Hafiz Saeed’s security beefed up following Pak Taliban threat

Lahore, May 19 (ANI): Pakistan’s Punjab province’ Home Department has directed concerned agencies to provide extra security cover to the banned Jamaat-ud-Daawa (JuD) chief Hafeez Muhammed Saeed, following intelligence reports that the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) is planning to target him.

According to a report of the Punjab Home Department, suspicious activities have been witnessed around Saeed’s residence.

Following the report the department has directed security agencies to beef up security of Saeed, the mastermind of the November 2008 Mumbai terror attacks, The News reports.

Pakistan, under intense international pressure, had arrested Saeed and put him under house arrest following the 26/11 attacks.

However, in October 2009, the Lahore High Court (LHC) quashed all terror charges against Saeed and set him free due to lack of evidence.

The LHC also notified that the JuD is not a banned organization and can work freely in Pakistan. (ANI)

Now a Brit actress claims Polanski sexually assaulted her when she was 16

London, May 15 (ANI): British actress Charlotte Lewis has alleged that Roman Polanski sexually assaulted her when she was 16.

The director is currently fighting to avoid extradition to the US on child sex charges in another case.

Lewis, who appeared in Polanski’s 1986 film Pirates, appeared at a press conference in Los Angeles to claim that she was abused by Polanski “in the worst possible way” at his home in Paris in 1982, while he was a fugitive from his 1977 rape trial in the US.

She claimed that the director “forced himself upon me” in his apartment in Paris.

Allred said that her client was “ready to testify under oath if and when that is necessary”.

Lewis, who read from a prepared statement, said that she had travelled from London to give a statement to prosecutors in Los Angeles and inform that the 1977 alleged rape is not the only incident that Polanski’s lawyers have claimed he was involved in.

“I am also a victim of Roman Polanski. He sexually abused me in the worst possible way when I was just 16 years old, four years after he fled the United States to avoid sentencing for his crimes.

“Mr Polanski knew I was only 16 years old when he met me and forced himself upon me in his apartment in Paris. He took advantage of me and I have lived with the effects of his behavior ever since it occurred,” The Times quoted her as saying.

She added that she wanted him to “get what he deserves” but refrained from mentioning details of the incident or the effect it had had on her life.

Polanski pleaded guilty in 1978 to unlawful sexual intercourse with Samantha Geimer but he fled the country before sentencing.

Polanski was taken into custody in Switzerland in September on a US warrant and remains there under house arrest at his home in Gstaad on 4.5-million-dollar bail. (ANI)

Myanmar’s Suu Kyi appeals sentence again

Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi has lodged an appeal with Myanmar’s top court, seeking to overturn a guilty verdict for her breach of a draconian security law last year, her lawyer said on Tuesday.

Her legal team submitted the appeal on Monday to a special three-judge panel of the Supreme Court and hopes to have the 18-month extension to her house arrest term scrapped on the grounds that the Aug. 11 verdict was unlawful.

“This is our last opportunity to appeal,” lawyer Nyann Win told reporters. “She’s innocent. We may not get the verdict we want, but it’s important that we maintain the focus of the international community.”

Lawyers for Suu Kyi, who has spent 15 of the last 21 years in detention because of her fight for democracy in the army-ruled country, say the law protecting the country against “subversive elements” is obsolete.

The legislation formed part of the 1974 constitution but was omitted from the latest charter, promulgated in 2008.

The ruling enraged the international community, which accused the ruling generals of using trumped-up charges to sideline Suu Kyi, the sole symbol of Myanmar’s democratic struggle, from this year’s elections.

The court ruled Suu Kyi breached her house arrest conditions by harbouring American intruder John Yettaw for two days after he swam to her lakeside home to tell her he had been sent by god to protect her from “terrorists”.

Yettaw was sentenced to seven years’ hard labour but was deported five days later after a visit by U.S. Senator Jim Webb, one of the few Westerners who have successfully engaged with the reclusive generals.

Even if the court agrees to hear her appeal, it is unlikely Suu Kyi will be freed because of her popularity and mesmerising influence on the Burmese people.

Regardless of the appeal, Suu Kyi is unable to run in the election. Her National League for Democracy party is boycotting the vote and even if she were to sign up to a new party, her criminal record and marriage to a foreigner prevent her from running.

