S.Africa’s Zuma warns of human trafficking risk

Parents must be vigilant during the soccer World Cup to guard against a possible jump in child trafficking, South Africa’s President Jacob Zuma said on Friday.

In a speech launching a new child protection law, Zuma said that hosting an event of such magnitude could be seen as an opportunity for criminals, particularly during an extended school holiday.

South African schools will be closed for the month-long Cup, which starts on June 11.

“Not all parents and care-givers will be able to align their vacation with that of the extended school vacation. We urge parents to take extra care and ensure that their children are supervised and provided with guidance at all times,” he said.

“Children wandering alone in shopping malls and football stadiums will be vulnerable to people with evil intentions.”

The United Nations says trafficking generates billions of dollars annually, with 79 percent of those affected falling victim to sexual exploitation. An estimated 6,000 to 8,000 people are trafficked a year, half of them children.

South Africa fast-tracked a new law against human trafficking to bring it into effect before the World Cup, making it easier to prosecute suspects and giving South African courts jurisdiction over acts outside the country’s borders.

Those found guilty could now face life imprisonment or a heavy fine.

SECURITY BUDGET

Trafficking has not traditionally been a major issue in South Africa but activists say the problem is growing and child groups have warned of an increase in incidents during the tournament, when some 350,000 foreigners are expected to travel to the country.

Zuma said human trafficking had been prioritised within the justice system and that dedicated police co-ordinators and task teams had been set up.

“We will play our part as government but parents and care-givers also have to be vigilant,” he said.

South Africa’s government has vowed to keep fans safe during the World Cup, setting aside an additional 1.3 billion rand ($164.2 million) for security.

The country has some of the highest violent crime levels in the world, with more than 18,000 people murdered in the 12 months to March 2009 — around 50 a day and more than the United States which has six times the population.

Local news agency SAPA reported that Zuma had appealed to South Africans to “be good” for the month of the tournament.

“In this time, we need good South Africans. Let them, just for four weeks, be good. Just for four weeks,” he said at a prayer meeting on Thursday.

(Editing by Clare Fallon; To query or comment on this story email sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)

FEATURE – Czechs tire of sleaze, embrace new parties

Marek is fed up with facing ever more graft in his business dealings in Prague, something he did not imagine would still be a problem so long after the wild early days of post-communist transformation two decades ago.

“A few years ago, officials went after bigger deals, now they are interested in kickbacks from every little order,” said the event management entrepreneur, who like most businesspeople interviewed for this article refused to give his full name.

As a May 28-29 general election nears, Czech media have been full of stories of suspicious contracts, from small orders to multi-billion crown deals to build highways, supply services, or buy military equipment.

The rise in sleaze has turned many Czechs off the two main established parties — the right-wing Civic Democrats and the left-wing Social Democrats — which have alternated in power and bear most responsibility.

That is likely to bring new parties into parliament which may determine the make-up of the next government.

The Czech Republic has gone through a highly successful transformation, giving its people democracy, better living standards at 80 percent of EU average, and security through integration into the European Union and NATO.

But, as in most other central and east European countries, strong institutions and good governance have been slower to evolve, resulting in a ineffective justice system unable to punish corruption and fraud.

“Unless we can fix it quickly and comprehensively, the opaque and inefficient system through which the state allocates its resources could erode the very foundation of both the free market and democracy,” Weston Stacey, head of the American Chamber of Commerce in Prague, wrote in an article last week.

“Despite all the accusations and outrage, the prosecutor’s office has been unable to put together any evidence of widespread abuse,” he added.

The chamber is leading a group of experts that has drafted a plan to improve public procurement, trying to force parties to adopt it as an agenda item for the next government.

GETTING WORSE

Last year, the country of 10.5 million people dropped seven spots to the 52nd in a ranking of perceived corruption by Transparency International, a non-profit group. That is behind its central European neighbours and most western countries.

The Czech Republic is still better placed than Bulgaria, which had 1 billion euros in E.U. development funds stopped due to endemic graft and ranks 71st on the list along with Greece and Romania as the EU’s worst performers.

But many Czech contracts are awarded without tenders; some are not published; strange conditions are set to eliminate rivals; final prices exceed those contracted; and winners often have anonymous ownership structures, raising suspicion of connections to politicians.

