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Posts Tagged ‘memorial’

Improving Patient Care with iPhone

With thousands of doctors, nurses, and administrators, the Memorial Hermann Healthcare System depends on the latest mobile technologies to streamline its services and deliver better patient care. iPhone and state-of-the-art medical apps like AirStrip OB let Memorial Hermann physicians keep their fingers on patients’ pulses even when they can’t be at their bedsides.

Russian NGO wins EU human rights prize

Russian human rights group Memorial has been awarded the European Parliament’s 2009 Sakharov Prize for freedom of thought. Parliament president Jerzy Buzek announced that Lyudmila Alexeyeva, Sergei Kovalev and Oleg Orlov would receive the prize on behalf of Memorial, as well as all other defenders of human rights in Russia.

Serbs prevented from reaching memorial

Members of the Kosovo police, KPS, prevented a group of some 80 Serbs from traveling to Velika Hoča last night. They were traveling in a bus, a van and three cars, and intended to attend a ceremony of unveiling of a memorial dedicated to the kidnapped and murdered Serbs in the Orahovac municipality.

DJ AM Funeral

DJ AM will reportedly be laid to rest during a private memorial service “family only” in Los Angeles Wednesday.
According to E! Online, the funeral for the celebrity DJ, real name was Adam Goldstein, will take place at 3 PM PT at the Hillside Memorial Park and Mortuary in West Los Angeles.
Goldstein was found [...]

US political rivals unite at Kennedy memorial

Top Democrats and Republicans united on Friday to pay tribute to Senator Edward Kennedy, the powerful liberal from America’s pre-eminent political dynasty whose death has been treated like the passing of royalty. Dignitaries from both sides of the political aisle and overseas attended

Girl seriously injured in memorial park

A five-year-old girl, shot and wounded on Sunday from a weapon she found in a memorial park, is still in a critical condition. Reports said that the girl sustained her injuries in the Jajinci Memorial Park in Belgrade from a homemade weapon.

Joan Rivers Slams Brooke Shields Michael Jackson Tribute

We don’t think Joan Rivers was among the people feeling all warm and fuzzy inside during Brooke Shields’ touching Michael Jackson’s memorial service tribute last month.
Unfortunately, Joan’s lack of emotion can’t be blamed on the fact that after her thousandth facelift her tear ducts are now located in her ears.

The legendary comedienne has branded the [...]

Taiwan returns Chiang to memorial

Gate leading to Chiang Kai-shek memorial hall - 20 July 2009

Taiwan has restored the name of the island’s former ruler, Chiang Kai-shek, to a memorial hall, less than two years after it was removed.

Chiang’s legacy is a contentious issue on the island, which split from mainland China when his Nationalist side (KMT) lost the civil war in 1949.

The Democratic Progressive Party (DPP)took his name off the memorial hall in 2007 when they were in power.

The hall was built as a tribute to Chiang after his death in 1975.

The DPP removed his name from several landmarks and changed the name of the hall to the National Taiwan Democracy Memorial Hall.

The DPP said Chiang was a dictator who was responsible for the deaths of thousands of people in Taiwan.

But others remember him as laying the foundation for Taiwan’s current economic prosperity.

On Monday workers protected by hundreds of police changed the name back to Chiang Kai-shek Memorial Hall.

The ministry of education, responsible for the monument, said the DPP had changed the name of the hall in 2007 without parliamentary approval.

The memorial has become one of Taipei’s best-known landmarks and a popular tourist attraction.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

One Final Hurdle For Children’s Memorial Downtown Helipad

The controversial heliport proposed for the $1 billion new Children’s Memorial Hospital in Streeterville is one step away from final approval.

Rights group halts Chechnya work

Natalia Estemirova in Grozny, September 2007

The Russian human-rights group Memorial has suspended its activities in Chechnya following the murder of its prominent activist Natalia Estemirova.

"We cannot risk the lives of our colleagues even if they are ready to carry on their work," senior Memorial member Alexander Cherkasov said.

Ms Estemirova, who investigated alleged abuses by Chechnya’s Moscow-backed government, was shot dead on Wednesday.

The Kremlin condemned the murder, which has caused international concern.

Ms Estemirova was abducted from her home in the Chechen capital Grozny and her bullet-riddled body was found dumped in a forest a few hours later.

Memorial has accused the government of Chechnya’s Kremlin-backed President, Ramzan Kadyrov, of responsibility for the murder.

Mr Kadyrov denied any involvement and promised to investigate the killing personally. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Russian leader condemns killing

Russian president Dmitry Medvedev has expressed "outrage" at the murder of a prominent human rights activist, Natalia Estemirova.

He has ordered an inquiry into the killing of Ms Estemirova, who was investigating alleged abuses by government-backed militias in Chechnya.

She was abducted and bundled into a van as she left her home in the Chechen capital, Grozny, on Wednesday.