(Reporting by Aung Hla Tun; Writing by Martin Petty; Editing by Jeremy Laurence)

Myanmar poll will not carry international legitimacy: US

After holding extensive talks with Burma’s (Myanmar) military junta and pro-democracy leaders including Aung San Suu Kyi, the US has said that the upcoming general elections in that country would carry no international legitimacy.

“The upcoming elections will carry no international legitimacy. We have made that clear to Burma. As to our efforts to continue to engage, it is why Kurt Campbell went (to Burma),” Assistant Secretary of State for Public Affairs P J Crowley told reporters at his daily press briefing.

Earlier, Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs Kurt Campbell held extensive talks with the military junta and pro-democracy leaders including Aung San Suu Kyi.

“In fact, on the course of his conversation with Aung San Suu Kyi, she shared her disappointment that the government was not more forthcoming, was not willing to expand political space, was not willing to have meaningful dialogue with its ethnic groups,” Crowley said.

The iconic Burmese leader, who has spent most of her time under house arrest in the past two decades, he said, also continued to support US efforts and international efforts to engage the Burmese Government.

Despite the tough posture of the US in the aftermath of Campbell’s visit to Burma, Crowley said the United States will continue with its policy of engagement with the Burmese military junta as part of its new Burma policy announced by the Secretary of State in September last year.

“Well, our engagement will continue. In what form and at what point, we’ll evaluate as we go along,” he said, adding that the isolation would has not worked in the past.

“We will continue to evaluate. We’ll continue to make clear to Burma what it should be doing. Not only in terms of how it relates to its own people, but also another message that Kurt Campbell delivered to them today was to reaffirm that we expect Burma to live up to its international obligations, including full support of UN Security Council Resolution 1874,” Crowley said.

Earlier in a statement, Campbell said we have urged Burma’s senior leadership to abide by its own commitment to fully comply with UN Security Council Resolution 1874.

Applauding the leaders of the National League for Democracy – a political party that has struggled for more than two decades to improve the lives of the Burmese people – with whom I held a lengthy meeting; Campbell said he was moved by the perseverance and the commitment Aung San Suu Kyi has shown to the cause of a more just and benevolent Burma and to the Burmese people themselves.

Campbell travelled to Nay Pyi Taw, wherein he held consultations with the Minister of Science and Technology, the Foreign Minister, the Minister of Information and the Spokes Authoritative Team, the Union Election Commission, the Labor Minister, and the head of the USDA.

Polanski evidence to remain undisclosed

London, May 11 (ANI): Secret evidence given by the original prosecutor in Roman Polanski”s three-decade old illegal sex case will not be disclosed.

Los Angeles Superior Court judge Peter Espinoza turned down a request from the Rosemary”s Baby director”s lawyers to unseal transcripts.

The judge said the material would be made public only if Polanski returned to the US for a hearing and the retired prosecutor, Roger Gunson, was unavailable to give evidence in person.

“We continue to be bogged down in the question of whether he will ever return,” the Daily Express quoted Judge Espinoza, as saying.

Polanski, 76, pleaded guilty in 1977 to having illegal intercourse with a teenaged girl but fled to France before his sentence could be pronounced.

He was arrested last September in Switzerland and currently remains under house arrest at his chalet in the Swiss resort of Gstaad. (ANI)

Roman Polanski breaks his silence on American extradition demands

London, May 3 (ANI): Polish filmmaker Roman Polanski has spoken about extradition demands by the US over a 33-year-old under-age sex case.

The 76-year-old Oscar winner said that America”s main purpose was to serve him “on a platter to the media.”

Polanski is under house arrest in his Swiss alpine chalet. He laid out his case against extradition on an online magazine run by one of his staunchest supporters, French philosopher Bernard-Henri Levy, reports The Daily Express.

“I have had my share of dramas and joys as we all have, and I am not going to try to ask you to pity my lot in life,” he wrote. “I ask only to be treated fairly like anyone else,” Polanski said.

He has claimed that the case charged against him is unjustified and full with problems. Each argument begins with the phrase: “I can remain silent no longer.”

Polanski also complains that Los Angeles County district attorney Steve Cooley, “who is handling this case and has requested the extradition, is himself campaigning for election and needs media publicity!”

Mr Cooley is running for the California attorney general post.

