By Anonymous (not verified) , 23 October, 2005
Author
Eddie Lopez

The death count is NOT under 2000. Here are the numbers the Associated Press is leaving out.

According to the Department of Defense these are the official numbers:

Operation Iraqi Liberation (OIL):

Combat Ops 3/19/03 to 4/30/03 - 139 Deaths

Post Combat Ops 5/1/03 to 10/21/05 - 1,839 Deaths

DoD Civilians - 5 Deaths

Total: 1,983 Deaths

By Anonymous (not verified) , 22 October, 2005
Author
Dire Wolf

News on Plame Gate. War on Iraq. Crimes of the ADL (more to come). William Cooper Interview with Jordan Maxwell.
size: 56MB
duration: Aprox 2hrs

By Anonymous (not verified) , 22 October, 2005
Author
CKUT Radio interview by Samaa Elibyari

Professor Anita Weiss specializes in Pakistan and South Asia, she has just co-edited a book on Power and Civil Society in Pakistan. Caravan spoke with Professor Weiss earlier this week.

By Anonymous (not verified) , 22 October, 2005
Author
Robbie Sinnott

3mins, mp3, 32kps

Neil Steedman of TSGI outlines what Irish people, if not everyone globally can do to try to alleviate some of the difficulties faced by Tibetans today.

By Anonymous (not verified) , 22 October, 2005
Author
Robbie Sinnott

10min, mp3, 32kbps

In the third part, Yungchen outlines Tibetan strategy of spiritual resistance, and non-hatred. Yungchen suggests that the world under capitalism will face many hardships if humans continue to alienate themselves with materialism.

By Anonymous (not verified) , 22 October, 2005
Author
Robbie Sinnott

mp3, 5mins, 32kbps

In the next five minutes, she speakss about the destruction of Tibet’s landscape, before describing debilitating health issues among the neglected indigenous population.

By Anonymous (not verified) , 22 October, 2005
Author
Robbie Sinnott

5m34s, mp3, 32kbps

In the first five minutes, Yungchen explains the importance of singing to her and the impact that Chinese imperilaism has had on her culture.

By Anonymous (not verified) , 22 October, 2005
Author
Robbie Sinnott

22 min studio interview, mp3, 128kbps (FM-friendly).

Interview with Hungchen Lhamo (from Tibet) and Neil Steedman (Tibet Support Group Ireland).

Yungchen Lhamo is a singer and Tibetan exile. At the age of 15 she trekked through the Himalayas to India, but the sense of loss and yearning for her country is palpable in her conversation.

The same interview is segmented at lower resolution for all sorts of internet connections lower down, and synopsis given under those headings.