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Monday, September 22, 2008

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[chottala.com] Will international law reach Bush?

Will international law reach Bush?
(www.smh.com.au) Bush in 2003 ordered the unprovoked invasion of Iraq.

In 1973, nobody would have believed that 33 years later General Augusto Pinochet would die under house arrest in Chile, facing trial on charges of human rights abuses.

By Peter Dyer
September 21, 2008

Q: What do Radovan Karadzic, former French Prime Minister Dominique de Villepin, and George W. Bush have in common? A: Each lives under the slowly growing shadow of a body of international criminal law.

 

This law is evolving towards the ultimate goal of holding even the most powerful leaders personally accountable for crimes committed by the State.

It is manifested in international agreements and statutes such as the Geneva Conventions, case law, two ad hoc war crimes tribunals (Yugoslavia and Rwanda), and a permanent International Criminal Court.

Radovan Karadzic, former Bosnian Serb President, has been arrested and now awaits trial in The Hague before the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (I.C.T.Y.) on charges of genocide and crimes against humanity.

Dominique de Villepin is one of 33 French military and political leaders who have recently been accused in a report released by the Rwandan government of arming and advising Hutu leaders in the genocide and crimes against humanity of 1994.

 
(At the time Rwanda was a French client state and de Villepin was chief aide to French Foreign Minister Alain Juppe. The 500-page report, based on a two-year investigation, accuses both men of crimes including enabling the genocide by violating a United Nations Security Council Arms Embargo against Rwanda.)

George W. Bush in March 2003 ordered "Operation Shock and Awe" (though officially dubbed "Operation: Iraqi Freedom") – the unprovoked invasion and occupation of Iraq – presenting the world with a clear prima facie case of aggression.

Aggression, in the words of the judgment delivered at the first Nuremberg Trial, is "the supreme international crime" because it unleashes all the other devastation and inhumanity of war.
 
Personal accountability by state leaders for the crime of aggression – initiating an unprovoked war – is the most profound as well as the most difficult goal of the continuing evolution of international criminal law.

For this reason, and because President Bush is head of the world's most powerful state, clearly the shadow of the law is at present less ominous to him than to Karadzic or perhaps to de Villepin.

But there is no statute of limitations for any of these crimes. Things change over time, often unpredictably. And the international community has been working steadily towards this difficult goal for decades.
 
No doubt the work will continue.

Nuremberg Precedent

Although the effort to hold leaders personally responsible for crimes of state goes back to the late 19th century, the first significant watershed was the 1946 judgment of the first Nuremberg trial.

A panel of judges from the U.S., U.K., France and the Soviet Union held German leaders personally responsible and punished them for crimes of state, including aggression.

The roots of the Yugoslavia and Rwanda Tribunals are largely in Nuremberg as are those of the International Criminal Court, although neither ad hoc tribunal charter included aggression.

One of the most significant achievements of the Yugoslavia Tribunal was the first ever indictment of an acting head of state, Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic, for crimes committed while still in office.

According to the I.C.T.Y. Web site, "the question is no longer whether leaders should be held accountable, but rather how can they be called to account."

A major problem with the two courts was that they were each temporary responses to a specific set of separate circumstances which had considerable legal overlap.

The ad hoc approach was clearly limited by issues of logistics, expenses and repetition, many of which could have been more effectively addressed by a permanent court.

The achievements of the two tribunals as well as their limitations gave new impetus to the decades-old effort to establish a permanent International Criminal Court.

On July 17, 1998, the great majority of countries of the world voted in Rome, 120 to 7 with 21 abstentions, to establish the International Criminal Court. With the signature and ratification of 60 states the International Criminal Court came into being on July 1, 2002.

Six years later, as of last June 1, 106 countries have ratified the Rome Statute. Written into the Statute is a provision for member states to meet seven years after the entry into force (2009) to consider amendments.

Because the Statute is the result of decades of evolution and five weeks of intense negotiations between 148 countries, it is full of compromises. Even so, it is remarkable.

Never before has the world community united to create an institution invested with legal authority to write, adjudicate and enforce international criminal law. And, despite compromises, it is remarkable for the degree to which so many were able to agree on some basics.

Most important among these is a set of "core crimes" over which the Court has jurisdiction. These are: 1) genocide, 2) crimes against humanity, 3) war crimes and 4) aggression (the waging of aggressive war).

Conflict over Definition

Unfortunately, the Rome conference was unable to agree on a definition of aggression.

Unwilling to leave out "the supreme international crime" containing within itself the "accumulated evil of the whole," the conference compromised, including aggression among the "core crimes" but leaving it undefined in anticipation of a future amendment defining the crime and setting out conditions for jurisdiction.
 
