Thursday, March 30, 2006

The first signs of spring in Geneva! This picture is actually from a couple weeks ago, so spring has progressed even further by now!











A church right down the street from where I live.


















A cute cafe in Geneva.













This is called Place Neuve. It's about ten minutes away from where I live.

Tuesday, March 21, 2006

A monument in Paquis in Geneva
I think this says it all.
The Calvin school or something in Geneva...It's a really cool building in old town whatever it is.
The cutest truck EVER

There's a street in Geneva that has all these little light blocks with good night and other phrases in different languages and it's so amazing. I wish I could accurately portray it in pictures...

Friday, March 17, 2006

The art and history museum in Geneva.

A cool building in Geneva.

A museum in the river x2.
A very European bridge, I felt.

Thursday, March 16, 2006

On the Peruvian elections:

.S. Meddling in Peruvian Presidential Race?By Jeremy BigwoodLink: http://upsidedownworld.org/main/content/view/227/1/Something smells funny about the recent denunciation of maverick Peruvianpresidential candidate Ollanta Humala for alleged human rights violations.Before the accusations, Humala was riding high as the leading candidate inPeru's presidential elections. Investigations illustrate that Humala'saccusers are subsidized by the US Government funded Agency for InternationalDevelopment (USAID) and the National Endowment for Democracy (NED).Washington may be interfering in this election to protect its own interests.**The former army officer heads a nationalist and anti-neoliberal coalitionbetween his new Peruvian Nationalist Party and the ten-year-old center-leftUnion for Peru party. Humala, a mestizo, was never part of Lima's whiteruling elite which has traditionally run the major institutions of thecountry. He is often derided for being an upstart "cholo" (indigenous),which sheds light on the colonial racism still inherent within Peruviansociety. So much of Humala's support comes from the impoverished non-whitemajority who has suffered from the "neoliberal reforms" of the unpopularsitting president Alejandro Toledo.Humala has met with Evo Morales, Bolivia's recently-elected indigenouspresident. Like Morales, Humala supports the commercialization and expandedinternational marketing of coca leaf products while at the same time beingstrongly against the cocaine trade. He also favors greater control by Peruover the exploitation of its natural resources. In the case of its largenatural gas fields, he would demand that the government receive at least 49percent of the profits and has made similar proposals for Peru's miningindustry. He has also promised to hold a national referendum on therecently-signed free trade deal with the United States, which is widelybelieved to favor U.S. corporate interests over those of Peru.This type of talk has not only scared Peruvian elites and multinationalbusiness interests, but has also drawn the ire of influential policy wonksof the neoliberal "Washington Consensus," who fear of another country goingto a left-talking "anti-imperialist" populist candidate—especially after thespectacular December victory of Morales in neighboring Bolivia. Yet unlikeBolivia's Morales, Humala is a relative newcomer to politics, which has leadsome people to fear that if elected he could turn out to be a disappointmentin the mold of Ecuador's discredited Lucio Gutiérrez, another army officerwho sold himself as a populist during elections. Regardless, even "liberals"and academics have joined the right-wing chorus in Washington of professinga preference for an electoral victory by right-wing candidate Lourdes FloresNano over Humala. Washington was unified. Humala had to go.Humala has also met with Venezuela's President Hugo Chávez. Both weremilitary officers who led failed military uprisings against their respectivepresidents – Chávez in 1992 and Humala in 2000. But unlike Chavez'sVenezuela, Peru has no major oil deposits.On Feb. 15, Humala was accused of a series of war crimes. The chargesincluded forced disappearance, torture and attempted murder that are allegedto have taken place when he commanded a jungle counterinsurgency base in1992 at the height of the bloody civil war with the extremist Maoist ShiningPath and Guevarist MRTA that engulfed Peru through much of the 1980s and1990s. It is a charge that Humala vehemently denies, but it is a charge thathas stuck and rapidly knocked him down to second place in the polls.The "non-governmental organization" (NGO) that led the charge against Humalawas the National Coordinator for Human Rights <http://www.dhperu.org/>, theumbrella organization for several human rights groups commonly known as the"Coordinadora." Whether or not the Coordinadora's charges are true orfabricated, nobody in the press has investigated