Caribbean-Latin America |
U.N. confirms death of Haiti mission chief Annabi |
2010-01-17 |
UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - The U.N. mission chief in Haiti, Hedi Annabi, died in Tuesday's earthquake that devastated the country's capital, U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon announced on Saturday. In a statement, Ban also confirmed the death of Annabi's deputy, Brazilian Luiz Carlos da Costa, and of the acting U.N. police commissioner in Haiti, Doug Coates of Canada. Ban gave no details of how the bodies had been found, but the world body said earlier this week that Annabi and his aides were under the rubble of the Hotel Christopher, the U.N. headquarters in Port-au-Prince, and could be alive or dead. Haitian President Rene Preval said on Wednesday that Annabi had died, but the United Nations said at the time it could not confirm that. Annabi is the first U.N. mission chief to die in the line of duty since Sergio Vieira de Mello of Brazil was killed along with 14 other U.N. staff when a truck bomb exploded outside the U.N. headquarters in Baghdad in 2003. After working in the Tunisian foreign service, Annabi joined the United Nations in 1981. For nearly a decade, he worked on a political settlement in Cambodia before joining the U.N. peacekeeping department where he rose to be an assistant secretary-general. He had held the Haiti job since 2007. |
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Iraq |
Former Iraqi pilot accused in 2003 UN Baghdad kaboom |
2010-01-17 |
![]() Then-U.N. envoy to Iraq Sergio Vieira de Mello, a Brazilian, was among those who died when a truck bomb exploded at the Canal Hotel, which served as the U.N. operations centre before and just after the 2003 U.S. invasion. The suspect, identified as Ali Hussein al-Azzawi or Abu Imad, has been charged with supervising several other attacks also, including an attack on an Iraqi army troop carrier in 2006 and bombings in eastern Baghdad in 2007 and 2008, Baghdad security spokesman Major General Qassim al-Moussawi said. "He is the direct perpetrator of many terrorist attacks and on top of them, supervised the planning of the bomb attack on the U.N. headquarters in August 2003 ... and he is responsible for linking Qaeda terrorist networks in Europe and Iraq," Moussawi said at a news conference. Azzawi was arrested in Baghdad on June 26, Moussawi said. He did not say where the suspect had been for the last seven months or why the charges were announced only now. Moussawi showed videotapes of what he described as the confessions of three men, two Iraqis and a Saudi, who said they had received orders from Azzawi. The Saudi, who identified himself as Mohammad Abdullah Hassan, said Azzawi acted as a financial manager for al-Qaeda in addition to planning attacks. "He used to distribute money to the soldiers and heads of the districts (in Diyala province) when he came to meet us," said Hassan, who appeared in the video with several days' growth of beard and wearing a dark blue prison uniform. Moussawi said Azzawi also negotiated ransoms with the relatives of foreigners kidnapped in Iraq, but did not give further details. Moussawi said Azzawi had been a pilot for Iraqi Airways, the state-owned airline. He played a short video clip of Azzawi in which the suspect only gave his name, birth date and address. |
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Iraq | |
World leaders condemn deadly Iraq bombings | |
2009-08-20 | |
As U.N. chief Ban Ki-moon said he was saddened by the "appalling" attacks, Iraqi officials raised the death toll from 75 to 95 and said at lleast 563 people were wounded. The attacks included two massive truck bombings outside government ministries just minutes apart, including one near the heavily fortified Green Zone, a car bombing and a spate of mortar attacks. The bloodshed struck on the six-year anniversary of a truck bombing on the U.N. compound in Baghdad in 2003, killing U.N. special envoy Sergio Vieira de Mello and 21 other people. | |
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Iraq |
UN to help the Iraqis improve spending. Like John Dillinger helped the banks. |
2008-08-13 |
BAGHDAD (AP) - Five years after bombings forced the United Nations to pull out of Iraq, the world body is back. It announced plans Wednesday to help Iraq rebuild and create jobs following complaints the government has been unable or unwilling to spend its oil riches.![]() With a budget of $2.2 billion through 2010, the U.N. hopes to use its know-how to train Iraqi bureaucrats and create incentives to develop the country's private sector. One of the main goals is to create jobs in a country where widespread unemployment especially in areas outside of Baghdad could undermine recent security gains if young men lose hope in their futures and turn to extremism. The ambitious plans came ahead of the fifth anniversary of the Aug. 19, 2003, bombing at the U.N.'s Baghdad headquarters that killed 22 people, including top U.N. envoy Sergio Vieira de Mello. The United Nations pulled out of Iraq in October 2003 after a second bombing at the organization's hotel headquarters and a spate of attacks on humanitarian workers. It maintained a presence with Iraqi employees and allowed 35 international staffers to return in August 2004 but operations were sharply curtailed. The current U.N. envoy to Iraq, Staffan di Mistura, said it was time to change that. "There are moments when we wonder whether all this was worthwhile or not," he said at a memorial ceremony Wednesday. "I can tell you that what we are doing at the moment is sending a signal that the U.N. is back. The U.N. is back to stay." As security has improved over the past year, the U.N. has steadily been raising its profile here. Di Mistura's deputy, David Shearer, said the organization currently has 140 international staffers around the country. One of the biggest concerns is jobs. |
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Iraq | ||||
Investigator urges inquiry into UN Baghdad deaths | ||||
2008-06-05 | ||||
GENEVA - A United Nations investigator called on Wednesday for the creation of a special inquiry into the 2003 killing in Baghdad of 22 U.N. staff, including then High Commissioner for Human Rights Sergio Vieira de Mello. Leandro Despouy, specialist sleuth for the U.N. Human Rights Council on the independence of judges, said the failure by Iraq or United States occupation forces to establish the truth about the bloodshed undermined the credibility of the world body.
