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Africa Subsaharan
Equatorial Guinea official arrested over 400 sex tapes with President''s sister, high-profile women
2024-11-06
[AFRICANEWS] Equatorial Guinea's Director General of the National Financial Investigation Agency (ANIF), Baltasar Engonga, has been arrested following allegations that he recorded more than 400 explicit videos featuring the wives of prominent public figures in the country.

The scandal emerged during a separate investigation into fraud allegations against Engonga, aged 54, when authorities uncovered a trove of CDs containing explicit material during searches of his home and office.

Among the people implicated in the recordings are high-ranking officials' spouses, including the wife of the Director General of Police, close family members, and relatives of senior government figures, including the sister of President Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo and spouses of multiple government ministers.

The videos reportedly feature encounters in various locations, including Engonga's office, sometimes with the national flag visible in the background.

The recordings were reportedly consensual but have since been leaked online, leading to widespread public outrage and intense scrutiny from local media. Reports by Ahora EG describe the revelations as unprecedented in the country's history, exposing what it called ''flagrant violations'' of ethical standards by a senior public official.

Known locally by the nickname ''Bello,'' Engonga's position has now become a focal point of national controversy, with allegations spanning multiple high-profile individuals.

Equatorial Guinea's Attorney General Nzang Nguema commented on the scandal, clarifying that consensual relations without coercion are not criminal under current laws.

However, he raised concerns over public health risks and emphasized the importance of a supportive environment for reporting any instances of non-consensual encounters or abuse.

The Attorney General also noted the potential risk of sexually transmitted diseases arising from Engonga's alleged activities, adding urgency to the government's response.

Following the scandal, the government swiftly enacted a suspension of officials involved in any sexual conduct within ministry offices as part of a broader ''zero tolerance'' stance on behavior that compromises public trust.

Vice President Teodoro Nguema Obiang Mangue condemned the actions in a statement on X (formerly Twitter), underscoring that ''ethics and respect are fundamental in our Administration'' and reaffirming the nation's commitment to enforcing public service integrity.

The case has highlighted the government's dedication to maintaining a professional and ethical standard across its institutions. Officials have stated that they aim to prevent future breaches of public trust and reinforce a respectful workplace culture.
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Jordan cleric Abu Qatada to stand trial from Dec 10
2013-12-04
[Pak Daily Times] Salafist holy man Abu Qatada, deported by Britannia in July after a near decade-long legal battle, is to go on trial in Jordan on December 10, judicial sources said on Tuesday.

"The state security court has set next Tuesday, December 10, as the date for the first hearing in the trial of Abu Qatada," one source said.

Defence lawyer Taysir Diab said he would meet his client on Saturday ahead of the trial opening.

After his deportation in July, Jordanian military prosecutors charged Abu Qatada with conspiracy to carry out terrorist acts. If convicted he could face a minimum of 15 years' hard labour, a judicial source told AFP last month. "The hearing, set for midday (0900 GMT), should be public and open to the media," Diab said.

Britannia's expulsion of Abu Qatada came after Amman and London ratified a treaty guaranteeing that evidence obtained by torture would not be used in his retrial and that the proceedings would be transparent.

The Paleostinian-born preacher was condemned to death in his absence in 1999 for conspiracy to carry out terror attacks, including on the American school in Amman, but this was immediately commuted to life imprisonment with hard labour.

In 2000, he was also sentenced in absentia to 15 years for plotting to attack tourists in Jordan during millennium celebrations.

However,
a woman is only as old as she admits...
he is to stand trial again for the charges, as Jordanian law gives him the right to a retrial with him present in the dock.

Born Omar Mahmud Mohammed Otman in Bethlehem in the now Israeli-occupied West Bank, Abu Qatada has Jordanian nationality because the town was part of Jordan at the time of his birth.

Videotapes of his sermons were allegedly found in the Hamburg flat of 9/11 ringleader Mohammed Atta.

Top Spanish judge Baltasar Garzon once branded Abu Qatada the late Osama bin Laden
... who is now sometimes referred to as Mister Bones...
's right-hand man in Europe, although he denies ever having met the late al Qaeda leader.
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Europe
Our Boy Baltazar To Lead Assange's Legal Team
2012-07-24
Ay-Pee. What? Ramsey Clark was unavailable?
Wikileaks says it has hired Spanish judge Baltasar Garzon to lead the legal team representing the group and its founder, Julian Assange.

