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Court Rules Somali Ex-Government Official Can Be Sued In U.S. Courts For Violations Of Human Rights

Issue 364
Front Page
News Headlines

UN Votes For Somalia Peace Force

“The British Government's Position Has Always Been To Be Sympathetic To Somaliland's Demand For Independence” Lord Malloch-Brown  

Court Rules Somali Ex-Government Official Can Be Sued In U.S. Courts For Violations Of Human Rights

Somalia And Somaliland Raised At Foreign Office Questions

Egyptian Teacher Kidnapped In Burao Released

Somali Politian Executed For 'Apostasy'

Local and Regional Affairs

Maternal Mortality In Somaliland In Decline But Still Worrying

Somaliland: A New Company To Provide Gas

Somaliland: Admas University College Opens A New Campus

Last Ethiopian Troops Leave Somalia's Capital

UN Orders Eritrea To Withdraw From Disputed Djibouti Border

Thousands Cheer Ethiopia Pull-Out

Insurgents Attack Somali Presidential Palace

Somaliland: Voter Registration Successfully Completed

Inside A Pirate Network

Somaliland: U.S. Investor Believes Ethiopia Likely To Break Apart Soon
Somali Pirate's Body Washes Ashore With $153,000
Editorial

Egypt And Piracy

Somaliland Voter Registration: What Is Next?

Features & Commentry

Miss East Africa UK 2008: Contestant Marian Fahen Samatar From Somalia

What A Black President Means To Me
Charity Worker Preparing To Visit War-Torn Sierra Leone

An Open Letter to Martin Luther King

Laying Our Hands On The Problem

By Flying Car From London To Timbuktu

Stop Babysitting Bottomless Somalia

To Reduce Piracy At Sea, Help Somalia On Land
Security Council Expresses Intention To Establish Peacekeeping Mission In Somalia, Subject To Further Decision By 1 June, Unanimously Adopting Resolution 1863

International News

 

History Links King Holiday, Obama Inauguration

Three Million Hit By Windows Worm

Airbus Crashes In New York River

Man Refuses To Drive 'No God' Bus

U.S. Navy Nears Deal with Unidentified Country to Prosecute Somali Pirates

How Birds Can Bring Down A Plane

Opinion

Government Failed To Stop School Children From Chewing Khat

Puntland Parliament Appoints New Pirate President

An Awakening For Somaliland Citizens: Somaliland Voter Registration

Indonesian Troops For Gaza?

Somalia: Talibanistan In East Africa

The Global Crisis Of Capitalism And Its Impact

Court's decision paves way for individuals to be sued for violating human rights

For Immediate Release    

Richmond, Virginia, January 8, 2009 – Today, January 8, 2009, the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit reversed a federal district court's decision dismissing the human rights lawsuit filed against former Somali General Mohamed Ali Samantar.  As a result, the case against General Samantar for his role in overseeing the widespread and systematic use of torture, rape, prolonged arbitrary detention and mass executions committed against the civilian population of Somalia in the 1980s, has been reinstated.

The suit, filed on behalf of five survivors of torture and other human rights abuses, was dismissed by the Federal District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia in 2007.  The district court ruled that the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act (FSIA) immunized former General Samantar from civil suit in the U.S.  The Fourth Circuit reversed and remanded, finding that the FSIA does not apply to individuals and that Congress did not intend to immunize "individual foreign government agents like Samantar" when it enacted the FSIA.  The Court further held that Congress did not intend to shield former government agents from suit under the FSIA.

"Today's ruling by the Fourth Circuit is an extraordinary victory for the people of Somalia who suffered severe repression under the military regime of Siad Barré and General Samantar and it is an important step in ensuring that human rights abusers who seek safe haven in the U.S. will be held accountable in our courts," said Pamela Merchant, Executive Director of the Center for Justice and Accountability which initiated the lawsuit.  "It is unconscionable that this war criminal can live in the U.S., just a few miles from the nation's capitol."

CJA and pro bono co-counsel Cooley Godward Kronish LLP represent five Somali survivors against Samantar who was the Minister of Defense during the regime of Siad Barré during the 1980s.  The lawsuit alleges that Samantar's subordinates in the Armed Forces committed torture, crimes against humanity, war crimes and other widespread abuses in violation of international law.  Samantar has lived in Virginia since at least 1998.  For a copy of the decision and more information and background on the case, Yousuf v. Samantar, please visit www.cja.org.

CJA is a San Francisco-based human rights organization dedicated to deterring torture and other severe human rights abuses around the world and advancing the rights of survivors to seek truth, justice and redress.  CJA uses litigation to hold perpetrators individually accountable for human rights abuses, develop human rights law, and advance the rule of law in countries transitioning from periods of abuse.

Center for Justice and Accountability

870 Market Street, Suite 688

San Francisco, CA 94102

415-544-0444

info@cja.org
www.cja.org

CONTACT:
Elizabeth Chertoff, Media Coordinator, 415-544-0444, ext. 303, echertoff@cja.org


 


 

 


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