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Archive for December 17th, 2007

Fidel Castro letter: I won’t ‘cling to office’

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HAVANA, Cuba (CNN) — A Cuban television news anchor read a letter on air Monday that was reportedly written by Fidel Castro promising he would not cling to office or be an impediment to rising young leaders.

My basic duty is not to cling to office, much less to obstruct the rise of younger people, but to pass on experiences and ideas whose modest value arises from the exceptional era in which I lived, Castro’s letter said, according to a CubaVision anchor.

The 81-year-old leader temporarily handed power to his younger brother Raul Castro in July 2006 after undergoing intestinal surgery. Officials say he is recovering, but they have not clarified if or when he could resume the presidency.

Castro hasn’t been seen in public since his surgery, but he has appeared in numerous videos and photos in state media. He appeared in an interview aired in September commenting on such topics as global warming and the price of oil.

About 60 articles under his name have emerged. Reflections of the Commander-in-Chief has covered a broad range of international topics, often railing against the U.S. government.

In October, Castro accused President Bush of pushing the world to the brink of World War III and widespread famine in an essay that appeared in Cuban state media.

Castro came to power in 1959.

The release of the letter comes ahead of an electoral process that begins next month and culminates in March with the election of the Council of State, Cuba’s supreme governing body. Despite ceding power to his brother, Fidel Castro remains head of the Council of State.
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Muslims gather for Hajj pilgrimage

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MECCA, Saudi Arabia (AP) — Millions of Muslims from around the world gathered in Mecca Sunday for the start of the annual Islamic Hajj pilgrimage, as the Saudi Interior Ministry announced tough security precautions.

Men and women draped in white robes circled the Kaaba, Islam’s holiest site, seven times in a ceremony anticipating the official start of the pilgrimage on Monday.

King Abdullah has invited 1,000 guests to this year’s Hajj, including Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

During the next two days, an estimated 2.5 million pilgrims will move out of Mecca to Mount Arafat for Tuesday’s climax of symbolically stoning the devil.

By Friday, more than 1.6 million pilgrims had arrived in Mecca, according to the Central Hajj Committee. The Health Ministry said about 254 pilgrims, many who were elderly, have died of natural causes since arriving. Watch what’s entailed in the large security effort

The pilgrims are massed in tent cities on the outskirts of Mecca. For many believers, the Hajj is a once-in-a-lifetime chance to cleanse their sins in what is one of the most important rites for Muslims. See the path the pilgrims take

This year’s Hajj takes place amid increasing worries across the Islamic world over the bloodshed in Iraq and Afghanistan and recent terror attacks by al Qaeda-linked groups, including last week’s twin suicide bombings in Algeria that killed at least 37 people.

Tensions also have increased between the two main sects of Islam, Sunnis and Shiites, who come together in the five days of Hajj rituals centered around Mecca, the traditional birthplace of Islam’s Prophet Muhammad.

Saudi Arabia and other Gulf Arab countries — who are all U.S. allies — have been worried over Iran’s increasing regional influence. But the king’s invitation to Ahmadinejad appeared to reflect a readiness from Saudi Arabia, a majority Sunni country, to reach out to its Shiite-dominated neighbor. It comes about a week after a U.S. intelligence report said Iran had ended a nuclear weapons program four years ago.

Saudi Interior Minister Prince Nayef bin Abdul-Aziz said the kingdom is capable of maintaining security and preventing any attempt to threaten the safety of the pilgrims.

We will not allow for the problems in other countries to be reflected here during this Hajj season, he said in a news conference late Saturday.

Maj. Gen. Saleh Mohammed al-Shihri, commander of the Central Control of the Hajj Security, said 1,150 cameras have been placed in several areas to monitor the area. Several helicopters, fitted with these cameras, will also hover over the pilgrims.

Nayef said no extra security precautions will be put in place for Ahmadinejad. The Iranian leader was scheduled to arrive in Mecca on Monday, Iranian state media has reported. 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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Lawyer: American convicted of murder held illegally in Nicaragua

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MANAGUA, Nicaragua (CNN) — An American man convicted of killing his former girlfriend is being held in jail illegally after a judge failed to show up for an afternoon meeting to release him, Eric Volz’s lawyer said.

Volz, of Nashville, Tennessee, was convicted in 2006 of raping and killing Doris Ivanez Jimenez and sentenced to 30 years in prison.

He should be set free, said his attorney, Fabbrith Gomez.

The court Monday reversed Volz’s conviction. Gomez said he intended to file a petition for writ of habeas corpus, a process that forces a court to give proof justifying why a prisoner is being held.

Ten witnesses testified or gave affidavits swearing that Volz was in his office in Managua at the time Jimenez was killed two hours away in San Juan del Sur. But one man testified that he had seen Volz in San Juan del Sur just after the time police believe Jimenez was killed.