Her body was found in neighbouring Ingushetia, with gunshot wounds.

Ms Estemirova, 50, had been gathering evidence – for the Russian human rights organisation, Memorial – of a campaign of house-burnings by government-backed militiamen.

Accusation

The pro-Moscow Chechen president, Ramzan Kadyrov, said the perpetrators of the murder "deserve no support and must be punished as the cruellest of criminals", according to Russian news agency, Interfax.

But the chairman of Memorial, Oleg Orlov, has already accused Mr Kadyrov of involvement in the killing.

In a statement on its website, he said: "I know, I am sure of it, who is guilty for the murder of Natalia…His name is Ramzan Kadyrov."

Mr Orlov alleged that Mr Kadyrov, a former Chechen rebel turned Kremlin ally, had previously threatened Ms Estemirova, and considered her "a personal enemy".

Memorial is one of Russia’s best known human rights groups.

Ms Estemirova had worked with the activists Anna Politkovskaya, who was shot dead in 2006, and Stanislav Markelov, who was killed in January this year.

"There is no shred of doubt that she was targeted due to her professional activity"

Human Rights Watch

Obituary: Natalia Estemirova

In 2007 she was awarded the inaugural Anna Politkovskaya Prize, and had also received awards from the Swedish and European parliaments.

The New-York based human rights group Human Rights Watch (HRW) said Ms Estemirova had been working on "extremely sensitive" cases of human rights abuses in Chechnya.

"There is no shred of doubt that she was targeted due to her professional activity," said Tanya Lokshina, HRW Russian researcher in Moscow.

Campaign group Amnesty International said her murder was a consequence of the "impunity" allowed to persist by the Russian and Chechen authorities, and an attempt to gag civil society in the country.

‘Most to fear’

BBC Moscow correspondent Rupert Wingfield-Hayes, who met Ms Estemirova in Chechnya just six weeks ago, says she was engaged in very important and dangerous work.

She was investigating hundreds of cases of alleged kidnapping, torture and extra-judicial killings by Russian government troops or militias in Chechnya.

Our correspondent says it was the government-sponsored militias that had most to fear from her work.

She is the most recent in a long line of human rights activists and lawyers to have been killed or attacked in Russia.

Our correspondent says the history of this type of case over many years is that very rarely are the killers brought to justice.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Washington diary

By Matt Frei
BBC News, Washington

Different countries mourn their fallen in different ways.

US Marines carry the remains of Sgt Michael C. Roy, at Dover Air Force Base, Delaware, 10 July 2009

The flag-draped coffins of Italian soldiers are applauded as they prepare to get lowered into the ground.

In Israel, relatives and friends display unfettered and unembarrassed grief as they throw themselves on the coffins.

In America, a democracy which worships its military more than any other I know, the ritual after death in battle is dignified, understated and wrapped in etiquette.

If you have any doubts about this, I suggest attending a burial at Arlington National Cemetery.

The undulating fields of gravestones peer out over the National Mall, the Lincoln Memorial and Capitol Hill.

In Washington, the prize of liberty is architecturally linked to the price of life.

Respect

This country owes its creation to the blood of its soldiers and never lets you forget it.

The military is a part of every day life. At virtually every airport you see soldiers returning from the front in Afghanistan or Iraq.

The radio is full of spots advertising discounts for military families. On Memorial Day, Independence Day and Veterans Day, our neighbours – who loathed George W Bush and his war in Iraq – hang out a super-sized Stars and Stripes.

I was on the shuttle flight to New York last month with the usual crowd of Capitol Hill staffers – a few congressmen, some agitated banking executives and napping lobbyists.

Suddenly, the captain announced that we had some soldiers on board who had just returned from Iraq. The whole plane erupted in applause. Respect for the military transcends party lines and opinions about war.

So it always struck me and my American friends as odd that the Bush administration maintained the ban on footage of the flag-draped coffins of fallen soldiers returning from Iraq.

The ban was first implemented by Mr Bush’s father during the first Gulf War, in an attempt to avoid the kinds of images that had undermined support for the Vietnam War.

"There is plenty of personal material to put a face, a name and a story to the awful statistics of war"

Matt Frei in the BBC World News America studio

But the images themselves do not create a mood swing for or against a conflict, they merely underpin existing impressions.

The concealed coffins of Dover Air Force Base – a ban which has since been lifted by the Obama administration – mirrored the many veiled justifications for a war that was overshadowed by too many questions.

And so we come to Britain, a country that has gone to war more often than any of its European neighbours since World War II.

Britain fought the Falklands War in 1982 to much of the world’s astonishment.

For the Argentine writer Jorge Luis Borges it was like "two bald men fighting over a comb".

Worthy cause

Britain relishes a just war. Lady Thatcher egged on President George Bush Sr to dispatch troops to Saudi Arabia after Saddam Hussein’s invasion of Kuwait.

