Monday, November 30, 2009
Catherine McNeil - Australian Vogue Cover
Friday, November 27, 2009
BBC: Shirin Ebadi Nobel Peace Prize medal 'seized by Iran'
Iranian human rights lawyer Shirin Ebadi says the Nobel Peace Prize medal she won in 2003 has been confiscated.
The medal and accompanying diploma were taken from a bank box in Tehran about three weeks ago on the orders of Iran's Revolutionary Court, she said.
Ms Ebadi, who has criticised Iran's recent disputed election and the subsequent treatment of protesters, said her bank account was also frozen.
Iranian authorities have not made any official comment on the issue.
Norway, which presents the award, said it was "shocked", by the confiscation.
The country's foreign ministry said it was the first time national authorities had taken such action.
Undeterred
Ms Ebadi told the Associated Press that her French Legion d'Honneur award and a ring given by the German association of journalists were taken along with the Nobel prize.
I will return whenever it is useful for my country Shirin Ebadi |
Speaking in London, she said the Iranian authorities had also demanded taxes on the $1.3m (£800,000) she was awarded, but that the prize is exempt under local law.
Ms Ebadi, the first Muslim women to be awarded a Nobel prize, has been away from Iran since travelling to Spain for a conference the day before the 12 June election.
The result of the election, in which President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was re-elected, saw thousands of people protesting for several days, with hundreds arrested.
Ms Ebadi said she had "received many threatening messages" since leaving Iran.
"They said they would detain me if I returned, or that they would make the environment unsafe for me wherever I am," she said, adding that her colleagues still in the country had also been "detained or banned from travelling abroad".
But Ms Ebadi said she would not let anyone prevent her from carrying out her "legal activities" and would eventually go back to Iran.
"I will return whenever it is useful for my country," she said.
'Unheard of'
Mohammad Ali Dadkhah, a spokesman for Ms Ebadi's human rights group, said the prize money had been used "to help prisoners of conscience and their families".
The election result was followed by days of protest and hundreds of arrests |
"The account has been blocked by the officials and they do not allow withdrawals," the AFP news agency quoted the lawyer as saying.
Mr Dadkhah said both the blocking of the account and the confiscation of the award were illegal under Iranian law and that the move was "politicised".
In Norway, where a committee chooses the annual recipient for the peace prize, Foreign Minister Jonas Gahr Stoere said: "Such an act leaves us feeling shock and disbelief."
The ministry summoned Iran's charge d'affaires to protest about the confiscation.
The Norwegian ministry said it was also concerned about the alleged beating of Ms Ebadi's husband in Tehran, with Mr Stoere saying the "persecution of Dr Ebadi and her family shows that freedom of expression is under great pressure in Iran".
The Norwegian Nobel Committee's permanent secretary, Geir Lundestad, said the move was "unheard of" and "unacceptable", Associated Press reported.
Wednesday, November 25, 2009
Victoria's Secret Show
Anja Rubik
Anna Jagodzinska
Abbey Lee
Elyse Taylor
Anastasia Kuznetsova
Saturday, November 21, 2009
Thursday, November 19, 2009
Katie Fogarty - Tush Magazine
Tuesday, November 17, 2009
Karlie Kloss - Korean Vogue Cover
Here's the first preview:
Monday, November 16, 2009
BBC: Zambia 'porn' reporter acquitted
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/8362853.stm
Sunday, November 15, 2009
Heroine: Tererai Trent
Triumph of a Dreamer
By NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF
Published: November 15, 2009
Of all the people earning university degrees this year, perhaps the most remarkable story belongs a one-time impoverished cattle-herd from Zimbabwe.
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/11/15/opinion/15kristof.html
Heroine: Chansa Kabwela
BBC: Surreal drama of Zambia 'porn' trial
The trial of a news editor in Zambia, accused of distributing obscene material, is coming to an end. Chansa Kabwela says she sent photos of a woman giving birth without medical help to senior government officials to highlight the effects of a nurses' strike. Jo Fidgen has watched the trial, and reflects on what it reveals about Zambian culture.
Chansa Kabwela is news editor of Zambia's best-selling newspaper |
The arresting officer makes for an arresting sight.
Sharon Zulu strides into the witness box, a strapping woman in gravity-defying heels and a shiny, baby-pink trouser suit. Grace Jones disguised as Shirley Temple. The promise of a grand finale to the prosecution case.
