Blackwater USA denies allegations for weapons smuggling

Blackwater USA denies allegations for weapons smuggling

Blackwater USA, which is under intense scrutiny following the shooting deaths of eleven people in Iraq, is also being investigated for smuggling weapons into Turkey and Iraq.  The investigation reportedly began through internal reviews by the Pentagon and the U.S. State Department regarding missing military weapons in Iraq and whether these weapons were subsequently transferred to other nations.

Blackwater USA responded strongly against its accusers “[a]llegations that Blackwater was in any way associated or complicit in unlawful arms activities are baseless . . . The company [Blackwater] has no knowledge of any employee improperly exporting weapons.”  (AP)

The investigations come after complaints from Turkish authorities in July, regarding American weapons that were confiscated from the Kurdistan Worker Party (PKK).  The PKK is an outlawed rebel faction in Turkey seeking to create an independent Kurdistan.  The faction was founded by Abdullah Ocalan in 1974 and has grown to 5,000 members.  Reportedly, the PKK has used guerrilla warfare to kill around 30,000 people.  (Impunity Watch Middle East, Kurds Continue to Battle)  Thus, the U.S. State Department has designated that the group is a “foreign terrorist organization.”  (AP)  This official designation prohibits any citizen or person within U.S. jurisdiction from helping that organization.  (AP)

This is not the first time that such an allegation has been brought against the security company.  Recently, Blackwater USA released two of its former employees because of their involvement with shipping stolen firearms internationally.  The company immediately fried the former marines and police officers, and the individuals are negotiating with prosecutors regarding their sentences.

How Iraq and Turkey deal with Blackwater’s troubles may define the international law regarding security companies, which is currently a legal gray area.  As private security companies have become increasingly popular by governments seeking ways to circumvent particular difficult situations, the Iraqi and Turkish governments must make these security companies accountable for their actions.  However, it will be especially difficult for the Iraqi government to take strong actions against Blackwater USA, because of the company’s close relationship with the U.S. government who have protected the fledging government.  However, it has taken a major step in voicing its deep concern with the practices of the security company’s practices to the international community.

For more information, please see:

AP- Blackwater Denies Smuggling Allegations- 22 September 2007

Bloomberg- Blackwater Says Allegations of Arms Smuggling are `Baseless’ – 22 September 2007

BBC News- Blackwater Denies Iraq Smuggling- 22 September 2007

Al-Qaeda’s Algeria Bombing Injures Nine

ALGIERS, Algeria – A group calling itself al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb said it carried out a bomb attack in Algeria, which wounded nine people. It is the latest of a string of attacks that have stymied the Algerian government’s effort to get beyond an insurgency that devastated the country since the 1990s.

A car rammed into an Algerian police convoy escorting workers for the French company Razel to a dam it is building in the region. Two French workers, one Italian, their Algerian driver, and five police officers were injured as a result of that attack. It occurred a day after al-Qaeda’s second-in-command Ayman al-Zawahiri released a video message saying that French and Spaniards should be “cleansed” from North Africa.

Earlier this month, Algeria was hit by two suicide attacks that killed more than 50 people. In August, the group also staged two deadly attacks that killed more than 50 people and wounded more than 140.

For more information, please see:

Al Jazeera – ‘Al-Qaeda’ claims Algeria bombing – 21 September 2007

BBC News – Algeria bomb attack injures nine – 21 September 2007

NY Times – Bomb hits European workers – 22 September 2007

UN Releases Their Report on Ethiopia’s Eastern Region

OGADEN, Ethiopia- On Wednesday, the United Nations (UN) released their report on the Ogaden region of Ethiopia. The region, which borders Somalia and is predominantly inhabited by Somalis, has been caught between the clashes of the government and rebels for several months. The anticipated report comes after the UN humanitarian assessment team visited the region from August 30th to September 5th.

The report comes after the Ogaden National Liberation Front (ONLF) alleges violations of human rights by government military. The government has denied all allegations. The team visited three of the five zones in the Somali Regional State. According to the ONLF, the Fik and Warder zones are the areas where the worst atrocities were committed; the UN mission was only granted access to “routes approved by the regime.”

The report however did not comment on the claims of abuses. Yet, taking into account the deteriorating situation in the region and direct accounts of human rights abuses, the report does urgently recommend an independent investigation of those allegations.

