Saturday, April 20, 2013

France won't block U.S. proposal on Western Sahara: envoys

By Louis Charbonneau

UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - France, Morocco's traditional protector on the U.N. Security Council, is unlikely to use its veto to block a U.S. proposal to have U.N. peacekeepers monitor human rights in the disputed territory of Western Sahara, envoys said.

The U.S. proposal was contained in a draft U.N. Security Council resolution Washington circulated to the so-called Group of Friends on Western Sahara, which includes the United States, France, Spain, Britain and Russia, U.N. diplomats said this week on condition of anonymity.

"We don't expect France will block," a diplomat from one of the Group of Friends countries said on condition of anonymity on Wednesday. The diplomat was confirming a French media report. Another U.N. diplomat on Thursday confirmed the remarks.

"It is between the U.S. and Morocco," the first envoy said.

The draft resolution is intended to extend the mandate of the U.N. mission in Western Sahara for another year. It was to be put to a vote in the Security Council this month.

France's Foreign Ministry said negotiations continued.

"We will decide when the time comes," a French diplomat said in Paris.

French U.N. Ambassador Gerard Araud told reporters on Thursday, "We are ready to vote the American text if it is put on the table." He did not indicate how Paris would vote.

A "yes" vote or an abstention would allow the resolution to pass. Diplomats said Morocco, a temporary council member through the end of 2013, would probably vote against a resolution calling for rights monitoring in Western Sahara.

The idea of making U.N. human rights monitoring one of the tasks of the U.N. peacekeeping mission for Western Sahara, known as MINURSO, is something Morocco opposes but rights groups and the Polisario Front independence movement have long advocated.

France, Rabat's traditional protector on the 15-nation Security Council, in the past has been prepared to block such proposals. But that is no longer the case, diplomats said.

ANGRY RESPONSE FROM MOROCCO

The U.S. suggestion for a human rights monitoring component of MINURSO came after Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon told the Security Council he advocated "sustained" independent human rights monitoring for the territory.

Morocco was annoyed by the U.S. proposal and canceled planned joint U.S.-Moroccan military exercises in response.

In U.N.-mediated talks, Rabat has tried to convince Polisario, which represents the Sahrawi people, to accept its plan for Western Sahara to be an autonomous part of Morocco.

Polisario instead proposes a referendum among ethnic Sahrawis that includes an option of independence, but there is no agreement between Morocco and Polisario on who should participate in any referendum.

No state recognizes Morocco's rule over Western Sahara but the Security Council is divided. Some non-aligned states back Polisario but France has supported Rabat.

Polisario accuses Morocco of routine human rights violations in Western Sahara and wants MINURSO to have the authority to conduct independent human rights monitoring.

In a report, Ban argued in favor of independent rights monitoring but offered no details on how it should be done.

"Given ongoing reports of human rights violations, the need for independent, impartial, comprehensive and sustained monitoring of the human rights situations in both Western Sahara and the (refugee) camps becomes ever more pressing," Ban said.

(Additional reporting by John Irish in Paris and Michelle Nichols in New York; Editing by Doina Chiacu)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/france-wont-block-u-proposal-western-sahara-envoys-174650896.html

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Tuesday, April 16, 2013

PFT: Steelers could end up regretting Sanders deal

Bernard PollardAP

Titans safety Bernard Pollard likes to talk.? But he won?t be doing any more talking about his most recent team and/or the reasons he no longer plays in Baltimore.

?As far as talking about any disappointments, I?m a Tennessee Titan now and I could really care less about that,? Pollard said, via John Glennon of the Tennessean.? ?I?ve talked about it too much and I?ve answered that question so many times, talking about mutiny and this and that and the Baltimore Ravens.

?Well you know what?? I?m no longer in Baltimore and I?m a Titan now.? [Titans] fans have embraced me.? They?ve been great.? For me, I?m ready to move on.? This is another chapter for me, and it?s going to be fun.?

Pollard previously complained about the perception that he was cut for voicing concerns in response to an invitation from coach John Harbaugh to do so.? As we understand it, however, Pollard?s comments in connection with the incident that a player described to Mike Silver of Yahoo! Sports as ?practically a mutiny? were just one example of Pollard?s habit of complaining too loudly and/or talking too much.

The situation landed on his new team?s radar screen.? ?By the time Bernard came in here, that had all been reported and addressed, but we all talked it over,? Titans G.M. Ruston Webster said, via Glennon.? ?I feel like we?re good there and we?ve covered our bases.? His positives for us would definitely outweigh the negatives.?

