Europe |
US Official: Germany not Keen on Release of Guantanamo Inmate |
2007-03-02 |
![]() Kurnaz was arrested in Pakistan in late 2001 on suspicion of being a terrorist and spent more than four years in detention before being released without charge from Guantanamo in 2006. He says he was tortured and abused at the camp. German government officials have denied delaying the release of Kurnaz, who has Turkish citizenship, but grew up in Germany. The case is now under investigation by a parliamentary committee. Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier, who was former Chancellor Gerhard Schröder's chief-of-staff, has come under fire for his role. Steinmeier has said that the Schröder government repeatedly talked to US officials about the Kurnaz case and lobbied for his release. But Prosper, who left public service to work as an attorney at the beginning of the year, said he didn't know of any such conversations. "If the German government would have said: 'We want Kurnaz,' we would have immediately sat down to come to an agreement," Prosper said, according to German translations of the interview. Prosper added that it was "not a secret" that Kurnaz had been "considered for release" since 2002. |
Link |
International-UN-NGOs | |
Genocide tribunal calls for help | |
2005-06-19 | |
THE overloaded UN-backed tribunal trying key figures in the 1994 Rwandan genocide has asked for co-operation from the US Government to help it accomplish its mission. Erik Mose and Hassan Bubacar Jallow, the president and chief prosecutor of the tribunal, have appealed directly to Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice. They "re-emphasised the need for sufficient resources to implement the ICTR's (International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda) completion strategy".
The ICTR is due to wind up all trials - excluding appeal hearings - by the end of 2008. It is investigating people suspected of key roles in the organised killing of at least 800,000 minority Tutsis and moderate Hutus in a 100-day killing spree unleashed in April 1994. During a US visit, the ICTR officials also held talks with senators and house of representative members, as well as with Pierre-Richard Prosper, the US ambassador-at-large for war crimes issues. Since its founding by the UN in 1994, the ICTR has tried 25 people including former ministers, members of the Rwandan former army and a Catholic priest for their roles in the genocide before the Hutu army and killer militias were driven out by rebels. | |
Link |
Iraq-Jordan | ||||
U.S. Team Is Sent to Develop Case in Hussein Trial | ||||
2004-03-07 | ||||
WASHINGTON, March 6 â Following a White House directive, the Justice Department is sending a high-level team of prosecutors and investigators to Iraq to take charge of assembling and organizing the evidence to be used in a war crimes trial of Saddam Hussein, administration and Iraqi officials said in recent days. The previously undisclosed directive signed by Condoleezza Rice, President Bush's national security adviser, directs the government to take the initiative in preparing a case against Mr. Hussein that will ultimately be run by Iraqis. The order, issued in January, gives the Justice Department the authority to act as the lead agency in the effort.
For his part, Mr. Hussein, who has been under interrogation by American officials since his capture on Dec. 14, has revealed little that could be used in any trial, government officials said in recent days. He has discussed few specific issues and at times comports himself as a The effort to develop a case involves a delicate balancing act for the administration, which is trying to turn over as complete a brief as possible for the Iraqis to use against Mr. Hussein without appearing to dominate the process in a way that could undercut the independence of the Iraqi authorities. "We're trying to balance a bunch of interests here," said one senior administration official. "We intend to bring quite a few resources to the table but not too many so it looks like a completely American process."
Salem Chalabi, the Iraqi lawyer in charge of the war crimes issue, said in a recent interview that while he understood the administration's political needs, the trials might not occur until late in the year, after the American elections, and that Mr. Hussein might not even be the first defendant. "We need and welcome the Americans' help and role in this," Mr. Chalabi, nephew of Ahmad Chalabi, the leader of the Iraqi National Congress, said in a telephone interview from Iraq. "But no one should misunderstand that this will be an Iraqi process with decisions by Iraqis."
