Tag Archive | "Murder"


War-Crimes Bribery: Evil Criminal Blackwater Mercenary Army Trying To Bribe Its Way Out of Killing 17 Iraqi Civilians in Cold Blood

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New York Times: Top executives at Blackwater Worldwide authorized secret payments of about $1 million to Iraqi officials that were intended to silence their criticism and buy their support after a September 2007 episode in which Blackwater security guards fatally shot 17 Iraqi civilians in Baghdad, according to former company officials. [ READ MORE ]

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Author Jeremy Scahill discusses a New York Times report that Blackwater paid hush money to Iraqi government officials.

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Blackwater: The Rise of the World's Most Powerful Mercenary Army

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The portrait of a ‘Hang-Man’

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Bush Portrait

Last Saturday, when President Bush presided over the unveiling of his “presidential portrait,” at the Union League, in Philadelphia, he joked to the crowd: ‘Welcome to my hanging.‘ Bush said the painter, Mark Carder, ‘did a really fine job with a challenging subject.

Yes, Mr. Bush ….Was it any challenge to you, when you arbitrarily “Hanged” hundreds of thousands of innocent Iraqi’s, and American soldiers?

Perhaps Saddam Hussein is beckoning you — to join him…..!

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Some comments internet wide:

webber wrote on: Dec 7, 2008 11:49:20 AM
The portrait of Bush makes him look like the cat who swallowed the canary. I notice a slight resemblance to Pat Robertson; the Preacher.

Slugger wrote on: Dec 7, 2008 1:58:10 PM
He should have been hung instead of his picture.

khovalyg wrote on: Dec 7, 2008 2:12:06 PM
If this non-elected piece of human waste leaves office without being prosecuted for felonies, treason, violation of oath of office, torture, murder, & war crimes, it’ll say that it’s ok for any president to be a Constitution-breaking tyrant & killer of American lives, livelihoods, & land. And that goes double for Cheney.

buzzsaw1 wrote:
The man is a war criminal and remains free. Begin impeachment proceedings now! What the hell is the holdup?

slim2 wrote:
“He kept photos of al-Qaeda leaders in his desk and showed how he had crossed through the pictures with a large “X” as each suspected terrorist was killed or captured.”…. This sounds more like your run-of-the- mill serial killer.

Schwartz1 wrote:
i love the picture of W. Like so many others, its clear that there is nothing behind those eyes. No brains, no headaches.

book134 wrote:
Almost no one quarrels with Dubya’s decision to invade & occupy Afghanistan. (Though the entire issue of war in Afghanistan should have been resolved & ended, years ago. This Administration has neglected the Afghanistan issue & thus, problems continue to fester there.)

But unless one is a Bush loyalist, bought & paid for with tax cuts for the wealthy, it is generally agreed that Dubya, aided by his GOP cronies, lied this nation into an unwarranted & unjust invasion & occupation of a sovereign nation (Iraq) for the purpose of further enriching his corporate cronies (esp. in the oil industry) & wealthy GOP investors.

This is by far, the most corrupt & criminal administration to ever darken the halls of the White House. Even Harding, Grant & Nixon were merely dabbling at corruption when compared with this bunch of criminals. Indeed, Watergate & Teapot Dome were child’s play in comparison to the endemic corruption of the Bush II Administration.

Hopefully, American historians will not give these criminals a pass

dmarble wrote:
Why did I read this piece? Not that it isn’t well-researched and well-written; it seems to be both. What I mean is, I already know this second-rate Chucklehead-in-Chief has been a disaster ever since Yale let him in the back door when no one was looking.

What a pathetic use of perfectly good oxygen.

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   The UNOFFICIAL Bush Presidential portrait
The UNOFFICIAL Bush Presidential portrait
   Courtesy Bob Cesca

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aint2sure wrote:
War crimes. Put all the SOBs on trial for war crimes. If Congress won’t do it, the international community should! Someone has to make these criminals pay for what they’ve done!

Cleareye wrote:
All of these problems are a result of one man being suckered into a war in the middle east by a guy living in a cave. Osama’s plan is on track like a Swiss watch. Time for us to change horses fast!

thuctho wrote:
Look at that idiot face of Georgie boy. LOL. He does not know what he is doing. He screws America and Americans voted for him twice. That says a lot about American people.

Samson151 wrote:
“He spoke..about his “instincts”.. saying, “I’m not a textbook player; I’m a gut player.”

