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MAR 22, 2005 |
CAMILLA
DOESN'T WANT TO BE QUEEN...
Bird flu epidemic could kill as many as 750,000 in Britain: estimate
US reaffirms Modi visa denial
EURO
WIRED: Nearly 1 in 2 households in Netherlands has broadband Internet
connection...
Iran's
Leader Blasts U.S. 'Warmongers'...
DNC
CHAIR DEAN CALLS REPUBLICANS 'BRAIN-DEAD'... |
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Guantanamo abuse 'videotaped'
MAR
21:
VIDEO footage of the treatment of prisoners by
the US military at Guantanamo Bay would reveal many cases of
substantial abuse as "explosive as anything from Abu Ghraib", a lawyer
said today.
Adelaide lawyer Stephen Kenny, who represented Australian David Hicks
during the early part of his detention at the military prison in Cuba,
told a law conference today 500 hours of videotape of prisoners at the
US base existed.Hicks, 29, from Adelaide, has been in American custody awaiting
trial since being captured in Afghanistan in 2001 and accused of
having links to terror group al-Qaeda. He is charged with conspiracy
to commit war crimes, attempted murder and aiding the enemy.
Mr Kenny said the full story of abuse at Guantanamo Bay would not
be told until the tapes were released, but they could be as damaging
as the images of Iraqi prisoners being abused by US soldiers at the
Abu Ghraib prison.
"I believe that these videos, if they are ever released, will be as
explosive as anything from Abu Ghraib," Mr Kenny told the LawAsia
Downunder conference.
Abu Ghraib is the prison outside Baghdad from where pictures
emerged of US guards abusing prisoners while some of them were forced
into humiliating, sexually suggestive poses.
Mr Kenny said the US military videotaped the actions of the
Immediate Reaction Force (IRF) who were responsible for prisoner
control at Guantanamo Bay.
He said evidence of the violence used by the IRF came to light when
a member of the US military, whom he identified as Specialist Baker,
applied for a medical discharge after being involved in a training
session.
"He was dressed in an orange jump suit and the IRF squad was
instructed that he was a detainee who had abused a guard and was to be
moved to another cell.
"What happened to him only came to light in Specialist Baker's
later hearing for a medical discharge from the military for the brain
damage he suffered in the beating he received at the hands of that
trainee squad."
Mr Kenny told the conference the American Centre for Civil
Liberties was pressing for the tapes to be released after an American
journalist reported that a secret military review of 20 hours of the
tapes had identified 10 substantial cases of abuse.
But he said the Government was refusing to release the tapes
because of "privacy concerns". (Source: The Australian) |
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Dr Qadeer and the nuclear black market
NEW YORK, Mar 21: Nuclear investigators
from the United States and other nations now believe that the black
market network run by the Pakistani scientist A. Q. Khan was selling
not only technology for enriching nuclear fuel and blueprints for
nuclear weapons, but also some of the darkest of the bomb makers'
arts: the hard-to-master engineering secrets needed to fabricate
nuclear warheads.
Their suspicions were initially raised by the discovery of
step-by-step instructions, some of which appear to have come from
China and Pakistan, among the documents recovered last year from
Libya. More recently, investigators have found that the Khan network
had offered similar materials to Iran, the New York Times reported.
The secrets range from how to cast uranium metal into the form needed
at the core of a bomb to how to build the explosive lenses that
compress the core and start the detonation.
The discoveries have set off a debate in the intelligence community
about whether those technological skills made their way to North Korea
and Iran. President Bush has vowed he will not tolerate either
country's obtaining a nuclear weapon.
Iran was a customer of the Khan network, and while it appears to have
turned down the offer of the engineering secrets in 1987, some
intelligence officials are concerned that it picked up the technology
elsewhere. North Korea, which is believed to have two separate bomb
projects under way, also did business with the Khan network, although
precisely what it obtained is not clear.
The weeks leading up to Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice's visit to
China this weekend, American officials provided their Chinese
counterparts with a stream of new information about North Korea's
nuclear program, but it is not clear how much detail they went into
about their latest suspicions. The Chinese, for their part, are
skeptical of the quality of the American intelligence.