Mr. Chalabi also said the Iraqis might choose to try lesser-ranking officials before Mr. Hussein. "If you try a smaller-ranking person for a war crime like the attacks on the Kurds and he is found guilty, then all we have to do with respect to Saddam Hussein is show the chain of command," he said. Mr. Chalabi said the Iraqi Governing Council had assembled a list of about 45 Iraqi judges as candidates for the war crimes tribunals. The statute setting up the tribunals calls for three panels of five judges each to try people, and nine judges to serve on an appellate panel. He said those judges who were believed to have been sympathetic to the Hussein government were not eligible. Those who might be prejudiced because they or their families suffered at the hands of the government could not serve as judges but could only be investigators or prosecutors.
| ||||
Link |
Iraq |
Iraqi officials will be tried as war criminals |
2003-09-07 |
An official from the US State Department confirmed Saturday that a judicial mechanism will be put in place to pursue former Iraqi officials who have caused great damage to Kuwait. He also indicated they would be tried as war criminals. The Ambassador-at-Large for War Crimes Issues in the US State Department, Pierre-Richard Prosper, told journalists in Kuwait after a meeting with a number of Kuwaiti officials from the National Committee for Missing and POWs Affairs (NCMPA), that his visit to Kuwait is aimed at discussing the issue of the Kuwaiti POWs and missing and to obtain sufficient information on this issue. "The American officials realize the importance of closing this file and arriving at the right answer on the fate of the Kuwaiti POWs," the American official pointed out. He added his visit also aims at arriving at a mechanism to accelerate the procedure related to the issue of the Kuwaiti detainees in Guantanamo, and to know whether they will be released or stand trial. Answering a question from Kuwait News Agency (Kuna) on the action Kuwait should take against former Iraqi regime officials and the means to try them as war criminals, Ambassador Richard said "I will head to Iraq to set up a judicial mechanism to try the former Iraqi officials as war criminals in the future." |
Link |
Terror Networks | |
Eleven Pakistanis freed from Gitmo | |
2003-07-18 | |
Eleven men have returned home to Pakistan after spending nearly two years as prisoners of the US military at Guantanamo Bay in Cuba. An official of the Pakistani interior ministry said they had been expecting 13 citizens to be repatriated. There was no immediate explanation for the discrepancy. Mahoud and Ibrihim changed their minds when they compared life in Gitmo to life in the Northwest Frontier. Brigadier Javed Iqbal Cheema said that Pakistani security officials planned to interrogate "Hi boys! You know who we are. So just assume the position and save us some time, okay?" News of the release came as a US diplomat said that a Swedish citizen held in Guantanamo was not among 37 other detainees to be released shortly. Sweden has criticised the US for labelling 23-year-old Mehdi-Muhammed Ghezali an enemy combatant rather than a prisoner of war. Sweden has argued that his detention is illegal, and it wants the US to present evidence against him or release him. Pierre Richard Prosper, the US ambassador-at-large for war crimes, said he could not reveal the identities of the prisoners to be released. "What I can say is that the Swedish detainee is not among them," he added. During a visit to Sweden in March Mr Prosper said that Mr Ghezali, arrested in Pakistan in 2001, would not be released because he was not cooperating with the authorities. He did not reveal what Mr Ghezali is accused of. But after a Swedish delegation visited the Guantanamo Bay prison in early July the third since Mr Ghezali was taken there in 2002 Mr Prosper said that Mr Ghezali "seems to be more open-minded about what he needs to do and what the situation is in Guantanamo." "Think about it, Mehdi. You can sit here and swat flies or go back to "Hokay, Iâll talk, Iâll talk!" The freed Pakistanis were among thousands of foreigners who
Far better than he would have treated any western soldier that he would have taken prisoner. | |
Link |
Iraq | |
U.S. seeks enforcers of Saddamâs regime | |
2003-04-20 | |
The U.S. must-find list of Iraqis who helped keep Saddam Hussein in power goes well beyond the top officials pictured on the military's now famous playing cards. Less visibly but no less actively U.S. officials are seeking thousands who enforced Saddam's control through assassination, torture and misdeed. Catching these lower-level operatives — and ultimately putting them on trial — promises to be a massive and lengthy undertaking. The administration is planning prosecutions for alleged war crimes committed during this war as well as the 1991 Persian Gulf War. Cases also are expected to be pursued for alleged atrocities committed over decades by Iraq's government against its citizens. "Numerous abuses, both past and present," are being catalogued, Pierre-Richard Prosper, State Department ambassador for war crimes, said recently. "It's a big challenge," said John Pike of GlobalSecurity.org. "I think that they have clearly identified the major war criminals ... but I haven't seen any indication of what they propose to do with them. And I've seen no