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2008年度世界“最恶劣独裁者”评选结果

2008年度世界“最恶劣独裁者”评选结果

美国杂志《Parade》为《华盛顿邮报》下属的周刊。该杂志的 2008年度世界“最恶劣独裁者”评选结果公布了。北朝鲜的金胖子登顶排名第一,恭喜恭喜!!我们经常在央视上面见到的那位,这次排名No.5,老百姓也可以烧鞭炮庆祝了~

这个排名历来都是竞争异常激烈的,我们应该珍惜这种来之不易的胜利!光看看这几年冠军宝座的变化就知道竞争有多残酷:2003-2004是金胖子蝉联,2005-2007年的冠军则是实力强劲的来自苏丹的奥尔马,终于到了今年金胖子再次发力,扳回一城!

今年的No.5在2002年上岗,现在我们来看看他在以前的排名:

2003年: 前10不进

2004年: No.3

2005年: No.4

2006年: No.6

2007年: No.4

从这里看出,No.5上岗一年后便开始进入状态,至今保持着还不错的战绩。看看今年大家对他的得奖评价:“Last year, No.5 came
down harder on human-rights activists and increased censorship. No.5’s
government also forces abortions, controls all media and harshly limits
the practice of religion. There’s little criminal justice to be found
in China—99% of all trials result in a guilty verdict.”——
提到了他在人权、法律审查方面的付出。还表扬了他在舆论控制、宗教限制方面的努力。作为褒扬的例子,列举了99%的被告在法庭上都被判为有罪的高效的法律
体系。

最后,我们来看看今年的排行榜:

1. 北朝鲜的金胖子

2. 苏丹的奥尔马

3. 缅甸的 Than

4. 沙特阿拉伯的King

5. (就不告诉你!气死你!!)

6. 津巴布韦的Robert

7. 伊朗的Sayyid

8. 巴基斯坦的Pervez

9. 乌兹别克斯坦的Islam

10. 厄立特里亚的Isayas

总之,无论如何恭喜上述各位获奖者。感谢联合国,感谢几年前宣布不再参加评奖的萨达姆,感谢13亿合作的国民,感谢陈冠希,感谢周正龙,感谢CCTV!
诸法因缘生,诸法因缘灭

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感谢楼主,在春节邦我们把悲伤转化成快乐。

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太棒了,明年的第一可能会是金三世哦

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6和7的排名太低了把,呵呵
不是别人高大,而是因为人家站着,自个跪着。也许注定要跪着生存,但也要尝试着站立思考!!
================================
人类的标志,不是直立行走,而是站立思考。

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5. (就不告诉你!气死你!!)
谁会被气死啊?????
http://langliyi.blog.163.com/

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NO.5就是:打死我也不说!

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NO.5 嘘~~

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强烈支持NO:5 在牛年更牛气,一举拿下NO:1!

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提示: 作者被禁止或删除 内容自动屏蔽

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No.5之歌:
你是电,你是光,你是唯一的神话...........

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这种排名一点意义都没有,媒体不过是为政治服务的工具而已

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伊朗的Sayyid??人家可是全民普选上去的

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乌兹别克斯坦也是啊.

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引用:
原帖由 天边的老狼 于 2009-1-29 07:24 AM 发表
伊朗的Sayyid??人家可是全民普选上去的

NO:5也到处说他是全中国人民选的呢!你选过没有?反正没让我选,或许把我没往“中国人民”里算。

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我还以为金胖子年年第一呢,榜单上有好几位都不怎么熟悉啊
中国就是一部悬疑连续剧:上集《多难》,下集《兴邦》;都60多年了,上集还没结束。

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有网站链接吗?发过来看看~~我不希望是造谣的宣传!!!更希望看到事物的另一面~~谢谢了!!如果是轮子的,就算了!