Garzon won global fame for aggressively taking on international human rights cases. He is best known for indicting former Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet in 1998.
But he's got 11 years of free time
Wikileaks said Tuesday that Garzon recently met with the Assange at the Ecuadorian embassy in London, where the group's founder is holed up seeking asylum, to discuss a "new legal strategy."
"We are innocent under the Federation of Planets Rules"
Assange is currently fighting extradition to Sweden, where he is wanted for questioning about allegations of sexual misconduct.
he reeaaaaallly doesn't want to go back. Perhaps Roman Polanski could make a film about him?
Wikileaks said in a statement posted on its Twitter account that Garzon has expressed "serious concerns" about "the lack of safeguards and transparency" with which actions are being taken against Assange.
"Plus he damaged the West. I consider that a plus!"
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International-UN-NGOs
Hide the cameras: Spanish court springs Baltasar Garzon
2012-02-28
If you know what's good for you, you won't get between a camera or an open microphone, and Balthasar

From TFA:


The celebrated Spanish human rights investigator Baltasar Garzón escaped a second conviction for abuse of his powers on Monday when the supreme court declared him not guilty in a case involving his investigation of crimes committed under the Franco dictatorship.

The decision came too late to save Garzón's career as an investigating magistrate as the the supreme court had already disbarred him in a separate case for wiretapping conversations between defence lawyers and their clients in a corruption investigation involving the prime minister, Mariano Rajoy's People's party.
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Europe
Thousands rally to support disbarred Spanish judge
2012-02-13
MADRID: Thousands of people rallied Sunday in Spain’s capital in support of the disbarred judge famous for taking on international human rights cases. Baltasar Garzon, 56, was convicted Feb. 9 by the Supreme Court, marking a spectacular fall from grace for the nation’s most prominent jurist. The seven-judge panel disbarred him for 11 years, effectively ending Garzon’s career unless he can have their decision reversed on appeal.

A large square outside the main gates of the Supreme Court filled with around 10,000 people, many carrying placards and banners calling for justice for the former judge and chanting, “Garzon, friend, Spain is with you.”

In Thursday’s verdict, the court ruled that Garzon acted unlawfully in ordering jailhouse wiretaps of detainees talking to their lawyers, the court said, adding that his actions “these days are only found in totalitarian regimes.”

The case was just one of three against Garzon, who is still awaiting a verdict in another trial on charges of initiating a probe in 2008 of rightist atrocities committed during and after the Spanish civil war of 1936-1939, even though the crimes were covered by a 1977 amnesty.

Garzon is best known internationally for indicting former Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet in 1998, and trying to put him on trial in Madrid for crimes against humanity. He also indicted Osama Bin Laden in 2003 over the Sept. 11 attacks and oversaw many rulings against Basque separatist group ETA and its political wing, Batasuna.

As a judge at Spain’s National Court, Garzon took on cases using the principle of universal jurisdiction — the idea that some crimes are so heinous they can be prosecuted anywhere. He attempted to apply this legal doctrine to abuses committed in far-flung places like Rwanda and Tibet.
Strangely, he never prosecuted the King Leopold over the Congo...
Garzon was a hero to many left-leaning human rights activists, but was viewed with suspicion by conservative sectors of Spanish society, including many senior judges who saw him as attention seeking and egotistical.

Garzon faces more legal woes over ties with a big Spanish bank that financed human rights seminars he oversaw while on sabbatical in New York in 2005 and 2006.
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Europe
Crusading Spanish judge ousted for using wiretaps
2012-02-10
Judge Baltasar Garzon, renowned for indicting late Chilean dictator Pinochet, may be facing the end of his career on the bench after Thursday’s ruling by the Spanish Supreme Court barring him from the judiciary for 11 years.

Garzon violated the constitutional rights of defendants in a corruption case when he ordered their communications monitored during pre-trial detention, the Spanish Supreme Court said in a unanimous ruling. By recording the jailed defendants’ telephone calls, Garzon hampered their right to a defense "without any reason that could be minimally acceptable," concluded the high court.

Garzon argued during the trial that it was necessary to monitor the defendants’ communication to ensure they did not continue to operate their purported criminal enterprise while imprisoned.

Suspended in 2010, Garzon will now be stripped of his judgeship on Spain’s National Court, established to deal with terrorism as well as major drug and corruption cases.

