During an examination of Spain 's human rights record in May this year at the UN Human Rights Council, Mexico asked Spain to investigate tens of thousands of cases of the Franco-era 'enforced disappearances', to punish perpetrators, and to provide redress to victims.
On 21 September 2010 the Spanish representative told the Council that it was rejecting the call. Spanish judges and courts - he said - are bound to act according to legal principles which bind the judiciary.
This was not the first call: there had been such demands in previous years. What is new is that, since 13 May 2010 , Spain has been a member of the Council. Its predecessor, the UN Human Rights Committee, recommended as recently as 31 October 2008 that Spain "[repeal] the amnesty law of 1977 and take legislative measures to guarantee the non-applicability of statutory limitations to crimes against humanity by the national jurisdiction." It also re-iterated that " [the] amnesty concerning grave violations of human rights was in contradiction to the provisions of the [International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights 1966]." All Spanish Governments have persistently ignored such calls.
Just two weeks before the recent Council's meeting the Criminal Chamber of the Spanish Supreme Court in Madrid had unanimously upheld the lower court's order that Judge Baltasar Garzón of the Audiencia Nacional - the National Court - should stand trial for the charge of the delito de prevaricación - the crime of knowingly overstepping his judicial competence. Garzón was charged on 7 April for his attempt to investigate the war crimes committed between 17 July 1936 and December 1951, the bloodiest period of Franco's dictatorship - a charge that Garzón claimed was politically motivated. The bench of five judges (Juan Saavedra, president, Juan Ramón Berdugo, Joaquín Jiménez, Francisco Monterde and Adolfo Prego) denied Garzón's appeal of the order, and he will face trial sometime this year. The judges found that the witnesses called by Garzón proffered only personal opinions; they also determined that exhumation of 19 mass graves that Garzón authorised on 1 September 2008 was inappropriate. The ruling comes just two days after an Argentine court reopened the case against the Franco regime for crimes against humanity.
Garzon has faced turmoil since his 2008 decision. On 14 May the Spanish Consejo General del Poder Judicial - the General Council of the Judiciary (CGPJ) voted unanimously to suspend Garzón. On 18 May the judiciary oversight committee of the CGPJ accepted a request by Garzón to work as a consultant at the International Criminal Court for a period of seven months in order to improve its investigative methods. On 12 May the ICC had invited Garzón to work with it. When news of the charge became known thousands gathered in cities across Spain in support of Garzón, parading with flags of the Second Republic that Franco had assassinated. Garzón is widely known for favouring universal jurisdiction, a doctrine which empowers national authorities to investigate and prosecute any person suspected of crimes such as genocide, crimes against humanity, war crimes, torture, extrajudicial executions and enforced disappearances - which are crimes under international law, regardless of where the crime was committed or the nationality of the accused and the victim, and to award reparations to victims and their families. He had become famous for employing such doctrine extensively in the past to bring several high-profile rights cases, including those against the former Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet and Osama bin Laden.
~ more... ~
Friday, October 8, 2010
Judge Baltasar Garzón: The Latest Victim Of Franquismo
Posted by Peacedream 0 comments
Palestinians accuse Israel of judaizing East Jerusalem
Senior Palestinian officials on Tuesday strongly accused Israel of putting the final touches of judaizing east Jerusalem for declaring the whole city as the unified capital of Israel, warning that this would escalate tensions between the two feuds.
The Palestinian accusation came after the Jerusalem authorities ' approval of a plan to make changes to the Wailing Wall, which is called by Palestinians as al-Buraq wall, west of al-Aqsa Mosque, including digging tunnels and building Jewish synagogues and police stations near the holy site.
Israeli Radio reported on Tuesday that the committee of planning and construction in the Jerusalem municipality approved on Monday the comprehensive plan in changing the characteristics of the Wailing Wall and the area that surrounds it.
The Radio said that the plan includes opening a new entrance to the wall from the gate that fronts the neighborhood of Silwan in the old city of Jerusalem, which would dig a long tunnel from the neighborhood passes underneath the southern fence and ends up at the wall.
The plan, according to the Radio, would build the facilities for physically disabled Jews to reach the wall, toilets and an electronic elevator that links between the Jewish quarter and the hall of the Wailing Wall in the old city.
According to the plan, the old Roman road will be reopened and renovated which begins at Silwan entrance and leads to the current archaeological excavations. A security check hall will also be build into the tunnel.
~ more... ~
Posted by Peacedream 0 comments
Hear Voices? It May Be an Ad
New Yorker Alison Wilson was walking down Prince Street in SoHo last week when she heard a woman's voice right in her ear asking, "Who's there? Who's there?" She looked around to find no one in her immediate surroundings. Then the voice said, "It's not your imagination."
Indeed it isn't. It's an ad for "Paranormal State," a ghost-themed series premiering on A&E this week. The billboard uses technology manufactured by Holosonic that transmits an "audio spotlight" from a rooftop speaker so that the sound is contained within your cranium. The technology, ideal for museums and libraries or environments that require a quiet atmosphere for isolated audio slideshows, has rarely been used on such a scale before. For random passersby and residents who have to walk unwittingly through the area where the voice will penetrate their inner peace, it's another story.
Ms. Wilson, a New York-based stylist, said she expected the voice inside her head to be some type of creative project but could see how others might perceive it differently, particularly on a late-night stroll home. "I might be a little freaked out, and I wouldn't necessarily think it's coming from that billboard," she said.
~ more... ~
Posted by Peacedream 0 comments
13 Favorites
- Cartoonist Alan Moore, the Guy Fawkes Mask, and Occupy Wall Street
- 'The History of Oil - by Robert Newman
- Can Dialectics Break Bricks?
- Riots or revolt? - An insight into why Greece is now in flames
- Salvador Dali expounds on his 'Paranoiac Critical Method' philosophy
- The Last Roundup
- The Merchant of Death: Basil Zaharoff
- UPDATED: Warriors out of their minds: Drugs of choice for super soldiers
- Holocaust Deniers - a growing club
- Smokey the Bear Sutra by Gary Snyder
- Twilight of the Psychopaths
- The Bankers' Manifesto of 1892
- Jacques Ellul on Propaganda
Last Month's 13 Most Viewed Entries
- The pineal gland: Interface between the physical and spiritual planes?
- Uganda: Devil worship
- Obama and the Anti-Christ
- '1984: Grace Commission Report under Ronald Reagan showed IRS is a fraud that collects taxes for the Banking Dynasties'
- The Illuminated Ones
- Martial Law declared in United States
- Illuminati Occult Symbolism in The 2012 London Olympics Opening Ceremony
- Israeli women take off clothes for Egypt “nude revolutionary” blogger
- The Bollywood star who nearly became Pakistan's First Lady
- Belgian Police brutality in action! Warning- this is upsetting
- Gregg Braden - A Field Exists That Connects Everything Together - The Ether Field
- Noble Gas Engine
- Hopi and Tibetan Buddhist Prophecies - The Connection