No, that wasn’t John McCain, although it sounds very much like something McCain would say. It was George Bush.

They’re very much alike. Both the rebellious sons of political heavyweights. Both adequate but hardly outstanding intellects. Both seeing themselves as the friend of the little guy, though both come from wealth and privilege.

One difference: Bush’s VP is a lot more qualified than McCain’s candidate. I don’t know whether that’s a good thing.

One other thing they have in common: both over their heads in the role of President.

Why do we keep electing people like this?

fridaolay wrote:
Bush will become the biggest mass murderer of the beginning of 21st century, and hopefully, there will never be another president like him.

Bush should join the lists of mass murderers such as Mussolini, Hitler, some of the Bolshevik– such as Stalin, Ivan the Terrible, and Atila the Hun, and Nero. Like all these psychopathic murderers, he is cruel, and like them Bush shows neither remorse or compassion. All he cares to know is “What was the body count on each side” in order to measure the level of his success on this war. He doesn’t seemed to be disturbed by the fact that many innocent people have been injured and maimed for life on both sides; what he cares to know is how many are dead…Bush is a repulsive psycho!

loan4ever wrote:
George W. Bush already made the world a better place. It’s a matter of fact that all the Bush-haters are enemies of liberty and justice — and now we know who they are and where they are. Well done, Mr. President!

God bless George W. Bush, the men and women in uniform, and America!

vought wrote:
Good God. How could we have possibly elected this messianic man president…twice? (er, make that once.)

cakewalk wrote:
The real morons are the voters who elected him.

gary4books wrote:
“Bring it on!”

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References:

1. A Portrait of a Man Defined by His Wars
2. The War WithinThe inside story of how President Bush’s team dealt with its failing Iraq strategy.
   | Dissension | Key Players | Timeline: Road to the Surge | About This Series |

   The Book!
The War Within: A Secret White House History 2006-2008
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Popularity: 12% [?]

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Sudan’s Omar al-Bashir is a criminal, a genocidal THUG who must be prosecuted

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   A USAToday Editorial: Accountability in Darfur

Omar al-BashirFor five and a half years, government-backed forces in Sudan have committed unspeakable acts  — murder, rape, torching villages  — in the vast western province of Darfur. About a quarter of a million people have died, with millions displaced.

In 2004, the U.S. government condemned this for what it is: genocide. But efforts to stop it, even sending in thousands of international peacekeepers, haven’t ended the horror.

On Monday, the International Criminal Court, a tribunal set up in The Hague, Netherlands, in 2002 to prosecute individuals for crimes against humanity, took a bold action. Its prosecutor asked its judges to indict Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir on war crimes and genocide charges — the court’s first indictment of a sitting head of state. (Two others, Yugoslavia’s Slobodan Milosevic and Liberia’s Charles Taylor, were indicted by special nited Nations courts.)

The value of the criminal court’s extraordinary decision is that it continues a movement over the past decade of putting leaders of countries on notice that they might not get away with terrible crimes against their people. That trend gained momentum after Rwanda’s 1994 genocide, in which the world stood by as 800,000 were slaughtered.

Each new effort can also put new pressure on countries that do business with tyrants. China has lucrative oil deals with Sudan and is its main arms supplier. The indictment gives China additional incentive to use its leverage to burnish its image as it prepares to host next month’s Olympic Games.

The potential downside is that the indictment could provoke a backlash by al-Bashir. He has played a game of promising to comply with efforts to end the genocide, including allowing in foreign peacekeepers.

In reality, he has aided the horror. Now, he could end all pretense. Already, worrisome new attacks on peacekeepers include one last week in which seven were killed and 22 injured. The U.N. said Monday it was withdrawing some non-essential staff.

Al-Bashir certainly won’t hand himself over. He is more likely to model himself on a fellow African tyrant, Zimbabwe’s Robert Mugabe, who unleashed a murderous onslaught on anyone who opposes him after it became clear he would lose this year’s election.

Like Mugabe, al-Bashir might be counting on help from China and Russia. Both are frequently accused of human rights violations and fear international moves that infringe on national sovereignty. Appallingly, they used their U.N. Security Council vetoes last week to block new sanctions against Zimbabwe.

One organization might have more influence than the international court or U.N. on al-Bashir and Mugabe. That organization
is the African Union.