One of the weaker aspects of the Statute is, of course, enforcement. As American Professor Leila Nadya Sadat, a delegate to the Rome conference wrote: "Here classic paradigms of sovereignty in which each state is master of its territory prevail. …The I.C.C.'s ability to effectively enforce international criminal law remains an open question."

Unfortunately, a major obstacle to the I.C.C., enforcement and otherwise, has been the United States. The U.S. was one of seven countries which voted against the Statute — part of a list which included Iraq, Libya, Israel, Qatar and Yemen. Despite the vote, President Clinton signed the Statute on Dec. 31, 2000.

Less than two years later President George W. Bush "unsigned it."
 
Other countries such as Russia and Egypt have signed but not ratified the Rome Statute. Still others such as China and India remain opposed.

If major countries such as Russia, China, India and especially the U.S. ever do decide to join and throw their considerable weight behind the I.C.C. here are a few examples of what the organization may eventually be capable of:

--"Treaty crimes" such as hijacking and narcotics trafficking, while not yet covered by the Statute, are slated to be discussed and possibly defined and amended into the Rome Statue as early as 2009. There would be an international institution with the legal power to apprehend, try and punish future Osama Bin Ladens without the catastrophic destruction and waste of war.

--The genocide visited by Saddam Hussein upon the Iraqi Kurds (1984-1991) perhaps could have been stopped, or at least punished upon authorization by the Security Council.

--There will be a venue for resolving murky situations such as the recent violence in Georgia, where a court of law could be the only place to finally decide if and when aggression and/or other crimes occurred and who was responsible.

--Assuming that aggression is eventually defined and fully included in the Rome Statute, those who initiate wars of aggression, such as the U.S. invasion of Iraq, will do so knowing there is at least the legal possibility of arrest, trial and prison.

Ironically the United States led the way in establishing the precedent for this when the Allies at Nuremberg tried and punished Germans for aggression and other crimes.

At the moment, the prospect of an American president sitting in the dock of the International Criminal Court seems remote.

It should be remembered, however, that in 1973, nobody would have believed that 33 years later General Augusto Pinochet would die under house arrest in Chile, facing trial on charges of human rights abuses, including kidnapping and murder, committed during the dark days of Chile's military government.

A lot can happen in three decades. Leaders come and go. Power ebbs and flows. National and international perspectives and relationships change.

Imagine the chilling effect the real prospect of arrest, trial and prison for starting a war would have on a head of state considering aggression. Such a simple and powerful deterrent could move humanity significantly closer to realizing the original vision of the United Nations: a world without war.

There simply can be no lasting peace without justice.

To quote Professor Sadat, "As humanity struggles to overcome its darkest impulses in this new millennium, impulses that led not only to the slaughter of hundreds of millions during the 20th century, but threaten our very survival, the creation of effective international institutions and regimes is essential … to transform the prohibitions on the commission of genocide, war crimes, crimes against humanity and aggression into real tools to deter the cruel and powerful."

Next year in New York, the I.C.C. Special Working Group on the Crime of Aggression is scheduled to conclude their work on a definition of aggression for inclusion as an amendment to the Rome Statute.

A review conference of the full I.C.C. Assembly will convene in 2010 to consider this and other amendments.

The work continues.

Peter Dyer is a freelance journalist who moved with his wife from California to New Zealand in 2004. He can be reached at p.dyer@inspire.net.nz

 
http://www.consortiumnews.com/2008/092108a.html
 
 
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[chottala.com] Was neuroscientist Dr. Aafia Siddiqui raped and tortured at US Bagram prison?

Was neuroscientist Dr. Aafia Siddiqui raped and tortured at US Bagram prison?
by Ernesto Cienfuegos
Sunday Sep 21st, 2008 10:39 PM
It appear that the Bush Administration may have another "Abu Ghraib Prison" type torture scandal in its hands that it is desperately attempting to cover up. The disturbing human rights case involves a Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Brandeis University educated Pakistani national that mysteriously disappeared, along with her three children, in Afghanistan in 2003. Last month the seriously injured, bleeding, frail, traumatized and confused Dr. Siddiqui re-appeared in a wheel chair in a New York federal court accused of terrorism and to face charges that she attempted to kill FBI and US soldiers in Afghanistan.
dr_aafia_siddiqui.jpg
dr_aafia_siddiqui.jpg

No one would have known about what some Pakistanis are calling "one of the most deplorable crimes against womanhood" if it had not been for human rights organizations speaking out against the rape and torture of "Prisoner 650" that was being held at the US Bagram Theater Internment Facility, a miserable prison that was previously utilized as air base hangers by the Russians during their occupation of Afghanistan. The British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) just recently picked up the story and the Bush Administration seems to be acting quickly to cover up what many consider to be a war crime.

