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This
weblog focuses on reparations and compensation. Weblog is,
literally, a 'log' of the web - a diary-style site or page,
in which the author (a weblogger, or 'blogger') links to other
web pages he or she finds interesting, or writes various thoughts.
This weblog focuses on the issue of reparations and compensation,
largely in the political context and following political conflict.
It includes all press releases, current cases and other issues
of related interest. It has significant focus on the case
of reparations in South Africa following the Truth and Reconciliation
Commission, as well as lawsuits against companies supporting
apartheid.
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on
reparations and compensation
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Thursday, October 07, 2004
Should business pay for apartheid?Jon Robins wrote an interesting article in The Times recently, the article begins, "WHAT responsibility does IBM have for South Africans beaten and tortured under apartheid? A connection might not be apparent but Michael Hausfeld, an American lawyer, is arguing that there is one. The computer giant is one of 20 multinationals (including British ones such as Barclays Bank) being sued via the US courts under an arcane 18th-century statute for their role in supporting a racist regime. Last week Hausfeld, who was a leading lawyer in the legal action against the Swiss banks for Holocaust survivors, filed an amicus brief -or legal opinion -in a New York court on behalf of the Khulumani Support Group (the name means "speak out" in Zulu). "The decisions made by this court will shape the future of human rights litigation," he argues. "They will reverberate beyond the courthouse walls to the ears of officials and private (citizens) across the world." To read more of this article visit The Times Law Page, click on the link down the page and register. It is free and easy.
posted by Brandon at 5:13 AM
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