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News Memo shows Pentagon questioned legality of Gitmo interrogations in 2003
Memo shows Pentagon questioned legality of Gitmo interrogations in 2003
Tom Henry
June 16, 2005 02:04:00 pm

Notes from a series of Pentagon meetings in 2003 show that General Counsel of the Department of the Navy Alberto Mora warned high-level officials that Guantanamo interrogation techniques could expose them to criminal prosecution, according to ABC...

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News Judiciary committee sends Boyle to Senate for confirmation
Judiciary committee sends Boyle to Senate for confirmation
Tom Henry
June 16, 2005 01:32:00 pm

The US Senate Judiciary Committee Thursday approved North Carolina judge Terrence Boyle for the US Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit, effectively sending him to the full Senate for confirmation. Boyle survived a...

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News US supports expanding UN Security Council
US supports expanding UN Security Council
Tom Henry
June 16, 2005 01:10:00 pm

The US government Thursday publicly expressed support for expanding the UN Security Council by "two or so" permanent members, saying that a larger expansion could hinder the effectiveness of the group. Review the State Department briefing ...

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News Mexican high court rules ex-president can face trial for student massacre
Mexican high court rules ex-president can face trial for student massacre
Tom Henry
June 15, 2005 03:27:00 pm

The Mexican Supreme Court ruled Wednesday that former president Luis Echeverria can be prosecuted for the deaths of student demonstrators killed in 1971. A panel of judges voted 3-2 to allow Echeverria and...

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News Schiavo autopsy reveals brain damage consistent with persistent vegetative state
Schiavo autopsy reveals brain damage consistent with persistent vegetative state
Tom Henry
June 15, 2005 02:26:00 pm

An autopsy report released Wednesday showed that Terri Schiavo had a severely "atrophied" brain that weighed less than half of what a normal brain should weigh and was irreversibly damaged. Pinellas-Pasco Medical Examiner Jon...

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News Rights groups warns of killings, mass arrests in Ethiopia at vote fraud protests
Rights groups warns of killings, mass arrests in Ethiopia at vote fraud protests
Tom Henry
June 15, 2005 01:05:00 pm

New York-based monitoring group Human Rights Watch reported Wednesday that thousands of people have been arrested and some 36 killed across Ethiopia in skirmishes with police during election-related protests. HRW said that the deaths occured...

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News Inuit hunters to claim US climate policy breaches human rights
Inuit hunters to claim US climate policy breaches human rights
Tom Henry
June 15, 2005 10:50:00 am

Canadian Inuit leader Sheila Watt-Cloutier announced Wednesday that Inuit hunters in the North plan to file a petition accusing the US government of human rights violations by continually fuelling global warming. Troubled by the melting of Arctic...

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News German sweep for Iraq terror funders yields three arrests
German sweep for Iraq terror funders yields three arrests
Tom Henry
June 15, 2005 09:59:00 am

German authorities announced Tuesday that they have detained three men who allegedly spent thousands of dollars to fund the Ansar Al-Islam terror network in its terrorist attacks in Iraq. On Tuesday more that 150 German police officers...

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News Pakistani gang-rape victim no longer barred from traveling abroad
Pakistani gang-rape victim no longer barred from traveling abroad
Tom Henry
June 15, 2005 09:38:00 am

The Pakistani government said Wednesday that gang-rape victim Mukhtar Mai has been removed from a no-travel list and is free to go abroad. In a case that has received international attention, Mai was gang-raped on...

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News Bush meets with dissidents to highlight rights abuses abroad
Bush meets with dissidents to highlight rights abuses abroad
Tom Henry
June 15, 2005 08:52:00 am

In an effort to highlight human rights abuses in certain countries, President Bush has begun meeting with dissidents in an approach similar to the one taken by former President Ronald Reagan in his meetings with Soviet dissidents during the...

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Peru dispatch: protesters demand new elections as death toll from political violence surges under newly sworn-in president

Peru dispatch: protesters demand new elections as death toll from political violence surges under newly sworn-in president

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THIS DAY @ LAW

Georgia became first US state to ban lynching

On December 20, 1893, Georgia became the first state in the Union to pass a law against lynching, making the act punishable by four years in prison.

The statute was not particularly effective - read the text of the 1899 pamphlet Lynch Law in Georgia by anti-lynching activist Ida Wells-Barnett.

UN Drug Trafficking Convention signed

On December 20, 1988, the United Nations Convention Against Illicit Traffic in Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances was signed in Vienna, Austria. The treaty provides mechanisms for international coordination in preventing the manufacture and distribution of drugs worldwide. Over 170 countries have signed the treaty to date.

Learn more about the treaty from the UN.

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