 10 exile Uyghur associations have suffered a viral hacking attack, one of the groups said Thursday, blaming the Chinese government for the blitz.
Dolkun Isa, head of the Munich-based World Uyghur Congress (WUC), said that his organization’s website had been crippled in recent days—though the site has since been functioning normally—and that its servers had been forced to distribute fake emails targeting activists from related organizations.
“More than 10 organizations have been affected by the recent virus,” Isa told RFA, adding that he had reason to believe that the attack was state-sponsored and had originated from China.
“It is likely related to the upcoming executive committee meeting,” he said, during which the WUC will discuss the ongoing situation in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region—where many Uyghurs chafe under Chinese rule—and the group’s future organizational strategy.
The WUC Executive Committee Meeting is scheduled to be held Sept. 21-23 in Amsterdam.
He said fellow activists and colleagues from outside the WUC who would not normally be sent an invitation had been receiving infected emails regarding the event.
Earlier on Thursday, the WUC had released a statement warning of a “recent rise of emails purportedly sent from the WUC aimed at tricking recipients into opening infected attachments.”
It said that “at least four” different emails had been identified that were “targeting Uyghur activists, colleagues and friends from other NGOs [nongovernmental organizations] and international organizations.”
“In view of many similar attacks in the past and the sophistication of these fake emails, the WUC believes that the infected emails are state-sponsored efforts by China to disrupt the work of the WUC,” the statement said.
It said the emails were being sent from addresses that exhibited “minor alterations” from real WUC addresses and contained information related to the group’s current work.
“These fake emails therefore illustrate a particularly worrying trend by China to specifically monitor the WUC and other Uyghur organizations with the sole purpose of disrupting peaceful activism to secure and promote the fundamental human rights of Uyghurs in [Xinjiang] and abroad,” the statement said.
“In doing so, China is exporting its efforts to curtail alternate discourse to that of official narrative.”
Activists targeted
The WUC noted that Chinese human rights activists, including those from the Uyghur and Tibetan ethnic minorities, have been the target of several incidents of cyber attacks in the past—particularly around the time of sensitive anniversaries of mass protests against Chinese rule.
The WUC sustained a crippling distributed denial of service (DDoS) attack in June and July of 2011, around the time of the second year anniversary of the July 5 government crackdown on Uyghur protesters in the Xinjiang capital Urumqi.
A DDoS attack attempts to flood a server or system with so much data that it becomes difficult or impossible to reach for legitimate traffic due to the overload.
According to the WUC, the 2011 attack blocked office phone lines and mobile phone numbers via repeated incoming calls and thousands of emails being sent to WUC accounts over a two-day period, rendering them inaccessible.
In June this year, Russian firm Kapersky Lab discovered a Mac-based Trojan attack targeting Uyghur rights groups which involved emails written in Uyghur carrying ZIP files which would open a backdoor intended to connect command and control servers located in China.
The file would allow attackers to list and transfer files, in addition to executing commands on the infected machine.
Dolkun Isa condemned the recent attack, which he said was part of a concerted effort by Chinese authorities to silence the Uyghur community outside of the country.
“The Chinese government must stop these types of personal attacks on Uyghur organizations, which they have incorrectly accused of carrying out terrorist activities,” he said.
China has accused exile Uyghur activists of inciting terrorism in Xinjiang and has exerted diplomatic pressure to prevent other WUC meetings, the group has said.
Uyghurs say they are subjected to political control and persecution for seeking meaningful autonomy in their homeland and are denied economic opportunities stemming from Beijing's rapid development of the troubled region.
In August last year, China rejected suggestions that it was behind a massive cyberspying initiative reported earlier that month by security firm McAfee.
McAfee said in a report titled "Operation Shady RAT" that hackers compromised computer security at more than 70 global organizations, including the U.N. and U.S. government bodies.
The report sparked speculation that China was behind the hacking, although cyber attacks often cannot be definitively attributed to a specific entity or government.
Reported by Joshua Lipes.
Is defending the country still relevant?
Is defending the country still relevant?: Since 1945, even though all Indonesians recognized they were part of Indonesia, they still retained many of their ethnic traits, faiths, languages, customs and so forth. These differences never used ...
Arrested Indonesian describes plot on police video
Arrested Indonesian describes plot on police video: Six men associated with an Islamic school founded by a radical cleric plotted to set off bombs and shoot police to wage "holy war" in an Indonesian town, one of the suspects said in an interrogation ...
