1. We are still dealing with major problems from the last guy from Texas. We don't need another retarded president from there.
  2. R.I.P. Václav Havel

  3. Kim Jong Il has passed away at the age of 69.

    What say you, forum loggers of u2start.
  4. one hero and one enemy of freedom died almost simultaneously .. curious
  5. Originally posted by U2fan:We are still dealing with major problems from the last guy from Texas. We don't need another retarded president from there.


    Just ignore his solid economic record.
  6. Originally posted by stj0691Kim Jong Il has passed away at the age of 69.

    What say you, forum loggers of u2start.


    The guy was crazy. All of you probably already saw on YouTube how his people cried for him, but that's just the way it is. They are completely isolated and don't really know how life looks outside of their borders.
  7. There were reports that many of the people who were filmed crying and moaning for him, were actually threatened to do so.
  8. North Korea is probably the worst stain on this planet. Let's hope their new leader is sensible and decides to start turning the country into a democracy. Maybe if he was educated in Switzerland...
  9. This has been on the news for months here in Sweden.

    2011-12-21

    Swedes convicted over Ethiopian rebel links

    Two journalists, detained after gun battle between Ethiopian troops and rebels, found
    guilty over links to banned group.
    Last Modified: 21 Dec 2011 12:21
    The journalists were slightly injured in the fighting in which several rebels were killed [Reuters]
    An Ethiopian court has found two Swedish journalists guilty of helping and promoting an outlawed rebel group, and
    entering the Horn of Africa nation illegally.
    Reporter Martin Schibbye and photographer Johan Persson were arrested in Ethiopia's Ogaden region on July 1
    during clashes between Ethiopian forces and fighters of the separatist Ogaden National Liberation Front (ONLF) with
    whom the pair had been travelling.
    "Guilty as charged, period, unanimous vote. They have shown that they are esteemed journalists, but we cannot
    conclude that someone with a good reputation doesn't engage in criminal acts," Judge Shemsu Sirgaga told the
    court.
    The pair could face up to 15 years in prison when they are sentenced on December 27.
    Charges of participating in terrorism were dropped last month due to a lack of evidence.
    The Ethiopian government has blacklisted the ONLF as a terrorist group, and recently adopted legislation outlawing
    promotion of the rebels' activities.2011-12-21
    2/2
    Source: Al Jazeera and agencies
    'Off limits'
    Ogaden area is off limits to foreigners and the duo entered Ethiopia from Somalia without visas. The journalists were
    slightly injured in the fighting in which several rebels were killed.
    They admitted contact with the outlawed ONLF but rejected accusations that they received weapons training.
    In Sweden, Fredrik Reinfeldt, the Swedish Prime Minister, said the Swedish government will immediately contact
    high-level officials in the Ethiopian government.
    "Our starting point is and remains that they have been in the country on a journalistic mission. They should be freed
    as soon as possible to be able to reunite with their families in Sweden," Reinfeldt said.
    Speaking with the TT news agency, the journalist's Swedish lawyer, Thomas Olsson, said he hoped the court would
    decide to deport rather than imprison Schibbye and Persson.
    "The hope is that they will nullify the charge related to terror crimes and be satisfied with deporting Martin and Johan
    because they entered the country illegally," the said.
    "Of course, it depends somewhat on how the court views their reason for entering the country. There are sentencing
    guidelines calling for up to 10 years in prison if the purpose was subversive, that is to say, if one had the intention of
    damaging the Ethiopian state. But since no such reason has been established, the hope is that they will settle on
    deporting them."
    'Journalistic catastrophe'
    Ulrika Knutson, chair of Sweden's National Press Club, condemned the guilty verdict as a "human, political, and
    journalistic catastrophe".
    "We still don't know how long the penalty will be. When we do know, the Swedish government must use all its powers
    to see that Martin Schibbye and Johan Persson come home as quickly as possible,” she told Journalisten.se, the
    newspaper of the Swedish journalists' union.
    Jesper Bengtsson, chair of the Swedish branch of Reporters without Borders, also called on the Swedish government
    to take a more active role in the case of the Swedish journalists, calling their conviction a “blow against press
    freedom”.
    "This is a major blow against quiet diplomacy as well," he told the Svenska Dagbladet (SvD) daily.
    "I'm assuming that the lack of sharply-worded statements that has existed in the past will be corrected now."