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US soldier gets 24 years for murdering Afghans Posted: 23 Mar 2011 06:18 PM PDT TACOMA, Washington, March 24 — The first of five US soldiers charged with killing unarmed Afghan civilians last year was sentenced yesterday to 24 years in prison after he pleaded guilty to three counts of premeditated murder. The guilty plea and sentencing of Army Specialist Jeremy Morlock, 23, of Wasilla, Alaska, marked a key turning point in the most serious prosecution of alleged US military atrocities during 10 years of war in Afghanistan. German magazine Der Spiegel this week published several photos related to the killings, one showing Morlock crouched, grinning over a bloodied corpse as he lifted the dead man's head by the hair for the camera. The military judge presiding over the case, Lieutenant Colonel Kwasi Hawks, accepted Morlock's plea deal with prosecutors at the end of a daylong proceeding at Joint Base Lewis-McChord near Tacoma, and sentenced Morlock to 24 years in prison. The judge also ruled Morlock's incarceration would be reduced by nearly a year for time already served since he was charged, and that he would be eligible for parole in about seven years. Morlock, who also will be dishonourably discharged from the Army, stood silently facing the judge and showed no emotion as his sentence was pronounced. Earlier in the hearing, he had read a statement apologising to the victims' families and the "people of Afghanistan", adding, "I lost my moral compass". Speaking under oath at the proceedings, Morlock also implicated the four other members of his infantry unit's so-called "kill team" and agreed to testify further against them if called as a prosecution witness for their courts-martial. — Reuters Full Feed Generated by Get Full RSS, sponsored by USA Best Price. |
Syrian forces shoot protesters, kill six in mosque Posted: 23 Mar 2011 05:35 PM PDT At least four youths were killed when the security forces intercepted them at the northern entrance of Deraa, witnesses said. Their bodies were seen at a clinic in the city. There were unconfirmed reports that dozens more bodies were taken to Tafas hospital outside the city, they added. "Bodies fell in the streets. We do not know how many died," one witness said. Another resident said: "You didn't know where the bullets were coming from. No one could carry away any of the fallen." The 10 people residents said were killed in the two attacks brought to 14 the number of civilians killed by Syrian forces in six days of demonstrations for political freedom and an end to corruption in the country of 20 million. Snipers wearing black masks were seen on rooftops. Parents were seen crying in the streets during the evening, and loudspeakers from mosques around Deraa called on those whose relatives had died to go to clinics to collect the bodies. "Peaceful, peaceful," the loudspeakers echoed — a cry taken up by protesters across the Arab world to emphasise the peaceful nature of their demonstrations against entrenched and undemocratic rulers and corruption, and their demands for freedom. Another witness saw 20 army trucks carrying soldiers heading to the city. Deraa, on the Jordanian border, has long been a stronghold of the ruling Baath Party, which recruits cadres from the region. But in recent days it has become a focus of unprecedented protests against President Bashar al-Assad's rule. The shooting yesterday began just after midnight, when security forces attacked protesters in the vicinity of the Omari mosque in the city's old quarter, the focal point of the Deraa protests, residents said. Electricity was cut off and telephone services were severed. Cries of "Allahu Akbar (God is greatest)" erupted in one quarter after another as the shooting at the mosque began. The bodies of two people killed in the mosque attack, a man and a woman called Ibtissam Masalmeh, where buried in Deraa yesterday. Thousands marched in the funeral chanting calls for freedom, and — for the first time since protests broke on Friday — slogans against Iran and Lebanon's Hezbollah "Honourable Syrians don't rely on Iran or Hezbollah," they chanted, breaking a taboo of criticising Syrian foreign policy, which is largely built on an alliance with the Shi'ite Islamic Republic and the armed Shi'ite movement. YouTube footage showed what was purported to be the street in front of the mosque before the attack, with the sound of gunfire audible and a person inside the mosque grounds yelling: "Brother don't shoot. This country is big enough for me and you." The United Nations, France and the United States condemned the violence. UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon called for a "transparent investigation" into the killings, and for those responsible to be held accountable. "We are deeply concerned by the Syrian government's use of violence, intimidation and arbitrary arrests to hinder the ability of its people to freely exercise their universal rights," said US State Department spokesman Mark Toner. "We call on the Syrian government to exercise restraint and refrain from violence against these peaceful protesters." 'Armed gang killed doctor' Those killed included Ali Ghassab al-Mahamid, a doctor from a prominent Deraa family who went to the Omari mosque to help victims of the attack. An official Syrian statement said: "Outside parties are transmitting lies about the situation in Deraa," blaming what it described as armed gangs for the violence. It said they had "stocked weapons and ammunition in the mosque and kidnapped children and used them as human shields". State television showed guns, grenades and ammunition that it said were found in the mosque, but activists said the protest was peaceful and there had been no weapons. An official statement said later that Assad had sacked Deraa governor Faisal Kalthoum. But a main demand of the protesters is an end to what they term as repression by the secret police, headed in Deraa province by a cousin of Assad. The Baath Party has banned opposition and enforced emergency laws since 1963. But the wave of Arab unrest that has toppled leaders in Tunisia and Egypt presents Assad with the biggest challenge to his rule since he succeeded his father Hafez al-Assad, who ruled Syria for 30 years until his death in 2000. Assad, a close ally of Iran, a key player in neighbouring Lebanon and supporter of militant groups opposed to Israel, has dismissed rising demands for fundamental reform in Syria, where his Baath Party has held a monopoly on power for 48 years. Former colonial power France urged Damascus to carry out political reforms without delay and respect its commitment to human rights. Reform pledge On Tuesday, Vice President Farouq al-Shara said Assad was committed to "continue the path of reform and modernisation in Syria", Lebanon's al-Manar television reported. Authorities arrested a leading campaigner who had supported the protesters, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said on Tuesday. It said Loay Hussein, a political prisoner from 1984 to 1991, was taken from his home near Damascus. In Damascus, authorities released six women protesters yesterday who took part in a silent demonstration last week supporting the release of political prisoners, lawyers said. Assad has lifted some bans on private enterprise but ignored calls to end emergency law, curb a pervasive security apparatus, develop rule of law and freedom of expression, free political prisoners and reveal the fate of tens of thousands of dissidents who disappeared in the 1980s. — Reuters Full Feed Generated by Get Full RSS, sponsored by USA Best Price. |
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