Munir case shows govt failure to combat impunity: AI
Munir case shows govt failure to combat impunity: AI: The government’s failure to bring to trial those responsible for assassinating noted human rights activist Munir Said Thalib raises a question about Indonesia’s willingness to combat ...
BANGLADESH: More data needed on abandoned children, trafficking
BANGLADESH: More data needed on abandoned children, trafficking:
DHAKA, 6 September 2012 (IRIN) - Children in Bangladesh who have been abandoned by their parents are vulnerable to traffickers, but tackling the problem is hampered by the lack of data on missing children, say aid workers. |
UGANDA: Government launches cancer vaccination programme
UGANDA: Government launches cancer vaccination programme:
KAMPALA, 6 September 2012 (IRIN) - The government of Uganda has launched a vaccination campaign against cervical cancer - the most common type of cancer among Ugandan women - but there are already fears a nationwide rollout might be jeopardized by lack of funds. |
Court frees jailed South African miners
Court frees jailed South African miners: Over 100 workers, held over deaths of their colleagues, walk free from court while peace talks hit a stalemate.
Scores killed after Turkey refugee boat sinks
Scores killed after Turkey refugee boat sinks: At least 60 people are reported to have died after a boat carrying mainly Arab immigrants sank off the Turkish coast.
Gaddafi's ex-spy to be questioned in Libya
Gaddafi's ex-spy to be questioned in Libya: Libyan authorities set to question Abdullah Senussi day after he was extradited from Mauritania.
Clinics Probed Over Abortions
Clinics Probed Over Abortions:
Authorities in northeastern Laos are investigating reports of illegal abortions at local clinics run by bogus medical practitioners from China amid questions over supervision of the substandard health centers.
Clinics in Xiengkhouang province’s Paek district have come under scrutiny after several women who underwent abortions fell sick and sought treatment at the provincial hospital last month.
The three clinics the women had visited have been licensed for some time, but are run under little official oversight, an official at the Xiengkhouang hospital said, speaking on condition of anonymity.
He said the authorities were discussing problems in the clinics, but had not yet sent inspectors to the clinics or taken further action to address reports of substandard conditions.
“The authorities are talking about this, but no one has taken any initiative,” he said.
“They say health services [should] go there and take a look at how the clinics are operated, whether they are complying with the rules, whether [proper] medical equipment is used, and whether the doctors meet professional standards.”
He added that many of those who visited the clinics found their treatment was costly and ineffective.
Illegal abortions
Paek residents say the treatment provided by the clinics is not up to standard, with no adequate equipment, and that the centers were effectively committing fraud and performing abortions illegally.
Elective abortions are banned in Laos, where they are considered a violation of Article 85 of the criminal law for both the doctors and women involved.
Some residents have also accused the clinics of dumping the aborted fetuses in nearby lakes and ponds, contaminating the local water supply.
One man from Paek said that no residents in the district trust the Chinese clinics and that only poor villagers from rural areas visit them.
“Most of the time they are a fraud and patients are cheated by people who do not understand anything. They just cheat you to get your money,” he said, speaking on condition of anonymity.
He said his grandmother had once gone to one of the Chinese clinics in the district and received poor care.
“They should have had better medical equipment and given her a real examination, but the Chinese doctor just looked her over with his eyes and gave her a prescription. None of the medicine they gave was able to cure the disease.”
“They cannot be trusted,” he said.
Little oversight
Paek residents said they believe officials have not cracked down on the substandard conditions in the clinics because the businesses exert influence on corrupt local authorities.
The Xiengkhouang hospital official said he suspected the clinics might hold sway over officials.
“I, too, do not understand why no one dares to get involved in this. What kind of power do the Chinese clinics have? Last year the Ministry of Health took a look at this, but nothing has been done,” he said.
Health care
Laos has one of the highest maternal mortality rates in Southeast Asia.
Unsafe abortions are believed to be a contributing factor, but little information on them is available because the procedure is often performed illicitly.
In 2000, with help from nongovernmental organizations like the U.N. Population Fund, the World Health Organization (WHO), and the World Bank, the Lao government established new millennium goals which aimed to reduce by more than half its rate of 790 maternal deaths per 100,000 childbirths that year—to 300 by 2015.
In 2009, the maternal mortality rate in Laos dropped to 500 mothers for every 100,000, according to the United Nations Development Program, down from 580 the previous year.
But Lao officials reported to the U.N. last year that the country is unlikely to achieve its millennium goals.
Medical coverage is a key problem.
