Showing posts with label UN. Show all posts
Showing posts with label UN. Show all posts

Friday, July 29, 2011

UN Accuses Eritrea of Planning Terror Attack


It will be interesting to see how this plays out, given that the UN-backed Hariri assassination investigation and prosecution before the STL is reportedly set to accuse top members of the Syrian regime of involvement in the operation, along with ensuing terror attacks. BBCNews reports:
A United Nations report accuses Eritrea of planning a car bomb attack at an African Union summit in Ethiopia.

The UN Monitoring Group report on Somalia and Eritrea says the aim was to disrupt the summit in Addis Ababa last January.
...
The report states that Asmara's spies are active in Uganda, South Sudan, Kenya and Somalia, posing a threat to regional peace and security.

The UN interprets the plot as representing a shift in tactics by the Eritrean intelligence services.

"Whereas Eritrean support to foreign armed opposition groups has in the past been limited to conventional military operations, the plot to disrupt the African Union summit in Addis Ababa in January 2011, which envisaged mass casualty attacks against civilian targets and the strategic use of explosives to create a climate of fear, represents a qualitative shift in Eritrean tactics," said the report.

It outlines the details of the plan: to attack the AU headquarters with a car bomb as African leaders took breaks, to blow up Africa's largest market to "kill many people", and attack the area between the prime minister's office and the Sheraton Hotel, where most heads of state stay during AU summits.

Monday, May 2, 2011

Jordanian Peacekeeper in Cote D'Ivoire

A UN peacekeeper from Jordan Battalion reloads his weapon as he returns fire on troops supporting Ivory Coast strongman Laurent Gbagbo during a patrol in the streets of Abidjan, Ivory Coast on April 3rd, 2011. (AP Photo/Jane Hahn via The Atlantic: In Focus)

Saturday, April 30, 2011

LAF-UNIFIL Joint Military Exercises 14.04.11

Troops from the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL) and the Lebanese army take part in a land and sea military exercise on April 14, 2011 in the southern Lebanese coastal town of Naqura, near the border with Israel (Getty Images via Daylife: here and here)

Related Posts:

Monday, April 18, 2011

Qana Massacre: 15 Year Remembrance

Above: Smoke raises from the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL) compound after it was shelled by Israeli artillery in the southern town of Qana 18 April 1996. Israeli forces pummeled a compound of UNIFIL housing Fijian forces and sheltering hundreds of civilians. 105 civilians were killed who had taken refuge there during Israel's 'Grapes of Wrath' offensive - also aimed at wiping out Hezbollah. World-wide condemnation was immediate and calls for an end to the fighting intensified, with Israel and Hezbollah agreeing to a ceasefire eight days later on April 26 (Getty Images via Daylife). Remaining: Fijian UN soldiers evacuate the remains of dead Lebanese refugee burned in the shelling of the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL) compound in Qana by Israeli shelling 18 April 1996 (Getty Images via here, here, here and here).

Qana Massacre 1996: Never Forget

Thursday, April 14, 2011

UN Helicopter Over Abidjian

A UN helicopter passes over the city of Abidjan, Ivory Coast, on Friday, April 1, 2011 (AP Photo/Emanuel Ekra via The Atlantic: In Focus).

Monday, April 11, 2011

Gbagbo Captured!

A picture taken on April 11, 2011 shows Laurent Gbagbo surrounded by troops loyal to Alassane Ouattar appearing on a TV footage on Ivorian television channel TCI shortly after his capture. Troops loyal to Ivory Coast leader Alassane Ouattara captured former strongman Laurent Gbagbo and his wife Simone and brought them to their base, Ouattara's spokeswoman said. The official, Anne Ouloto, told AFP the former first couple had been brought to Abidjan's Golf Hotel, where Ouattara's camp is based, at around 1.00 pm (1300 GMT), shortly after their arrest (Getty Images via Daylife)

Friday, September 3, 2010

LAF-UNIFIL Joint Military Exercises 01.09.10

French soldiers from the United Nations Interim Forces In Lebanon (UNIFIL) fire their artillery during a joint exercise with Lebanese Army Forces in the village of Naqura south of Beirut on September 01, 2010. The Field Artillery Group, part of UNIFIL Quick Reaction Force, and LAF Artillery took part in the exercise named 'Neptune Thunder' in an area about a Kilometer south of UNIFIL Headquarters in Naqura near the Lebanese Israeli border. (Getty Images via Daylife)

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Interview with STL Prosecutor Daniel Bellemare


NOWLebanon brings us an exclusive interview with STL Prosecutor Daniel Bellemare.  Excerpts from the interviewee below:
The Special Tribunal for Lebanon (STL) will not file an indictment in the case of the assassination of former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri in September, said Daniel Bellemare in an exclusive interview with NOW Lebanon. The Canadian prosecutor, who has not spoken to the media for almost a year, reacts to some recent rumors that have been circulating in the Lebanese media and states clearly that he never said he would file the indictment next month.

Let me state clearly that the indictment has not been drafted yet. As I have previously said, I will only file the indictment when I am satisfied that there is enough evidence."

"Currently I am working on what I would call the evidentiary process; I have to make sure that the evidence I will produce is admissible in court."

I want to make sure there is as much convincing evidence as possible.