Sandi Gibbons, District attorney”s spokeswoman said the office “will withhold comment until the Swiss make a decision on his fugitive status.”

Swiss government is deciding whether to extradite Polanski to Los Angeles for having sex in 1977 with a 13-year-old girl or not.

Polanski was arrested seven months ago when he arrived in Zurich to receive a lifetime achievement award at a film festival. (ANI)

After over 21 years, Suu Kyi”s party bids farewell to Burmese politics

London, May 3 (ANI): Burma”s National League for Democracy (NLD), which sprang to life on a wave of opposition to military rule more than 21 years ago, has said that it will cease to exist.

According to The Independent, under laws drawn up by Burma”s ruling generals to govern elections this year, the NLD was forced to choose between expelling its detained iconic leader Aung San Suu Kyi on grounds that she is a prisoner, or not registering for the vote.

It chose the latter, a decision that means the party cannot legally exist after the May 6 deadline for registration.

Born out of the failed uprising of 1988, the party won a landslide victory in the last national elections in 1990, but the military never allowed it to take power.

Senior members of the party, most of them now elderly, have been harassed, imprisoned and tortured.

Yet through all this, and despite this final, killer blow to their party, NLD activists have extraordinary belief.

“We do not feel sad. We have honour. One day we will come back; we will be reincarnated by the will of the people,” said Tin Oo, the NLD”s 83-year-old deputy leader who has endured several spells in prison and was freed from house arrest in February.

Win Tin, Burma”s longest-serving political prisoner who was released in 2008 after 19 years in jail, said: “We won”t dismantle our party ourselves. Symbolically, that would be wrong. But remember, this is nothing new for us. We”ve seen our offices closed all over the country, our flags and signboards pulled down. We are used to this repression.”

NLD members plan to continue their social work, which includes small education and health projects and offering financial and moral support for the families of Burma”s estimated 2,100 political prisoners.

“But we will not do political work here. We want to avoid any misunderstanding with the authorities,” said Tin Oo, choosing his words carefully. (ANI)

Hurriyat leader Geelani in custody for violating house arrest

Srinagar, Apr 30 (ANI): All Party Hurriyat Conference (APHC) leader Sayyed Ali Shah Geelani was taken into custody by Jammu and Kashmir Police on Friday afternoon for violating house arrest norms.

Geelani was placed under house arrest following his call to march on the UN office in the city.

The hardline faction of the APHC had given call for the march in protest against the Delhi Court’s verdict on the 1996 Lajpat Nagar blast case, which sentenced three of the accused to death.

Police, had told Geelani not to move out of his house on Wednesday.

The APHC has condemned Geelani’s house arrest, describing it as an undemocratic act of the ruling National Conference. (ANI)

Polanski’s lawyer orders Swiss authorities to release the director

London, April 26 (ANI): Film director Roman Polanski’s lawyer has ordered the Swiss authorities to release the embattled director from house arrest in the country.

Polanski, 76, has been confined to his Swiss estate since December (09) following his September (09) arrest in Zurich stemming from a three-decade old sex crime in America.

And the Los Angeles District Attorney’s Office wants Polanski to return to California to be sentenced for having unlawful sex with a 13-year-old girl at a party in 1977.

L.A. officials on April 22 ruled that Polanski cannot be sentenced in absentia, but his lawyer Herve Temime is now insisting Swiss officials release the Oscar winner from house arrest immediately.

“It is up to the Swiss authorities to tell the truth and give back Roman Polanski his freedom once and for all, regardless of the roar and unbearable pressure of an ill-informed public,” the Daily Star quoted him as saying.

In February (10), Swiss authorities stated they would not make a decision on the extradition of Polanski to the U.S. until all avenues of appeal are exhausted. (ANI)

Polanski”s sex victim cannot call for case”s dismissal

London, April 17 (ANI): Roman Polanski”s illegal sex victim Samantha Geimer has no right to call for the three-decade-old case against the Oscar-winning filmmaker to be dismissed, US prosecutors told a court.

Los Angeles County prosecutors told the California Second District Court of Appeal that a recent constitutional revision did not give victims the right to determine the outcome of criminal cases, reports The Daily Express.

In a filing, they also called upon the appeals court to reject requests by Geimer to have the case transferred to another county and unseal recent testimony by a former prosecutor.