Jan, a Prague entrepreneur in information technology, explained how some procurement deals he saw worked.

“You create a big project with not much actually in it which costs a crazy amount of money. Award it to friends, who find someone who does the real work for a fraction of the price, and pocket the rest,” he said.

He called the projects “Zeppelins” after the giant gas-filled airships popular in the early 20th century.

An opinion poll by the CVVM agency found in March that 42 percent of Czechs believed most public officials take bribes. Another 23 percent thought nearly all take bribes.

A Czech Confederation of Industry survey found in April that 29 percent of firms thought corruption had worsened from a year ago. Only 2 percent said there had been an improvement.

The group’s chief, Jaroslav Mil, said companies reckon bribes and overpricing account for between 5 and 20 percent of the cost of contracts, adding up to billions of dollars a year.

“It has been getting worse. It has become a tolerated thing, something common,” he said.

Among deals in the spotlight is a military purchase of armoured personnel carriers worth 14.4 billion crown ($701.1 mln), which media said were three times as expensive as a similar type bought by Portugal. The defence ministry said the Czech ones have better equipment.

Vladimir Kovar, owner of a software firm, said on television he lost a state software tender despite submitting a cheaper bid than the winner after rejecting an offer by unknown lobbyists to give 20 million crowns to members of the steering committee. There have been no charges in either deal.

PRAGUE VOTERS RUN

Prague, the capital of 1.3 million people, has become a national symbol of opaque governance.

The most notorious deal criticised in the press is a contract to design passes to pay for public transport, similar to London’s Oyster card, which cost 880 million crowns ($42.84 mln) and was won by a firm whose owners were unknown.

The city leadership has denied wrongdoing, and there have been no charges against officials.

Prague had been a firm power base for the conservative Civic Democrats in the past two decades. That is over. The party won 48.3 percent in the capital in the last general election but only polled 23.5 percent in an opinion poll this month.

Citizens’ groups have sprung up to urge people to boot out the established parties. One is called simply “Exchange the politicians”. Another calls on people to select candidates from the bottom of party lists so they jump ahead of party leaders.

A new party with catchy anti-corruption rhetoric, Public Affairs, has been polling around 10 percent and may become the kingmaker in forming the next government.

A week before the election, it remains uncertain who will lead the country for the next four years.

Helena Hejdova, an architect who finds it very hard to pick who to vote for, was sceptical about whether it matters.

“There has been more and more theft; I wonder if anyone who comes next will be any better,” she said.

US may amend Miranda Rights for effective interrogation

Washington, May 10 (ANI): After facing flak over providing Miranda Rights to Times Square bomber Faisal Shahzad, the Obama administration is in the process of framing a law that would enable investigators to question terror suspects without informing them of their rights.

Attorney General Eric H. Holder has averred that Shahzad was trained by Taliban on Pakistani soil.

There has been mounting pressure on the Obama adminstration to treat terror suspects as military detainees, and enemy combatants waging war on the US.

In an unprecedented departure from its stance defending the provision of Miranda Rights, the Government is paying heed to Holder’s concerns.

“We’re now dealing with international terrorists, and I think that we have to think about perhaps modifying the rules that interrogators have and somehow coming up with something that is flexible and is more consistent with the threat that we now face,” the New York Times quoted Holder, as saying.

John O. Brennan, Obama’s counterterrorism adviser strongly echoed Holder’s views, and is convinced of Shahzad’s Talibani affiliations.

“He was trained by them,” Brennan said. “He received funding from them. He was basically directed here to the United States to carry out this attack. Investigation’s ongoing,” he added.

The US administration is now hastening to fill the glaring lacunae in its justice system. Cold-blooded Shahzad was questioned for just two hours before being read out his rights.

The administration relied on an exception to Miranda for immediate threats to public safety. That exception was established by the Supreme Court in a 1984 case in which a police officer asked a suspect, at the time of his arrest and before reading him his rights, about where he had hidden a gun. The court deemed the defendant’s answer and the gun admissible as evidence against him, the paper said.

Miranda was formulated with a view to prevent confessions that were obtained through coercion and intimidation, however, critics have for long argued about the possibility of its misuse.

Rudolph W. Giuliani, the former New York City mayor and Republican presidential candidate, said Sunday on “This Week” on ABC that he supported Holder’s proposal.