That man, Nelson Danglas, was originally arrested for the slaying but received full immunity in exchange for his testimony against Volz. No physical evidence from the crime scene linked Volz to the slaying.

In addition to Volz, the same court also convicted Julio Chamorro of Jimenez’s murder, although investigators did not connect him with Volz.

When the verdict was reached, a mob had gathered outside the courtroom chanting for Volz’s conviction.

Volz, 28, was the publisher of EP (El Puente) Magazine, which he founded. He was transferred Monday from a Managua jail to a police hospital, according to Gomez and the prison warden, but it wasn’t clear why.
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Jury: Millionaire couple enslaved housekeepers

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CENTRAL ISLIP, New York (AP) — A jury on Monday convicted a millionaire couple of enslaving two Indonesian women they brought to their mansion to work as housekeepers.

Mahender Murlidhar Sabhnani, 51, and his wife, Varsha Mahender Sabhnani, 45, were each convicted of all charges in a 12-count federal indictment that included forced labor, conspiracy, involuntary servitude, and harboring aliens.

Prosecutors said the women were subjected to repeated psychological and physical abuse and were forced to work 18 hours or more a day.

The Sabhnanis, who have four children and operate a worldwide perfume business out of their Muttontown home on Long Island’s Gold Coast, could face up to 40 years in prison, although attorneys predicted the punishment would be considerably less. He is from India, and she is from Indonesia, but both are naturalized U.S. citizens.

One of the couple’s daughters, Dakshina, collapsed in the front row as the verdict was read, prompting the judge to clear the courtroom while medical personnel attended to her.

Defense attorney Jeffrey Hoffman said he would appeal. Apparently, the jury was taken by the histrionics … of the Indonesian women, he said.

Fellow defense lawyer Stephen Scaring said another of the Sabhnanis’ children, daughter Tina, told him: We never did anything to anybody, how could this happen to us in America?

Prosecutors refused to comment until court proceedings were completed.

A representative of the Indonesian consulate in New York declined to comment.

Prosecutors called it a case of modern-day slavery. Assistant U.S. Attorney Mark Lesko said in closing arguments the poorly educated women worked as housekeepers for $100 or $150 a month — all of which was sent to their relatives back home.

Lesko said the women, known only as Samirah and Enung, were subjected to punishment that escalated into a cruel form of torture that ended when one of the women fled on Mother’s Day.

Allegations of abuse included beatings with brooms and umbrellas, slashings with knives, being made to repeatedly climb stairs and take freezing cold showers as punishment for misdeeds that included sleeping late or stealing food from trash bins because they were poorly fed.

Samirah, the woman who fled the house in May, said she was forced to eat dozens of chili peppers and then was forced to eat her own vomit when she failed to digest the peppers, prosecutors said.

This did not happen in the 1800s, Lesko said. This happened in the 21st century.

Enung testified that Samirah’s nude body once was covered in plastic wrapping tape on orders from Varsha Sabhnani, who then instructed Enung to rip it off. When I pulled it off, she was screaming, the housekeeper said through an interpreter before breaking down in tears on the witness stand.

The Sabhnanis’ defense attorneys contended the two women concocted the story of abuse as a way of escaping the house for more lucrative opportunities. They argued the housekeepers practiced witchcraft and may have abused themselves as part of an Indonesian self-mutilation ritual. They also said the couple went on frequent vacations that would have given the two women ample opportunity to flee.

The Sabhnanis spent nearly three months in jail until a judge approved a bail package that required them to post $4.5 million and pay an estimated $10,000 a day for security monitoring while they were kept under house arrest. The bail package remained in effect Monday.
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Pinups of bikini-clad women hid jailbreak route, officials say

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ELIZABETH, New Jersey (AP) — Two inmates escaped from a county jail, hiding the holes they made in the walls by putting up photos of bikini-clad women, officials said.

Authorities searched over the weekend for Jose Espinosa, who was awaiting sentencing for manslaughter, and Otis Blunt, who was facing robbery and other charges.

They also launched a review of jail security.

The two got out of the Union County jail Saturday evening.

The county prosecutor’s office said the two apparently removed cement blocks from two walls, squeezed through the openings, jumped to a rooftop below and then made it over a 25-foot-high fence.

The section they escaped from was supposed to be the most secure area of the facility.

I’m extremely disturbed that a jail with the capability of security it has would foster a breach of this nature, County Prosecutor Theodore Romankow told The Star-Ledger of Newark for Monday’s editions.

Espinosa, 20, an alleged gang member, was awaiting sentencing after pleading guilty to manslaughter in a 2005 drive-by shooting in Elizabeth. Blunt, 32, was awaiting trial on charges of robbery and weapons offenses.

The men helped cover up the break by placing dummies under their bed blankets, and hiding the wall holes with magazine photos of women in bikinis, authorities said.

Authorities launched a review of security measures, and barred inmates from pinning up pictures from magazines on their cell walls.
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