The inability of intelligence officials to track down the whereabouts
of the bomb-making instructions underscores the fact that more than a
year since Mr. Khan's arrest and pardon by Pakistan's president, Gen.
Pervez Musharraf, there are still many mysteries about what exactly
the Khan network was selling, and to whom.
The United States has not been allowed to interview Dr. Khan, and Ms.
Rice raised concerns about cooperation in the nuclear investigation
when she met with General Musharraf last week. But American officials
and the International Atomic Energy Agency are beginning to extract
information from Dr. Khan's chief deputy, Buhari Sayed Abu Tahir, who
is in jail in Malaysia. "It's becoming clearer to us that Khan was
selling a complete package," said a senior American official involved
in the setting of nuclear strategy. "Not a turnkey operation - that
would be overstating it - but close to it."
To investigators and other experts, the discovery that Dr. Khan was
selling step-by-step directions for making crucial parts of a bomb was
startling.
"The real secrets are in the details of the metallurgy, the
manufacturing and the engineering," said Siegfried S. Hecker, director
of the Los Alamos weapons laboratory from 1986 to 1997 and now a
senior fellow there.
Intelligence officials in the United States and European diplomats
said documents from Libya and Iran showed the Khan network had offered
for sale instructions on such tricky manufacturing steps as purifying
uranium, casting it into a nuclear core and making the explosives that
compress the core and set off a chain reaction. Unlike bomb designs
themselves, these manufacturing secrets can take years or even decades
for a country to learn on its own.
Thomas B. Cochran, a senior scientist at the Natural Resources Defense
Council in Washington, a private group that tracks nuclear arms, said
having the manufacturing instructions was a tremendous leap beyond
rudimentary bomb designs. "I can show you the schematic of an
automobile that has a engine and a transmission, and go to a book that
describes how the pistons work," he said. "But if you actually want to
build a car, you need the details and step-by-step procedures for
everything from casting the components, to machining them, to
assembling them."
Dr. Khan is a metallurgist and an expert at making both centrifuges
that enrich uranium and nuclear warheads. Investigators say that in
the early 1980's, he obtained the detailed blueprints for a Chinese
atomic bomb.
The first public hint that Dr. Khan's network traded in bomb designs
and engineering instruction emerged in 1995 after United Nations
inspectors in Iraq found a set of documents describing an offer made
to Baghdad before the Persian Gulf war of 1991. An internal Iraqi
memorandum, dated June 10, 1990, told of an unidentified middleman
saying that Dr. Khan could help Iraq "establish a project to enrich
uranium and manufacture a nuclear weapon" and that he was "prepared to
give us project designs for a nuclear bomb."
The Iraqis never took up the proposal, which they judged a scam or a
sting operation. Western experts also questioned its authenticity.
But the apparent validity of the offer became clear in late 2003 when
Libya showed investigators blueprints for a 10-kiloton atomic bomb
that it got from the Khan network. The International Atomic Energy
Agency reported that the documents included information on both
nuclear design and fabrication, calling it of "utmost concern."
The Libya disclosure touched off a global hunt for more Khan
documents. Officials in the United States and Europe said the trail
recently led to Dubai, where Mr. Tahir, the Sri Lankan businessman who
was Dr. Khan's deputy, ran a front company, SMB Computers. They said
reliable network sources had told of seeing bomb documents there that
contained step-by-step instructions on how to fabricate components for
nuclear arms. Intense searches in Dubai, they added, had so far failed
to turn up the documents.
The latest development in the hunt came March 1 with the disclosure of
the network's 1987 offer to Iran of centrifuge machines and materials,
as well as "uranium reconversion and casting capabilities," according
to an I.A.E.A. report.
While investigators have determined that Tehran paid precious hard
currency to the Khan network for nuclear equipment, it appears to have
turned down the offer of the engineering secrets necessary to build
the core of a nuclear weapon.
European and American officials said they considered the 1987
transaction some of the best evidence that Iran sought, starting at
least 18 years ago, to assemble the technologies needed to build a
nuclear arsenal.
"It adds a piece to the puzzle that makes the whole thing more
incriminating," a European official said. "But is this a smoking gun?
No. Does this make people more suspicious? Yes."
(Source: SANA) |
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