Archive for April, 2015

Reckoning Point: Ex-US Guards Face Sentencing in Iraq Case

A yearslong legal fight over a deadly shooting of civilians in an Iraq war zone reaches its reckoning point with the sentencing this week of four former Blackwater security guards.

Dustin Heard, Evan Liberty and Paul Slough face mandatory, decadeslong sentences because of firearms convictions. A fourth defendant, Nicholas Slatten, faces life in prison after being found guilty of first-degree murder.

At the hearing Monday in U.S. District Court, defense lawyers intend to appeal for mercy by arguing that their clients acted in self-defense during a chaotic firefight in Baghdad. They also plan to argue that sending the defendants to prison for decades would be an unfairly harsh outcome for men who have close family ties and proud military careers, and who were operating in stressful conditions in a war-torn country.

The men were charged in the deaths of 14 Iraqis at a crowded traffic circle in downtown Baghdad, killings that caused an international uproar and became a dark episode of contractor violence during the Iraq war. Defense lawyers argued that the contractors, who arrived there after a car bomb exploded, were targeted with gunfire from insurgents and Iraqi police, and shot back in self-defense. Prosecutors contended that there was no incoming fire and that the shooting was unprovoked.

The defendants who were in Iraq to protect American diplomats were convicted in October after a trial that stretched months and featured testimony from Iraqi witnesses and from other Blackwater guards who cooperated with the government.

The sentencing hearing arrives with much at stake for the men given the heavy punishments the government is seeking. The firearms convictions alone carry mandatory minimum sentences of 30 years in prison. But prosecutors are seeking sentences far beyond that, partly because they say the men have never shown remorse or accepted responsibility. The murder conviction against Slatten carries a life sentence.

"By imposing substantial sentences, this court would hold the defendants accountable for their callous, wanton and deadly conduct, and deter others wielding the awesome power over life or death from perpetrating similar atrocities in the future," prosecutors wrote in a sentencing memorandum.

Defense lawyers say the mandatory minimums in this case violate a constitutional prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment.

"The defendants in this case did not have the option to 'leave their guns at home.' They were required to carry their government-issued weapons in order to do their job in a war zone," they wrote in court filings.

The lawyers said they were "aware of no other case in which the government has prosecuted government security contractors for conduct undertaken in self-defense in a war zone, much less for having used weaponry of a particular magnitude, when the weaponry was issued by the United States government for official use."

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Reckoning Point: Ex-US Guards Face Sentencing in Iraq Case

Reuters Iraq bureau leaves after death threat

The Baghdad bureau chief for Reuters has left Iraq after he was threatened and denounced by a Shia paramilitary group's satellite news channel.

It came in reaction to a Reuters report last week that detailed lynching and looting in the city of Tikrit.

The threats against journalist Ned Parker began on an Iraqi Facebook page run by a group that calls itself "the Hammer" and is believed by an Iraqi security source to be linked to armed Shia groups.

The 5 April post and subsequent comments demanded he be expelled from Iraq.

One commentator said that killing Mr Parker was "the best way to silence him, not kick him out."

Three days later, a news show on Al-Ahd, a television station owned by Iranian-backed armed group Asaib Ahl al-Haq, broadcast a segment on Mr Parker that included a photo of him.

The segment accused the reporter and Reuters of denigrating Iraq and its government-backed forces, and called on viewers to demand Mr Parker be expelled.

The pressure followed a3 April report by Mr Parker and two colleagues detailing human rights abuses in Tikrit,after government forces and Iranian-backed militias liberated the city from the Islamic State extremist group.

Two Reuters journalists in the city witnessed the lynching of an Islamic State fighter by Iraqi federal police.

The report also described widespread incidents of looting and arson in the city, which local politicians blamed on Iranian-backed militias.

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Reuters Iraq bureau leaves after death threat

Libya, Yemen OFWs urged to return home – Video


Libya, Yemen OFWs urged to return home
Due to the continuing conflict in Yemen and Libya, it is becoming harder to escape in those countries. The government appeals to the Overseas Filipino Workers (OFWs) to return home now while...

By: ABS-CBN News

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Libya, Yemen OFWs urged to return home - Video

EU warns against sabotage of Libya talks – Video


EU warns against sabotage of Libya talks
The EU warned Friday that anyone sabotaging talks on forming a Libya national unity government will be held responsible by an international community despera...

By: Levi Koton

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EU warns against sabotage of Libya talks - Video

UN condemns escalation of hostilities in western Libya, calls for immediate ceasefire

11 April 2015 The United Nations Support Mission in Libya (UNSMIL) has today condemned the grave escalation in hostilities in western Libya, particularly in the Aziziya area in Warshafana, a region whose towns in recent days have undergone considerable destruction from intermittent battles.

The people who live in Warshafana are enduring immense hardship, with many civilians displaced, abducted and tortured, and in dire need of humanitarian aid, the Mission said today in a statement.

“The Mission urges all parties to take all necessary measures to ensure the right of return for all those displaced from the area, and that none are illegally detained and prosecuted outside the scope of the law,” it added, calling for an end to the fighting so that residents can resume their normal day-to-day living.

UNSMIL commended efforts to reach a ceasefire and offered its good offices and available technical expertise to assist the parties in bringing an end to the fighting.

“The Mission also reiterates its warnings to the warring parties that the targeting of civilians could amount to crimes punishable under international humanitarian law,” the note also said.

Significant progress is being made in the UNSMIL-facilitated Libyan political dialogue process with the aim of reaching a comprehensive resolution of the political crisis and military conflict in Libya, the Mission emphasized, reiterating its call on all parties in Libya to desist from taking any military actions that could constitute a provocation in the current environment of heightened tensions.

UNSMIL also called on the parties to safeguard national institutions by refraining from taking any steps that could compromise neutrality that is so crucial for Libya's economic survival.

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UN condemns escalation of hostilities in western Libya, calls for immediate ceasefire