The magistrate who indicted Pinochet and successfully prosecuted Al Qaeda and ETA terrorists still awaits a verdict in a case brought against him for allegedly violating a 1977 amnesty law by initiating investigations of the crimes of the Franco regime. Another trial, in which Garzon is charged with accepting improper payments for speeches, is ongoing.
Link


Europe
Spanish judge who took on Pinochet goes on trial
2012-01-17
Career of Baltasar Garzón, who ordered the arrest of the Chilean dictator, could be over as he faces abuse of power charges
Link


Caribbean-Latin America
Zedillo Lawsuit will be decided on sovereignity claims
2012-01-15
For a map, click here

By Chris Covert

A detached observer might get the idea that a 15 year old massacre, all of whose relevant legal and moral issues had been resolved long ago -- its resurrection the basis for a debate of the worthiness of long standing principles such as national sovereignty -- would be a good starting point to discuss those issues now.

But a detached observer might also get the impression that, were the impetus for resurrecting such a calamity to simply beat a political opposition over the head with it, such a resurrection could potentially bring out some less than savory actors.

When the September, 2010 lawsuit was filed against Mexican former president Ernesto Zedillo Ponce de Leon, it seemed to be news of a perfunctory nature; as if the lawsuit was expected inasmuch as the issues had long ago been resolved.

Consider the law firm filing the lawsuit.

Up until the September 2010 filing in Hartford, Connecticut, the two attorneys named as the lead attorneys, Roger Kobert and Marc Pugliese, were known as civil litigators in a law firm with a small, international clientele. Indeed, the most public civil litigation to date involving the two lawyers was an adverse verdict which cost their clients several millions of dollars including interest.

Usually when a high profile civil suit amounting to a public interest lawsuit is filed, it is filed by a firm with a known background in public interest law. Some element somewhere in the firm's background would lead any interested party to conclude that this is an experienced law firm seeking justice for victims somehow wronged.

And make no mistake: the 45 victims in Acteal were wronged on that the day on December 22nd, 1997. The day the attack took place nearly every individual shot dead or wounded was unarmed; many of the victims knew the attack was coming but chose, as their belief dictated, to pray they would be spared the coming massacre; many of the victims were children caught up in a social and political calamity, placed in the kill zone by their parents' own choosing. It is impossible to consider that the Mexican chief executive would somehow have had a hand in that attack; that the victims themselves, as passive as they were, supported a violent Marxist group that had attacked Mexican soldiers -- patriots -- in their drive for autonomy, and possibly provided some material support to the group.

This writer could find no nexus or connection whatsoever that would give a hint as to the impetus behind the suit. A request by email submitted last week to answer the question has never been answered Little was to be gained financially even by the lawyers because they had failed to provide an idea of the compensation being sought for the 45 victims at Acteal. Former President Zedillo at the time the lawsuit was filed was heading up an institution at Yale University. Comparatively speaking. Zedillo had moved from living in the opulence as a Mexican president to the relative penury of a private college. It is very unlikely that any one of the victims one day booked a flight to Miami to speak with the attorneys, nor is it likely in as backward a state as Chiapas, Mexico any of the victims or their progeny could afford to do so.

No even a hint of politics could be determined from the background of the attorneys.

It is almost as if one of the lawyers woke up some fine day and said, "Hey, you know what? Let's sue Zedillo! We'll make a bundle!" Given the past 20 months of Righthaven, far more absurd legal activities have profitably taken place in US federal courts.

What politics that could be considered resided in materials filed by Zedillo's attorneys last week. Among the exhibits was a program from a 2002 awards ceremony by the Franklin Delano Roosvelt Institute, dubbed the Franklin Delano Roosevelt Four Freedoms Awards. In 2002 the awards ceremony held in Middleburg Abbey in Zeeland province in the Netherlands was held to honor five recipients of the awards. Among those recipients was Zedillo, who received the Freedom from Fear Award that year.

The politics involved are an exemplar of the politics of the American left. In Hartford, Connecticut resides a former head of state working as a professor, recipients of a human rights ward giving by individuals with radical leftist connections.

One of those associated with the Franklin Delano Roosevelt Center was none other than William vanden Heuvel, its co-chair, former US diplomat and icon of the old left. In 2002, William vanden Heuvel gave a presentation for the awards ceremony. His daughter is Kartine vanden Heuvel, editor and partial owner of The Nation, of the the oldest leftist publications in the world.

Previous recipients have included Amnesty International, Olof Palme and Armand Hammer, all individuals who maintain the good relations of the old Left.