On Tuesday, they chose their front man, Brian Ross of ABC News, to begin propagandizing against Dr. Aafia Siddiqui in order to justify to the American people the gruesome treatment of the Pakistani neuroscientist at the hands of US authorities in Afghanistan and their lackey Pervez Musharraf in Pakistan. Many of you may remember that Brian Ross was also the Neocon front man in the national news concerning the Anthrax Terrorist Attacks in 2001. He was reporting that the anthrax sent to U.S. political and media figures was linked to Saddam Hussein's biological weapons program. That was a lie. No tests ever revealed any such thing. Like Colin Powell, he was attempting to create the perception in the public's mind that Iraq was behind the anthrax attacks and that it possessed weapons of mass destruction.

Tortured Dr. Siddique at US courtThe FBI has accused Dr. Siddiqui of being an al-Qaida terrorist. Her father was educated as a doctor in Britain. Her brother is an architect from Houston and her sister is a Harvard University-trained neurologist. Because Dr. Aafia Siddiqui is a Muslim, the FBI started investigating her as far back as 2001when she lived in Boston.

The FBI harassment of Dr. Siddiqui and her family prompted her to return to Pakistan around 2002. Soon after, the FBI issued a "Wanted Poster" on Dr. Siddiqui and alerted the Pakistani Pervez Musharraf's regime. After her picture appeared on the FBI "Wanted Poster", Dr. Siddiqui was picked up by alleged US/Musharraf operatives in 2003 while she was visiting, along with her three children, in Afghanistan and imprisoned in the notorious Bagram prison. Dr. Siddiqui, according to human rights organizations became "Prisoner 650" and for 5 years suffered repeated rapes, water boarding and other forms of torture.

Soon after the horrific story surfaced in the international media, it appears that the alleged torturers moved quickly to cover up their crime. There are serious allegations that Dr. Siddiqui was "framed" in order to justify the abominable human rights violations against her. Credible human rights sources, including her US attorneys, are claiming that the Bagram prison torturers, temporarily released the traumatized and confused victim, planted evidence on her and re-arrested her on charges of terrorism in July of this year. They then set up a situation inside the prison to accuse her of attempting to kill FBI agents and US soldiers. The alleged torturers are saying that as she was about to be questioned by the FBI and US soldiers in a room in the Afghan prison, that she picked up an M4 rifle and fired at a US soldier. Another soldier fired at her with a pistol and wounded her in the abdomen. An Amnesty International official said "It seems extraordinary to imagine that four U.S. agents who'd gone to pick her up — two military, two FBI — along with at least two Afghan translators, were somehow surprised by this woman, who overpowered them, grabbed a gun, flipped the safety, fired off a couple of shots, and then could only be subdued by shots to the torso."

There is no information about what may have occurred to two of Dr. Aafia Siddiqui's three children; one son was returned to Pakistan last week.

The Horrendous Case of Aafia Siddiqui
http://www.counterpunch.org/mariner09102008.html
The wounded Dr. Siddiqui at court in the US
by Ernesto Cienfuegos Sunday Sep 21st, 2008 10:39 PM
 
Related News
Pak Government can bring back Aafia in a day
Thaindian.com, Thailand - Sep 20, 2008
Karachi , Sep 20 (ANI): One day is enough to bring American educated Pakistani neuroscientist and terror suspect, Dr Aafia Siddiqui, back to Pakistan if the ...
 


BBC
Amnesty International Human Rights Watch News
Aafia's son freed by Kabul, flown to Islamabad
Pakistan Dawn, Pakistan - Sep 15, 2008
By Syed Irfan Raza ISLAMABAD, Sept 15: A 12-year-old son of neuroscientist Dr Aafia Siddiqui was handed over to his aunt Fauzia Siddiqui here on Monday ...
Full security for Dr. Aafia's son: interior ministry sources The News International
Afghanistan frees young son of al-Qaida suspect The Associated Press
Aafia Siddiqui's Son Released to His Aunt OhmyNews International
New York Times - Online - International News Network
all 371 news articles »

Free Aafia !

Free Aafia NOW
Facebook Groups!
 

 

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[chottala.com] Great Charity - Distressed Children International (DCI)

This is a great charity--you can sponsor a child in Bangladesh for one year for only $144!!
 