But mystery still shrouds the event, which led the United Nations to
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International-UN-NGOs | ||||
UN warned to adapt to becoming a target | ||||
2008-02-29 | ||||
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Brahimi was appointed panel chairman by Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon in early February. Ban created the panel in response to the twin truck bombings in the Algerian capital, Algiers, that killed 17 U.N. staff and at least 20 other people on Dec. 11. The Algerian government had initially opposed a U.N. probe, saying it was investigating. But Brahimi suggested he had worked out a deal with the Algerian authorities to allow the investigation.
Brahimi promised a vigorous examination of U.N. security issues in Algeria and elsewhere over the next six weeks, and said that his personal ties to that nation would not bias the panel's work but would work to the U.N.'s benefit.
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Iraq | |
French FM offers help to end Iraq crisis | |
2007-08-20 | |
BAGHDAD - French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner made a surprise visit to Iraq on Sunday and offered his countrys support to try to end the turmoil, as local leaders agreed on the agenda for a key summit. Kouchners visit is the first by a French minister since the US-led invasion of Iraq in 2003, which Paris vehemently opposed, putting a heavy strain on relations with Washington. Shortly after his arrival, Kouchner visited the fortified UN compound in Baghdad to pay tribute to 22 people killed when the world bodys former headquarters was hit by a powerful bomb exactly four years ago. Among those who died was the head of the mission Sergio Vieira de Mello, a personal friend of Kouchner, and three UN officials who had worked with the French minister when he was the United Nations administrator in Kosovo. Accompanied by his Iraqi counterpart Hoshyar Zebari and the UN deputy special representative in Iraq, Michael von der Schulenburg, Kouchner laid a wreath in front of a simple memorial to those killed in the blast. Kouchner offered to support efforts by Iraqis and the United Nations to halt the bloodshed. We are ready to be useful, but the solution is in Iraqi hands, not in French hands, he told reporters after holding talks with Zebari. Kouchner three-day visit, so soon after President Nicolas Sarkozy made a fence-building trip to the United States, will be seen as a sign that France is ready to seek a role in Iraq. But he made it clear that France had no regrets about its original decision to oppose US intervention in Iraq, and insisted there could be no military solution to the conflict. Later Sunday, Kouchner was to meet Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki who is due to leave on a three-day visit to Syria on Monday.