Its members, led by powerful South Africa, have behaved more like a cozy old boys’ network.
On Monday, they even asked the court to stop the indictment. They should be more concerned with getting the thugs in their club to stop the killing.

THE OTHER SIDE OF THE STORY:

Blood, water & oil: fallacies of the Darfur War
by Michael Schmidt – ZACF, southern Africa Monday, May 14 2007, 9:42am

The Darfur War has been described as the worst conflict in the world today – and yet despite intensive media coverage, many aspects of the conflict are misunderstood because of the propaganda battle that runs in tandem with the war on the ground. The view from the ground offers different perspectives.

The USA alleges genocide against the Fur, Masaalit and Zaghawa tribes by Khartoum-backed Janjaweed militia — an interest spurred no doubt by Washington’s desire for access to Sudan’s oil reserves which are currently being exploited exclusively by China and to a lesser extent, Malaysia and India. On the other hand, Nafi Ali Nafi, deputy leader of the ruling National Congress Party admitted that Khartoum armed and trained a “popular defence force” from among civilians to be used to support the Sudanese Defence Force in its battle against rebels in Darfur, while denying any genocidal campaign.

Sudan remains, in World Bank terms, a highly indebted poor country. But oil is changing all that: by 2006, oil accounted for over 25% of Sudan’s GDP. However little of the wealth from that 120,000 barrels of crude a year finds its way into an economy propped up by Bangladeshi guest workers lured to Sudan on false promises, or into neglected extremities like Darfur… [MORE >>]

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U.N. Report: Balkans Safer Than Thought

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By Risto Karajkov, Osservatorio sui Balcani, Rovereto, Italy, July 3, 2008

The Balkans is safer than thought. This is the basic message from a recently published report, “Crime and Its Impact on the Balkans,” by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime.

The report, which was launched last week, made global headlines as some of its arguments run counter to common wisdom–that the Balkans is a gloomy and risky place.

With detailed, comprehensive statistics, the report concludes that the Balkans, contrary to widespread opinion, does not have a problem with conventional crime: “South East Europe does not, in fact, suffer from high rates of crime, at least in terms of the range of offences commonly referred to as ‘conventional crime’: murder, rape, assault, robbery, burglary, theft, and the like. In fact, most of the region is safer than West Europe in this respect.” The report notes, “This key fact is often omitted from discussions on crime in the region.”

Balkans Map

The report focuses on the so-called Western Balkan countries (former Yugoslavia minus Slovenia plus Albania), Bulgaria, Romania, and Moldova, but its comparisons include Central and Western European countries, and other parts of the world.

In 130 pages of in-depth analysis, the report gives a full account of all crime-related issues that concern the Balkans, from conventional to organized crime and corruption. It discusses both the socioeconomic and political preconditions of crime, and, in turn, the possible impact crime has on the region’s development.

The report first analyzes the social conditions in the Balkans and notes, “The social conditions in South East Europe are not the sort generally associated with high crime regions. In essence the Balkans does not represent a favourable environment for crime.” The report reaches these conclusions because of a set of factors that include the region’s demographic makeup–aging population, low fertility rates (with the exception of Kosovo), combined with strong outward migration, again mostly involving young people. The report considers the additional factors of income and education levels. Incomes are small but the number of people in abject poverty is limited. The region’s communist legacy has left a low, although now widening, income inequality, which is “regarded as the most robust quantitative correlate of crime rates.” Education levels are relatively high (by global standards).

After analyzing the standard indicators of conventional crime, such as murders and theft (especially auto theft), the report unequivocally concludes that the region is safer overall than Western Europe, “In terms of the standardized murder rates â?¦ most countries of the region fall at or below the European average. Moldova and Albania are exceptions, but even these two countries are safer than most of Eastern Europe.” For example, the West European average of murders per 100,000 people (2004 data) stands at 2.5, Macedonia at 2.3, Croatia at 1.8, Romania at 2.5, Bulgaria at 4.1, Albania at 5.7, and Moldova at 8.0. Russia has the worst statistics with an average of 19.9 murders per 100,000 people.

“Albania stands out as having a relatively high murder rate,” concedes the report, but “the number of murders committed in Albania in 2006 is only 5% of what it was after the collapse of government in 1997.”

In addition, the report notes the positive trend over the past decade of declining murder rates throughout the region: “Combining the data from Moldova, Albania, Romania, Croatia, Bulgaria, and Serbia, the number of murders in the region essentially halved between 1998 and 2006.”