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布什才是世界最恶劣独裁者

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回复 #14 我爱宝_马 的帖子

可内贾德确实是全民普选上去的。不能因为伊朗反美就把他归到独裁行列里吧。

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No.5,yes he can
Facebook 的原罪是它能让人认识想认识的人。 Twitter 的原罪是它能让人说出想说的话
。 Google 的原罪是它能让人知道想知道的东西。 Yootube 的原罪是它能让人证明需要证
明的现实。

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引用:
原帖由 woshiputao 于 2009-1-29 07:14 PM 发表

有网站链接吗?发过来看看~~我不希望是造谣的宣传!!!更希望看到事物的另一面~~谢谢了!!如果是轮子的,就算了!

http://www.parade.com/dictators/2008/profiles/hu-jintao.html
这个是google搜索的链接,”Internet Explorer 无法显示该页面“(不要问我为什么)




[ 本帖最后由 blank001 于 2009-1-30 11:28 AM 编辑 ]
诸法因缘生,诸法因缘灭

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但是很多外国网站和博客都有转载,下面是从其他网站下载的原文:
引用:

">ffice:smarttags" name="place">">ffice:smarttags" name="country-region">

Parade Magazine’s World’s Worst Dictators: 2008

 

1.  Kim Jong-il

Country: North Korea

Age: 66

In Power Since 1994

Last Year's Rank: 2

Kim Jong-il runs the most isolated, repressive regime in the world. His citizens have no access to information other than government propaganda. His harsh system includes collective punishment (three generations of a family can be punished for one member’s alleged crime); detainment of roughly 200,000 citizens in labor camps; and the capture, torture and jailing of those who try to flee to China.

§  U.S. LINK: Last year, Kim’s government carried out its pledge to the U.S. and other nations to shut down its nuclear reactors. However, it missed December’s deadline to disclose its full nuclear inventory. 

 

2. Omar Al-Bashir

Country: Sudan

Age: 64

In Power Since 1989

Last Year's Rank: 1Under Bashir’s rule, the Darfur region of Sudan continues to be the site of a violent power struggle among government forces and allied militia, rebels and bandits. In 2007, Bashir ordered aerial bombing raids that killed dozens of civilians. While Bashir did appoint an official to investigate the human-rights situation in Darfur, the appointee himself has been suspected of war crimes by the International Criminal Court.

§  U.S. LINK: The U.S. government has harshly criticized the abuses in Sudan. The Clinton Administration issued trade sanctions in 1997, but it exempted gum arabic, which is used in products ranging from soft drinks and candy to shoe polish and stamps. The U.S. still imports more than 4000 tons of the substance from Sudan annually.

 

3.  Than Shwe

Country: Burma (Myanmar)

Age: 75

In Power Since 1992

Last Year's Rank: 6

In August and September, Buddhist monks led pro-democracy demonstrations against 45 years of military rule. Than Shwe ordered troops to fire at the crowds: They killed dozens of protestors, and his forces detained several thousand more. Burma’s symbol of democracy, Nobel Peace Prize-winner Aung San Suu Kyi, remains under house arrest.

§  U.S. LINK: President Bush ended imports from Burma in 2003, but the U.S. sells the country more than $7 million in exports each year. After the fall crackdowns, Bush accused Than Shwe of “vicious persecution.”

 

 

4.  King Abdullah

Country: Saudi Arabia

Age: 84

In Power Since 1995

Last Year's Rank: 5

Under King Abdullah, Saudi Arabia adheres to a punitive justice system in which young teens can be sentenced to death and defendants tortured. Women are more oppressed than in any other country—they can’t even seek medical care without a male guardian’s permission.

§  U.S. LINK: Every President since the 1940s has sought good relations with petroleum-rich Saudi Arabia. American companies have sold its government more than $15 billion in arms in the last decade. Last year, U.S. oil imports totaled more than $30 billion. King Abdullah promised to crack down on extremists after we learned that 15 of the 9/11 hijackers were Saudis. Yet researchers at West Point say that the largest number of al-Qaeda fighters in Iraq still come from Saudi Arabia.

 

5.  Hu Jintao

Country: China

Age: 65

In Power Since 2002

Last Year's Rank: 4

Last year, Hu came down harder on human-rights activists and increased censorship. Hu’s government also forces abortions, controls all media and harshly limits the practice of religion. There’s little criminal justice to be found in China—99% of all trials result in a guilty verdict.

§  U.S. LINK: China is a close economic ally and our second leading trade partner (behind Canada). Our country’s trade deficit with China stands at almost $1 billion a day, and the U.S. government owes Chinese lenders $388 billion. At the same time, a 2007 report to Congress said that Chinese espionage activities in the United States “comprise the single greatest risk to the security of American technologies.”

