Sudan appoints Janjaweed to cabinet post
January 22, 2008 2 min. read

The Sudanese government appointed an alleged Janjaweed militia leader to a cabinet post.  Human rights officials and observers in Washington accuse the appointee, Musa Hilal, with coordinating the Janjaweed militia during Darfur's bloody campaign.  Human Rights Watch called on the U.N. Secretary-General, Ban Ki-moon, to urge the Sudanese president to revoke the appointment.  Hilal denies […]

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U.S. sentences terror suspect to life.
January 21, 2008 3 min. read

The U.S. District Court in New York sentenced a 25-year-old Canadian of Kuwaiti descent to life in prison for plotting in 2001 a bombing of the U.S. embassies in Manila and Singapore.  The FBI in May 2002 arrested Mohammed Mansour Jabarah at a FBI-run safe-house in Oman for alleged al-Qaida suspects fleeing Afghanistan following the […]

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Khmer Rouge tribunal holds town hall meeting
January 16, 2008 3 min. read

Officials and judges from the U.N.-backed war crimes tribunal for former members of the Khmer Rouge traveled to one of the disposed regime's villages to hold a town hall meeting for local residents. Five senior members of the Khmer Rouge were arrested in 2007 and charged with a variety of atrocities, including war crimes and […]

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Joint Chiefs chair wants Gitmo closed
January 14, 2008 3 min. read

The chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Adm. Mike Mullen, said Monday he wanted to see the detention facility at the U.S. Naval base in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, closed because it damaged American's international reputation. “I’d like to see it shut down,” Mullen said. “I believe that from the standpoint of how it reflects […]

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Rwanda as a GITMO model?
January 11, 2008 2 min. read

Officials in the Rwandan capital of Kigali decided to hold a civilian trial examining the role of former Sen. Anastase Nzirasanaho in the 1994 genocide there. Nzirasanaho is classified in the “first category” of alleged planners of the genocide in Rwanda. He is also accused in the April 1994 murder of Theoneste Gafaranga, a leader […]

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… and more Charles Taylor
January 9, 2008 2 min. read

The war crimes tribunal for former Liberian president Charles Taylor proceeded for its third straight day at the U.N.-backed Special Court for Sierra Leone seated at The Hague, Netherlands. The court heard Wednesday details from one of Taylor's associates in the Special Security Service who said he had direct evidence suggesting Taylor financed and armed […]

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Charles Taylor trial enters second day
January 8, 2008 3 min. read

The war crimes trial for former Liberian President Charles Taylor resumed its second day of testimony Tuesday. The hybrid Special Court for Sierra Leone seated at The Hague, Netherlands, heard testimony from a pastor who witnessed some of the atrocities that occurred during Taylor's tenure as president during the 1991-2002 civil war in neighboring Sierra […]

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War crimes case of Charles Taylor resumes
January 7, 2008 2 min. read

The war crimes trial of former Liberian President Charles Taylor resumed at the international court in The Hague, Netherlands Monday. The trial is the first such case involving charges brought against a then-acting head of an African government.  Taylor is charged with 11 counts of crimes against humanity, war crimes, conscripting child soldiers and sexual […]

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Serb commander charged with war crimes
January 5, 2008 2 min. read

A Bosnian war crimes court indicted a former commander of the Bosnian Serb army for a 1995 missile strike that killed 71 people in the United Nations safe zone of Tuzla. It seems the commander, Novak Djukic, ordered a single artillery shell into western Tuzla hitting a group of boys , ranging from 3-years-old to […]

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Kenya witnessing "genocide on a grand scale."
January 3, 2008 4 min. read

Raila Odinga with Kenya's opposition Orange Democratic Movement called the recent “alleged” political killings by the ruling government there “genocide on a grand scale.”  Various reports out of Kenya have children piling up in morgues and I remember hearing reports from local priests this week (Tuesday maybe?) of children setting churches ablaze with scores of […]

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Candidates weigh in on International Criminal Court
January 2, 2008 3 min. read

What a way to spark off the New Year not only with a nice piece on the International Criminal Court, but a nice piece about the ICC and the presidential candidates!  And all this the day before the Iowa caucus.  Was I a good boy last year, or what? So, it seems the San Francisco […]

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2007 Year in Review
December 31, 2007 8 min. read

I took a broad approach to this year's reporting on war crimes and focused on a lot of events not normally considered during a discussion on war crimes. I did not spend a great deal of time debating or discussing the issues behind such things as the International Criminal Court and the formulations of the […]

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