Ms. vanden Heuvel is a representative of the new Left, a self described progressive, the current buzzword for socialist. The self identification is appropriate since it has long been an established pattern of leftists to call for socialistic reforms without calling such reform anything other than progressive. Ms. vanden Heuvel has been antiwar in the past and anti conservative, and her publication has been showing its view for a long time.

Except for references to Acteal. A quick search of the archives of The Nation shows no references to Acteal or to the EZLN. The omission is odd because in prior editions The Nation favorably presented material for violent Marxist groups, such as the Sandinistas and Castro's Cuba.

But among the oddest individuals to have emerged in the controversy surrounding the lawsuit has been Spanish jurist Baltasar Garzón Real. Garzón Real has in the recent past immersed himself into several controversies, including his attempt to charge the Bush Six, Alberto Gonzales, John Yoo, Douglas Feith, William Haynes II, Jay Bybee and David Addington for their alleged roles in offering justifications to torture.

The Spanish legal system must have scrambled to keep the cases away from Garzón Real's courtroom, eventually assigning it to another judge who dropped the case.

This time Garzón Real said to the press last week, absurdly, that immunity "did not apply" to Zedillo, all without describing how immunity did not apply. His remarks came in the wake of news that an application had been made from the Mexican Foreign Ministry to the US State Department requesting Zedillo receive immunity as a former chief executive.

What made Garzón Real's remarks charmingly irrelevant was the fact that Garzón Real never met a camera he could put his mug in front of or a microphone before which he had nothing to say.

Perhaps the clearest remarks came from Mexican leftist politician Andres Manuel Lopoez Obrador. In remarks published last Saturday, Lopez Obrador hinted that Carlos Salinas de Gortari, Zedillo's predesssor, may share in the blame for the events leading up to the massacre.

Indeed Salinas' indifference to the growing threat of the EZLN was a contributing factor; in Mexico such a concept could be considered a statement of fact.

However, his other remarks left no doubt where he stood on the matter and what he would do were he elected to president of Mexico.

According to Proceso, Lopez Obrador made references for his supporters to eschew "revenge"and to "seek justice." Lopez Obrador is likely referring to other members of Mexico's leftist mainstream, including Jesus Zambrano (PRD), who suffered horribly under a succession of Mexican presidents. Lopez Obrador has in the past made no secret of his disdain for the Mexican Army and other arms of Mexican security. Those forces arrayed against Grijalva and other political allies could conceivably suffer the worst under a Lopez Orbador administration, as he has stated on more than one occasion his intention to end the drug war by simply not prosecuting it any longer.

Lopez Obrador is currently in the midst of the PRD primary season attempting to make a second successive run to be president of the republic, a goal in which he came up short by less than one percent of the popular vote last time.

The Petition

At the heart of Zedillo's defense against the lawsuit is the principle of sovereign immunity. Simply stated, sovereign immunity is immunity government officials enjoy when they leave office for crimes they may have committed during their term in in office.

The crux of the plaintiff's argument is that Zedillo enjoys no immunity if those acts were committed outside the color of their authority. The concept is that if a government official commits an act that was illegal at the time he committed it as head of state, sovereign immunity would no longer apply, since those acts were outside the scope and color of his authority.

The intention of the plaintiffs then seems pretty clear. The plaintiffs are asking the court to allow them to proceed on the matter even though nothing Zedillo had done during his term in office was considered illegal. The plaintiffs want a chance to prove what Zedillo did was illegal even though no charges had been filed since the alleged crime. The plaintiffs are asking for court permission to grant that a crime has taken place outside Zedillo's authority, even though no charge civil or otherwise has been forwarded, and for relief so their part of the charges may be proved he did in fact act outside his authority as president.

The issue being argued at the moment is foreign official immunity from prosecution for acts committed while in office. What lies at the basis of the lawsuit is an attempt by the plaintiffs to suspend the concept of sovereignty inasmuch as Zedillo's attorney's have argued he was not responsible for the Acteal massacre in 1997.

If Zedillo committed any act, gave any order, was aware of any act or order of any significance which led to the massacre, the plaintiffs claim, it would represent an act outside Zedillo's authority. But any one of those putative acts must be considered in context of the Chiapas Conflict in 1994.