May Allah bless you, and bring peace, prosperity, and happiness to all!
Regards,
              Sultan Chowdhury


 

--- On Thu, 9/18/08, Chowdhury Salahuddin Mahmood <salahuddin@distressedchildren.org> wrote:
From: Chowdhury Salahuddin Mahmood <salahuddin@distressedchildren.org>
Subject: DCI Texas Chapter Newsletter
To: dci@distressedchildren.org
Date: Thursday, September 18, 2008, 9:49 PM

Dear DCI Sponsors and Friends:
Please find attached the DCI Texas Chapter Newsletter. Thank you for your help and support for our work for children.  Regards

-Chowdhury Salahuddin Mahmood
Representative, DCI Texas Chapter
Distressed Children & Infants International
www.DistressedChildren.org


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[chottala.com] Jamaat flip-flop shocks EC

Jamaat flip-flop shocks EC
 
Mon, Sep 22nd, 2008 9:03 pm BdST
Dhaka, Sept 22 (bdnews24.com) – The Election Commission has been taken by surprise at the flip-flop of Jamaat-e-Islami which agreed to get registered in their first two rounds of talks but reversed its stance in the final round.

The Islami Oikyo Jote has done the same, the EC has said.

"Oh my God! What do I hear from the Jamaat and Islami Oikyo Jote hujoors (leaders) in the holy month of Ramadan?" a bewildered chief election commissioner ATM Shamsul Huda said to reporters on Monday.

"Jamaat-e-Islami and Islami Oikyo Jote had earlier told us that they agreed on the issue of registration. But the amazing thing is that this time they have gone back on their previous stances," Huda said.

The EC held talks with the three parties of the four-party alliance – BNP, Jamaat-e-Islami and IOJ – on Sept 20.

Jamaat and IOJ had joined the previous two rounds of dialogue sessions, but initially skipped the final round in a public show of solidarity with the BNP.

When BNP decided to sit with the commission after the release on bail of party chief Khaleda Zia on Sept 11, the allies followed suit.

"BNP have talked to the commission with a positive mentality. They seemed to be eager to join the elections, which makes us optimistic."

"[But] they (Jamaat and IOJ) have made the U-turn, which I find impossible to believe."

"Their attitude is very unfortunate," he said.

All the 16 parties, who were invited to the dialogue, have agreed to get registered with the Election Commission, except those two parties, Huda said.

Many parties including the Awami League have asked the EC not to allow the Jamaat-e-Islami, who they accuse of being backed by anti-liberation forces, to register.

The statement of Jamaat secretary general Ali Ahsam Mohammad Mojahid in the first-round of dialogue held on Oct 25 last year that there was no war criminal in the country drew howls of protests from other political parties and the civil society.

The party in its third-round dialogue asked the EC not to make the registration for the political parties mandatory.

bdnews24.com/mhc/su/bd/2044hours
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[chottala.com] Fw: [thebsa] Save sangeeta, a student of CU



----- Forwarded Message ----
From: md.ullah rabbi <rabbi_dhbd2002@yahoo.com>
To: Adda Baz YahooGroup <adda_bazz@yahoogroups.com>
Cc: Dr. Jamir Chowdhury <americamyland@gmail.com>; The BSA <thebsa@yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Sunday, September 21, 2008 10:25:03 AM
Subject: [thebsa] Save sangeeta, a student of CU

SANJIDA ISLAM ( SANGEETA ), A MERITORIOUS student of dept.of "INSTITUTE OF FORESTRY & ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE" in CHITTAGONG UNIVERSITY.. ..
as soon as she gonna explore herself...findout no where but in fornt of death....

BRAIN TUMOUR...... YES U Heard it right...our fave SANZIDA (sangeeta) facin the threat of death.....so bring her back in life...required only(!!!!!!) 800000 to 1000000 tk...thats quite a big ammount in fact impossible for her(moreover she lost her parent) ....

She needs an operation as soon as possible said by the doctor. She has to go to India (CRISTIAN MISSIONARY hospital ) for this purpose....

So this is impossible for him to bear these expenses. So they badly need your help.....
Save SANGEETA, save your soul.

She always told her frd to see her beyond her limitations. I think now it is time for us to do exactly that. It is simply heartbreaking to see such a lively, jolly and spirited human fall so miserably and we simply cannot accept that! We need to fight for her the way she had fought with her fate all her life. With all the love and spirit she has spread in the world, she deserves to live and it's up to us to make that happen….

WILL U GUYZ B WID US TO TAKE BACK A FRIEND,A SIS, AMONG US??


If you want to help this girl plz contact in this below:

AFROJA HAQUE
S/B acc no: 129.101.54341
DUTCH-BANGLA Bank Ltd.
CDA Branch, Chittagong.

......FOR FURTHER INFORMATION. ..

Md. Sarif Nijami (01813 345373).
Shurov (01818960309) .


Contact Info
Email:
Office: Her Home Add: N Vhaban(5th floor );Moushumi Residential Area..
Location: D.C. Road, BAKOLIA,Chittagong
Chittagong, Bangladesh

 Please forward this mail .......



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[ Nokia Club Bangladesh ] Personal Share Management Software

Personal share management softwarre Myshare lunched.
 
 
Download From This Link www.oceansoftbd.com/myshare/
 
 
 

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