indication of how big the B list is and what they propose to do with the B list." Human rights experts says Saddam had layers of security apparatus — secret police, militias, intelligence agents — whose members committed widespread atrocities to quash political dissent and keep the Iraqi president firmly in control of the nation of 25 million. Tens of thousands of people had such jobs. U.S. officials do not know how many survived the war or how many committed rights violations. Coalition troops are sorting more than 7,000 prisoners captured from the battlefield, deciding who to release and who to hold for prosecution on war crimes or past rights violations. "The whole fabric of society was corrupted by the violations all the way down to the local police officer who participated in the arrest of someone on political grounds," said Alistair Hodgett of Amnesty International USA. "But the ultimate decision rests in the hands of the Iraqi people to decide how far down the line do the trials go. If you're a guy ... whose brother was taken away, imprisoned and tortured, it's not for the United States to say the (perpetrator) is a small fry." Another NGO with its hand in the till that wants to call the shots. The US is the "Guardian of Record", and will do what it deems best for both the Iraqi people and the United States. Abuses have been reported for years. A U.N. report said membership in certain political parties was punishable by death, as was insulting Saddam or his party. The State Department says Saddam's government targeted dissidents' family members. Yet the UN did nothing but squabble about these abuses. Yea, team. Rah. Rah. {puke}. American troops in Iraq carry a deck of cards with pictures of leaders in Saddam's government who are wanted most urgently. Several have been captured. Coalition forces are questioning them for information about Iraq's weapons programs, the whereabouts of other leaders and Iraqi links to terrorists. Bringing them to trial is a lower priority. The administration says it has not decided what charges might be brought against them or who would prosecute. As for lower echelons of suspects, Iraqis have given information that has aided some captures. Over time, more tips and captured documents will help U.S. officials decide who else to apprehend, Pentagon officials said. Hodgett and other rights advocates oppose the U.S. plan to help Iraqis prosecute rights violators, noting the country's judicial system has been in disarray for years. He said the United Nations should name a group to begin planning the rebuilding of an Iraqi justice system immediately because it has extensive experience and because justice delayed could result in a rash of revenge killings. Sigh. Here we go again. "Only the United Nations has the experience, only the United Nations, can do it right, the United Nations has to be involved." Can these twits even go to the bathroom without the United Nations holding their hands? The United States has the longest-running record for a truly JUST system of jurisprudence of any Western Power, save Britain, who happens to be a co-participant and partner in this endeavor. The United Nations can go play games in NKor if it wants, but keep your filthy hands off Iraq. Pike said that because abuse was pervasive, Iraq could consider something like South Africa's post-apartheid Truth and Reconciliation Commission. Another purveyor of jurisprudence, South Africa. Sheesh, do these people ever read anything but their own propaganda? Just leave us alone, and let us get the job done. I'm beginning to seriously doubt the ability of the United States to accomplish anything in Iraq without first dismantling the United Nations and all the NGOs that support and suck up to it.
| |
Link |
International |
US to handle war crimes trials, not UN |
2003-04-08 |
The United States has the "sovereign right" to prosecute Iraqi leaders for war crimes in its own courts, and will not hand Saddam Hussein or his henchmen to any international tribunal, senior American officials said yesterday. In a move likely to alarm Downing Street, senior Pentagon and State Department officials summoned reporters to hear a pre-emptive rejection of any role for the International Criminal Court (ICC) - the permanent war crimes tribunal established in The Hague. Instead, Iraqi leaders accused of war crimes could be tried in federal courts in the United States, or by special military tribunals, they said. The United States had the right to imprison those found guilty, or sentence them to death. Britain, as its ally in the war, would have the same rights. I seem to recall that the Four Powers didn't require an ICC to deal with the Nazi and Japanese war criminals. Didn't we do something about that in, oh, what's the name of that town? The Bush administration has aggressively resisted the authority of the ICC, saying it fears that its military personnel and other citizens might be singled out for politically motivated prosecutions. To Britain's dismay, Washington last year "unsigned" the treaty establishing the court, and has leaned on allies worldwide to sign agreements shielding American citizens from any potential ICC probe. Among the many smart things GWB did. Pierre-Richard Prosper, the United States ambassador for war crimes issues, said the ICC had no jurisdiction over this war, because neither America nor Iraq