So far, it has amounted to a succession of trembling ministerial secretaries expressing their humiliation and shock that a woman in childbirth, the most private moment of her life, had been photographed.
Shock, not over the fact that she had given birth in a hospital car park. Or that her baby had suffocated. But that the pictures had been seen by men - an absolute taboo.
This is not to say the photographs are not terrible. When I saw them, it took me several seconds to focus, as though my brain was refusing to process the images.
The most graphic shows a woman from the waist down, lying on a plastic sheet, with the bloodied torso of a baby between her thighs. The head is still inside her.
This is what Zambia's President, Rupiah Banda, declared pornographic, when he called for the photographer to be arrested.
Poster girl
But Mrs Zulu has been a police investigator for 19 years. She must have seen a few unpleasant things in her career. Surely, she is not going to be thrown off balance by these photos?
Not for the first time in this trial, my expectations are confounded.
The spectators have been ooh-ing and aah-ing all through the trial, like an audience for a Shakespearean tragi-comedy |
Mrs Zulu tells the court that she felt assaulted, disturbed, naked. Upset with the person who had circulated the pictures.
"We are all Zambian here," she says. "We all know this is not allowed in our culture."
I shift uncomfortably, the only non-Zambian in the room. Maybe there are cultural forces at play here beyond my understanding. I scan the public gallery. A pretty unrepresentative lot - the benches are stuffed with pop stars, actors, free speech campaigners and opposition politicians.
The defendant, Chansa Kabwela, news editor of Zambia's best-selling newspaper, The Post, has become the poster girl for anyone who dislikes the government.
The spectators have been "ooh-ing" and "aah-ing" all through the trial, like an audience for a Shakespearean tragi-comedy. Or maybe a Zambian adaptation of Kafka. The magistrate has had to tell them off for intimidating the witnesses.
President Rupiah Banda has described the photos as pornographic |
The defence counsel rises to his feet. An imposing man with elegant glasses and a soft voice layered with intellectual menace.
I have watched other witnesses crumple under his cross-examination. The audience holds its breath. We all sense that this will be the climactic scene.
He casually offers her some rope. What prompted this investigation? Was she aware that the president himself had made his position clear? Why did she not interview any of the intended recipients of the photos? Including those who had spoken publicly in support of Chansa Kabwela?
Mrs Zulu folds her arms, pouts, refuses to answer some of the questions, is reprimanded by the magistrate, and pouts some more.
Plot twists
The definition of obscenity employed by the defence is from British law in the 1960s. It talks about corrupting morals by making people homosexual, drug-takers, prostitutes.
A few scattered laughs as the legal extract is read out, but no outrage that an out-of-date law from the old colonial power is being invoked.
|
It seems to me that Zambia's social conservatism is in tune with a Britain that no longer exists.
Defence and witness continue their ill-tempered exchange as to whether the photographs are capable of causing arousal.
It has been a constant theme. One witness almost found herself agreeing that only a lunatic could be turned on by them, but stopped herself when she spotted the president's portrait looming over the magistrate.
Perhaps she was remembering that now infamous news conference when the Zambian leader declared the pictures pornographic.
I have been to see several plays in Lusaka, but none has had the human drama, the plot twists, the surrealism of the performance in Magistrates Court Three.
But I cannot help feeling that the principal character is hiding in the wings.
Fred Mmembe is the editor-in-chief of The Post newspaper. He hates the government and his paper shouts it loud and clear.
I am left with the uncomfortable feeling that the whole of Zambia is a political battleground at the moment, and that even in a courtroom, there is no such thing as no man's land |
Stage whispers hint that he is the real target. And sure enough, he is soon charged with contempt.
His trial, for an article published about this case, began this week. Of course, that could just be one of those coincidences that good playwrights can get away with.
As we leave court at the end of Mrs Zulu's evidence, one of the defence team comes up to me. "Thanks for your support," he says.
I'm aghast. "I'm not supporting you," I say, pointing at the press bench. "I'm sitting there, I'm neutral."
"You support us just by turning up," he asserts.
And I am left with the uncomfortable feeling that the whole of Zambia is a political battleground at the moment, and that even in a courtroom, there is no such thing as no man's land.