The EZLN [Ejercito Zapista Liberacion Nacional] attacked in January 1994, the last year of the term of President Carlos Salinas de Gortari. Despite warnings by local and state government officials that the national government needed to do something about the increased activity of Guatemalan rebel's use of Mexico as a haven against Guatemalan Army counterinsurgency operations since 1992, Salinas seem to have been caught with his pants down. It was probably an unlikely combination of intervention by the Liberation Theology wing of the Mexican Catholic church and EZLN logistics that ended the hottest portion of the war.

It had to have been an embarrassing fiasco for Mexico's national government, and one for which the Mexican Army developed a solution.

The Plana Campana de Chiapas 94, the document the plaintiffs plan to use against Zedillo was developed by Carlos Salinas' government and implemented by the Mexican Army months before Zedillo actually took office. Part of the plan included using Mexican former and current military to establish patrols in the area to gather intelligence and act as a police presence in Chiapas. Implicit in that was for those elements to be armed with firearms. That part of the plan is often described as pro se evidence of the Mexican government's involvement in the 1997 Acteal massacre. The charge that the Mexican Army was arming civilians is largely true despite the fact that committed Marxist rebels in the area and many of their supporters also had weapons at their disposal, and used them repeatedly against political opponents throughout the region for at least two years before the massacre.

Between 1994, when the Chiapas war started and the end of 1997, not only was the EZLN actively pursuing its goals of taking over some municipalities in Chiapas, a violation of the Peace Accord, but Mexico saw no less than two new violent and armed Marxist insurgencies formed, which attacked Mexican government facilities including army bases in Guerrero and Oaxaca. Although the EZLN did not vocally support the EPR and the EPI, those two groups expressed support for the EZLN. Both groups performed the same information operations as EZLN, without respite in Chiapas, Oaxaca and Guerrero state during that time, which included representatives taking tours of various villages and ejidos in the mountains where indigent Indian groups were the most susceptible to Marxist propaganda.

Universally reviled by the Mexican left when it was released was the Blanco Libro Sobre Acteal or White Paper on Acteal released by the national attorney general,which described some of the events which preceded the massacre. Prominently displayed were numerous acts of vandalism, murder and intimidation of Mexican citizens in the area by individuals and groups sympathetic to the EZLN, and responses by Mexican citizens towards EZLN supporters. The main thrust of the document was to demonstrate that both sides had contributed to the hostile conditions which led to the massacre.

The document has been dismissed as a whitewash, yet even presumed whitewashes contain some elements of truth. In this "whitewash" the Mexican government sought to flood any debate about the Acteal massacre with a description of the near total breakdown of authority in the state, fostered by ELZN in illegal attempts take control of municipalities without state legislature approval, and unchecked citizen involvement in the situation by both sides which led to the massacre.

The plaintiffs used the document to point out that Zedillo had no intention of negotiating with the EZLN, despite the agreement to end the war. The contention is absurd in light of of the historical record and the government's intention to maintain its sovereignty in the area. It is an amazing thing both sides agreed to the accord in 1994 since at the time the US was ruled by the most liberal government in generations and was likely to side with the rebels. It is hard to consider how showing a US federal court that a natural act of a government to exert its sovereignty could prove that such an act was outside the scope of a chief executive's authority.

More so, it is astonishing that the plaintiff's attorneys would expect the US Court system to adjudicate a 150 year old record of stare decis, as well as common law which goes back even farther than that.

Sovereignty is the basis and job description of the top political executive in every nation on the planet. You have to wonder why Zedillo, outside the normal illogical arguments leftists may make to the contrary, would be denied this basic requirement of his office, short of a weakly argued lawsuit, and possibly politics.

The lawsuit also describes the measures taken by the Mexican Army to counter EZLN and their supporters in Chiapas, including arming and training of "villagers" described as "Anti-EZLN villagers" with military grade assault rifles, very similar to the military assault weapons carried by EZLN guerrillas and their supporters, a fact the petition does not address.

One of the differences between the Acteal White Paper and the petition concerns rifles. The petition claims the the Mexican Army armed and trained civilians, a fact which is borne out by the White Paper. The petition charges that the Mexican Army directed the killers during the attack, which is arguable. However, the White Paper said that many of the participants did not have rifles; that the weapons were given to them by local and state police forces along with police uniforms, who then allowed them to carry out the attack. The White Paper said some of the weapons used were AK-47 rifles, a weapon which would not be available to government supporters and the weapon of choice of revolutionary movements since the 1960s; rather, the venerable US-made M16 would have been handed out. The issue of the rifle type used to kill Los Abesas, critical in the matter is simply not addressed in the petition.