“I would not have given him Miranda warnings after just a couple of hours of questioning,” Mr. Giuliani said. “I would have instead declared him an enemy combatant, asked the president to do that, and at the same time, that would have given us the opportunity to question him for a much longer period of time.” (ANI)

Boosting legal services would save money: Greens

The ACT Greens are pushing the Government to establish a legal centre for people with mental health problems and boost funding for community legal centres.

Greens MLA Shane Rattenbury says many people are struggling to access legal help because they cannot afford a lawyer or qualify for legal aid.

He says the Government has an obligation to help them.

“There are people in our community who cannot access lawyers and the legal system when they need it the most, when they’re facing a crisis in their life, when they’re having a significant problem,” he said.

“People need to be able to access the legal system and at the moment they can’t.”

Mr Rattenbury acknowledges the Government is in a tight financial situation but he says the changes would save money in the long term.

“We know that for every dollar spent in a community legal centre more than $100 is saved later in the justice system overall,” he said.

“It’s also about helping those people who are most vulnerable in our community.

“This is money we have to spend if we want to have a just and fair city.”

Lawyers defend justice system over McGee verdicts

The Law Society and Lawyers Alliance have defended the verdicts against the McGee brothers and deny they indicate that anything is wrong with the justice system.

Lawyer Eugene McGee and his brother Craig have been found not guilty of conspiracy to attempt to pervert the course of justice over the hit-run road death of cyclist Ian Humphrey six years ago.

This week’s verdict has led to a wave of criticism of the justice system, including a suggestion that those who know the legal system and have enough money get a better outcome.

Tony Kerin from the Lawyers Alliance says an emotional response is driving opinion.

“What’s happened in the McGee case is obviously tragic to the family of the victim and that’s to be expected,” he said.

“But if you really have a look at what was happening here, there was a lot of legal commentary to say that these charges were misplaced.

“Conspiracy to attempt to pervert the course of justice is quite a peculiar charge and takes quite a lot of effort to prove.”

Richard Mellows from the Law Society of South Australia is confident the judge arrived at the right verdict.

“There’s a lot to be gained by reading it and getting the full context of it and it’s clear that his honour came to the conclusion that the charges hadn’t been made out and he did so on the evidence before him,” he said.

Eugene McGee, a former police prosecutor, was fined over the hit-run death of the cyclist, then faced new charges arising from a royal commission.

Lawyer confidentiality under attack claims Burke

The former West Australian Premier Brian Burke has taken a swipe at the state’s Corruption and Crime Commission after his trial on false testimony charges.

Mr Burke has been charged with five counts of giving false and misleading evidence during the Commission’s hearings in 2006.

The Commission was investigating the former Premier’s lobbying activities on behalf of a developer in the state’s south-west.

Mr Burke has claimed he was unfairly targeted by the CCC.

And, he said the Commission’s power to listen to and record any phone call has implications for the justice system.

The prosecutor, James MacTaggart said Mr Burke knew he gave false answers to the Corruption and Crime Commission.

Lied

He told the court the former Premier lied when he denied discussions with and about certain public servants.

Mr MacTaggart told the court Mr Burke lied when he said he didn’t ask a Minister to make an appointment to a government agency.

The prosecutor said intercepted phone calls showed Mr Burke implored the Minister, Norm Marlborough.

“You’ve been a minister six months. This is the first person I’ve ever recommended to you for appointment anywhere,” said Mr Burke.

” Mate, it’s a done deal,” replied Mr Marlborough.

For the defence, Grant Donaldson, SC said Mr Burke was not trying to pressure the Minister for his own benefit.

He said it had never been suggested that there was anything in it for Mr Burke, and the former Premier was just putting a name up.

Mr Donaldson said the CCC had engaged in a witch hunt and a show trial.

Confidential no longer

One of the issues that arose during the trial was that of lawyer-client confidentiality.

Mr Donaldson had told the court that intercepts of his own calls with the former Premier were a breach of legal professional privilege.

After closing submissions ended, Mr Burke spoke briefly outside the court.

“I’m very pleased that it’s over and there’s now the stress of waiting for the decision. But, I remain absolutely appalled at the evidence that was led that showed that the CCC actually listened to my senior counsel’s advice to me two or three days before the hearing,” he said.

“How can anyone get a fair go if the CCC’s listening to every side of the argument and you don’t even have confidentiality with your lawyer’s advice to you?”