Prosecutors believe granting her request for dismissal would “fundamentally alter the way in which crimes are prosecuted”.

The filing says that if victims were parties to criminal cases, cases could be dropped either through intimidation, coercion or public pressure.

Geimer asked the appeals court to dismiss the case and make the other rulings in March.

She has repeatedly tried to have the case dismissed, saying renewed interest in the case and its media coverage is quite a harrowing experience for her.

Polanski, 76, is accused of having had illegal intercourse with Geimer, when she was 13, in 1977.

The Rosemary”s Baby director pleaded guilty to the charge but fled the US on the eve of his sentencing.

He is currently under house arrest in his chalet in the Swiss luxury resort of Gstaad. (ANI)

Burma annuls Suu Kyi’s election victory

Burma’s military government has annulled the last election held in the country, which was won in a landslide by the party of Aung San Suu Kyi.

Burma’s last elections were won in a landslide by the National League for Democracy party led by Aung San Suu Kyi.

Ms Suu Kyi won about 80 per cent of the vote but was immediately placed under house arrest, where she has remained for much of the past 20 years.

Burma is due to hold its first election since then later this year.

The military government has this week been releasing the rules for the poll, which include a clause that Ms Suu Kyi’s party must expel her if they want to participate in the vote.

International observers are dismayed by the move, which will add to fears that the election will be a sham.

Pak’s ambivalence in cracking down on Saeed clear : NYT

New York, Sep.19 (ANI) : Pakistani authorities may have filed cases against Lashkar -e-Taiba (LeT) chief Hafeez Mohammad Saeed, the alleged mastermind of the November 2008 Mumbai terror attacks, but Islamabad’s actions are being considered as a mere ‘hogwash’.

The New York Times, while reporting the actions taken against Saeed, said the ambivalence of Pakistani authorities in cracking down on the LeT’s fouder leader was clear.

The newspaper highlighted that the Pakistan government has never been serious regarding putting a check on Saeed and his covert terror activities being run under the LeT’s charity organization Jamaat-ud-Dawa (JuD).

“Even after he was placed under house arrest in December, the government took steps to soften the blow, allowing him, for instance, to hold a defiant news conference before his confinement began,” it said.

While the Pakistan government has been maintaining that it is seriously carrying out the probe regarding the 26/11 massacre, and tried to show the same to the international community especially the US by booking Saeed under the anti-terrorism act, its ‘bluff’ was laid bare when Saeed’s lawyer disclosed that the case registered against his client were ‘very weak’.

“I have gone through both the FIRs against Saeed thoroughly. The charges against my client are very weak. He has expressed his views like any other Pakistani,” Saeed’s lawyer AK Dongar told a private television channel.

Pakistani authorities also revealed that they have not received any instructions for arresting Saeed despite the registration of two cases against him. (ANI)

Lawyers optimistic about Suu Kyi’s release

Yangon (Myanmar), Sep 18(ANI): Lawyers of detained Burmese opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi have said that they have firm arguments in the appeal that they have filed against her criminal conviction.

“We are optimistic that Daw Suu and her two companions will be released because we based our appeal on sound legal points,” The Daily Express quoted Nyan Win, Suu Kyi’s lawyer, as saying.

Earlier, Suu Kyi’s lawyers had submitted an appeal against the conviction to the Divisional Court in Yangon.

A Myanmar court had sentenced Aung San Suu Kyi to a three year jail term with hard labour for violating terms of her house arrest, when an American citizen John Yettaw swam to her lakeside home in May and stayed there uninvited for two day when she was under dentention.

The sentence was later reduced to 18 months under house arrest, but it would still keep her off the political stage and elections that the military government has set for next year, the paper reports.

The appeal filed by Suu Kyi’s lawyers argues that the law cited by authorities is invalid, as it applies to a constitution abolished two decades ago.

The American, Yettaw, was sentenced to seven years in prison, but was released on humanitarian grounds and deported on August 16.

Suu Kyi, who sacrificed her prosperous days in England to take up the crusade for democracy in her home country, Myanmar, and later imprisoned by the military regime, has become the world”s most famous political prisoners, and an icon for the struggle of democracy.

