2007/01/25

 

Actes de Terrorisme - Camouflage

«la vie des êtres humains doit être respectée et protégée»a déclaré le secrétaire général de l'ONU

Mr. Ban Ki-Moon! Do not say too much.

Simply, close your crime bases in European Union and end your political terrorism.

Le terrorisme ne peut être éradiqué avec de l’argent et des femmes.
Les activités des Terroristes devraient être anéanties.



Jung-Pyo Cho, Dae-Hwa Choi, Ki-Moon Ban, Diplomatic Immunity and Privileges, Kuhn Shin (KCIA), Dong-Won Lim (KCIA) - Principle IV, The fact that a person acted pursuant to order of his Government or of a superior does not relieve him from responsibility under international law, provided a moral choice was in fact possible to him. PRINCIPE 4, Le fait d'avoir agi sur l'ordre de son gouvernement ou celui d'un supérieur hiérarchique ne dégage pas la responsabilité de l'auteur en droit international, s'il a eu moralement la faculté de choisir. (Principes du droit international consacrés par le statut du tribunal de Nuremberg et dans le jugement de ce tribunal, 1950.)


PRINCIPE 3, Le fait que l'auteur d'un acte qui constitue un crime de droit international a agi en qualité de chef d'Etat ou de gouvernant ne dégage pas sa responsabilité en droit international. Principle III, The fact that a person who committed an act which constitutes a crime under international law acted as Head of State or responsible government official does not relieve him from responsibility under international law. Nuremberg Principles

"Life is very precious and every human being has a right to live with dignity and life of human beings must be respected and protected," Ban said in Brussels when asked about an Italian bid for a worldwide moratorium on the death penalty.
http://www.newsmax.com/archives/ic/2007/1/24/102613.shtml?s=os
http://www.cyberpresse.ca/article/20070124/CPACTUALITES/70124209/6117/CPMONDE
PS: Camouflage

2007/01/12

 

Ban Ki-moon calls for closure of Guantanamo Bay


Ban Ki-Moon's Terror Base in European Union.
From Prostitution to Diamond smuggling
From Narcoterrorism to Bioterrorism.

Mr. Ban. Close your crime business base!

2007/01/11

 

All members of the international community should pay due regard to all aspects of international humanitarian and human rights laws? You tried so...

Ban Ki-Moon Urges Iraqi Government Not to Execute Those on Death Row.

This is Ban's real politics. - Burnt Offering


June 16, 2006, Ban
June 21, 2006, Ban
June 30, 2006, Ban
If Minister Ki-Moon Ban makes an excuse by saying “I am a professional diplomat, Minister of Foreign Affairs and Trade, I just work at the command of the President”, then Minister Ban is making an excuse for any action that he performed it because it was an order.

Mr. Ban! Just following orders ("Befehl ist Befehl") ?

"The fact that a person acted pursuant to order of his Government or of a superior does not relieve him from responsibility under international law, provided a moral choice was in fact possible to him."

http://newsblaze.com/story/20070107100909tsop.nb/newsblaze/TOPSTORY/Top-Stories.html
United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon today urged the Government of Iraq to grant a stay of execution to those whose death sentences may be carried out in the near future.
His Chef de Cabinet, Vijay Nambiar, in a letter to Iraq's UN ambassador, today reiterated the Secretary General's endorsement of the call made earlier this month by the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Louise Arbour, for restraint by the Government in carrying out death sentences imposed by the Iraqi High Tribunal.
The letter also refers to the Secretary-General's view that all members of the international community should pay due regard to all aspects of international humanitarian and human rights laws, according to a spokesman for Mr. Ban said.
On 3 January, reacting to the Government's plans to execute two high-ranking co-defendants of former president Saddam Hussein, who had already been hanged, Ms. Arbour pointed out that international law "only allows the imposition of the death penalty as an exceptional measure within rigorous legal constraints."
The High Commissioner had previously voiced concern about the fairness and impartiality of Saddam Hussein's trial.
Source: United Nations
judythpiazza@gmail.com

2007/01/10

 