Pollard clearly has the ability.? The problem is that he eventually wears out his welcome ? as he did in Kansas City, Houston, and then Baltimore.? With the Titans desperate to win, a one-year gamble on a guy who can perform at a high level justifies the risk.? Especially since the controversy surrounding his departure from the Ravens could prompt Pollard to dial it back a bit.

Then again, Pollard already has no misgivings when it comes to addressing the link between new Titans assistant Gregg Williams and last year?s bounty scandal.

?I?m one of those guys that continues to say you don?t have to pay me to go out there and knock the [heck] out of somebody because that?s something I love doing anyway,? Pollard said.? ?If anything, the club is already paying me to do that.? I?m not saying the club is provoking us to go out there and hit anybody, but just to get things done and to make things happen.?

Pollard is definitely going to make things happen in Tennessee.? Some good, some maybe not so good.? The Titans believe that, for now, the balance will tip toward the things that will help the team win games.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2013/04/14/barring-a-long-term-deal-steelers-will-regret-matching-sanders-offer/related/

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Saturday, April 13, 2013

A country song, assumptions _ and a racial outcry

FILE - This combination of file photos shows Brad Paisley, left, in Hollywood, Calif. on Nov. 1, 2011 and LL Cool J in Los Angeles on Feb. 10, 2013. Southern white men don't usually drive racial dialogue. For as long as race has riven America, they have been depicted more often as the problem than the solution. So the country music star must have been unsurprised at the days of widespread criticism of his new song ?Accidental Racist,? which details the challenges facing a ?white man from the southland? and then features LL Cool J rapping a black perspective. (Photos by Jordan Strauss/Invision/AP, File)

FILE - This combination of file photos shows Brad Paisley, left, in Hollywood, Calif. on Nov. 1, 2011 and LL Cool J in Los Angeles on Feb. 10, 2013. Southern white men don't usually drive racial dialogue. For as long as race has riven America, they have been depicted more often as the problem than the solution. So the country music star must have been unsurprised at the days of widespread criticism of his new song ?Accidental Racist,? which details the challenges facing a ?white man from the southland? and then features LL Cool J rapping a black perspective. (Photos by Jordan Strauss/Invision/AP, File)

FILE - Brad Paisley performs during The Inaugural Ball at the Washignton convention center during the 57th Presidential Inauguration in Washington on Monday, Jan. 21, 2013. Southern white men don't usually drive racial dialogue. For as long as race has riven America, they have been depicted more often as the problem than the solution. So the country music star must have been unsurprised at the days of widespread criticism of his new song "Accidental Racist," which details the challenges facing a "white man from the southland" and then features LL Cool J rapping from a black perspective. (AP Photo/Paul Sancya)

FILE - A member of the United Daughters of the Confederacy collects Confederate flags after the Confederate Memorial Day ceremony at Magnolia Cemetery in Charleston, S.C. on Tuesday, May 10, 2011. Southern white men don't usually drive racial dialogue. For as long as race has riven America, they have been depicted more often as the problem than the solution. So the country music star Brad Paisley must have been unsurprised at the days of widespread criticism of his new song ?Accidental Racist,? which details the challenges facing a ?white man from the southland? and then features LL Cool J rapping from a black perspective. (AP Photo/The Post And Courier, Grace Beahm)

Southern white men don't usually drive racial dialogue. For as long as race has riven America, they have been depicted more often as the problem than the solution.

So after country music star Brad Paisley released his new song "Accidental Racist" this week, what happened next was hardly surprising: days of widespread criticism about his attempt to detail the challenges facing a "white man from the Southland" and his recruitment of LL Cool J to rap a black perspective.

The song sparked a predictable blaze this week on TV, talk radio and the Internet. USA Today asked if it was an "epic fail." At The Atlantic, Ta-Nehisi Coates titled his analysis, "'Accidental Racist' Is Actually Just Racist." More than a few ridiculed it as "the worst song ever."

Some elements of the outcry, however, raise less predictable questions: Where does naivet? turn into ignorance, and then into racism? What is the basis of modern Southern pride? And, possibly most important, should we grade racial attitudes on a curve?

Paisley begins the song with an anecdote about a black man taking offense to his Confederate flag T-shirt. "The only thing I meant to say is I'm a Skynyrd fan," Paisley sings, referring to the pioneering Southern rock group.