Suu Kyi has been detained for more than 13 of the last 19 years. (ANI)

Hurriyat leader Geelani placed under house arrest

Srinagar, Sep.11 (ANI): Jammu and Kashmir police on Friday placed leader of the hardline faction of the All Parties Hurriyat Conference (APHC) under house arrest as a preventive measure.

The arrest was ordered to prevent protests against Indian rule during Friday prayers.

Geelani’s close aide Aiyaz Akbar told reporters here that the former had been told not to break through his security cordon.

The ailing Geelani, 79, was earlier set free by police on Wednesday after serving a three-month jail sentence for organising protests against the Shopian double rape and murder case.

The latest detention came hours after he led scores of Kashmiris in an anti-India demonstration in Srinagar.

Police and federal paramilitaries were monitoring Friday prayers during the Muslim fasting month of Ramadan.

He had addressed a press conference at his residence Thursday afternoon and later led scores of his supporters who shouted anti-India and pro-freedom slogans. (ANI)

Burmese court accepts appeal against Suu Kyi’s conviction

Yangon (Myanmar), Sep 4(ANI): A Burmese Court has accepted the appeal filed by lawyers of detained Burmese opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi against her criminal conviction, and has scheduled the appeal for September 18.

Earlier, Suu Kyi’s main lawyer, Kyi Win, had said that they submitted an appeal against the conviction to the Divisional Court in Yangon.

A Myanmar court had sentenced Aung San Suu Kyi to a three years jail term with hard labour for violating terms of her house arrest, when an American citizen John Yettaw swam to her lakeside home in May and stayed there uninvited for two day when she was under dentention.

The sentence was later reduced to 18 months under house arrest, but it would still keep her off the political stage and elections that the military government has set for next year, The Daily Express reports.

Meanwhile, the appeal filed by Suu Kyi’s lawyers argues that the law cited by authorities is invalid, as it applies to a constitution abolished two decades ago.

The American, Yettaw, was sentenced to seven years in prison, but was released on humanitarian grounds and deported on August 16.

Suu Kyi, who sacrificed her prosperous days in England to take up the crusade for democracy in her home country, Myanmar, and later imprisoned by the military regime, has become the world’s most famous political prisoners, and an icon for the struggle of democracy.

Suu Kyi has been detained for more than 13 of the last 19 years. (ANI)

Lawyers of Suu Kyi to appeal against her conviction

Yangon (Myanmar), Sep 3(ANI): Lawyers of detained Burmese opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi have said that they will file an appeal against her criminal conviction.

According to reports, Suu Kyi’s main lawyer, Kyi Win, has said that the appeal would be submitted to the Divisional Court in Yangon.

The appeal argues that the law cited by authorities is invalid, as it applies to a constitution abolished two decades ago. Following the submission, the court will give a date for arguments to consider whether it will accept the appeal.

Earlier on August 11, a Myanmar court had sentenced Aung San Suu Kyi three years jail term sentence with hard labour for violating terms of her house arrest when an American citizen John Yettaw swam to her lakeside home in May and stayed there uninvited for two day when she was under dentention.

However, the sentence was later reduced to 18 months under house arrest, but it would keep her off the political stage and elections that the military government has set for next year.

The American, Yettaw, was sentenced to seven years in prison but was released on humanitarian grounds and deported on August 16.

Suu Kyi, who sacrificed her prosperous days in England to take up the crusade for democracy in her home country, Myanmar and later imprisoned by the military regime, has become the world’s most famous political prisoners and an icon for the struggle of democracy.

Suu Kyi has been detained for more than 13 of the last 19 years. (ANI)

Suu Kyi keen to boost security at her home, says lawyer

Yangon (Myanmar), Sep.1 (ANI): Detained Burmese opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi plans to repair her dilapidated two-story home to improve security, after an American’s high-profile intrusion led to her house arrest being extended.

According to The Telegraph, the 64-year-old Nobel Peace Prize laureate was ‘very keen to have her house repaired, mainly for security reasons, her lawyer Nyan Win said.

Suu Kyi wants to reinforce two balconies on the upper floor, which have only glass doors, and meet with an architect to discuss other renovations, said Win. (ANI)

Despite million-dollar US offer, Scotland freed Lockerbie bomber

Washington, Aug. 30 (ANI): The United States had offered ‘millions’ to keep the convicted Lockerbie bomber, Abdelbaset Ali al-Megrahi, under house arrest in UK, but Scotland went ahead with the controversial decision to release the convicted Lockerbie bomber.