Spying scandal weighs on Polish church

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070109/ap_on_re_eu/poland_church_scandal
By RYAN LUCAS, Associated Press WriterTue Jan 9, 2:53 PM ET
The abrupt resignation of two top Roman Catholic clergymen over alleged ties to Communist-era secret police has left Poland facing a "national crisis," the prime minister said Tuesday.
Speaking on state Radio 1, Prime Minister Jaroslaw Kaczynski praised Pope Benedict XVI for accepting the resignation of new Archbishop Stanislaw Wielgus, calling it "the right decision."
Wielgus stunned worshippers gathered at St. John's Cathedral on Sunday by stepping down moments before his official installation Mass — a move that has rattled the nation and the church. Another prominent clergyman, the rector of Krakow's Wawel Cathedral, left his post for similar reasons a day later amid warnings that more such revelations may be coming.
The Rev. Janusz Bielanski denied the allegations Tuesday, saying: "I was never an informer, I never signed any documents, I never received any money."
Kaczynski, whose conservative Law and Justice Party has sought both to purge Poland of the vestiges of Communist influence and to strengthen traditional Catholic values, also warned of the scandal's damage to the church in the deeply Catholic country.
He called the church a "national institution" in Poland. "That's why this crisis is a national crisis, a very difficult crisis," he said.
While the government has passed new laws widening the number of public officials that must be screened for possible ties to the Communist-era intelligence service, many say the church has fallen behind the rest of society in dealing with penetration of its ranks.
Gen. Czeslaw Kiszczak told church officials in 1990 that the secret police had destroyed all its documents on clergy, Polish media have reported. It now turns out, however, that microfilm of some of those files survived.
It was microfilm copies that confirmed Wielgus' cooperation with the secret police.
Kiszczak declined to comment when asked on TVN24 television about the alleged burning of the files.
Historians from the state-run Institute of National Remembrance, which holds the secret police archives, estimate about 15 percent of Polish priests cooperated with the Communist-era intelligence services, which sought to clamp down on threats to the regime.
Wielgus' case highlights the problem, but may also mark a turning point, says Marek Zajac, a commentator for the respected Catholic weekly Tygodnik Powszechny. It seems to be a painful "mental breakthrough" for many church leaders that past agents will be outed, Zajac said.
The widening scandal threatens to darken the Polish church, whose resistance to the Communist leadership was perhaps best personified by the late Pope John Paul II. His encouragement of peaceful challenge to the regime is credited by many with hastening its demise.
Kaczynski stressed that the church played an "unambiguously positive and heroic role" in opposing the regime that ruled Poland until 1989, and warned that due to the current crisis the church is "almost accused of participation in the (Communist) system."
"We have to find a way out, above all, we have to very intensively make the nation aware of who the victims were and who the executioners were, and it's necessary to take care of the executioners," he said.
Zajac said two "radically different" ideas have emerged inside Poland's church on how deal with evidence of clergy who collaborated.
"One camp ... thinks that you have to bravely deal with the security service archives, that there's no other way out," Zajac said. "The other camp thinks instead that we shouldn't look into the archives, but that we should wait. Some voices say we should close the archives for 50 years until everyone in them is dead."
But the church may not have that much time, he said.
"If the church doesn't deal with the security services' archives, journalists will, and the church's authority will be undermined," he said.

2007/01/08

 

UN Chief Ban Ki-moon Wants Iraq to Delay Executions (Update1)

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=advHXCufRTQY&refer=home
By Bill Varner
Jan. 8 (Bloomberg) -- The Iraqi government should delay the executions of the two men sentenced to death along with former dictator Saddam Hussein for the 1982 killings of Shiite Muslims, United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said.

Ban ``strongly urged'' Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki's government to stay the executions, according to a statement released in New York.

A Jan. 6 letter to Iraqi Ambassador Hamid al-Bayati also backs the position taken by Louise Arbour, the UN's high commissioner for human rights, that Iraq shouldn't have hanged Hussein and should delay the executions of Awad Hamed al-Bandar and Barzan Ibrahim al-Tikriti.
Hussein, 69, was executed on Dec. 30. Video footage of the former leader being taunted by witnesses and hung in mid-prayer provoked international criticism and outrage among Iraq's Sunnis, Hussein's base of support.

Al-Tikriti, Hussein's half-brother, was Iraq's intelligence chief at the time of the killings of 148 people in the village of Dujail. Al-Bandar issued death sentences to Dujail residents as the head of a court. The two men were sentenced to death by the Iraqi High Tribunal on Nov. 5.
Ban's statement followed a similar appeal by New York-based Human Rights Watch, which said in a statement that executing the two men would be a ``cruel and inhuman punishment that will only drag a deeply flawed process into even greater disrepute.''

Feisal al-Istrabadi, Iraqi's deputy UN ambassador, said his government would determine when to go ahead with the executions.

``It is a domestic matter for the government of Iraq,'' al- Istrabadi said. ``These men had a fair and transparent trial and had a richly deserved sentence passed on them.''
Ban, Penalty

Ban declined to criticize the execution of Hussein in his first news conference after taking the office of secretary- general on Jan. 1. He said it was up to each country that belongs to the UN to determine whether to use the death penalty.

Al-Maliki has refused to accept criticisms of the manner of Hussein's execution, a position that is reminiscent of statements made by Hussein's Baathist government, according to Human Rights Watch.

The second trial dealing with allegations against Hussein and his officials sat today for the first session since his execution. There was an empty black leather chair in the space formerly taken by Hussein in pictures aired on Arabic-language television channels.

The prosecution says six defendants, including Ali Hassan al-Majid, also known as ``Chemical Ali'' for his alleged use of gas attacks, ordered the ``Anfal'' military campaign in the late 1980s that killed 182,000 Kurds in northern Iraq.

To contact the reporter on this story: Bill Varner in United Nations at wvarner@bloomberg.net . Last Updated: January 8, 2007 14:47 EST

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