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Iraq |
Al Qaeda operative hanged for bombing |
2007-07-08 |
![]() Oras Mohammed Abdul-Aziz was executed Tuesday in Baghdad after being sentenced to death in October in the killing of Ayatollah Mohammed Baqir al-Hakim, the leader of the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq, the official said. Ministry Undersecretary Busho Ibrahim's statement was the first word that a suspect had been tried in the huge August 2003 car bombing outside the Shrine of Ali in Najaf, one of Shi'ite Islam's holiest sites. Ayatollah al-Hakim was poised to become a major figure in Iraqi politics following the fall of Saddam Hussein. His brother, Abdulaziz al-Hakim, now heads the group, the largest Shi'ite party in parliament. Al Qaeda in Iraq claimed responsibility for the attack. Mr. Ibrahim said Abdul-Aziz, from the northern city of Mosul, was affiliated with al Qaeda in Iraq and confessed to other attacks. Included in his confession was the 2004 killing of Abdel-Zahraa Othman, the president of the Governing Council, the U.S.-appointed body that ran Iraq following Saddam's fall. The al-Hakim slaying took place 10 days after the bombing of the U.N. headquarters in Baghdad killed 23 persons, including the top U.N. envoy to Iraq, Sergio Vieira de Mello an attack also claimed by al Qaeda in Iraq. |
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International-UN-NGOs |
Annan comments on UN role in Iraq |
2006-12-20 |
![]() He also warned against any kind of military intervention in Iran. Annan, who on December 31 will end ten years as the Secretary-General of world's most powerful organisation, said it was not hard to identify the worst moment of the past decade. "The worst moment, of course, was the Iraq war which as an organisation we couldn't stop," Annan said. "I really did everything I can to try to see if we can stop it. The other really painful one was the loss of our colleagues in Baghdad which was a very painful thing for all of us and for me personally." Annan was referring to the truck bomb that killed the UN's special representative in Iraq, Sergio Vieira de Mello and at least 16 others on August 19, 2003. "They were not just colleagues, they were true friends. And I think nothing had hit me as much as almost the loss of my twin sister," Annan said. |
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Iraq |
Arrest warrant issued for Ansar al-Sunnah leader |
2005-12-17 |
![]() The statement yesterday said Iraq's Central Investigating Court had issued the warrant on December 4 for Mullah Halgurd al-Khabir. It named him as the prime suspect for the U.N. headquarters attack and said he was the senior leader in Baghdad of the Army of Ansar al-Sunna -- one of the main Sunni insurgent groups in Iraq. It also said Khabir had historical ties to Abu Musaab al-Zarqawi, al Qaeda's leader in Iraq. |
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Iraq |
Zark posts eulogy for UN boomer |
2005-11-24 |
Al Qaeda in Iraq offered personal details Tuesday about the man it said was the mastermind behind two of its first and most notorious homicide attacks â the August 2003 bombings of the U.N. headquarters in Baghdad and the main Shiite shrine in Iraq. The planner of the attacks, Thamir Mubarak Atrouz, was killed by U.S. forces in April 2004, the group said in a "distinguished martyr's biography" posted on an Islamic radical Web forum. Al Qaeda occasionally posts such biographies of its slain fighters, usually long after they are killed. Their authenticity cannot be independently confirmed. The U.N. and Najaf bombings are seen as the first major attacks of Iraq's insurgency, which has continued unabated. The Aug. 19, 2003, bomb attack on the U.N. headquarters in Baghdad killed 23 people, including the top U.N. envoy to Iraq, Sergio Vieira de Mello. More than 150 people were wounded. Ten days later, a car bomb exploded outside the Shrine of Ali in the town of Najaf, south of Baghdad â one of Shiite Islam's holiest sites â killing more than 85 people, including the Shiite leader Mohammed Baqir al-Hakim. Al Qaeda in Iraq, led by the Jordanian militant Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, has previously claimed responsibility for the attacks. But the Web biography was the first time it gave details of who was purportedly behind it. It said Atrouz, from the town of Khaldiyah in the Sunni Arab province of Anbar west of Baghdad, was an officer in Saddam Hussein's army who fled Iraq to Saudi Arabia because of opposition to the Iraqi leader. He returned home just before the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq in March 2003 to fight the Americans. "You need only to know about Hajji Thamir that he was directly in charge ... of two of Iraq's greatest operations in that year," it said, referring to him by the title given to Muslims who have made the pilgrimage to Mecca. Atrouz was killed when U.S. troops attacked the insurgent stronghold of Fallujah in April 2004, after four U.S. security contractors were killed by a mob in the city. |
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Iraq | ||
UN chief in surprise Iraq visit | ||
2005-11-12 | ||
United Nations Secretary General Kofi Annan has arrived in the Iraqi capital Baghdad on a surprise visit. He is expected to meet Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari and other members of the Iraqi government. Mr Annan arrived as the latest car bombing killed least four people and wounded another 19 near a market in south-eastern Baghdad. Iraq's US-backed interim government is battling a mainly Sunni insurgency that has killed thousands of people. Next month will see general elections for a permanent government. The latest attack, in the New Baghdad area, came just days after a suicide bomber killed dozens of people in a crowded restaurant in the capital. Eyewitnesses said the explosion had started fires in several shops in the market, trapping people inside. Eyewitness Ali Saleh told Reuters news agency: "A car parked near a pharmacy suddenly blew up and we saw smoke and people started running. Women were searching for their children. The shrapnel flew everywhere, the force of the blast was so strong." Mr Annan was in Amman on Friday, where he discussed Wednesday's bombings in three hotels in the Jordanian capital, which al-Qaeda in Iraq has claimed. His visit to Iraq follows separate trips by UK Foreign Secretary Jack Straw and US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice in recent days.
Both said they wanted to encourage participation in the parliamentary elections on 15 December.
The UN pulled out of Iraq after a bomb at UN headquarters in Baghdad in August 2003 killed 22 people, including envoy Sergio Vieira de Mello. | ||
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