its history or who backsit. Is the Coordinadora merely a disinterested and neutral human rightsorganization doing its job, or was this denunciation the result of anothermore nefarious hidden agenda?To anyone following Latin America recently, it should come as no surprisethat the accuser, the Coordinadora is an "NGO" that has been funded by theU.S. government for years.Although it is not mentioned in the Coordinadora's "officialhistory<http://www.wola.org/andes/Peru/Peru_Coordinadora_eng.pdf>"written by the Washington, D.C. based nonprofit called the Washington Officeon Latin America, it has been funded by both the Agency for InternationalDevelopment <http://www.usaid.gov/> (USAID) and the smaller NationalEndowment for Democracy <http://www.ned.org/> (NED) on and off for more thana decade. While both USAID and NED are civilian entities, they are largelycontrolled by the State Department and are indispensable instruments of U.S.foreign policy.Does U.S. funding of a foreign "NGOs" affect their behavior? Andrew Natsios,USAID's former head,stated<http://www.usaid.gov/press/speeches/2003/sp030521.html>unequivocallyin a widely distributed 2003 speech that even foreignUSAID-funded contractors and NGO's "are an arm of the U.S. government." Andthe role of the much smaller NED was made clear when Allen Weinstein, one ofits founders stated in a 1991 Washington Post article that, "a lot of whatwe do today was done covertly 25 years ago by the CIA."During some of the years that USAID funded the Coordinadora, the moneypassed through the USAID's Office of Transition Initiatives (OTI) in Lima.USAID's OTI offices – just as their name indicates – are devoted to"political transitions" and are temporarily located only in countries wherethe U.S. government has an interest in either "regime change" or inpolitically and economically shoring up its allies.OTI offices exist or have existed in several Latin American and theCaribbean countries, including Bolivia, Colombia, Venezuela, Peru and Haiti.Not surprisingly, the biggest OTI office worldwide is in Iraq. In bothVenezuela and Haiti over the last few years, USAID's OTI has contributed farmore money to "NGOs" working for the U.S.'s political and economic intereststhan the more notorious yet much smaller meddler, the NED.According to an email from the USAID's press officer, USAID has given theCoordinadora some $762,750.00. But Francisco Soberón, the Coordinadora'sdirector, told Upside Down World that such grants have "happened in thepast—but right now for us at the Coordinadora there is nothing at all." Buthe later said that "some [of the] other organizations that are members ofthe Coordinadora have received or are presently receiving" funding. One ofthese, APRODEH,received<http://www.usaid.gov/our_work/cross-cutting_programs/transition_initiatives/country/peru/rptFinal.pdf>atleast $53,246.39 from USAID. One-year-old Freedom of Information Act requests to USAIDto determine the exact amounts of all of the grants have not yet beenanswered.Soberón denied that the Coordinadora has received funding from NED, but theNED's own website<http://www.ned.org/grants/04programs/web-lac04.html>lists it undertheir list of grantees and former grantees. However, there isno indication of how much it received or when. At the time of this writing,telephone requests to NED's press officer Jane Riley Richardson forinformation on the exact amount of funding have not been answered. Neitherhave a series of FOIA requests to NED been responded to. However, ifVenezuela and Haiti are any guides, NED funding of the Coordinadora hasprobably been considerably less than that of USAID.What has been the Coordinadora's role vis a vis the U.S. Embassy? Accordingto a declassified State Department response to the Freedom of InformationAct, as early as 1993, Coordinadora officers weredebriefing<http://jeremybigwood.net/FOIAs/Huallaga-COORDINADORA-USAID/index.htm>theU.S. embassy in Lima about their trips to the conflictive areas of Peruwhere insurgents were still active. Given the U.S. government's assistanceto the Peruvian government during the counterinsurgency war, suchdebriefings could have been considered as spying.Is the U.S. getting anything out of this funding? The Coordinadora's Soberónresponds with an emphatic "no," adding that "we do not accept conditionsfrom anyone." But with the denunciation of Humala and his resultant drop inthe polls, it looks like the U.S. may have gotten a lot for its money.###*Sources linked to in this article:*http://www.usaid.gov/press/speeches/2003/sp030521.htmlhttp://www.usaid.gov/our_work/cross-cutting_programs/transition_initiatives/country/peru/rptFinal.pdfhttp://www.ned.org/grants/04programs/web-lac04.htmlhttp://peru.indymedia.org/news/2005/12/22776_comment.phphttp://www.usaid.gov/pubs/cbj2002/lac/pe/527-001.htmlhttp://jeremybigwood.net/FOIAs/Huallaga-COORDINADORA-USAID/index.htm