had signed up to the treaty establishing the court. "So there!" W Hay Parks, a senior Pentagon lawyer, accused Baghdad of three specific violations of the Geneva Convention and the rules of warfare, and said others were being investigated and catalogued. The first two alleged war crimes centred on Iraqi television footage of American soldiers captured and killed when their supply convoy was ambushed near the southern city of Nasiriyah, Mr Parks said. A third crime involved alleged acts of "perfidy", when Iraqi forces attacked coalition troops while carrying the white flags of surrender, or while disguised in civilian clothes. Mr Parks said that further charges might be levelled, amid signs that prisoners of war might have been killed, tortured, or treated inhumanely. The mention of humane treatment raised the prospect that a teenage soldier rescued last week might become a key witness against the Iraqi regime. Pte Jessica Lynch, 19, is the only American prisoner of war to have returned to American custody. There were initial reports that some members of the 507th Maintenance Company - Pvt Lynch's unit whose supply convoy was ambushed at Nasiriyah - had been executed in cold blood. We, the Brits and Aussies should form up the tribunals. We could invite in some of our coalition allies if they want. Run the tribunals as we did in Nuremburg. Let the Iraqi people in to see the trials and broadcast them via satellite to the entire Middle East. Keep the UN and ICC as far away as possible. |
Link |
East/Subsaharan Africa |
Kenyan Pursuing Genocide Suspect Killed |
2003-01-21 |
A Kenyan working with the United States to capture a Rwandan genocide suspect with a $5 million bounty on his head has been killed. William Mwaura Munuhe was found dead at his home in the affluent Nairobi suburb of Karen on Jan. 17, two days after the U.S. Embassy and Kenyan police tried to trap genocide suspect Felicien Kabuga, police spokesman King'ori Mwangi said. There was blood on Munuhe's body, Mwangi said, but the cause of death has not been determined. The independent Daily Nation newspaper reported Tuesday that Munuhe, 27, was shot in the head but that his death was made to look like a suicide from carbon monoxide poisoning. "Doctor? Are you sure it was CO poisoning? That bullet wound in his ear hole looks mighty suspicious..." The U.S. Embassy suspects the killing "was connected with Kabuga's efforts to evade capture," spokesman Peter Claussen said. Kabuga, a wealthy businessman from Rwanda's majority Hutu community, is alleged to have helped finance the 1994 genocide in which more than 500,000 Rwandans, most of them minority Tutsis, were killed. Earlier this month, Pierre-Richard Prosper, the U.S. ambassador at large for war crimes, said Kabuga received Kenyan government help â including from an official in the Cabinet of former President Daniel arap Moi â in remaining a fugitive. So maybe he had official help in bumping off poor Bill? Inspector Camembert! Call your office! |
Link |
Axis of Evil |
U.S. preparing war crimes dossier on Sammy and friends... |
2002-10-07 |
The United States has begun assembling a war crimes dossier to prosecute Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein for genocide, ethnic cleansing, rape, mass executions and other crimes against humanity. The dossier is evidence of the Bush administration's mounting preparations for the proposed "regime change" in Iraq. I don't think they'll end up using the dossier, though. I think they plan to "kill him." President George Bush, who will present his case on national television in the US this morning, kept up the pressure over the weekend, warning in his regular radio address that "delay, indecision and inaction are not an option for the American people because they could lead to massive and sudden horror". The danger to Americans, he said, was "grave and growing". Just as a hypothetical, a single gunman could maybe roam around a suburban county or two, potting people at random with a high-powered rifle. There's also the possibility of exploding autos, roving gangs of indignant turbans killing people in their homes, attacks on polling places, candidates, newspapers, all sorts of things. He doesn't need WMD to strike against the U.S. They're more part of his personal kink. There are enough tools in place to cause us damage... The dossier against President Saddam and at least 12 other Iraqi officials is being prepared by the State Department, the Pentagon and intelligence experts. "We need to do our part to document the abuses, to collect the evidence that points to who is responsible," said Pierre-Richard Prosper, the State Department's ambassador for war crimes. "We feel there has to be accountability for what has occurred. You can't brush aside the deaths of more than 100,000 people." Not without being a true Transnational Progressive Multilateralist, anyway... Half of the dozen names on the list are members of President Saddam's family: two sons, three half-brothers and a cousin. The cousin, Ali Hassan Majid, was nicknamed "chemical Ali" for his role in a 1988 operation that used chemical weapons to kill tens of thousands of Kurds in northern Iraq. US officials estimate that at least 130,000 civilians have been killed during President Saddam's 23-year rule. Ali Hassan was also governor of Kuwait when it was Iraq's 19th province... |
Link |