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Issue 401

Front Page

News Headlines

Somaliland Police Arrest An Alleged Terrorist

Somaliland Armed Forces Thwart Clan Conflict In Ceelbardaale

Al-Jazeera Features Somaliland

Parliament Suspends Impeachment Motion

Top UN Envoy Welcomes Agreement On Presidential Polls In Somaliland

Tusmo Donates Blankets Berbera Hospital

SCDO Holds Seminar On Violence Against Women

US Court To Hear Somali Ex-Minister Torture Case

Local and Regional Affairs

In Brief: Capitalize On Rains, Somaliland Urged

Shabaab Rebels Take Full Control Of Somali Port

"Media Freedom Kept Within Bounds”: Nusoj Report On Somaliland

CPJ Condemns Suspension Of VOA Service In Puntland

U.S. Delays Somalia Aid, Fearing It Is Feeding Terrorists

African Women Connect In Minneapolis

A Message To Young People

Ottawa To Pressure Ethiopia To Release Canadian

Ethiopia Says No Rebel Risk To Ogaden Oil Search

Somali Pirates Resume Attacks

Somalia's President Seeks Support In Twin Cities

Somalia: Scarce Educational Opportunities Affect Overall National Development

Bristol's Somali Voice Newspaper Back After Arson Attack

Good EU Backing For Somali Training Plan -Solana

Human Rights Council Holds Interactive Dialogues With Independent Expert On Somalia

Lawyer For Woman Stranded In Kenya Calls Gov't Claims Irrelevant

Somalia Could Miss World Cup Trophy Tour

Editorial

Jama Sweden Indicts Himself

Features & Commentary

Somaliland: Democracy Threatened

Political Brinkmanship: A Close Call for Somaliland

Our Brother In Guantánamo

Nomad Diaries

It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World

Canada: Ottawa Saw 'Imposter' In Mohamud

Somali 'Travelers': The Holiest Gang, Part III

Kenya’s Citizenship On Sale

War Is Boring: In Somalia, Security Gains Mean Piracy Decline

International News

Rio To Host 2016 Olympic Games

Obama's Olympian Gamble Collapses

Elbaradei Bound For Iran To Pin Down Geneva Accord

EU And U.S. To Present Plan To Break Bosnia Deadlock

Guinea Opposition Rejects Unity Bid

Opinion

Somaliland Is Rescued By Foreign Friends And A Watchful Media

A Four-Step Plan To Destroy Somaliland In Action

Somaliland: A New Way Forward Toward Peaceful Elections.

To Save Somaliland We Have A Duty To Start The Change Process Immediately

How Can Some One Try Destroying Our Production (Somaliland) By Blundering Around In The Dark?!!”

US Court To Hear Somali Ex-Minister Torture Case

Washington, D.C., October 3, 2009 – The U.S. Supreme Court has agreed to review the first human rights case ever filed addressing human rights abuses committed in Somalia during the brutal Siyad Barre regime. The key issue under review is whether the defendant in the case, Fairfax Virginia resident and former Somali General and Defense Minister Mohammed Ali Samantar, is immune from civil suit in the U.S. for human rights abuses committed in Somalia. No person has ever been held legally responsible for the abuses committed by the military government against the civilian population of Somalia in the 1980s.

"The Center for Justice and Accountability is confident that the Supreme Court will not allow U.S. law to be manipulated, making the U.S. a safe haven for human rights abusers like Samantar,” said CJA's Executive Director, Pamela Merchant. Currently, survivors of torture, extrajudicial killing and other grave human rights abuses can seek justice against their abusers in U.S. courts under the Torture Victim Protection Act (TVPA), provided these abusers are found in the U.S. In 1991, President George H.W. Bush signed the TVPA into law, laying out in clear terms the commitment to make U.S. courts available to survivors of international human rights violations.

The suit, Yusuf v. Samantar, was brought by the Center for Justice and Accountability (CJA) and pro bono co-counsel Cooley Godward Kronish LLP on behalf of five torture survivors: Bashe Abdi Yusuf, a young business man detained, tortured, and kept in solitary confinement for over six years; Aziz Mohamed Deria, whose father and brother were abducted by officials and never seen again; John Doe I, whose two brothers were summarily executed by soldiers; Jane Doe, a university student detained by officials, raped 15 times, and put in solitary confinement for over three years; and John Doe II, imprisoned for his clan affiliation, who was shot by a firing squad, but miraculously survived by hiding under other dead bodies.

The suit was filed in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia in 2004 and was dismissed on sovereign immunity grounds in 2007. The district court ruled that the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act (FSIA) immunized former General Samantar from civil suit in the United States. On January 8, 2009 the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit reinstated the case and held that the FSIA would not immunize General Samantar from suit. For a copy of the decision and more information and background on the case, 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 Press release

Source: HREA - www.hrea.org, September 30, 2009
Human Rights Education Associates (HREA) is an international non-governmental organization that supports human rights learning; the training of activists and professionals; the development of educational materials and programming; and community-building through on-line technologies.











 

 


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