The best university in Iraq. Imagine the rest

From the www.monabaker.com archive (legacy material) Luke Harding | The Guardian | 23 September 2004 Broken or antiquated equipment, and too few chairs to go round. Luke Harding in Baghdad reports on what Saddam, sanctions and ‘shock and awe’ did to science. Standing in the physics laboratory of Baghdad University, Professor Raad Radhi points to the machine for measuring liquid

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Pulling Up the Welcome Mat

From the www.monabaker.com archive (legacy material) Interview with Tariq Ramadan | The Chronicle of Higher Education | 9 September 2004 Has academic freedom fallen victim to post-September 11 efforts to safeguard the country’s borders? For some people, the U.S. government’s revoking of a visa for Tariq Ramadan, a controversial Muslim scholar, has raised such questions. Are their concerns valid? Why

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The slaughter of Iraq's intellectuals

From the www.monabaker.com archive (legacy material) Andrew Rubin | New Statesman | 6 September 2004 Since the occupation began, some 200 leading Iraqi academics, most of them in the humanities and social sciences, have been killed. Is the CIA responsible?  Control, intimidation, and even murder of Iraqi intellectuals, professors, lecturers and teachers has become more or less systematic since the

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Ramadan's vital work

From the www.monabaker.com archive (legacy material) Peter Walshe | The Guardian | 1 September 2004 The department of homeland security’s de facto veto of the University of Notre Dame’s appointment of the Islamic scholar Tariq Ramadan to a chair in the Kroc Institute for International Peace Studies is offensive, not least as a denial of academic freedom (An oft-repeated ‘truth’,

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Tampa judge raises government's burden of proof in Al-Arian case

From the www.monabaker.com archive (legacy material) VICKIE CHACHERE | The Online Ledger | 5 August 2004 Prosecutors putting a former professor on trial on charges he raised money for the Palestinian Islamic Jihad will have to prove financial contributions to the group were used for terrorist attacks rather than charitable purposes, a federal judge has ruled. The ruling from U.S.

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