The petition does not address in any way the nexus between the apparent ad hoc and impromptu raid and the office of the president, save for his role as commander in chief of Mexico's armed forces. It appeared that raid was conducted by Anti-EZLN villagers independent of the Mexican Army, save for the Plana Campana Chiapas and the apparent presence of large numbers of rifles. The petition claims units of the Mexican Army were in the area at the time of the massacre, but also claims army units heard shots but did not respond. That claim is contrary to the petition's contention that the Mexican Army directed the attack.

The White Paper claims that human rights groups and observers, known to be sympathetic to the EZLN, were not in the area at the time of the attack, which is confirmed in the petition when it states that Mexican Army units in the area heard shots but failed to enter the area until almost 14 hours after the shootings had ended.

The petition also claimed that Zedillo was taping a message to the nation when news of the Acteal shootings reached him. According to the petition Zedillo briefly stopped taping before resuming the recording of his message. If Zedillo was directly involved in an operation such as killing members of an obscure religious sect seen as a potential threat, he could have conceivably been at a command center waiting news, instead of conducting his normal duties.

In the response Zedillo's attorneys claim Zedillo was stunned by the news, which is borne out by most accounts.

In discussing charges of a coverup, the petition blows by the long time frame between investigation -- which was rapid -- and the eventual conviction of the alleged perpetrators of the crime almost 10 years later. For example, within 48 hours of the end of the shootings, representatives of Zedillo's attorney general's office, the Procuradoria General de la Republica (PGR) were at the scene gathering evidence and testimony. For individuals accused of planning and executing a massacre, the investigation went forward with due dispatch.

The petition also claims a number of irregularities surfaced when the convictions of the 33 individuals who were convicted of the crime were tossed out.

In Mexican jurisprudence, a year is a long time. When a prosecutor charges an individual, they go to jail and there they will stay until they can prove their innocence. The conviction for the 33 individuals for their role in the crime took place in 2007, almost 10 years after the act and, the petition claims, done under a completely different political party, the Partido Accion Nacional (PAN).

The petition claimed a number of irregularities in gathering evidence and references a number of juicio de amparo, or procedural appeal decisions in the matter which showed irregularities may have occurred. The petition fails to note for the court that in Mexican jurisprudence juicio de amparo suits are an extremely common counter to prosecutors and are a routine matter. Those lawsuits do not per se demonstrate a pattern of abuse.

The Politics

The real basis of the lawsuit is Mexican and American politics. Mexican presidential elections are coming by July and it is entirely possible that the Partido Revolucionario Institucional, Zedillo's party, will return to the Mexican White House known as Los Pinos.

The motivation of the two attorneys in prosecuting this lawsuit will probably remain shrouded and are almost completely irrelevant to the massacre itself. If the plaintiffs win their contention that Zedillo does not enjoy immunity as a former chief executive, it will throw several decades of law into a new standard where sovereignty doesn't matter. Indeed the goal of the lawsuit may be just that: wrecking US concepts of sovereign immunity. The international legal community would love to get their hands on George W, Bush and his liberation of Iraq and Afghanistan, and an adverse decision could engender that environment.

But even more relevant could be the ongoing drive by the Mexican mainstream and independent leftists to get access to decades of US National Security material on the Dirty War and in the Chiapas War.

A fair amount of those materials were already released under the liberal Clinton administration.

Revelations of US involvement, and any Mexican politicians involved could invoke an orgy of "justice" as Lopez Obrador has termed it.
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Europe
Socialist-Internationalist Spanish judge suspended ahead of trial
2010-05-15
Spain's crusading judge Baltasar Garzon was suspended from his post Friday ahead of his trial for abuse of power linked to a probe of Franco-era crimes, a decision condemned by human rights groups.

The body that oversees the judiciary, the General Council of the Judiciary (CGPJ), decided unanimously to suspend Garzon, a spokeswoman for the body said, two days after the Supreme Court cleared the way for his trial.

On hearing of the decision, an emotional Garzon emerged from his office at National Court to cheers and hugs from dozens of supporters who chanted "Garzon, friend, the people are with you!"

Garzon is accused of abuse of power for opening an investigation in 2008 into the disappearance of tens of thousands of people during the 1936-39 civil war and General Francisco Franco's ensuing right-wing dictatorship. The case follows a complaint by far-right groups that the probe ignored an amnesty law passed in 1977, two years after Franco's death, for crimes committed under the general's rule.