Mr Burke said the CCC’s power could even have an impact on the conduct of trials.

“If you’re listening as the prosecutor, to the advice the lawyer’s giving the accused or the defendant, I mean, how’s it fair?”

A spokesman for the Corruption and Crime Commission says there is no exemption for lawyers in terms of professional privilege.

And, if they are speaking with someone who is under investigation, they could have their calls intercepted.

The verdict on the false evidence charges is expected to be handed down on April the first.

“Saddam-style” torture and death penalty still prevalent in Iraq: Amnesty

Baghdad (Iraq), Sep 1(ANI): Amnesty International on Tuesday said that even though Iraq has been free from Saddam Hussein’s regime for six years, more than 1,000 prisoners are still facing death penalty in the country.

It said that Iraq’s burdened justice system can barely cope with ordinary crimes, and punishment for crimes ranging from murder to the membership and support of armed groups are out of bounds for them.

“Many Iraqis who had been traumatised by his policies hoped and expected that a new chapter would be opened in which human rights would be respected and upheld, and that torture, killings and the death penalty would remain only as a bad memory of the past,” The Daily Express quoted Amnesty International, as saying.

“Six years on (from the fall of the regime in 2003), as an estimated 1,000 prisoners face the prospect of execution, that dream has all but faded to nothing,” it added.

Amnesty further said that instead of wiping away the death penalty, Iraqi government had widened both the scope and application of penalty in 2004, and called for an “immediate moratorium” on all executions.

It further added that Iraq use of the death penalty “lacks transparency”, and trails in the country fail to match international standards and said it expressed disappointment that Iraq’s Human Rights Minister Dr Wajdan Mikhail Salam advocates the death penalty.

It also said that people suffering from death penalties should be given a ray of hope to contend their cases again.

Amnesty also claimed that complaints were received from defendants in numerous cases that confessions were extracted from them under torture.

It further informed that out of the 1,000 prisoners, some 150 have exhausted all means of appeal or clemency and are at “immediate risk of death”. (ANI)

Chris Brown should be in jail, says Rihanna’s dad

London, June 29 (ANI): Rihanna’s father says that her daughter’s ex-boyfriend Chris Brown should’ve been jailed.

Ronald Fenty slammed the U.S. justice system after Brown was handed a ‘light’ sentence for assaulting the ‘Umbrella’ hitmaker.

The R and B singer was sentenced to five years’ probation and six months of community service by a U.S. court after he pleaded guilty to one count of assault on Rihanna.

Community service will include picking up litter or removing graffiti, as per the order of the court.

Apart from it, he will also have to attend courses on domestic violence.

However, Fenty is furious after an L.A. judge failed to imprison Brown.

“He should be in jail. Chris should have been sent to jail for what he did to my girl. He’s got off lightly. Chris put her through hell,” the Daily Star quoted Fenty as saying. (ANI)

Guide offers advice for Indian students in Australia

Melbourne, June 27 (ANI): An international student in Australia, Danny Ong, has written a guide for Indian students as well as for other international students in the country, which will offer essential advice to them regarding house-hunting, public transport, the justice system and the concept of human rights in Australia.

The guide titled ‘International Student Handbook: Living and Studying in Australia’ will be published in August.

Danny Ong wrote the guide following a disappointing job interview where he was asked to outline his experience in Australia, the below par interview motivated him to write the guide, which offers indispensable insight into the Australian culture.

“I realised I didn’t know anything. I was so fixated with getting good marks that I had learned nothing about Australia or Australian culture,” the Age quoted Ong, as saying.

The guide encourages international students to get involved into the Australia life, and includes advice ranging from finding a job to doing volunteer work.

An Indian student, Vibhav Roy, who is a student of Monash University, highlights that the biggest challenge for most students was to adjust to the life away from family and overcoming loneliness.

Roy admits that students get so traumatised by the transition that some of them even decide to return back home and says that the guide by Danny Ong would be invaluable to students trying to negotiate housing, financial and cultural issues.

Apart from the guide, in the wake of recent attacks on international students, Danny Ong has also advised newcomers to stay alert to potential dangers of late-night work and travel. (ANI)

Chris Brown’s plea deal branded a ‘joke’ by justice campaigners

London, Jun 24 (ANI): After singer Chris Brown has made a plea deal, and has been let off without a jail term for assaulting his ex-girlfriend Rihanna, justice campaigners have come forward and condemned the action as a “joke”.

