2011年10月5日星期三

Yahoo! News: Terrorism

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Yahoo! News: Terrorism


Napolitano defends immigration enforcement policy (AP)

Posted: 05 Oct 2011 05:20 PM PDT

Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano, gestures while discussing the department's enforcement of immigration laws, Wednesday, Oct. 5, 2011,  at American University in Washington.  (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)AP - Facing critics on all sides, Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano on Wednesday defended the Obama administration's new policy of deciding which illegal immigrants to send home first.


AP IMPACT: NYPD spied on city's Muslim partners (AP)

Posted: 05 Oct 2011 05:20 PM PDT

In this photo taken Monday, Oct. 3, 2011, Sheikh Reda Shata stands in the men's prayer room at his mosque, The Islamic Center of Monmouth County, in Middletown, N.J. The New York Police Department’s intelligence squad secretly assigned an undercover officer to monitor a prominent Muslim leader even as he decried terrorism, cooperated with the police, dined with Mayor Michael Bloomberg and was the subject of a Pulitzer Prize-winning series by The New York Times about Muslims in America. (AP Photo/Mel Evans)AP - The New York Police Department's intelligence squad secretly assigned an undercover officer to monitor a prominent Muslim leader even as he decried terrorism, cooperated with the police, dined with Mayor Michael Bloomberg and was the subject of a Pulitzer Prize-winning series by The New York Times about Muslims in America.


Judge: Terrorist can sue over prison restrictions (AP)

Posted: 05 Oct 2011 04:54 PM PDT

AP - A man convicted of a 1998 terrorist strike on the U.S. Embassy in Tanzania has won the right to sue the federal government over tight restrictions on his visitors and letter-writing at the federal Supermax prison in southern Colorado.

Final jury pool settled in underwear bomb case (AP)

Posted: 05 Oct 2011 04:03 PM PDT

In this courtroom drawing, Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab appears in U.S. District Judge Nancy Edmunds' courtroom in Detroit, Tuesday, Oct. 4, 2011. Jury selection in the trial of the Nigerian man accused of trying to bring down a jetliner with a bomb in his underwear got under way in Detroit with a dozen people accepted into the jury pool and four excused. The government alleges Abdulmutallab says he wanted to become a martyr when he boarded Northwest Airlines Flight 253 in Amsterdam on Christmas 2009. In the background is U.S. District (AP Photo/Jerry Lemenu)AP - A Nigerian on trial for a failed terrorist attack near Detroit kept his scorn for the U.S. under wraps Wednesday as a judge and lawyers settled on 47 people for final jury selection.


Senate leader blocks defense bill over detainees (Reuters)

Posted: 05 Oct 2011 03:01 PM PDT

Reuters - Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid will block consideration of the wide-ranging defense bill until provisions on how terrorism suspects will be treated are changed, according to a letter released on Wednesday.

Somali militants vow to up attacks after bombing (AP)

Posted: 05 Oct 2011 08:27 AM PDT

Somalis carry the body of a man killed at the scene of an explosion in Mogadishu, Somalia Tuesday, Oct. 4, 2011. A car laden with explosives blew up in front of the Ministry of Education in the Somali capital Tuesday, killing scores of people in the biggest attack since an Islamist insurgent group withdrew from Mogadishu, a rescue official said. (AP Photo/Farah Abdi Warsameh)AP - Al-Qaida-linked militants threatened more terror attacks that will "increase day by day" after a suicide bomber killed 72 people. Mourners transported coffins atop cars Wednesday to funerals for those who perished in al-Shabab's deadliest bomb attack in Somalia.


Obama, Congress divided over terror suspects (AP)

Posted: 05 Oct 2011 07:38 AM PDT

In this Oct. 4, 2011, photo, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid meets with reporters on Capitol Hill in Washington. Facing fierce congressional resistance, the administration has accepted restrictions on detention of terror suspects. Last year’s defense bill and the omnibus spending bill that Obama and Congress agreed to in April barred the transfer of terror suspects from Guantanamo to the United States, prevented construction or modification of U.S. facilities to house suspects, and required the defense secretary to notify Congress before moving a terror suspect to a foreign country.  Now, however, the administration is pushing back by opposing detainee provisions in the latest defense bill.  And, citing administration opposition as well as his own reservations, Reid said he would hold up the bill until concerns over the detainee provisions are settled.(AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)AP - The Obama administration has tracked down and killed Osama bin Laden, Anwar al-Awlaki and other al-Qaida leaders. Yet, in spite of those successes, Republicans and some Democrats in Congress remain intent on challenging the administration's policies for handling captured terror suspects.


Greek terrorist trial postponed due to strike (AP)

Posted: 05 Oct 2011 06:12 AM PDT

AP - Judicial authorities postponed a trial of eight Greek terrorist suspects until later this month, as lawyers were participating in a 24-hour civil servants' strike.

Prosecutor: Women knew group involved in terrorism (AP)

Posted: 04 Oct 2011 07:16 PM PDT

FILE - In this Aug. 5, 2010 file photo, Hawo Mohamed Hassan, left, and Amina Farah Ali, both of Rochester, Minn., leave the U.S. District Court after appearing at a hearing in St Paul, Minn. The two women are accused of funneling money to a terrorist group in Somalia, and are the first to go on trial in Minnesota's years-long federal investigation into the recruiting and financing of al-Shabab. Their trial begins Monday, Oct. 3, 2011. (AP Photo/Craig Lassig, File)AP - Two Minnesota women accused of going door-to-door to raise money for al-Shabab knew the Somali-based group engaged in terrorism and "rejoiced" when they heard about its victories in their war-torn homeland, a prosecutor said Tuesday.


Defendant in Minn. terror trial says mistreated (AP)

Posted: 04 Oct 2011 07:15 PM PDT

FILE - In this Aug. 5, 2010 file photo, Hawo Mohamed Hassan, left, and Amina Farah Ali, both of Rochester, Minn., leave the U.S. District Court after appearing at a hearing in St Paul, Minn. The two women are accused of funneling money to a terrorist group in Somalia, and are the first to go on trial in Minnesota's years-long federal investigation into the recruiting and financing of al-Shabab. Their trial begins Monday, Oct. 3, 2011. (AP Photo/Craig Lassig, File)AP - A Minnesota woman who has refused to stand for her trial on terror charges now says she was mistreated in jail.


Chile drops terror charges in bank bombings case (AP)

Posted: 04 Oct 2011 07:14 PM PDT

AP - A major terror case in Chile fell apart Tuesday as prosecutors dropped charges due to a lack of evidence against 13 suspects who spent eight months in prison for a series of bombings outside bank buildings.

Detainee Provisions Stall Defense Bill (CQPolitics.com)

Posted: 04 Oct 2011 01:11 PM PDT

CQPolitics.com - The leaders of the Senate defense policy panel are discussing a request from the majority leader to strike from their authorization bill provisions affecting detainees in the war on terrorism.

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