Garzon has argued that the disappearances constituted crimes against humanity and were therefore not covered by the amnesty.

The Supreme Court on Wednesday removed the last obstacle to his trial over the case, although no date been set.

If convicted he would avoid prison but could be suspended for up to 20 years, which would effectively end the career of the 54-year-old.

"It's a very sad day for Spain," said Santiago Macias, the vice president of the Association for the Recovery of Historical Memory, which campaigns for the rights of victims of Franco.

"Today, someone needs to come out and say: 'Spaniards, justice is dead,'" he said, referring to the famous line of a television presenter in 1975 who announced in tears that "Spaniards, Franco is dead."

Human Rights Watch also condemned the CGPJ's decision.

"This is a sad day for the cause of human rights. Garzon was instrumental in delivering justice for victims of atrocities abroad and now he is being punished for trying to do the same at home," Reed Brody, the rights group's legal counsel, said in a statement.

"Garzon's decision not to apply Spain's amnesty, for which he is being prosecuted, is supported by international law, which impose on states a duty to investigate the worst international crimes, including crimes against humanity."

On Tuesday, Garzon asked Spanish authorities to be allowed to work as a consultant for the International Criminal Court, following an offer from The Hague-based court.

The ICC posting, scheduled to last seven months, had been seen as an attempt by him to avoid the humiliation of a formal suspension over the charges against him.

The judge is also involved in two other cases, one regarding wiretaps he ordered as part of a probe into a corruption scandal involving members of the conservative opposition party and another over suspected bribery over payments he allegedly received for seminars in New York.

He first made world headlines in October 1998 when he ordered the arrest of former Chilean dictator General Augusto Pinochet in London under the principle of "universal jurisdiction."


Universal jurisdiction holds that heinous crimes like torture or terrorism can be tried in Spain even if they had no link to the country.
In March 2009, Garzón considered whether Spain should allow charges to be filed against former officials from the United States government under George W. Bush for offering justifications for torture.

The six former Bush officials are: Alberto Gonzales, former Attorney General; John Yoo, of the Office of Legal Counsel; Douglas Feith, former undersecretary of defense for policy; William Haynes II, former general counsel for the Department of Defense; Jay Bybee, also at Justice Department's Office of Legal Counsel; and David Addington, Vice President Dick Cheney's Chief of Staff.

On 29 April 2009, Garzon opened an investigation into an alleged "systematic programme" of torture at Guantanamo Bay, following accusations by four former prisoners. Garzón has repeatedly expressed a desire to investigate former U.S. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger in connection with a plot in the 1970s known as Operation Condor.
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Home Front: Politix
Obama's Prosecutions by Proxy
2009-05-06
By John R. Bolton

President Obama's passivity before the threatened foreign prosecution of Bush administration officials achieves by inaction what he fears doing directly. This may be smart politics within the Democratic Party, but it risks grave long-term damage to the United States. Ironically, it could also come back to bite future Obama administration alumni, including the president, for their current policies in Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere.

Obama has taken ambiguous, and flatly contradictory, positions on whether to prosecute Bush administration advisers and decision makers involved in "harsh interrogation techniques." Although he immunized intelligence operatives who conducted the interrogations, morale at the CIA is at record lows. The president has played to the crowd politically, but the principles underlying his policies are opaque and continually subject to change. This hardly constitutes leadership.

Despite uncertainties here, developments overseas proceed apace. Spanish Magistrate Baltasar Garzón opened a formal investigation last week of six Bush administration lawyers for their roles in advising on interrogation techniques. Garzón did so over the objections of Spain's attorney general, as he did in 1998 in proceeding against former Chilean president Augusto Pinochet. Under Spain's inquisitorial judicial system, Garzón is essentially unaccountable, whatever the views of Spain's elected government.

Asked repeatedly about Garzón's investigation, the State Department has said only that it is a matter for the Spanish judicial system. Last week, Attorney General Eric Holder went further, implying that the Obama administration could cooperate. "Obviously, we would look at any request that would come from a court in any country and see how and whether we should comply with it," Holder said. This is deeply troubling. Obama appears to be following the John Ehrlichman approach, letting the U.S. lawyers "twist slowly, slowly in the wind." Garzón's is far from a run-of-the-mill police investigation in which an American tourist abroad runs afoul of some local ordinance. Indeed, from what appears publicly, U.S. consular officials would do more for the tourist than Obama is doing for the former Bush officials. If Obama is attempting to end the Garzón investigation, it is one of our best-kept secrets in decades.