The World Bank had said that human resources for maternal health in the country are limited with only 0.35 physicians per 1,000 people. Nurses and midwives are slightly more common at 0.97 per 1,000 people.
Reported by Apichart Sopapong for RFA’s Lao service. Translated by Somnet Inthapannha. Written in English by Rachel Vandenbrink.
Authorities in northeastern Laos are investigating reports of illegal abortions at local clinics run by bogus medical practitioners from China amid questions over supervision of the substandard health centers.
Clinics in Xiengkhouang province’s Paek district have come under scrutiny after several women who underwent abortions fell sick and sought treatment at the provincial hospital last month.
The three clinics the women had visited have been licensed for some time, but are run under little official oversight, an official at the Xiengkhouang hospital said, speaking on condition of anonymity.
He said the authorities were discussing problems in the clinics, but had not yet sent inspectors to the clinics or taken further action to address reports of substandard conditions.
“The authorities are talking about this, but no one has taken any initiative,” he said.
“They say health services [should] go there and take a look at how the clinics are operated, whether they are complying with the rules, whether [proper] medical equipment is used, and whether the doctors meet professional standards.”
He added that many of those who visited the clinics found their treatment was costly and ineffective.
Illegal abortions
Paek residents say the treatment provided by the clinics is not up to standard, with no adequate equipment, and that the centers were effectively committing fraud and performing abortions illegally.
Elective abortions are banned in Laos, where they are considered a violation of Article 85 of the criminal law for both the doctors and women involved.
Some residents have also accused the clinics of dumping the aborted fetuses in nearby lakes and ponds, contaminating the local water supply.
One man from Paek said that no residents in the district trust the Chinese clinics and that only poor villagers from rural areas visit them.
“Most of the time they are a fraud and patients are cheated by people who do not understand anything. They just cheat you to get your money,” he said, speaking on condition of anonymity.
He said his grandmother had once gone to one of the Chinese clinics in the district and received poor care.
“They should have had better medical equipment and given her a real examination, but the Chinese doctor just looked her over with his eyes and gave her a prescription. None of the medicine they gave was able to cure the disease.”
“They cannot be trusted,” he said.
Little oversight
Paek residents said they believe officials have not cracked down on the substandard conditions in the clinics because the businesses exert influence on corrupt local authorities.
The Xiengkhouang hospital official said he suspected the clinics might hold sway over officials.
“I, too, do not understand why no one dares to get involved in this. What kind of power do the Chinese clinics have? Last year the Ministry of Health took a look at this, but nothing has been done,” he said.
Health care
Laos has one of the highest maternal mortality rates in Southeast Asia.
Unsafe abortions are believed to be a contributing factor, but little information on them is available because the procedure is often performed illicitly.
In 2000, with help from nongovernmental organizations like the U.N. Population Fund, the World Health Organization (WHO), and the World Bank, the Lao government established new millennium goals which aimed to reduce by more than half its rate of 790 maternal deaths per 100,000 childbirths that year—to 300 by 2015.
In 2009, the maternal mortality rate in Laos dropped to 500 mothers for every 100,000, according to the United Nations Development Program, down from 580 the previous year.
But Lao officials reported to the U.N. last year that the country is unlikely to achieve its millennium goals.
Medical coverage is a key problem.
The World Bank had said that human resources for maternal health in the country are limited with only 0.35 physicians per 1,000 people. Nurses and midwives are slightly more common at 0.97 per 1,000 people.
Reported by Apichart Sopapong for RFA’s Lao service. Translated by Somnet Inthapannha. Written in English by Rachel Vandenbrink.
Children's Hospitals May Close
Children's Hospitals May Close:
A group of hospitals offering free care to children in Cambodia is in danger of closing due to insufficient support and has begun a campaign to raise funds, highlighting what one nongovernmental organization has called the “desperately poor” state of health care in the Southeast Asian country.
Run by Swiss pediatrician Beat Richner, 65, the Kuntha Bopha hospitals—with four facilities in the country’s capital Phnom Penh and one in Siem Reap province—provide medical treatment, surgery, and vaccinations at no charge to Cambodian children.
However, the cost of running the hospitals now tops U.S. $30 million per year, of which Cambodia’s government provides only U.S. $1 million.
And additional funds of U.S. $4 million from the Swiss government and U.S. $22 million from charity will not keep the hospitals in operation, hospital sources say.
Without the care that they provide, the lives of an estimated 3,200 children may be at risk each month, according to the hospital’s website.