US officials had “very reluctantly” backed a proposal to move Abdelbaset Ali al-Megrahi from Greenock Prison into some kind of high-security accommodation elsewhere in Scotland, The Independent quoted senior government sources, as saying.

However, the Americans had only consented to the option in a desperate attempt to deter the Scottish Executive from releasing Megrahi on compassionate grounds (due to his terminal prostate cancer) and sending him home to die, the report adds.

“They also made it clear that the US would be willing to contribute millions of dollars to a complicated house arrest operation that would have demanded round-the-clock security to keep the prisoner under guard and protect him from attack,” sources said.

But the Scottish National Party government in Edinburgh eventually chose the option of compassionate release, claiming that police chiefs had ruled that the security implications of house arrest would be “severe.”

However, Strathclyde Police denied last week that they had made any judgement on the proposal, and claimed they had only told the Scottish government how many officers would be needed.

“Our position has consistently been that we wanted to see Megrahi serve out his sentence in Scotland,” an official within the US administration said yesterday.

“It got to the stage [during talks over the release] where we would have agreed to anything that would have kept him under Scottish jurisdiction,” they said. (ANI)

Interpol to assist Indian Government, set to issue notice against Hafiz Saeed

New Delhi, Aug.23 (ANI): The Indian Government has reportedly approached Interpol and requested it to issue a Red Corner Notice (RCN) against Jamaat-ud-Dawa (JuD) chief and 26/11 mastermind Hafiz Saeed.

Sources said that they expect the RCN to be issued some time next week, possibly by Tuesday.

The request from New Delhi is reported to have been made in the wake of a Pakistan court ordering the release of Saeed from nine months of house arrest on grounds that there was insufficient evidence to detain him in connection with his role in the 26/11 massacre in Mumbai that claimed nearly 170 lives and maimed more than 300.

Officials in New Delhi are reportedly of the view that Saeed should be chargesheeted and prosecuted for masterminding the Mumbai carnage on the basis of the six documents of evidence that they have handed over to the Pakistan Government through diplomatic channels.

Government sources said that the CBI, which acts as the nodal agency for all dealings with Interpol, has already written to the world police body, based on the 26/11 chargesheet, to get an RCN issued against Saeed who was let off by the Lahore High Court as Islamabad didn’t press charges against him.

Interpol issues an RCN against any accused after it receives all information and evidence against him from the country in which the crime has been committed.

The RCN will be issued on the basis of the non-bailable warrant issued against Saeed by a Mumbai court earlier and also all the evidences gathered against him by the Mumbai police.

According to the Mumbai police, Saeed is among the 35 people who provided training to all the terrorists who executed 26/11.

Pakistan has defended its refusal to act against Saeed by saying that India has not given evidence against him. (ANI)

Trying Musharraf could hurt Sharif more than Zardari: Najam Sethi

Lahore, Aug. 8 (ANI): The invocation of the Pakistani constitution’s Article 6 against former President Pervez Musharraf may once again put the civilian government on collision course with the military, and eventually hurt PML-N chief Nawaz Sharif more than President Asif Ali Zardari, the Daily Times reports.

A private TV channel quoted Daily Times Editor-in-Chief Najam Sethi, as saying that it was possible that a pro-Musharraf general could impose martial law in the future.

“If that happens, Nawaz will likely have to stay abroad for another 10 years,” he said.

Sethi said Sharif was still waiting to become prime minister, adding the PML-N chief had made a good political decision by demanding to bring a resolution against Musharraf.

This decision would make it more difficult for Musharraf to participate in general elections, he said.

“The army, bureaucracy and former cabinet members will have to be included if any action is initiated against Musharraf. But, the government cannot afford to sack the military leadership and bureaucracy to bring revolutionary steps against the former president,” Sethi noted.

The PPP and the PML-N would not get unanimous approval for a resolution against Musharraf in the presence of PML-Quaid and the Muttahida Qaumi Movement, he said.

Moreover, he concluded that Musharraf was unlikely to be treated like former Chilean dictator General Augusto Pinochet, who was placed under house arrest following the end of his dictatorship, due to certain international guarantees. (ANI)