Global Voices: Daily Digest - Sep 8-14, 2011
September 8-14, 2011
Morocco: Multiple Arrests Against
Activists
There has been a sudden surge in arrests
among pro-democracy activists and online campaigners in
Morocco in recent days. Three have occurred in the past week
alone. Little has been reported in the press and it took
bloggers to report on the arrests for the mainstream media
in Morocco to pick up on the stories. read>>
Zimbabwe: Deluge of
Online Reactions to Latest WikiLeaks
Julian Assange's
WikiLeaks cables are raising an online storm among
Zimbabwe's netizens. The latest release, among other things,
quotes the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe Governor saying Mugabe
will die of prostate cancer before 2013. read>>
Bahrain: Medical Staff
Released After Hunger Strike
Bahrain yesterday
released doctors and medical personnel who have been behind
bars since March 2011, after increased international
condemnation and a series of hunger strikes by supporters
inside and outside the country. Mona Kareem reports. read>>
Philippines: Lolong,
World's Largest Crocodile
A 21-foot saltwater
crocodile is now under captivity in the Philippines and is
believed to be the largest of its kind in the world. Animal
rights activists are urging the government to release it
into the wilderness. Some netizens are comparing the
crocodile to corrupt politicians. read>>
Egypt: Turkey's
Response to Kurds Questioned as Erdogan Speaks in
Cairo
Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan's speech
about the Palestinian bid for a statehood at the Arab League
was translated online live by members of social networking
sites, namely Twitter, for those who did not speak Arabic or
Turkish. Ruwayda Mustafah reports. read>>
More posts on Global
Voices this week..
9/11 Retrospective: The Birth of a
Generation
Portugal: Citizens Ask Icelanders About
Democracy
Haiti: UN Troops Must Go, Say Haitians After
Rape Scandal
Japan: The Case of an Exposed Online
Pseudonym
Russia: Connecting Neighbors, Saving
Lives
China: Now With America's Attention
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ENDS