In other forms of conventional crime, the report finds Western Europe “to have over twice the burglary, over four times as much assault, and 15 times as much robbery as South East Europe.” For example, in terms of vehicle thefts per 100,000 vehicles, the United Kingdom has the worst statistics with 1,330, Greece has 185, and Austria has 125, whereas Moldova has 184, Croatia has 166, Macedonia has 113, and Albania has 90. Bulgaria has the worst statistics in the region with 412 vehicle thefts per 100,000 vehicles, but the report notes Bulgaria’s declining trend.

With in-depth discussion and analysis for possible mistakes, the report concludes that these relatively positive numbers are not the result of government “adjustments” to look better before the international monitors: “The only conclusion that can be drawn is that South East Europe is one of the safer areas of the world, and that progress is being made in making the region even safer.”

The data on conventional crimes provides the good news; however, the report moves on to discuss the real issues in the region, and that is organized crime: “The issue that makes headlines in South East Europe is not conventional crime â?¦ but organized crime.” Here, the report notes two dimensions: “the role that groups from South East Europe have played in organized crime in West Europe” and “the impact that organized crime has had on the region itself.”

In the section on organized crime, the central issue is drug trafficking. A shorter section covers human trafficking and smuggling of migrants, but the report seems to consider these a much smaller threat, which is nevertheless declining.

The report provides details of the Balkans’ role as a major drug route from Asia to Western Europe: “The most valuable form of contraband crossing the region is heroin. South East Europe lies along the most convenient route (the so-called ‘Balkan route’) between the supplier of some 90% of the world’s heroin (Afghanistan) and its most lucrative consumer market (Western Europe). It is estimated that about 100 tons of heroin crosses South East Europe on its way to Western Europe, of which 85 tons eventually makes it to the consumer, a flow valued at US$25-30 billion. This is more than the GDPs of most of the countries of the region, and consequently this flow has great corrupting power.”

Although “the ‘Balkan route’ has been the continent’s primary heroin trafficking route for decades” the report notes, “the share of South East Europeans who consume opiates is half that of West Europe and one-sixth that of East Europe.” This, according to the authors, “suggests the flow has been conducted by highly organized groups determined to command the highest return for their product, rather than by a diffuse network of couriers who might ’spill’ some of the heroin into their local communities.”

The report additionally notes that “the problem of South East Europe as a gateway for drugs to West Europe must be distinguished from the problem of South East Europeans dealing drugs in West European countries, although the two issues are obviously related.”

In discussing drug trafficking as the most serious form of organized crime concerning the Balkans, the report strongly emphasizes the role of “ethnic Albanians” in the drug trade: “Since the mid-1990s, ethnic Albanian traffickers have been said to control the trafficking of this commodity west into Europe. Past estimates suggested that ethnic Albanian traffickers controlled 70% or more of the heroin entering a number of key destination markets.” For example, the report notes, “About half the heroin seized by the Italian authorities in 2006 was taken from Albanian nationals.”

In trying to explain the “ethnic colour” of organized drug trafficking, the report uses numerous references from national sources in Western Europe, which have singled out Albanian ethnicity: “‘Ethnic Albanian Criminal Groups’ are the only national group discussed in the 2006 Europol publication ‘The Threat From Organized Crime.’”

The report suggests that “ethnic Albanian heroin trafficking is arguably the single most prominent organized crime problem in Europe today.”

Corruption, which is a major issue in the Balkans, is not a focus of the report, but it does observe that “while conventional crime levels are low and organised crime appears to be in decline, [the] one area of criminal activity that is especially problematic in the Balkans [is] corruption and economic crime.”

The report refers to studies from Transparency International to illustrate the scope of corruption in the region: “Large shares of the population continue to report paying bribes. Albania had the highest rate of annual bribe paying (66%) of the 57 countries polled in the 2006 TI Global Corruption Barometer, and the South East European average was 4.5 times as high as the West European average.”

By offering detailed statistics and a realistic approach in analyzing the Balkan crime problem, the report is timely and relevant. It disproves some previous partial or incomplete research and statistics, which feed the stereotype that the Balkans is simply dangerous. The report provides a comprehensive overview of the state of crime in the region. The problem is organized crime and corruption. Conventional crime, although much higher than before the beginning of transition, is still low.

From Osservatorio sui Balcani.

Prime Time Crime: Balkan Media in War and Peace

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