British public opinion was far more enthusiastic about a military engagement in the boggy Balkans than the House of Commons.

It was Tony Blair who persuaded Bill Clinton to use force in Kosovo.

Apparently, the two had a stand-up row in the Oval Office with the British Prime Minister shaming the American President into action.

The hearses containing the bodies of five fallen British soldiers make their way through the streets of Wootton Bassett, Wiltshire, 10 July

The Iraq war was the exception to the rule and Afghanistan is proving to be an interesting case.

After 9/11 there was very little opposition to the Afghan war.

The combination of going after al-Qaeda and removing a medieval regime that banned women’s education was considered a worthy cause.

The war appeared to be over almost before it began and warnings about the treacherous terrain of Afghanistan soon dissipated.

How things have changed.

In the space of two days last week, Britain lost eight soldiers, three of them just 18 years old.

Some of the soldiers had kept journals which have been reprinted in the press. Others had been featured on national TV before they were killed.

In other words, there is plenty of personal material to put a face, a name and a story to the awful statistics of war.

Insufficient armour

The town of Wootton Bassett, which is close to the air force base where coffins are flown into, has provided a chorus of grief.

Thousands of people lined the quaint streets on Tuesday to welcome back the fallen heroes.

Many cried. Others cheered. Uniformed veterans hung their heads in honour before applauding.

Wootton Bassett has done this 80 times since the beginning of the Afghan war and twice in the last week alone.

This is raw and unscripted grief, leavened by shock. Who knows where it will lead

Everyone is watching whether the beast of public outrage will stir once again.

It has done so often enough this year, most memorably over the MPs’ expenses scandal.

So far the picture is mixed. There have been some poignant questions about insufficient armour in Afghanistan.

They have been asked in some of the journals of the fallen soldiers, and repeated in the pub and on the floor of the House of Commons.

This is damaging and – almost inevitably – the government of the day will be blamed. Take cover, Gordon.

Every country hates the idea that its sons and daughters are being asked to risk their lives on the battlefield with dodgy equipment.

The latest opinion polls indicate that the public and parliament are still behind this war.

But the casualties mount, the possibility of defeat is discussed and the definitions of victory become increasingly woolly.

Britain still mourns its dead in Afghanistan with pride and applause. That may change if the cargo of coffins becomes more regular.

Meanwhile, Britain’s colonial history lingers uncomfortably on the sidelines.

In 1842, 16,000 men and their dependants evacuated Kabul after a disastrous occupation.

Only one of them, Dr William Brydon, a military surgeon survived.

The rest were killed by winter, hunger and Afghan tribesmen who resented the presence of armed foreigners and infidels on their soil.

The last thing that the British government now needs is for the public to start re-reading the history books.

Matt Frei is the presenter of BBC World News America which airs every weekday on BBC News, BBC World News and BBC America (for viewers outside the UK only).


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This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Jill Sobule: My Funeral and Memorial Service

Michael Jackson’s memorial made me realize that not only do I need to write up a will, but I also need to plan my own memorial service and tribute for when that inevitable time comes.

LA to foot Jackson memorial bill

Michael Jackson memorial

The city of Los Angeles will pay the costs of policing Michael Jackson’s memorial concert, its mayor has said.

"This is a world-class city and we provide fire and police protection," said Antonio Villaraigosa.

City council officials have suggested Jackson’s family and promoter AEG Live should pay some of the $1.4m (£860,000) needed for police and traffic control.

But Mr Villaraigosa said that "the idea we would charge the family for a funeral is nonsensical".

The mayor was on holiday in South Africa a week ago when more than 17,000 fans flocked to downtown Los Angeles to watch the public memorial.

In his absence a website was set up encouraging public donations to help cover the costs of last Tuesday’s event at the Staples Center.

‘Hard decisions’

Meanwhile, AEG Live’s chief executive has revealed he wants to stage a one-off London tribute concert featuring the Jacksons and other artists.

Speaking to 6 Music, Randy Phillips said "hard decisions" would need to made if the event was to take place on what would have been Michael Jackson’s 51st birthday.

"What we’re thinking about is one massive tribute that’s broadcast around the globe," he said.

However, he played down reports that a concert was already in the works featuring such artists as Leona Lewis and Justin Timberlake.

Mr Phillips also rejected calls for AEG to reimburse LA authorities for the costs incurred by last week’s memorial.

"I think the city should cover these costs," he said. "[When] someone of this fame dies, do you not give them a proper funeral"</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Srebrenica marks 14 years since massacre

The remains of 534 newly identified victims of the 1995 war crime in Srebrenica will be laid to rest at the memorial center in Potočari today. Today also marks the 14th anniversary of the massacre in this eastern Bosnian town, when Bosnian Serb forces, led by General Ratko Mladić, committed genocide by killing over 8,000 Bosniaks (Bosnian Muslims).