Brown, 20, has admitted to having assaulted Rihanna just hours before they were due to perform at the Grammy Awards in February.

Under the terms of the bargain, he is likely to serve no jail time and will instead do six months community service and placed on probation.

But the recommended sentence has not been met with favour by domestic violence campaigners, who say that it sends out the wrong message and may discourage women reporting violence.

“It is letting him off the hook. What they are doing is letting him off easy. I do not know what it accomplishes. It is laughable,” the Daily Express quoted Roslyn Muraskin, professor of criminal justice and director of the Long Island Women’s Institute, as saying.

“It will discourage people coming forward. It is revolving justice – you get a slap on the wrist and let back on the streets. It is not proper justice, it is a joke.

“It is typical (of the US justice system). They do not pay a great deal of attention to women who are the victims of domestic violence. When people get killed, that is when they pay attention,” the author of ‘It’s A Crime: Women and Justice’ stated.

“There are so many deterrents preventing women coming forward,” Retha Fielding, of the US National Domestic Violence Hotline, added.

UK-based campaign groups also warned that “ineffective, low” sentencing does not protect vulnerable women.

But charities welcomed the publicity surrounding the case.

“We welcome the clear message that this sends around the world that domestic violence is unacceptable and perpetrators can and should be convicted,” Deborah McIlveen, spokeswoman for Women’s Aid, said.

“Domestic violence is a serious crime that affects one woman in four during her lifetime. This case has highlighted the fact that domestic violence affects all parts of our society,” Sandra Horley, chief executive of Refuge, voiced her opinion.

“A successful and popular celebrity like Rihanna is just as likely to experience domestic violence as any other woman,” Horley added. (ANI)

India among top 10 countries where social stress has increased dating violence

Washington, May 9 (ANI): India is among the top 10 countries that have highest levels of social stress, which has a direct link to increased dating violence, according to new research from the University of New Hampshire.

The research led by Murray Straus, co-director of the UNH Family Research Laboratory and professor of sociology, is based on a 32-nation study.

It shows that Taiwan has the highest level of social stress.

While making a presentation on the study at the conference on “War, Terrorism, and Social Stress: Impacts on Crime and the Criminal Justice System” at the Institute of Criminology, The Hebrew University, Jerusalem, recently, Straus said: “The current economic stress in the United States and around the world is likely to result in more violence, including more physical abuse of children and more violence between partners.”

Studying 14,252 university students from 68 universities in 32 nations in a comprehensive and groundbreaking International Dating Violence Study, he found that the more stress experienced by these students, the greater the probability they had hit a dating, cohabiting, or marital partner.

According to his study, Taiwan has the highest levels of social stress, followed by South Korea and China. The United States ranked 12th out of the 32 nations studied for social stress.

The Netherlands was found to have the lowest levels of social stress.

When looking at rates of assault, Iran had the highest overall assault rate and Taiwan had the highest rate of severe assaults.

Top 10 countries with the highest stressful conditions are:

1. Taiwan

2. South Korea

3. China

4. Russia

5. Tanzania

6. South Africa

7. Hong Kong

8. Japan

9. Lithuania

10. India (ANI)

Montana town eyes Guantanamo prisoners; fed officials sceptical

San Francisco – A remote town in Montana has come up with a new proposal for its empty jail – turning it into a replacement for the US government’s notorious facility in Guantanamo, Cuba.

But the proposal has met scepticism at the federal level.

According to the Billings Gazette Friday, officials in Hardin, Montana proposed the site as a Guantanamo replacement since they have been unable to secure contracts for inmates since the 27-million- dollar facility was completed in July 2007.

The 460-bed private jail was constructed by the town’s development authority, which hoped to make money by contracting it out to overcrowded prison systems in other states.

So far it has sent details of the facility to all 50 states, but has not received any offers in return.

US President Barak Obama has ordered the Guantanamo facility to be closed, but officials have still not located any suitable alternative site for housing the approximately 240 Guantanamo inmates.

Initial reactions to the Montana plan do not appear encouraging. Montana senator Max Baucus came out quickly against the plan, saying “bringing terrorists into our state is a clear and present dangers to everyone who lives here.”

