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Archive for November 19th, 2007

Former Khmer Rouge leader arrested

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PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (AP) — A U.N.-backed tribunal in Cambodia arrested the former Khmer Rouge head of state Monday, the fifth senior official of the brutal regime to be rounded up ahead of a long-delayed genocide trial.

Police escorted Khieu Samphan, 76, to the tribunal from a Phnom Penh hospital where he had been undergoing treatment since Wednesday after suffering a stroke a day earlier. Officers held Khieu Samphan’s arms to support him as they led him to a police car, which sped away in a heavily guarded convoy.

Tribunal spokesman Reach Sambath, who announced the arrest, said Khieu Samphan would be formally charged by investigating judges later in the day. The statement did not say what charges he faced.

Most historians and researchers believe the radical policies of the Khmer Rouge, which sought a utopian communist state, led to the deaths of at least 1.7 million Cambodians through starvation, disease, overwork and execution.

The arrests of the Khmer Rouge suspects come almost three decades after the group fell from power, and many fear the aging suspects could die before being brought to justice. After years of delays, the trial is expected to begin in 2008.

Khieu Samphan has repeatedly denied responsibility for any atrocities. An insight into his defense hit bookstores last week, when he published his version of the Khmer Rouge’s story.

In Reflection on Cambodian History Up to the Era of Democratic Kampuchea, Khieu Samphan says the Khmer Rouge only wanted what was best for Cambodia.

There was no policy of starving people. Nor was there any direction set out for carrying out mass killings, he writes. There was always close consideration of the people’s well-being.

Khieu Samphan’s arrest by the U.N.-backed tribunal had been widely expected. The tribunal, which was created last year after seven years of contentious negotiations between the United Nations and Cambodia, already has arrested four of his colleagues.

A week ago, authorities arrested Ieng Sary, the Khmer Rouge’s ex-foreign minister, and his wife Ieng Thirith, its social affairs minister. Both were charged with crimes against humanity; Ieng Sary was also charged with war crimes. The genocide tribunal formally placed them in provisional detention for up to a year.

Two other suspects — former Khmer Rouge ideologist Nuon Chea and Kaing Guek Eav, also known as Duch, who headed the group’s S-21 torture center — were detained earlier this year on charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity.

The tribunal is scheduled to open a hearing Tuesday on an appeal by Duch’s lawyers against his detention. The hearing will mark the first-ever courtroom proceeding held by the tribunal.
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Goldman vows to dog O.J. Simpson to the grave

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LOS ANGELES, California (AP) — No matter how O.J. Simpson’s hotel-room robbery trial plays out, he can plan on seeing Fred Goldman’s lawyers in court again.

A taciturn 66-year-old whose gray hair and handlebar mustache have made him familiar to followers of the Simpson saga, Goldman speaks forcefully but rarely angrily when he talks of hounding the former football star he believes stabbed his son, Ron Goldman, and Simpson’s ex-wife to death in 1994.

Our intent is to continue to pursue him, to continue to hold him accountable and responsible for Ron’s murder, he said during a recent phone interview from his daughter’s home in the Los Angeles suburb of Santa Clarita. And we’re going to continue to do that until he’s dead.

Although the discussion is all about Simpson, Goldman never mentions him by name, choosing words like monster, killer and trash.

Simpson was acquitted of murdering Ron Goldman and Nicole Brown Simpson in one of the most divisive verdicts in U.S. history. But Goldman and Brown’s family sued him for wrongful death, and Goldman won the lion’s share of a $33.5 million judgment.

When Simpson pleaded poverty, Goldman went after every asset he had but lost round after round of the legal fight. The award was tied up through several years of appeals and Simpson hid his earnings through sham corporations, Goldman said.

In a typical setback, Goldman thought he had laid claim to an expensive Rolex watch, only to learn it was a Chinese knockoff worth so little the court made him give it back.

There were small victories along the way, including an auction of rugs, lamps, golf clubs, and Simpson’s Heisman Trophy that raised an estimated $500,000. All of that, Goldman’s lawyers said, went to cover legal expenses.

