 The shift is most obvious, perhaps, in Eilat, the small city in the south where Anei and several thousand African asylum seekers live. Here, refugees find their children barred from municipal schools.
The shift is most obvious, perhaps, in Eilat, the small city in the south where Anei and several thousand African asylum seekers live. Here, refugees find their children barred from municipal schools.
And in a move that has alarmed both human rights organisations and the local branch of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), the municipality has hung red flags throughout the city as part of a municipal campaign against African migrants - initiated by employees of the state of Israel and financed with public funds.
 
		 Human Rights Glance
 Human Rights Glance It becomes clearer every day that Binyamin Netanyahu's government is terrified by the prospect that the Palestinians are planning to unilaterally declare a state later this year. In fact, it is safe to say that no other proposed Palestinian action has ever shaken up any Israeli government the way that the idea of a unilateral declaration has.
It becomes clearer every day that Binyamin Netanyahu's government is terrified by the prospect that the Palestinians are planning to unilaterally declare a state later this year. In fact, it is safe to say that no other proposed Palestinian action has ever shaken up any Israeli government the way that the idea of a unilateral declaration has. 
 The Bush administration was so intent on keeping Guantanamo detainees  off U.S. soil and away from U.S. courts that it secretly tried to  negotiate deals with Latin American countries to provide "life-saving"  medical procedures rather than fly ill terrorist suspects to the U.S.  for treatment, a recently released State Department cable shows.
The Bush administration was so intent on keeping Guantanamo detainees  off U.S. soil and away from U.S. courts that it secretly tried to  negotiate deals with Latin American countries to provide "life-saving"  medical procedures rather than fly ill terrorist suspects to the U.S.  for treatment, a recently released State Department cable shows.
 Two priests, a nun and two women in their 60s who cut  through fences at Naval Base Kitsap-Bangor to protest submarine nuclear  weapons were sentenced Monday to prison terms ranging from two to 15  months.
Two priests, a nun and two women in their 60s who cut  through fences at Naval Base Kitsap-Bangor to protest submarine nuclear  weapons were sentenced Monday to prison terms ranging from two to 15  months. 
 












