US Marshal Dwight MacKay is also opposed to the plan saying that the local law enforcement and justice system is not designed to deal with such dangerous inmates. “These are not the normal Joe Six-Pack meth users,” MacKay told the paper. “This is a different league of people that can be considered a national threat. We have to take the proper steps to ensure the safety of our community, the safety of our courts.”(dpa)

Dubai police seek Chechnya deputy PM in killing

Dubai police said on Sunday they sought a deputy prime minister of Chechnya, Adam Delimkhanov, in connection with the slaying of a former Chechen military commander, Sulim Yamadayev, shot down in a parking garage.

“The deputy prime minister of Chechnya is wanted by the justice system of the UAE and six people are suspected of involvement in the murder,” Dubai police said in a statement.

Police said they held two suspects in connection with the killing — one Russian and one Iranian — and sought four more for questioning in connection with the case. They did not give names.

Yamadayev was shot on March 28 in the underground car park of a luxury seaside apartment block in Dubai, one of seven emirates that make up the United Arab Emirates.

Sixty new CBI courts to be set up

NEW DELHI: Chief Justice of India K G Balakrishnan on Thursday announced the setting up of 60 new CBI courts across the country to expedite disposal
of cases involving the agency.

“Sixty new CBI courts will be set up across the country. A recent survey shows 9,000 cases involving CBI are pending in various courts,” Justice Balakrishnan said while delivering the 10th D P Kohli Memorial lecture on Criminal Justice System — Growing Responsibility in the Face of Challenges in Modern Society.

Justice Balakrishnan said criminal law provisions needed to be examined in a fresh light so as to accommodate the logic of punishment as well as compensation. A majority of punitive remedies enumerated in the statutes, such as fines, penalties and imprisonment, were not proportionate to the degree of harm suffered by the victim.

He also emphasised that if the extent of compensation had to bear a rational correlation to the actual harm suffered, the trial judge would need to make a thorough inquiry into the nature and degree of such harm. “There is obvious question about the source of funds for granting compensation to the victims,” he added.

“I am quite optimistic that the proposed changes will definitely improve the role and status of victims in the criminal justice system. The larger agenda of criminal justice reform touches on many more issues — such as better training for police personnel, a clear separation between the investigation and prosecution functions and continuous education for lawyers and judges,” the CJI said.

He cautioned though that if failures of criminal justice system were allowed to continue, they would only encourage offenders to commit more crimes and correspondingly lead to acts of vigilante justice. He also said an efficient yet fair criminal justice system was an essential requirement for a liberal democracy and these issues should be at the forefront of the agenda of all political parties.

Sexual assaults in US military climbed eight percent in 2008-09

Washington, Mar.18 (ANI): Pentagon officials said Tuesday that sexual assaults in US military climbed eight percent in 2008-09 in comparison to the previous year.

In the fiscal year 2008, 2,923 people, whether they were service members or civilians subjected to service members, reported a sexual assault. That’s up from 2,688 in the previous year.

A Fox News report quoted Dr. Kay Whitley, the director of the Pentagon’s Sexual Assault and Prevention and Response Office, as saying that this revelation was being viewed as a positive indicator, suggesting that more people are reporting the incidents rather than keeping quiet.

In 2005, the military introduced the option of restrictive reporting, which allows victims to report an assault without revealing the identity of their attacker.

Victims are offered a full range of treatment, including a rape kit if necessary, and have the option of revealing the name of their attacker up to one year later if they choose.

The Pentagon believes this program is working, and accounts for the increase in reporting.

“Sometimes a victim needs time to restore order to his or her life before getting involved in the justice system, and restricted reporting allows this to happen,” Whitley said at a news conference Tuesday.

The Pentagon believes, based on anonymous surveys conducted over the past three years, that sexual assaults occur at a relatively equal rate over time.

The Pentagon said one of the major barriers for reporting crimes among victims is fear of retaliation.

The military does not clearly track convictions. But in 2008, 317 service members received courts-martial, including some crimes originally reported in 2007.

In 2008, 588 service members reported that they were raped. Of that number, 95 said they were subjected to nonconsensual sodomy.

Whitley wants service members to know that sexual assaults are the most under reported crimes in the United States, and the military should not be a place where people are afraid to come forward. (ANI)