We (also) took away his royalties from his B movies, Goldman said. We’ve broken a small trust that he had. We’ve got a small bank account that he had.

In all, he estimates he’s netted maybe $5,000 after expenses.

But earlier this year Goldman hit the jackpot. He won the rights to Simpson’s book, If I Did It, an ostensibly fictional account of how he would have committed the murders. Retitled by Goldman If I Did It: Confessions of the Killer, it quickly became a New York Times best-seller.

With a court having earmarked 90 percent of its royalties for Goldman, he could eventually win a substantial sum, although he says he hasn’t seen any money yet.

When news broke that Simpson was in trouble in Las Vegas for a September 13 armed heist of sports memorabilia he claimed had been stolen from him, Goldman’s lawyers were back in court so fast that Goldman obtained an order to get the items before Simpson was arrested. The items, including photos, footballs and jerseys, could fetch tens of thousands of dollars if they are found to belong to Simpson.

Goldman’s $19 million share of the judgment has risen to approximately $39 million with interest, but he knows it’s unlikely he’ll ever collect more than a fraction, no matter how many court battles he wins.

He plans to donate a portion of the book’s proceeds to the Ron Goldman Foundation for Criminal Justice that he and his daughter recently established. They hope it can help families of crime victims.

Goldman admitted he did find something to smile about in Simpson’s latest arrest, expressing incredulity that he would have burst into a hotel room instead of simply calling the police.

Occasionally, he acknowledged, people will tell him it’s time to let the past go and get on with his life.

He can’t do that.

My son on the night of June 12, 1994, made a choice to stand and fight and didn’t run away. And we’re not going to run away, Goldman said. It wouldn’t serve to honor Ron’s memory to walk away and pretend like it never happened. E-mail to a friend

Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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Car chase left Kidman ‘in tears’

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SYDNEY, Australia (AP) — Nicole Kidman told a courtroom Monday how she was reduced to tears and feared a car accident after a celebrity photographer pursued her two years ago.

Kidman, who divides her time between Los Angeles and her hometown of Sydney, Australia, was testifying in the photographer’s defamation suit against a Sydney newspaper that slammed him for allegedly hounding the Oscar-winning actress.

Kidman, who wore a gray knee-length skirt, cream-colored blouse and pale pink cardigan and had her long, curly hair drawn up in a loose bun, appeared calm and composed during the session in the New South Wales state Supreme Court.

Her poise contrasted sharply with her description of the ride from her house in Sydney to her parents’ home in another part of the city for dinner on January 23, 2005.

Kidman described hunkering down in the car’s back seat — leaning over in her chair in the witness stand to demonstrate — to try to avoid being spotted by photographer Jamie Fawcett.

She said the trip quickly turned into a hair-raising chase as a vehicle carrying Fawcett and another vehicle, believed to contain his assistant, lurched through traffic around Kidman’s car.

I was frightened and I was worried there was going to be an accident, Kidman said.

Kidman said she was really, really scared during the car ride and that she was in tears and distressed by the time she reached her parents’ house.

Fawcett, a well-known celebrity photographer in Sydney, is suing The Sun-Herald newspaper for defamation over an article that said he was Sydney’s most disliked freelance photographer and was determined to wreak havoc on Kidman’s private life.

A jury has already found that the article defamed Fawcett. The current hearing is to decide whether the newspaper’s publisher, Fairfax Media, should pay the photographer damages, and how much.

Kidman described two other times that Fawcett had allegedly been intrusive when trying to photograph her — once while she was on her honeymoon with country music star Keith Urban in Tahiti in mid-2006, and once after Christmas in Sydney last year. She said he was one of the reasons she employed full-time security guards.

I have been pursued many times, Kidman said. I have had this happen in relation to this particular man … so many times.

I employ people to protect me now. I employ people 24 hours to protect myself because I don’t feel equipped to handle things, she said. E-mail to a friend

Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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Destination of ‘recycled’ electronics may surprise you

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SAN FRANCISCO, California (AP) — Most Americans think they’re helping the earth when they recycle their old computers, televisions and cell phones. But chances are they’re contributing to a global trade in electronic trash that endangers workers and pollutes the environment overseas.