 

6.  Robert Mugabe

Country: Zimbabwe

Age: 83

In Power Since 1980

Last Year's Rank: 7

Zimbabwe’s economy went from bad to worse last year. Inflation exploded to more than 8000%, unemployment reached 80%, and food supplies continued to dwindle. One-quarter of the country’s population has fled. Nevertheless, Mugabe is running for a sixth term. The opposition is trying to unite, but police arrested and beat 50 opposition leaders last March.

§  U.S. LINK: American politicians from both parties have condemned Mugabe’s many abuses, and Bush called Zimbabwe’s policies “an assault on its people” in a September speech to the United Nations. However, U.S. trade with Zimbabwe has increased in each of the last four years, led by our imports of the metals ferrochromium and nickel (both used to make stainless steel).

 

 

7.  Sayyid Ali Khamenei

Country: Iran

Age: 68

In Power Since 1989

Last Year's Rank: 3

While a recent intelligence report concluded that Iran had halted its nuclear-weapons program, the Ayatollah Khamenei and his council have adopted increasingly repressive measures. Last year, officials carried out public hangings, stoned a man to death for adultery, shut down music studios and cafés, and persecuted dissidents.

§  U.S. LINK: The U.S. seemed on the verge of attacking Iran last year, and Bush recently called it “the world’s leading state sponsor of terrorism.” Still, trade has increased, and U.S. exports to Iran rose from $8 million a year in 2001 to over $125 million a year in 2007.

 

8.  Pervez Musharraf

Country: Pakistan

Age: 64

In Power Since 1999

Last Year's Rank: 15

In recent months, Musharraf suspended Pakistan’s constitution, shut down the courts, arrested several thousand dissidents and passed a law removing challenges to his continuation as president. He allowed former prime ministers Nawaz Sharif and Benazir Bhutto to return to Pakistan but barred Sharif from running in elections. Bhutto was assassinated—an act that some observers tie to Musharraf’s government.

§  U.S. LINK: The U.S. considers Pakistan a valuable economic and political ally. Americans bought almost $3 billion worth of Pakistani cotton clothing and fabrics in 2007. Even after Musharraf suspended the constitution, Bush said Musharraf had “advanced democracy in Pakistan.” The U.S. has given him more than $7 billion in military aid in the last six years, which critics say has largely been spent on arms to fight India, not terrorists.

 

9.  Islam Karimov

Country: Uzbekistan

Age: 70

In Power Since 1989

Last Year's Rank: 8

The Uzbek constitution imposes a two-term limit, but Karimov was elected to a third term in December. His government engages in routine torture of citizens and has subjected dissenters to forced psychiatric treatment.

§  U.S. LINK: The U.S. showed little interest in Uzbekistan until 9/11, when its 85-mile border with Afghanistan made it an appealing ally. Karimov allowed U.S. forces to use an Uzbek air base but kicked the Americans out after Bush criticized Karimov for ordering the massacre of hundreds of people. Nonetheless, U.S. imports have doubled since 2002 because Uzbekistan has a rich supply of uranium, which is needed for our power plants and weapons.

 

 

10.  Isayas Afewerki

Country: Eritrea

Age: 62

In Power Since 1991

Last Year's Rank: 13

Afewerki’s ban on privately owned media makes Eritrea one of the world’s worst abusers of press freedom. During his rule, Afewerki has never allowed national elections or the implementation of a constitution.

§  U.S. LINK: The U.S. has provided aid and food to Eritrea, but Afewerki ordered American aid workers out in 2005. The U.S. still conducts trade with Eritrea, but it’s largely limited to our country’s export of sorghum.




诸法因缘生,诸法因缘灭

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后面还有11-20
引用:

ffice:smarttags" name="place">ffice:smarttags" name="country-region">

11.  Muammar al-Qaddafi    Country:
Libya      Age:
65



In
Power Since 1969  
Last Year's Rank:
9



Long
considered an enemy of the United
  States
, Qaddafi has recently made peace with
the West.  The U.S. imported almost $3 billion
worth of Libyan oil last year, and the Libyans have purchased airplanes and
oilfield equipment from our country.



 



 



12.  Bashar al-Assad          Country: Syria        Age: 42



In
Power Since 2000  
Last Year's Rank:
10



On
the one hand, the United
  States
considers Assad’s government to be a
supporter of Islamic terrorist organizations. 
On the other hand, in a well-documented case the U.S. kidnapped
Syrian-Canadian Maher Arar and handed him over to Syrian authorities to be
tortured and interrogated, before he was finally released without charge.  



