Lahore women files petition seeking Pakistani citizenship for Indian husband

Lahore, Sep.17 (ANI): A Pakistani woman has filed a petition in the Lahore High Court (LHC) seeking Pakistani citizenship for her Indian husband.

Justice Mian Saqib Nisar admitted the petition filed by one Shazia Zia, and referred the matter to the High Court Chief Justice.

Zia, in her petition, said she has married an Indian national named Majid Ali, but the authorities have denied giving her husband a Pakistani citizenship despite repeated appeals.

She alleged that there was no legal justification for this refusal and submitted that it was gender discrimination which has no provision in the constitution

“A foreigner woman married a Pakistani man and got Pakistani nationality, but my husband is being refused the same,” The Daily Times stated the petition, as saying. (ANI)

Jordan King accuses US of engaging in torture

Washington, Apr.25 (ANI): Jordan’s King Abdullah II has said in an American TV interview that there is enough evidence available to suggest that the United States had engaged in torture, a topic that has turned into a political firestorm since the release last week of Bush-era interrogation memos.

Abdullah, when asked in an interview with NBC News if he thought the U.S. had tortured, was quoted by Fox News as saying such accounts suggest “that is the case,” calling the CIA’s controversial interrogation techniques “illegal ways of dealing with detainees.”

“But there is still a major battle out there,” he said, adding that he thought President Obama was making improvements to the American legal system.

The interview, to air Sunday on “Meet the Press,” comes after Abdullah called on the United States to support peace between Israel and the Palestinians, and both sides are already testing President Barack Obama’s resolve.

Abdullah, who talked Mid East peace with Obama at the White House earlier in the week, said the United States should have a peace plan “for 2009 and beyond,” in which negotiations produce clear and quick results.

“Now is the time for the United States to lead,” Abdullah said. He warned that time is running out to establish a viable independent Palestinian state alongside Israel. That is the goal all sides have embraced and the outline of a deal is clear, but it will take determination and a push from Washington to make it happen, Abdullah said in an address at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

“The status quo is simply untenable,” Abdullah said.

The memos released last week by the Obama administration are from 2002 and 2005 and detail legal justification for the CIA’s interrogation techniques used on terror suspects after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks on New York City and the Pentagon.

Obama plans to invite the Israeli, Palestinian and Egyptian leaders to the White House in the coming weeks for separate discussions on Middle East peace.

Abdullah welcomed what he called early signals from Obama that he will make Middle East peace a priority.

The White House named a special peace envoy but has made no bold moves three months into Obama’s term and during a period of political upheaval in Israel. (ANI)

Legal analysts question legality of targeting US lawyers in torture inquiry

Washington, Apr 22 (ANI): With President Barack Obama reopening the possibility of investigating and even prosecuting Bush Administration lawyers on the so-called “torture memos”, the legal analysts have questioned question the US Justice Department move.

These “torture memos” cleared the way for the CIA to use harsh interrogation methods when questioning suspected terrorists.

Obama’s move doesn’t mean those attorneys will end up facing prison sentences any time soon, FOX News reported.

Some legal analysts doubt the Obama administration and Attorney General Eric Holder have the stomach for taking on their predecessors. And others question whether the Justice Department would pursue a case that amounts to prosecuting a legal opinion.

“My prediction is you’ll never see prosecutions,” said Doug Burns, a former federal prosecutor.

He said Obama was merely back-pedalling on Tuesday to blunt the political backlash he was facing from the left.

Though the president has said that CIA agents will not be charged for following legal guidelines for interrogations, some Democrats have pushed him to support prosecution of the lawyers who drafted the legal ground for such interrogations. Obama said Tuesday that he will defer to Holder on those potential charges.

“It would really be a very, very difficult case to make,” said Bruce Fein, a constitutional lawyer and former official in the Justice Department’s Office of Legal Policy.

Not impossible, though. Fein said the prosecutor in the case would have to prove that the Bush attorneys essentially fabricated the legal justification in their memos.

He said the prosecutor could try to bring charges of aiding and abetting torture, or conspiracy, to do so.

But Fein, who said there is enough evidence to warrant an investigation into top Bush Administration officials over the interrogations, questioned the logic of targeting lawyers who did not by themselves order any interrogations.

David Rivkin, an attorney and member of the Council on Foreign Relations who has argued that the memos prove the Bush Administration did not torture, gave a similar opinion. (ANI)

Obama releases CIA interrogation memos, rules out prosecution

Washington – President Barack Obama on Thursday released four internal legal opinions that were used by former president George W Bush’s administration as justification for harsh CIA interrogations, but ruled out prosecuting anyone involved in such practices.

The memorandums released by the Justice Department offered legal justification for a series of harsh interrogation tactics against suspects held in CIA prisons, including sleep deprivation and a drowning-simulation technique known as waterboarding, which some human rights groups have said amounted to torture.

But Obama said he had no intention to prosecute any CIA officials involved in the interrogations.

“In one of my very first acts as president, I prohibited the use of these interrogation techniques because they undermine our moral authority and do not make us safer,” Obama said in a statement.

“In releasing these memos, it is our intention to assure those who carried out their duties relying in good faith upon legal advice from the Department of Justice that they will not be subject to prosecution,” Obama said.

Civil rights group ACLU welcomed the release but said it was still pushing for an independent prosecutor to investigate allegations of torture under the Bush administration.

“We have to look back before we can more forward as a nation,” said Anthony Romero, executive director of the ACLU. “When crimes have been committed, the American legal system demands accountability.” (dpa)