While there are no precise figures, activists estimate that 50 to 80 percent of the 300,000 to 400,000 tons of electronics collected for recycling in the U.S. each year ends up overseas. Workers in countries such as China, India and Nigeria then use hammers, gas burners and their bare hands to extract metals, glass and other recyclables, exposing themselves and the environment to a cocktail of toxic chemicals.

It is being recycled, but it’s being recycled in the most horrific way you can imagine, said Jim Puckett of the Basel Action Network, the Seattle-based environmental group that tipped off Hong Kong authorities. We’re preserving our own environment, but contaminating the rest of the world.

The gear most likely to be shipped abroad is collected at free recycling drives, often held each April around Earth Day, recycling industry officials say. The sponsors — chiefly companies, schools, cities and counties — often hire the cheapest firms and do not ask enough questions about what becomes of the discarded equipment, the officials say.

Many so-called recyclers simply sell the working units and components, then give or sell the remaining scrap to export brokers.

There are a lot of people getting away with exporting e-waste, said John Bekiaris, chief executive of San Francisco-based HMR USA Inc., which collects and disposes of unwanted IT equipment from Bay Area businesses. Anyone who’s disposing of their computer equipment really needs to do a thorough inspection of the vendors they use.

The problem could get worse. Most of the 2 million tons of old electronics discarded annually by Americans goes to U.S. landfills, according to U.S. Environmental Protection Agency data. But a growing number of states are banning such waste from landfills, which could drive more waste into the recycling stream and fuel exports, activists say.

Many brokers claim they are simply exporting used equipment for reuse in poor countries. That’s what happened in September, when customs officials in Hong Kong were tipped off by environmentalists and intercepted two freight containers. They cracked the containers open and found hundreds of old computer monitors and televisions discarded by Americans thousands of miles away.

China bans the import of electronic waste, so the containers were sent back to the U.S.

The company that shipped out the containers was Fortune Sky USA, a Cordova, Tennessee-based subsidiary of a Chinese company. General manager Vincent Yu said his company thought it was buying and shipping used computers, not old monitors and televisions, and is trying to get its money back.

Fortune Sky exports used computers and components to China, Malaysia, Vietnam and other Asian countries.

There’s a huge market over there for secondhand computers that we don’t use anymore, Yu said. I don’t think it’s going to cause any pollution. If the equipment can still be used, then that’s good for everybody.

Yu refused to say where he bought the material, but Basel Action Network tracked it to a San Antonio, Texas, company that collects computers, printers and other electronics from schools and businesses.

Activists complain that most exporters don’t test units to make sure they work before sending them overseas.

Reuse is the new excuse. It’s the new passport to export, said Puckett of Basel Action Network. Other countries are facing this glut of exported used equipment under the pretext that it’s all going to be reused.

At the other end at customs, the goods don’t always get checked either.

It is impossible to stop and check every single container imported into Hong Kong, said Kenneth Chan of Hong Kong’s Environmental Protection Department. Smugglers may also deliberately declare their … waste as goods.

In the first nine months of this year, Hong Kong authorities returned 85 containers of electronic junk, including 20 from the U.S.

Exporting most electronic waste isn’t illegal in the United States. The U.S. does bar the export of monitors and televisions with cathode-ray tubes without permission from the importing country, but federal authorities don’t have the resources to check most containers.

The EPA recognizes the problem but doesn’t believe that stopping exports is the solution, said Matt Hale, who heads the agency’s office of solid waste. Since most electronics are manufactured abroad, it makes sense to recycle them abroad, Hale said.

What we need to do is work internationally to upgrade the standards (for recycling) wherever it takes place, he said.

The EPA is working with environmental groups, recyclers and electronics manufacturers to develop a system to certify companies that recycle electronics responsibly. But so far the various players have not agreed on standards and enforcement.

Many activists believe the answer lies in requiring electronics makers to take back and recycle their own products. Such laws would encourage manufacturers to make products that are easier to recycle and contain fewer dangerous chemicals, they say.