 



13.  Teodoro Obiang Nguema     Country: Equatorial
  Guinea



Age:
65     In Power Since 1979  
Last Year's Rank: 11



U.S. oil companies
enjoy good business relations with Obiang, and last year, the U.S.-based
security firm MPRI signed a contract to train Obiang’s personal Presidential
Guard. 



 



 



14.  King Mswati III           Country: Swaziland
    Age: 39



In
Power Since 1986  
Last Year's Rank:
12



King Mswati is the last
remaining absolute monarch in Africa. The U.S. provides training for the king’s defense
forces through our International Military Education and Training program, and Swaziland has
been declared eligible to receive military equipment through the U.S. Excess
Defense Articles program. Alarming health fact: Swaziland has the world’s highest
rate of AIDS/HIV, with 25.9% of its citizens between ages 15 and 49 infected
with the disease.



 



 



15.
 Meles Zenawi             Country: Ethiopia               Age:
52



In
Power Since 1995  
Last Year's Rank:
17



When
the United States became
involved in the conflict in neighboring Somalia,
it chose Ethiopia
as its regional partner, providing support for former guerrilla leader Meles
Zenawi.  The U.S.
has even given its approval to North
  Korea
’s Kim Jong-il to sell weapons to Meles
Zenawi.



 



16.  Aleksandr Lukashenka   Country: Belarus
  Age: 53



In
Power Since 1994  
Last Year's Rank:
14



Lukashenka is Europe’s only dictator and is considered a pariah on the
international scene.  In November, the
U.S. Treasury Department announced new sanctions against certain Belarusan
businesses.  Nonetheless, U.S.
trade with Lukashenka’s country has actually increased for eight straight
years, driven by American purchases of oil and potash (a kind of fertilizer).



 



17.  Hosni Mubarak           Country:
Egypt
     Age: 79



In
Power Since 1981  
Last Year's Rank:
18



According to the U.S. State
Department, Mubarak has the ability to transfer any criminal case from the
civilian judicial system to a military court, and the use of torture by his
officials is common.  In recent months
journalists have been jailed for “ insulting the president.” The U.S. gives Egypt $2 billion in aid a year,
including $1.3 billion in military assistance.



 



18.  Raúl Castro                  Country: Cuba       Age: 76



In
Power Since 2006  
Last Year's Rank:
Unranked



Due
to health problems, Fidel Castro transferred power to younger brother Raúl in
2006.  Even before that, Raúl had long
been in charge of Cuba’s
military, which also manages GAESA, a huge conglomerate of Cuban businesses
involved in tourism, mining, consulting, construction and international
trade.  Although the U.S. government maintains a strict ban on
importing goods from Cuba, U.S. exports to Cuba, primarily food products, have
grown from $7 million in 2001 to about $400 million in 2007.  The Castro regime also keeps a stranglehold
on the media. Since 2003, some 24 journalists have been imprisoned and three
foreign reporters were forced to leave the country, according to the Committee
to Protect Journalists. No publication is permitted.



 



19.  Choummaly Sayasone     Country: Laos        Age:
71



In
Power Since 2006  
Last Year's Rank:
16



Laos is run by an
old-fashioned Communism Party headed by elderly men, and Choummaly Sayasone
sits at the top.  Between 1964 and 1973,
the U.S. dropped two million
tons of bombs on Laos—1
000 pounds of explosives for every man, woman and children in the country.  Twenty-five years later, the two nations are
friendly, and trade between the U.S.
and Laos
doubled over the last year.



20.  Idriss Déby           Country: Chad       Age: 55



In
Power Since 1990   
Last Year's Rank:
Unranked



The
United States
has criticized Déby’s government for a wide range of human-rights abuses,
including the use of torture, politically-motivated disappearances and
life-threatening prison conditions. 
However, Chad is a
major producer of oil, and last year the U.S. bought about $2 billion worth
of the product from it. 



 





诸法因缘生,诸法因缘灭

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努力,努力,明年争做第一!

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引用:
原帖由 天边的老狼 于 2009-1-29 05:24 AM 发表
伊朗的Sayyid??人家可是全民普选上去的

这里说的是精神领袖哈梅内伊,不是Ahmadinejad

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独裁其实在某一方面也是有好处的,只要适应经济发展,存在即合理

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