Instead, the main focus of the report was the humanitarian and food situation. The OFLA has also accused the government of creating a man-made famine. The report expresses concerns of drastic food, drug and medical shortages that will likely reach emergency level very shortly. The region has long been extremely poor but the increased fighting between the ONLF and the government has worsened the conditions. Furthermore, the government commercial and livestock trade restrictions have only aggravated the situation. The price of food has nearly doubled.

The report calls for immediate and “impartial” food distribution to 600,000 people in the region for the next three months. The government has promised to ensure the needs of the people through its collaboration with the UN. The report further appeals to both sides to guarantee the food and medical aid reach those in need.

For more information please see:

BBC – UN Seeks Ethiopia Abuses Inquiry – 20 September 2007

Yahoo News (AFP) – UN Calls for Probe into Alleged Eastern Ethiopia Rights Abuses – 19 September 2007

AllAfrica.com – Ethiopia: UN Report Warn of Food Crisis in Ogaden – 20 September 2007

ICC Prosecutor Demands Arrests in Sudan

KHARTOUM, Sudan – The International Criminal Court’s chief prosecutor, Luis Moreno Ocampo is calling for the arrests of two men charged with war crimes in Darfur.  Warrants for Humanitarian Affairs Minister Ahmed Haroun and Janjaweed leader Ali Muhammad Ali Abad al-Rahman were issued by the ICC in April.   Sudan’s government has continued to assert that it is not bound by the ICC decisions.

Both men are wanted by the ICC on 51 counts of crimes against humanity and war crimes.  Ahmed Haroun was a minister responsible for the Darfur portfolio in 2003 and 2004 and allegedly was responsible for organizing and funding the Janjaweed militia.  As the minister for humanitarian affairs, he currently has authority of the displaced persons camps and control over the flow of humanitarian aid.  Mr. Ocampo has said that “there can be no solution     to the crisis in Darfur while Mr. Haroun remained free.”  Ali Muhammad Ali Abad al-Rahman, also known as Ali Kushayb, is accused of ordering the torture and mass rape of civilians during attacks on villages in west Darfur.

Ministers from 26 countries have been invited to attend a meeting on Friday chaired by UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and African Union Chairman Alpha Oumar Konare.  The meeting is intended to discuss mobilizing support for new political negotiations, deployment of a 26,000 UN-AU force, and expansion of humanitarian assistance.  Mr. Ocampo urged the international community to remind Sudan’s government of its duty to arrest those charged.  “I am concerned that silence by most states and international organizations on the subject of the arrest warrant has been understood in Khartoum as a weakening of international resolve in support of the law, and in support of the arrest…It is time to break the silence.”

Political talks are set to begin in Libya next month between the Sudanese government and Darfur rebels to discuss peace and to speed up deployment of peacekeepers to the region.   The arrest warrants are not on the agenda for those talks.

For more information, please see:

BBC News – Prosecutor demands Sudan arrests – 21 September 2007

AFP – ICC prosecutor presses for arrest of Darfur war crimes suspects – 21 September 2007

Sudan Tribune – ICC Prosecutor urges world to be on side of Darfur victims – 21 September 2007

The Canadian Press – Prosecutors want arrest of alleged war criminals atop Darfur agenda – 21 September 2007

Egypt to Dissolve Human Rights Organization

By Kevin Kim
Impunity Watch Reporter, Middle East

CAIRO, Egypt – On September 4, Cairo governor `Abd al-`Azzem Wazeer issued a decree closing the Association for Human Rights Legal Aid (AHRLA). AHRLA is one of the country’s leading human rights organizations, and it reports on human rights violations and provides legal assistance to torture victims.

Even though Egypt is a member of the UN Human Rights Council, the Egyptian government has shown increasing tendency to abuse state powers to police and stifle the work of civil society organizations. Earlier in April, the government also closed Center for Trade Union and Workers Services (CTUWS), which offered legal aid to Egyptian factory workers and reported on labor-rights issues.

AHRLA has appealed the decree to the Administrative Court, and a hearing will be held on October 21.

For more information, please see:

Human Rights Watch – Reverse decree closing human rights organization – 18 September 2007

Reuters – Egypt to close rights group aiding torture victims – 13 September 2007