Tiphaine Dickson, the eloquent Canadian lawyer and the woman who drafted the
Yesterday, for the first time ever in recorded history (at least as best I can tell), the ENew York Times finally mentioned that Dickson exists, and lingered on her just long enough to report her activities at the trial as follows (UMarlise Simons, “Milosevic Loses Director Role In His Own Courtroom Drama,” Sept. 8):
Tiphaine Dickson, a Canadian lawyer attending the hearings, was one of 95 lawyers who signed a recent letter arguing that Mr. Milosevic had an absolute right to defend himself under international law. ”What is going on is unseemly,” she said.
Boy. It sure is good to see that alternative—and in Dickson’s case, dead-on—points of view are flooding the mainstream daily news accounts coming out of “Europe’s biggest war crimes trial since Nuremberg,” and keeping the populations back in the states that sponsor this august body so well informed about it.
Slobodan Milosevic: Iintetho kunye nodliwano-ndlebe (Iphepha lasekhaya)
Ukunyanzeliswa koMcebisi kuSlobodan Milosevic Kusongela ikamva loMthetho wamazwe ngamazwe kunye noBomi boMmangalelwa (aka, Ileta evulekileyo), IKomiti yeZizwe ngezizwe yokukhusela uSlobodan Milosevic, ngoJulayi 29, 2004
"INkundla ye-ICTY yaseHague: Igumbi leNkwenkwezi!” Tiphaine Dickson, ngoSeptemba 6
"UMarlise Simons kwiNkundla yaseYugoslavia: Uphononongo kwiNkonzo yePropaganda epheleleyo,” Edward S. Herman noDavid Peterson, ZNet, 2004
Uvavanyo lweMilosevic I, ZNet Blogs, Agasti 31
Ulingo lweMilosevic II, ZNet Blogs, Septemba 7
I-ZNetwork ixhaswa ngemali kuphela ngesisa sabafundi bayo.
Nikela