Although the six lawyers are in a precarious position, they are only intermediate targets. The real targets are President Bush and his most senior advisers, and the real aim is to intimidate U.S. officials into refraining from making hard but necessary decisions to protect our national security. There is never a shortage of second-guessers about U.S. foreign policy. For example, former U.N. high commissioner for human rights Mary Robinson said during the NATO-Serbia war over Kosovo that "civilian casualties are human rights victims." She asked, "If it is not possible to ascertain whether civilian buses are on bridges, should those bridges be blown?"

The question here is not whether one agrees or disagrees with the advice the lawyers gave, or with their superiors' operative decisions concerning interrogation techniques. Nor is it even whether one believes our Justice Department should launch criminal investigations into their actions. (I believe strongly that criminalizing policy disagreements is both inappropriate and destructive.)

Instead, the critical question is who judges the official actions that U.S. personnel took while holding government office. Is it our own executive and judicial branches, within our constitutional structures and protections, or some unaccountable foreign or international magistrate in some unaccountable distant court? The proper U.S. position is to insist that our Constitution alone governs any review of our officials' conduct.

This issue is not abstract. For the six lawyers, it has immediate effects on their lives, careers and families. Moreover, whether or not Obama has decided against prosecuting CIA agents, his decision in no way binds the creative mind of Señor Garzón, a man who has never shied from spotlights. Indeed, U.N. Special Rapporteur Manfred Nowak has already said that the other 145 states party to the Convention Against Torture must launch their own criminal investigations if the United States does not.

Behind-the-scenes diplomacy is often the best, and sometimes the only, way to accomplish important policy objectives, and one hopes that such efforts are underway. But in this case, firm and public statements are necessary to stop the pending Spanish inquisition and to dissuade others from proceeding. The president must abandon his Ehrlichman-like policy and pronounce unequivocally that Spain should take whatever steps are necessary to stop Garzón.

Otherwise, in four or eight years, like Mary Robinson before them, future second-guessers will decide, say, that U.S. drone attacks in Pakistan constitute war crimes, and that former commander in chief Obama must be hauled before the bar of some mini-state to stand trial. After all, his decisions involve risking civilian deaths, not just shoving terrorists into a wall (and no protective neck braces, either).

Will President Obama's successor vigorously dispute the legitimacy of foreign prosecutions, or will she follow the current Obama policy and let the foreign investigation proceed, perhaps even to trial? Obama and his advisers should think carefully about that second scenario -- now.

The writer, a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, was U.S. ambassador to the United Nations from August 2005 to December 2006 and is the author of "Surrender Is Not an Option: Defending America at the United Nations and Abroad" (Simon & Schuster, 2007).
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Europe
Spanish judge starts Guantanamo torture probe
2009-04-30
[Al Arabiya Latest] A Spanish judge started a criminal investigation on Wednesday into alleged torture of detainees in the U.S. base at Guantanamo.

Judge Baltasar Garzon, who once tried to extradite former Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet, will probe the "perpetrators, the instigators, the necessary collaborators and accomplices" to crimes of torture at the prison at the U.S. naval base in southern Cuba, he said in ruling

The judge based his decision on statements by Hamed Abderrahman Ahmed, known as the "Spanish Taliban" and three other former Guantanamo detainees -- a Moroccan, a Palestinian and a Libyan -- who alleged they had suffered torture at the camp.

"It seems that the documents declassified by the U.S. administration mentioned by the media have revealed what was previously a suspicion -- the existence of an authorized and systematic program of torture" at Guantanamo and other prisons including that in Bagram in Afghanistan, Garzon said
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Europe
Gaarzon rules out dropping Gitmo probe
2009-04-19
[Al Arabiya Latest] A Spanish judge considering possible criminal action against six former Bush administration officials for torture at the U.S. prison at Guantanamo Bay defied pressure to drop the case on Friday.

However Judge Baltasar Garzon, internationally known for trying to extradite former Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet, accepted that he might not personally take charge of any eventual criminal investigation into officials including former U.S. Attorney General Alberto Gonzales.

Public prosecutors at the National Audience, Spain's top criminal court earlier issued an official request to Garzon to drop the investigation. They said Garzon was unqualified to carry out such a "general inquiry into policies put in place by the previous U.S. administration."
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