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SUICIDE BOMBER FAILED IN COPENHAGEN

Danish police have confirmed a small blast at a Copenhagen hotel, on Friday 09/10/2010, after reports that a would-be suicide bomber was injured by an explosion there.


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9 KILLED AT MOGADISHU AIRPORT

A suicide car bomber and a vehicle with militant gunmen attacked the front gate to Mogadishu's seaside airport, on Thursday 09/09/2010, triggering an explosion and gunbattle that killed 9 people.


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4 AL QAEDA ESCAPED US CONTROLLED JAIL

Four prisoners with ties to Al Qaeda have escaped from the US-controlled section of Baghdad's Karkh prison, also known as Camp Cropper, on Wednesday 09/08/2010 night.


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15 KILLED IN VLADIKAVKAZ MARKET BLAST

At least 15 people have been killed, on Thursday 09/09/2010, and more than 60 wounded in an apparent car bomb attack on a market in Vladikavkaz, in the Russian Caucasus.


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MULLAH OMAR – VICTORY "CLOSE"

Afghan Taliban leader Mullah Omar said, on Wednesday 09/08/2010, his fighters were close to victory in driving foreign forces out of Afghanistan.


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3 TO BE CHARGED IN PAKISTAN OVER TIMES SQUARE PLOT

Pakistani police said, on Wednesday 09/08/2010, they will bring terrorism charges against three men being held for allegedly assisting Faisal Shahzad the failed Times Square Plot main suspect.


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US SP RULED GUANTANAMO DETAINEES CAN APEAL

US SUPREME COURT RULED GUANTANAMO
 
 DETAINEES CAN APEAL

The USA Supreme court ruled out, on Thursday 06/12/2008, that Guantanamo detainees have the right to challenge their cases in civilian courts. The decision extends the Bush administration's losing streak to three Guantanamo-related cases. 

In 2004, the Supreme Court said U.S. federal courts had jurisdiction to decide whether detainees at Guantanamo were rightfully imprisoned. In 2006, the court invalidated an executive branch decision creating military tribunals, saying it lacked congressional authorization.
 

In response, Congress passed the Military Commissions Act of 2006, which instituted the military tribunal system now in use at Guantanamo. Part of that act removed the habeas corpus protection for detainees, the ability to challenge their detention in court and it was on this that the latest legal debate centered.

 

Today's ruling involved two cases, Boumediene v. Bush and al-Odah v. United States. Lakhdar Boumediene, an Algerian national, was arrested in Bosnia in October 2001. Bosnian authorities accused him of plotting to attack the U.S. embassy in Sarajevo, and he was handed over to the U.S. military.

 

Fawzi al-Odah, a Kuwaiti, was in Afghanistan in 2001 on what he claimed was a humanitarian mission. He crossed into Pakistan after the U.S. invasion. He was captured and transferred to U.S. authorities, who sent him to Guantanamo.

 

Thirty-five other detainees are included in these cases. In all, some 270 men are currently held at the detention center on the eastern end of Cuba.

 

Allegations of abusive interrogation practices have also been lodged.

The military tribunals were in session just last week, with the arraignment of top members of al-Qaida, including Khalid Shaik Mohammed the self-proclaimed planner of the 9/11 attacks. See -  JEFFREY BROWN 
 
 

 

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13/06/2008 03:16:30


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