Showing posts with label Brutality. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Brutality. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 5, 2014

[309] Greenwald Destroys Bill Maher, Undocumented Police Brutality, MLK"s Whitewashed Legacy

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[309] Greenwald Destroys Bill Maher, Undocumented Police Brutality, MLK"s Whitewashed Legacy

Friday, October 4, 2013

Police brutality caught on camera in Dekalb County, Georgia - Truthloader

Featured video on injustices:



Seven Deputies and one Sergeant showed arrived at someone’s home at 1:30 am, they banged on the door repeatedly and were eventually let in – all over a civil…



Police brutality caught on camera in Dekalb County, Georgia - Truthloader

Wednesday, September 11, 2013

Video shows Canada police brutality


A new video has surfaced in Canada, showing a man being tackled to the ground and punched repeatedly by Ottawa police, in yet another instance of police brutality in the North American country, Press TV reports.


According to Ottawa police, they responded to a call about a man attempting to hit a security staff member with a metal pole.


Police claimed that when they arrived at the scene another man attempted to punch a police officer in the face.


However, the gruesome video of the incident captured by a bystander shows a police officer punching the man repeatedly in the head and upper body at least 10 times while other officers pinned him down to the ground.


Following the release of the video, Ottawa Police Chief Charles Bordeleau said the professional standards section of the Ottawa police force will investigate the incident.


Although, reports said Bordeleau later sent an internal email to the force’s rank-and-file saying he maintains confidence in his officers.


“Always remember that the public has confidence in you and that you have my confidence and respect for the service you provide every day,” Bordeleau wrote.




The two men, who were caught in the video and were arrested, face charges of resisting arrest, assaulting an officer and causing disturbance.

Last month, police in the Canadian city of Toronto came under fire for the fatal shooting of a teenager whose family members said suffered from mental illness.


MR/KA/SS




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Video shows Canada police brutality

Tuesday, September 10, 2013

Kenyan deputy president orchestrated post-election brutality: ICC prosecutor


Kenya

Kenya’s Deputy President William Ruto speaks to his defense counsel Karim Khan (L) in the courtroom before their trial at the International Criminal Court (ICC) in The Hague September 10, 2013.


Credit: Reuters/Michael Kooren






THE HAGUE/NAIROBI | Tue Sep 10, 2013 6:48am EDT



THE HAGUE/NAIROBI (Reuters) – Kenya’s Deputy President William Ruto pleaded innocent to crimes against humanity charges at the International Criminal Court on Tuesday, while back home Kenyans hoped the case would not reignite political violence they have struggled to overcome.


As the parties took their places in the courtroom before the judges arrived, Ruto appeared relaxed, laughing and smiling with his lawyers. Joshua arap Sang, his co-accused, gave a reporter the thumbs-up sign.


Ruto and Sang are charged with co-orchestrating a post-election bloodbath five years ago, working with co-conspirators to murder, deport and persecute supporters of rival political parties in Kenya’s Rift Valley region.


“The crimes of which Mr Ruto and Mr Sang are charged were not just random and spontaneous acts of brutality,” said Fatou Bensouda, the ICC’s prosecutor, describing the charges in court.


“This was a carefully planned and executed plan of violence… Ruto’s ultimate goal was to seize political power for himself and his party in the event he could not do so via the ballot box.”


It is the first time such a senior official has appeared in court to face international justice while still serving in office. Kenya’s President Uhuru Kenyatta, Ruto’s former rival and now his political ally, will also face trial on similar charges of crimes against humanity, beginning in November.


The cases have split public opinion, and witness testimonies of the violence in 2007-08 that killed more than a thousand people could stir tension.


The cases are also a major test for prosecutors at the decade-old Hague-based ICC, who have had a low success rate and face accusations of focusing on African countries, while avoiding war crimes in other global hotspots.


Rival members of Kenyatta’s Kikuyu and Ruto’s Kalenjin tribes, wielding machetes, knives, and bows and arrows, went on the rampage after a disputed 2007 election, butchering more than 1,200 people and driving hundreds of thousands from their homes.


This year, Kenyatta and Ruto buried their differences and joined forces for another election, which was comparatively peaceful. Their joint Jubilee Alliance ticket was elected in March after a campaign in which their supporters criticized the ICC for meddling in Kenya’s affairs.


They say their new alliance makes violence unlikely. Their supporters say the court cases risk undoing years of painstaking reconciliation, although they insist the alliance will survive.


“LET JUSTICE TAKE ITS COURSE”


In the epicenter of the violence on Ruto’s political turf in the lush Rift Valley town of Eldoret, some 300 km north-west of the capital Nairobi, Patrick Muchiri said he watched the trial with several others crowded around a television at a restaurant.


“We would have wished that the cases don’t take place since we have already reconciled, especially with our Kalenjin neighbors,” said Muchiri, 53, a Kikuyu farmer who was evicted from his home near Eldoret by Kalenjin youth.


“But since the matter is before the ICC, let justice take its course. However, our concern is that this might create for us a big problem should they find Ruto liable. It would revive old wounds,” said Muchiri, who lives at a tented camp near the town housing hundreds of displaced victims of the clashes.


In Naivasha, just north of Nairobi, where the worst revenge attacks by suspected members of a Kikuyu militia took place, Josiah Otieno, 34, a tailor, said justice would finally be done.


“After years of waiting and suffering, we now believe that justice will be done, and those responsible for our problems punished,” said Otieno, who said he was assaulted by militia who set his belongings ablaze.


Kenyan public backing for the ICC has eroded. An Ipsos-Synovate poll in July showed only 39 percent still wanted the trials to proceed. It had been 55 percent in April 2012.


