- Pentagon Brings Charges in the USS Cole Attack
- DC Circuit Court Rejects Government Argument Against Chinese "Enemy Combatant"
- Pastors for Peace Caravan Prepares to Cross into Mexico to Deliver Aid to Cuba
- US and Coalition Fatalities Higher in Afghanistan than in Iraq
- Tibetan Exiles in Nepal Arrested Near Chinese Border
- Nelson Mandela Finally Removed From US Terror Watch List
Click here for newscast for Tuesday, July 1st, 2008
Pentagon Brings Charges in the USS Cole Attack
Military prosecutors have charged a Saudi national detained at Guantanamo Bay with plotting the deadly October 2000 attack on the USS Cole navy destroyer and for having a separate role in a suicide bombing of a French oil tanker in 2002. The detainee, Abdel Rahim al-Nashiri, is among the handful of terrorism suspects the CIA has admitted to waterboarding. Al-Nashiri told a Guantanamo hearing that he confessed to providing explosives for the attack on the USS Cole after torture by US interrogators. Al-Nashiri will face the death penalty if convicted by the Guantanamo Bay military tribunal system.
DC Circuit Court Rejects Government Argument Against Chinese "Enemy Combatant"
In legal news, a federal appeals court in Washington DC has ruled that courts and tribunals must be able to assess the reliability of government evidence against a Chinese Muslim held as an enemy combatant at Guantanamo Bay. In the unclassified portion of the ruling released on Monday, the 3 judge panel unanimously rejected the government's argument that its accusations against the detainee were true simply because they were repeated in three different secret documents. The court ordered the government to either release Huzaifa Parhat, transfer him to another country, or hold a new hearing to determine his status as an unlawful enemy combatant. Legal experts believe this ruling could have a wider impact on the cases against other Guantanamo detainees based on similar accusations.
Pastors for Peace Caravan Prepares to Cross into Mexico to Deliver Aid to Cuba
Members of a caravan intent on delivering donated medical and school supplies to Cuba have arrived in the Texas border city of McAllen, where they intend to cross into Mexico before travelling on to Cuba in direct violation of the 4 decade old US embargo against the island. Rachel Clarke has more.
For the 19th straight year, "caravanistas" with the group Pastors for Peace have traveled across the US collecting educational and medical supplies to donate to schools and hospitals in Cuba. More than 130 volunteers with the ecumenical organization are participating this year in direct violation of the 40 year old trade and travel restrictions the United States continues to impose on the island nation. The group arrived in the US/Mexico border city of McAllen, Texas on Monday where volunteers will receive extensive training in what to expect when they cross. The caravan plans to cross into Mexico on July 3rd where donated aid will be loaded onto cargo ships bound for Havana. The United Nations voted last November 183-4 against the continuation of the US-led embargo against Cuba, but none of the restrictions have been lifted and it is unclear what challenges or penalties caravan participants will face in the coming weeks. For Free Speech Radio News, I’m Rachel Clarke.
US and Coalition Fatalities Higher in Afghanistan than in Iraq
US and Coalition deaths in Afghanistan have outpaced those in Iraq for a second month in a row. The Taliban has been steadily increasing its attacks in key areas, particularly in the region along the Afghan border with Pakistan. Twenty-seven US soldiers were among the 45 Coalition troops that died in Afghanistan in June - the deadliest month for foreign troops since the start of the war in 2001.
Tibetan Exiles in Nepal Arrested Near Chinese Border
Nepalese police today detained 42 Tibetan monks and nuns while they attempted to sneak into the Tibetan region of China along its border with Nepal. The monks and nuns were transported back to Kathmandu after their arrest. PC Dubey has more.
Today's protest by Tibetan exiles in Nepal was unusual due to its proximity to the Nepal-China border. The Tibetan refugees managed to come so close to the border by hiking some 75 miles through difficult mountainous routes rather than traveling along the main highway. Tibetans have been staging regular demonstrations in Kathmandu since March 10th, when pro-autonomy protests erupted in the Tibetan capital, Lhasa. The protests in Lhasa were met with a deadly Chinese army crackdown. The Nepalese government has strong ties to China and has repeatedly shown willingness to stifle Tibetan demonstrations of dissent against Chinese rule. Approximately 20,000 Tibetan exiles live in Nepal. Many of whom have announced plans to continue protest actions ahead of the Beijing Olympics. For FSRN, I am PC Dubey.
Nelson Mandela Finally Removed From US Terror Watch List
And finally, President Bush signed a bill today that removes former South African President and Nobel Laureate Nelson Mandela from the US terror watch list. The bill, H.R. 5690, also removes the names of other activists from the African National Congress, an organization that fought against the apartheid system in South Africa before becoming the ruling party in 1994. The ANC was put on the State Department's watch list in the 1970s as an organization with alleged ties to communism. The removal of Mandela's name from the watch list comes just weeks before his 90th birthday.