I can confirm that this is still a problem in Feisty.

Using a CoolerMaster USB-SATA device with ntfs, vfat and ntfs partitions
(yes, two ntfs) I'm given only an "Eject" option in Nautilus/Desktop (no
"Unmount Volume" option like I get for network shares). Selecting the
Eject option unmounts all three partitions, gives a "Cannot eject
volume" error and then remounts all three partitions a second or so
later. If the "Disk Mounter" applet is running an empty error dialog
also pops up.

For me "sudo unmount /media/sdg?" and "sudo eject /media/PartitionName"
will both unmount the device so that it can be unplugged safely (albeit
hacking through Terminal *and* requiring a sudo privelege), so I'm kinda
in agreeance here with Sergio that the Eject command needs to be fixed
in hal.

Although I can't think of any reason why it would benefit me,
personally, there probably is a case for having an "Unmount Volume"
command for each partition of multi-partition devices so that they can
be unmounted individually. Avoiding accidental writes to the wrong
partition is probably a good reason.

I have to disagree with Mikele, though, where he says that USB storage
devices _cannot_ be ejected. There are plenty of USB devices that can
and do have a real eject function. Syquest-like devices on a USB-
SCSI/IDE bridge accept and act on Eject commands, spinning down the
cartridge and disengaging it for manual completion. Plus Zip and Jazz
drives, and Sony electronic-eject floppy drives, CD/DVD's, etc. There's
bound to be a few DLT's around as well. Having a working Eject command
would be a requirement for those devices.

-- 
nautilus, media containing multiple partitions cannot be unmounted(with eject) 
(USB connected)
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/108643
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