The charges complicate relations between Kenya and Western leaders, who see Nairobi as central to the fight against militant Islam in East Africa.


The court’s public gallery was packed with dozens of Kenyan lawmakers who had travelled to The Hague in a show of solidarity with their deputy president.


“There will be an immediate response in local politics once these trials start,” said John Githongo, a former government anti-corruption official turned whistleblower. “Last time the politicians managed to turn it around for alliance building and it worked extremely well. However, invariably, once the evidence starts coming out, it will bring tension.”


WITHDRAWAL THREAT


The horrors of the election violence shattered Kenya’s reputation as one of Africa’s most stable countries and dealt the economy a heavy blow from which it is only now recovering.


Anger over the charges culminated last week in a vote in parliament calling for Kenya to withdraw from the international court’s jurisdiction. Kenyatta threatened to suspend cooperation with the ICC if he and his deputy were summoned simultaneously, leaving no head of state in residence.


Judges said the cases would alternate at one-month intervals. Even if Kenya does quit the court, trials already under way will continue.


Bensouda, the court’s prosecutor, has rejected claims of meddling, saying that the cases before the court related purely to the violence five years ago and those accused of it.


“Contrary to what has now become a rallying call for those who do not wish to see justice for victims of post-election violence, our cases have never been against the people of Kenya or against any tribe in Kenya,” she said on Monday.


Both sides have been accused of intimidating witnesses, allegations they deny. Karim Khan, Ruto’s lawyer, said such accusations were designed to distract attention from a fundamentally weak prosecution case.


“This case will fall apart in the end. But it will fall apart because of lack of evidence because of the deficient investigations conducted, and not for any other reason.”


(Additional reporting by Michael Kooren; Editing by Sara Webb and Peter Graff)





Reuters: Top News



Kenyan deputy president orchestrated post-election brutality: ICC prosecutor

Friday, September 6, 2013

New video showing Syrian rebel brutality emerges



Published time: September 06, 2013 09:53

AFP Photo / Mezar Matar

AFP Photo / Mezar Matar




A video smuggled over the Syrian border by a former rebel features a mass execution of government soldiers by the Jund al-Sham group fighting Assad. The latest example of rebel brutality comes as Washington prepares to intervene into the conflict.


The video, obtained by New York Times and which has gone viral online, is a mobile phone recording of an execution that took place in April.


Seven government soldiers are shown shirtless on their knees in somewhat fetal positions with their faces to the ground. Some have their hands tied behind their backs.


Rebels stand behind the condemned men, pointing their firearms down at them and listening to their leader chant the verdict.


For 50 years, they are companions to corruption,” the commander of the group says. “We swear to the Lord of the Throne, that this is our oath: We will take revenge.”


Having pronounced that, the man shoots the soldier closest to him. Other gunmen immediately follow suit to execute the rest of the captured soldiers. The dead bodies are then dumped into a well.



The man who smuggled the video across the border is former assistant to the chief of the group, who says he defected from it because he could no longer stand atrocities performed by his brothers in arms, according to New York Times.  


The runaway, concealing his identity for security reasons, explains the seven soldiers were executed after videos of them raping civilians and looting were found on their cell phones.


The group he belonged to is little-known and not large, consisting of 300 fighters. It’s called Jund al-Sham, sharing the name with three international terrorist groups.


The rebel commander is Abdul Samad Issa, 37, also known as ‘the Uncle’ because two of his deputies are his nephews. According to his defected assistant the man believes his father was killed during a 27-day government crackdown on the Muslim Brotherhood in 1982, led by the father of Syria’s current president. Thus, fighting government forces now is partly a matter of personal revenge for Issa.


The video is one in a series of episodes raising questions over methods used by the rebel forces, some of which actually claim links to terrorists.  


One of the groups, associating itself with Al-Qaeda attacked a Christian village on Wednesday.


In June, a teenage boy was allegedly executed by an Al-Qaeda-affiliated opposition group for supposedly blaspheming.


In May, the world was shocked to see a video of a Syrian rebel apparently eating the heart of a slain government soldier.




RT – News



New video showing Syrian rebel brutality emerges

Thursday, August 15, 2013

Canada police under fire for brutality


Police in the Canadian city of Toronto have come under fire for the fatal shooting of a teenager whose family members say suffered from mental illness, Press TV reports.


Sammy Yatim, 18, was shot by a law enforcement officer while he was alone holding a small knife on an empty streetcar on July 27. The whole incident was recorded by a witness and was later posted on YouTube.


The footage shows a total of nine shots being fired at Yatim, who died instantly.


The 18-year-old’s death has sparked public outrage and several rallies have been held with the participation of large numbers of people including the Yatim family members, calling for justice.


The Yatim family has also criticized the police force for its brutal handling of the case with Sammy’s uncle saying that he had a history of mental illness.


“Since when does a scrawny 110-pound-something teenager become a threat to a dozen or so brawny policemen… that they felt that they had no other choice but to use lethal force?” said the slain teen’s uncle, Jim Yatim.


City Councilor Janet Davis has also harshly criticized the police killing, saying, “It looks as though this young man was shot when he was alone in the streetcar and surrounded by police officers.”


“Was there nothing else that could be done to save his life?” Davis stated.




The Special Investigations Unit of Ontario has launched an investigation into the case. However, Ontario Federation of Labor is demanding an independent investigation into police training.

This is not the first time Toronto police have been criticized for using excessive force. In 2012, officers shot dead a mentally-ill man, who was wearing a hospital gown and holding two pairs of scissors on the street.


MR/HSN




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Canada police under fire for brutality

Wednesday, July 17, 2013