Latest news: the Human Rights Council has been established. Here's the article from www.reformtheun.org:
Resolution Creating New Human Rights Council Adopted in the General Assembly
New York, 15 March 2006 -- In a historic vote, the General Assembly adopted the draft resolution A/60/L.48 creating a new Human Rights Council today with 170 yes votes, 4 no votes (Israel, US, Palau, Marshall Islands) and 3 abstentions (Belarus, Iran, Venezuela). While the GA President, Jan Eliasson had hoped to take a decision by consensus, he was forced to call a vote at the request of the United States.
Newly Created Human Rights CouncilThe 53 member Commission on Human Rights will now be replaced by a 47 member Human Rights Council, which will be a subsidiary body of the General Assembly rather than of the Economic and Social Council. Members will be elected by absolute majority, requiring 96 votes, according to a new regional allocation based on equitable geographic distribution. After serving two consecutive terms, members will no longer be immediately re-eligible to serve another term, thus prohibiting de facto permanent membership. In addition to taking into account candidates' contribution to the promotion and protection of human rights and voluntary pledges/commitments, the GA will also have the ability, through a two-thirds majority vote, to suspend the membership of a Council member that commits gross and systematic violations of human rights.
In contrast to the Commissions single six-week session, the Council will meet for a minimum of three sessions throughout the year for no less than 10 weeks with the ability to hold additional sessions. The Council is expected to convene its first session on June 19th following the elections of members, which are to take place on May 9th.
As an important step forward, the Council will undertake a new universal periodic review to assess all states' fulfillment of human rights obligations/commitments and elected members of the Council will be subject to this review during their term. Furthermore, the Council will maintain key strengths of the Commission such as its system of special procedures and mechanisms for NGO participation.
Overview of 72nd GA PlenaryNoting a decisive moment for human rights, multilateralism and the United Nations, the President of the General Assembly highlighted the strengths of his draft resolution, which he felt represented a fresh start for human rights, and opened the resolution to a vote. Prior to the vote, Cuba and Venezuela were each given the floor to provide an "explanation of vote before the vote." Cuba expressed disapproval of US negotiating tactics, including exertion of pressure, blackmail, and the US hegemonic agenda. Despite voicing various concerns, Cuba noted that they would not vote against the text. Venezuela, also objecting to the US approach, said it would not vote against the resolution to avoid falling in the same camp as the US, but would abstain.
Following the vote, member states were given the opportunity to express their views and provide an explanation of their votes. The US Ambassador, reiterated the US objection to the resolution based on its failure to secure membership by a two-thirds majority vote as well as exclusionary criteria to prevent countries on Chapter 7 Security Council sanctions lists from serving on the Council. In noting that the US could not join consensus on the resolution, Ambassador Bolton nonetheless expressed that the US would " work cooperatively with other Member States to make the Council as strong and effective as it can be." The US therefore plans to support the Council and be involved in its work.
Other countries that spoke during the morning session, including Mexico, Austria on behalf of the EU, Switzerland, Norway, Chile, Singapore, Vietnam and South Africa on behalf of the African Union, described the text as a balanced compromise and expressed strong support despite having made concessions. Yemen, which spoke on behalf of the Organization of Islamic Conference noted that its members decided not to block the resolution despite disapproval with the draft's failure to include unambiguous language against incitement and hatred in both the preambular and operative paragraphs. Addressing US concerns, the Austrian Ambassador, on behalf of the EU noted that EU members would not vote for those countries on sanctions lists under Chapter 7 of the UN Charter. The session extended into the afternoon.
DocumentsClick here to download the draft resolution (A/60/L.48) establishing the Human Rights Council.
Click here to download the GA President's Statement at the opening of the 72nd Plenary.
Click here to download the US Explanation of Vote by Ambassador John Bolton.
Click here to download the UN DPI Summaries of Member State Statements at the 72nd Plenary on the Human Rights Council.

