Auteur Sujet: yhdc Abdel Hakim Belhaj: justice barred for Libyan dissident, say lawyers  (Lu 52 fois)

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 Almost 30 years ago, I sat with my parents in front of the television and watched one of the last mass actions that marked the end of state socialism in Europe: the toppling of the statue of Enver Hoxha, the historic leader of the Albanian Communist party. Transfixed by the live images of tens of thousands of people taking turns to pull ropes, I saw the gigantic bronze figure of a man whose portrait still adorned my school walls tilt slightly left and then right, before losing its balance and collapsing to the ground. The statue was dragged into the main square of the capital聽Tirana, followed by chants of  Freedom ,  Democracy , and  The police are with us .聽The police were in stanley bottles deed with the protesters, but not out of sympathy for their cause. The聽Communist聽party,聽at that point still in power,聽had given them orders not to intervene.  stanley thermobecher During the preceding weeks of protest, high-ranking officials had realised that a system that had lost legitimacy in the eyes of the majority could no longer demand their compliance. Foreign news channels celebrated the birth of freedom in what they called the last dictatorship of Europe.I recalled these events as I listened to Priti Patels remarks about the  thuggery  stanley cup website  of  the criminal minority  who rolled the statue of the slave trader Edward Colston into Bristols harbour. I smiled at Keir Starmers sharp words lamenting the  lawlessness  of these actions and condemning them as  completely wrong . They reminded me of state propaganda on Albanian tel Btgv Nowhere review 鈥?an audacious and radical message for peace
 A London transport ban on a Christian charity s posters suggesting gay people can  move out of homosexuality  has been put in doubt by a court of appeal judgment that ordered an investigation into whether the mayor, Boris Johnson, acted  for an improper purpose .The Core Issues Trust had claimed that the mayor unlawfully used his position as chairman of Transport for London  TfL  to prohibit the advertisement on buses to secure support from the gay community before his 2012 re-election campaign.In its decision, overruling an earlier decision by the high court, the court of appeal said there must be a fresh inquiry to consider whether the mayor had abused his political position and t stanley fr o re-examine whether or not the poster could be used.The ad posters designed for the sides of the capital s buses read:  Not Gay! Ex-Gay, Post-Gay and Proud. Get over it!  鈥?implying that some people could be helped to change their sexualit stanley cup uk y. The posters were a response to a bus poster campaign by the gay rights group Stonewall, which carried the message:  Some people are gay. Get over it! The Christian charity has accused gay and lesbian rights activists of seeking to be the new  moral enforcers  and says it is Christian religious conservatives who now need protection for their right to express d stanley cup issent against  the new orthodoxy .Johnson had said the Core Issues advert was  offensive to gays  and could lead to retaliation agains