Almost daily, new articles pop up in the Lebanese media quoting “sources close to the STL,” “exclusive secret reports” or “anonymous diplomatic sources.” What do you say to that?

Bellemare: I think it is sad for the people who read those newspapers [citing “sources close to the STL,” “exclusive secret reports” or “anonymous diplomatic sources.”] ... They are purely speculations, ... some of them are truly outrageous. ... Sometimes I wonder, “Why do they do this?” But of course, I am not going to speculate myself.

The one who knows about the case is me. People should remember this. Unless they can read into my brain, everything else is just speculation.

... the day I am faced with political interference I cannot deal with, I will resign. To those who say I am influenced by this or that person, I will tell them, “Sorry, but I am not!”

The position I have taken is that I do not have tunnel vision, meaning that when you have a theory, you try to fit all the evidence you have to that theory. This is something we have to get absolutely away from. If somebody comes to me with credible evidence that shows me that I may not be on the right path, whatever path I am on, then of course I will look at that material. That is exactly what we are doing. Mr. Nasrallah says I have material, and we are looking at it. But in order to make an assessment you need to work with a complete record. That is why we asked for the rest.

... The fact of the matter is we are not politicized. We operate in a political context, no question about that. But the decision that will be made is not a political decision. It would be a political decision if the decision would be influenced by politics. The decision that will be made is completely out of these things. It is made independently; nobody will tell me what to do.

The pace of the investigation is fairly steady at this point. We have made huge progress. You have to put things in context. Look at other large investigations: the Khobar Towers bombing in Saudi Arabia or the Oklahoma bombing. They all took time.

The Hariri case is probably one of the biggest murder investigations currently under development. Look at the Lockerbie trial; it took years before the whole process was finished. Even though I have to be very careful when I compare the Hariri case with something else.

... At the end of the day, we will talk through our indictment. That would be our response to everything.

I will not comment on what Mr. Siddiq says. Basically, he is not somebody we will produce in court as a witness.

Who stamped him [Hussam Hussam] and Siddiq false witnesses? I never used that expression. At this point, he is not a suspect. Just like Siddiq. I will just leave it to that.

Bellemare: [The Lebanese justice minister] was tasked by the Lebanese cabinet [to look into the issue of the false witnesses]. We have to respect the decision of the Lebanese government. Of course, I have the primacy over the investigation. So we will see where this leads.

Many people have told me that justice has to be transparent. I agree with that. But the question is: What has to be transparent? Not the investigative process. It is the judicial process that has to be transparent. I think many people are confused with that.
Update: Michael Young gives his assessment of the interview.

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

STL: Indictments and Some Personal Info

Indictments to come between September and December 2010 and some personal info from Cassesse, the Daily Star reports:
Special Tribunal for Lebanon prosecutor Daniel Bellemare plans to file charges this fall, tribunal President Antonio Cassese told The Daily Star in an exclusive interview on Saturday.
...
The UN Security Council established the court to try suspects in the February 2005 assassination of former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri, although the tribunal has a mandate to pursue the perpetrators behind assassinations, attempted killings and political violence from October 2004 through January 2007. Hariri’s killing sparked a wave of popular demonstrations which brought about the withdrawal of Syrian troops from Lebanon after a 29-year presence. Syria has always denied any involvement in Hariri’s assassination.

At the same time, Cassese believes the tribunal will struggle to find enough donations for its budget next year, because the added costs of a trial would run into state budgets shrunken by the economic crisis afflicting the Western nations bankrolling the court. Lebanon pays 49 percent of the tribunal’s annual budget, which for 2010 amounts to $55.35 million.
...
Experts on international law have said it remains unclear how far the tribunal could go in any case to pursue high-ranking politicians, because the court’s statutes do not address whether heads of state enjoy immunity from the court. While Cassese said he could not comment on his court’s jurisdiction, he added that he had previously published his opinion that international tribunals did not have to respect diplomatic immunity because of the serious nature of the crimes they deal with.

“As an academic studying international law, I am on record … I have always argued that, as the International Court of Justice rightly pointed out, heads of state do not have functional immunity – that means that immunity because of the exercise of their functions while they were incumbent,” Cassese said.

“They enjoy personal immunities, however, before national courts. Before international tribunals they don’t enjoy any immunity whatsoever.”

The tribunal has also battled negative perceptions over the exodus of key personnel. Since being officially established in a suburb of Holland’s The Hague in March last year, the tribunal has witnessed the exits of the chief of investigations and two registrars – the officials who act as the court’s chief executive. Cassese said that all international courts experienced high rates of staff turnover, but the departures were usually connected to outside issues such as family or more lucrative job opportunities.

“I know that when [registrar Robin Vincent] left and then when [Vincent’s successor] David Tolbert left, people said, ‘So there is something wrong with this tribunal,’” Cassese said. “This happens all the time because these are international institutions where people are, in a way, taken away from their own countries. You don’t have friends. You don’t make friends in The Hague. I only go out to dinner with ambassadors or judges. So you get fed up.”

Cassese resigned from his post as president of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia because his wife threatened him with divorce, even though he relished the work, he said. “I myself left after seven years because my wife said, look, either you come back or I will divorce you,” he said. “I had no choice. I was very happy to work there. I enjoyed my job very much, but then I had a family problem.”