Countries, for $200.
And the answer is:
When assuming the presidency of this country, this tall young man with protuberant ears, an elite education and a beautiful savvy wife raised hopes about change among its citizenry. In the intervening years, rather than prosecuting the members of the prior administration who had authorized torture and violated its citizens' rights through domestic spying, invasion of privacy and extrajudicial detention, the president not only allowed the policies to remain, but retained many members of the prior administration responsible for them.
While some legitimate voices have been heard in the media and on the streets criticizing the President's record on human rights, they have been too few. Rather, the president has been attacked under the guise of "freedom of speech" by groups whose sources of support are not transparent, by conservative leaders seeking to advance their own political careers, or by those representing portions of the population who would diminish the rights of women and minorities, attack the nation's infrastructure and civil servants, seek to undermine the President's modest economic accomplishments and remove the president from office (even by force).
Hint: While Canada has apologized to Maher Arar, this country has not.