That scene actually happened to Paisley in real life, said Charlie Cook, programming director for West Virginia Radio Corp. and a member of the Country Music Association's board of directors, who heard Paisley discuss the song with a group of industry executives.

"He sat down and thought about it from another person's perspective and said, 'If I offended you, it was accidental,'" Cook said. "I think it's really from his heart."

That doesn't matter, say many of the critical voices. They say it's the result that counts ? a song that, to them, turns some of the most stinging flashpoints of American racial history into aw-shucks anecdotes. They are receiving a message very different from the one Paisley intended: the country-music staple of trying to figure out one's experiences through song.

Ignorance is no excuse for Demetria Irwin, who savaged "Accidental Racist" in a piece on the black news and culture website TheGrio.com.

"I think he had good intentions. I think he genuinely wanted to explore a topic," Irwin, who is black, said in an interview. However, "I don't believe he doesn't know what the Confederate flag symbolizes and what it means. There's nothing accidental about that."

"There's also just a general entitlement that some white people might have, the whole white privilege thing, being totally unaware of black culture in a real sense," she added.

The song's black culture was provided by LL Cool J, whose verses were widely panned as shallow. Coates pointed out that while rap is full of artists who are passionate about racial issues, LL is not one of them.

"The only real reason to call up LL is that he is black and thus must have something insightful to say about the Confederate Flag," wrote Coates, who is black. "The assumption that there is no real difference among black people is exactly what racism is."

Choosing LL, he said, is like "assuming that Paisley must know something about barbecue because he's Southern."

Being Southern comes with its own set of assumptions and stereotypes, some of them negative ones created by the low points of the region's history. Southern pride is largely a defensive reaction to such stigmas, said Eric Weisbard, a music critic and American Studies professor at the University of Mississippi.

So while some might see "Accidental Racist" as a ham-handed attempt to start a dialogue, it's part of a long tradition in which Southern musicians "try to talk about who they are in answer to what others dismissively assume they are," Weisbard wrote on NPR.org.

Much of the friction around the song comes from people who don't understand this history, Weisbard said in an interview: "We're as segregated culturally as we often are socially."

Many people are proud of being from the "heartland," New York City or other American places, Weisbard said. But "the South has been branded a problem for the country as a whole at least since the Civil War."

"In every generation, there's a new way in which white Southerners have marginalized themselves," he said, "and the rest of America has to think about what that means."

Paisley gave America something to think about with the chorus of the song: "I'm just a white man comin' to you from the Southland / Tryin' to understand what it's like not to be / I'm proud of where I'm from but not everything we've done / And it ain't like you and me can re-write history."

At the end of the chorus he sings, "Caught between Southern pride and Southern blame."

That's a gray area for Chris Newman, 25, a white West Virginia University graduate student who grew up in Lexington, Ky. He says Southern pride often is "flirting a fine line between being offensive and supporting historical heritage."

Hospitality, driving your truck through the mud, floating down a river or drinking bourbon in Kentucky are great ways to embrace Southern culture, he says. "But I don't run around wearing Confederate T-shirts. I have Lynyrd Skynyrd T-shirts, but they don't have stars and bars on them."

That's a deliberate choice: "If I respect somebody, I'm going to make sure I don't offend them," Newman said.

Newman doesn't believe "accidental racism" exists. But Luke Laird, a Nashville songwriter who has penned many chart-topping hits, has "absolutely" seen it while growing up in a small, mostly white town in western Pennsylvania.

"There were people who said things (that) I know if they actually knew what it meant, they would be horrified," said Laird, who is white.

Back in high school, Laird saw a Hank Williams Jr. shirt with a Confederate flag on it and thought, "that looks cool."

"To be completely honest, and it's probably just ignorance, but growing up I never really thought a lot about that flag and what it meant," Laird said.

"We all want to treat everyone equally, but the reality is we don't always do that," Laird said. "The reality is, it takes more of a conscious effort to try and see where the other people are coming from."

___

EDITOR'S NOTE ? Jesse Washington covers race and ethnicity for The Associated Press. He is reachable at http://twitter.com/jessewashington

___

AP Writers Vicki Smith in Charleston, W.Va. and Chris Talbott in Nashville contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2013-04-11-Accidental%20Racist/id-9386d7bfed914a179b40962bb1c0ad6b

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