Monday, March 13, 2006

Here's the entrance of the place I live.














The glorious phone booths where you can hear everything the person next door is saying and nothing that the person you're talking to is...




The cafe across the street from the nunnery, which supposedly doesn't serve Panini despite the huge sign on the window...I've never been there. I'm frightened frankly.
The nuns' hope sign in the entrance.















The mailboxes where I RARELY HAVE MAIL HINT HINT

Friday, March 10, 2006

Ok, so another post about the future, if you will...I have been thinking more and more about my master's degree partly because most of the people here have masters and mostly because I know that's basically the next step. I will be applying for grad school in January 2007. I know that much. The next step is where and for what...So, there are basically two paths out there for me: law or international relations/regional studies. I think that I will go to a university not in the U.S. for a different perspective and because they are so much cheaper. However, if I want to go the law route, I don't think that I will be able to get a law degree outside of the U.S. because I would have to get a bachelor of law first, so it would take a lot longer. I don't know if that's totally true, cause I don't understand the levels of law degrees really, but yeah. These are my thoughts right now. Would love feedback.

Thursday, March 09, 2006

A more text oriented post...Today one of the board members of ISHR joined us for a small talk this morning. He talked about his career and then spoke about careers in human rights and the options out there. He was saying that though learning the international system is important, most of the "world changing" action takes place at the national and sub-national level. It made me think about next steps and how I do need to have experience in Latin America if that's the area I'm interested in getting into. More later.




A toilet in Lausanne...


Even more Lausanne pictures


About the proposed human rights council that I have mentioned to some of you:
http://www.iht.com/articles/2006/03/02/opinion/edrobinson.php

This is the main cathedral in Lausanne from above.












This is a really funky tree that I found. Of course I got obsessive and had to take a bunch of pictures...























Lausanne rooftops. Not the most exciting picture..sorry. But I thought the steeple things were interesting....


More Lausanne pictures. To the left is a cathedral doorway in case that wasn't completely obvious...
Then some statue guy



All I have to say about this is SKETCH ME OUT. This was in a public restroom in Lausanne. I had to document. But I guess it goes along with that whole debate about providing safe methods for unsafe behaviors...

More Lausanne pics



Thursday, March 02, 2006

Last night I dreamt that Lil and I were both reading the same book - I think it was Middlesex - and she was really into it and was glued to it. I was so proud that I had inspired her/found a book that inspired her.

Wednesday, March 01, 2006



These pictures are of the cathedral in Lausanne. It's a city about 3/4 across the lake.







These are the lights in the trees down by the river in Geneva.


On the left is a snowy path that I went running on a couple weeks ago. It was such a beautiful evening that I had to take loads of pictures. It also snowed this morning, but the snow is mostly gone now - an hour or so later. Geneva basically shuts down in the "snow". The same night I took this picture I saw a man shoveling his front stoop - he was basically scraping the gravel - it was hilarious.
This is the Russian Church in Geneva.
Another picture from the snowy night - there are lots of birdfeeders along this path and it's just totally precious.


This is the blister I got my first week in Geneva - so painful I just had to take a picture. Sorry for any squeemish people out there.