Appeals for funds
Fundraising campaigns, including the organizing of concerts and placing of radio and television appeals, have now been set up across the country, sources told RFA’s Khmer service.
T-shirts reading “Together for helping Kuntha Bopha, for children’s health in Cambodia” have also been widely distributed.
“If the hospital closes down or stops providing free services, thousands of Cambodian children—especially those from poor families—will die,” Khiev Sotheara, a Siem Reap resident who recently made a donation together with his wife, told RFA.
And a musical group, four of whose eight members were treated as children in the hospitals, has written a song urging public support which they have performed in a fundraising campaign.
“When I was a child, I suffered from a colon disease and received an operation at the hospital,” said Som Srey Nea, a member of the band.
“Whenever I pass that hospital, I always remember how they helped me, and I thank the group of doctors who helped save my life.”
'Desperately poor'
According to the London-based NGO Health Poverty Action, some 78 percent of Cambodians live in “deep poverty,” with four out of five living on less than U.S $2 per day.
The group calls health care provision in the country “desperately poor.”
Despite government directives to doctors to provide care without regard to socioeconomic status, reports have surfaced across Cambodia about discriminatory practices against the poor in the country’s hospitals, especially in rural areas.
Reported by Uuon Chin for RFA’s Khmer services. Translated by Yanny Hin. Written in English by Richard Finney.
A group of hospitals offering free care to children in Cambodia is in danger of closing due to insufficient support and has begun a campaign to raise funds, highlighting what one nongovernmental organization has called the “desperately poor” state of health care in the Southeast Asian country.
Run by Swiss pediatrician Beat Richner, 65, the Kuntha Bopha hospitals—with four facilities in the country’s capital Phnom Penh and one in Siem Reap province—provide medical treatment, surgery, and vaccinations at no charge to Cambodian children.
However, the cost of running the hospitals now tops U.S. $30 million per year, of which Cambodia’s government provides only U.S. $1 million.
And additional funds of U.S. $4 million from the Swiss government and U.S. $22 million from charity will not keep the hospitals in operation, hospital sources say.
Without the care that they provide, the lives of an estimated 3,200 children may be at risk each month, according to the hospital’s website.
Appeals for funds
Fundraising campaigns, including the organizing of concerts and placing of radio and television appeals, have now been set up across the country, sources told RFA’s Khmer service.
T-shirts reading “Together for helping Kuntha Bopha, for children’s health in Cambodia” have also been widely distributed.
“If the hospital closes down or stops providing free services, thousands of Cambodian children—especially those from poor families—will die,” Khiev Sotheara, a Siem Reap resident who recently made a donation together with his wife, told RFA.
And a musical group, four of whose eight members were treated as children in the hospitals, has written a song urging public support which they have performed in a fundraising campaign.
“When I was a child, I suffered from a colon disease and received an operation at the hospital,” said Som Srey Nea, a member of the band.
“Whenever I pass that hospital, I always remember how they helped me, and I thank the group of doctors who helped save my life.”
'Desperately poor'
According to the London-based NGO Health Poverty Action, some 78 percent of Cambodians live in “deep poverty,” with four out of five living on less than U.S $2 per day.
The group calls health care provision in the country “desperately poor.”
Despite government directives to doctors to provide care without regard to socioeconomic status, reports have surfaced across Cambodia about discriminatory practices against the poor in the country’s hospitals, especially in rural areas.
Reported by Uuon Chin for RFA’s Khmer services. Translated by Yanny Hin. Written in English by Richard Finney.
Obama Girls, Though Unheard, Figure Prominently in Race
Obama Girls, Though Unheard, Figure Prominently in Race: The girls’ appearance at the Democratic convention will underscore their importance to their father’s image as a likable family man.
From former Libyan prisoners, new claims about CIA renditions, abuses
From former Libyan prisoners, new claims about CIA renditions, abuses:
A new report from a human rights group accuses the CIA of using harsh interrogation measures on detainees who were subsequently imprisoned in Libya and cites claims by one former detainee that he was subjected to waterboarding.
Read full article >>
A new report from a human rights group accuses the CIA of using harsh interrogation measures on detainees who were subsequently imprisoned in Libya and cites claims by one former detainee that he was subjected to waterboarding.
Read full article >>
Prepaid Cards Move to Credit
Prepaid Cards Move to Credit: As overdraft and other credit-like features have been added to prepaid cards in recent years, some consumers are outspending their means and racking up big debts from the cards, say consumer advocates, who are lobbying regulators to ban the practice.
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