Eight states, including five this year, have passed such laws, and companies such as Apple, Dell, Hewlett-Packard and Sony now take back their products at no charge. Some require consumers to mail in their old gear, while others have drop-off centers. HP says it also now designs its equipment with fewer toxic materials and has made it easier to recycle.
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Court allows Musharraf to rule

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ISLAMABAD, Pakistan (AP) — A Supreme Court hand-picked by President Gen. Pervez Musharraf swiftly dismissed legal challenges to his continued rule on Monday, opening the way for him to serve another five-year term — this time solely as a civilian president.

The opposition has denounced the new court, saying any decisions by a tribunal stripped of independent voices had no credibility. Musharraf purged the court on November 3 when he declared emergency rule, days before the tribunal was expected to rule on his eligibility to serve as president.

The United States has put immense pressure on Musharraf to restore the constitution and free thousands of political opponents jailed under the emergency before Pakistan’s critical parliamentary election on January 8.

Monday’s court ruling could hasten Musharraf’s decision to take off his army uniform. The general has said he would quit as armed forces commander by the end of the month, assuming he was given the legal go-ahead by the court to remain as president.

Chief Justice Abdul Hameed Dogar dismissed three opposition petitions challenging Musharraf’s victory in a disputed presidential election last month, saying two had been withdrawn because opposition lawyers were not present in court.

The third was withdrawn by a lawyer for the party of opposition leader Benazir Bhutto, who suggested the court was illegitimate.

We asked for (the case) to be postponed because we said there is no constitution, she told reporters in Karachi after a meeting with the U.S. ambassador. She said she had no plans to revive power-sharing negotiations with Musharraf, broken off after the general’s decision to declare emergency rule.

We are not going back to the former track, Bhutto said. We are interested in a roadmap for democracy, but we do not have the confidence that Gen. Musharraf’s regime could give us that road map.

One of Musharraf’s first acts after seizing extraordinary powers was to purge the Supreme Court of independent-minded judges. Opponents had argued that he ought to be disqualified under a constitutional ban on public servants running for elected office, which they said applied because Musharraf was still army chief.

The military ruler told The Associated Press last week that he expected the retooled court to quickly endorse his re-election, and he was right. Deliberations lasted less than a day on the most serious cases challenging Musharraf.

The court said it would rule Thursday on another petition from a man whose candidacy for the October 6 presidential election was rejected by the election commission. Only then can it authorize the election commission to announce Musharraf the winner of the vote.

An official in Musharraf’s office, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he is not authorized to speak to the media, said Monday’s ruling kept the general on track to quit the army by the end of November.

With pressure mounting to get the country on a path to democracy, the government on Monday set January 8 as the date for the parliamentary elections.

The opposition has threatened to boycott, saying a vote held while its members are detained and its freedom to assemble blocked would have no validity. They also have questioned the neutrality of a caretaker government installed by Musharraf last week.

Despite an outcry both here and in Washington, there were no indications Musharraf intended to lift his state of emergency before the vote.

In his first public comments since a sit-down with Deputy Secretary of State John Negroponte, Musharraf vowed that the elections would be fair, but also defended the emergency, which has seen thousands of the general’s opponents jailed, the judiciary purged and independent media muzzled.

I took this decision in the best interest of Pakistan, Musharraf said at a ceremony late Sunday to inaugurate a bridge in the southern port city of Karachi.

I could have said thank you and walked away, he told the state news agency. But this was not the right approach because I cannot watch this country go down in front of me after so many achievements and such an economic turnaround.

Musharraf urged the opposition not to boycott the vote, saying that any who do would be acting because they feel they cannot win — not because the playing field is unfair.

Negroponte, Washington’s No. 2 diplomat, was blunt in comments Sunday after his meetings with Musharraf and other senior military and political figures, saying the emergency rule was not compatible with free, fair and credible elections.

But Pakistan was quick to dismiss those concerns, saying the senior American diplomat brought no new proposals on his weekend visit, and received no assurances after urging Musharraf to restore the constitution.

The face-off leaves the Bush administration with limited options in steering its nuclear-armed ally back toward democracy. Senior Bush Administration officials have said publicly that they have no plans to cut off the billions of dollars in military aid that Pakistan receives each year.
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