Key Suspect in 9/11 Attacks Calls US the Bigger Killer - New York Times [getdailynow.blogspot.com]
Chinese whispers: Murder, mystery, the mediaWe examine a scandal that has seen the single voice of the Chinese state compete with a cacophony of online voices - who is winning the media battle? Plus, the new cult that is North Korea's Kim Jong-un.
GUANTÃNAMO BAY, Cuba (Reuters) â" The man accused of being the mastermind of the Sept. 11 attacks said in a courtroom here on Wednesday that the United States government had killed many more people in the name of national security than he was accused of killing.
The defendant, Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, was allowed to address the court at a pretrial hearing focused on security classification rules for evidence that will be used in his trial on charges of orchestrating the attacks by hijacked planes.
âWhen the government feels sad for the death or the killing of 3,000 people who were killed on Sept. 11,â he said, there should also be sorrow that the government has killed âthousands of people, millions.â
Mr. Mohammed, who wore a military-style camouflage vest to the courtroom, accused the United States of using an elastic definition of national security, comparable to the way dictators bend the law to justify their acts.
âMany can kill people under the name of national security, and to torture people under the name of national security, and to detain children under the name of national security, underage children,â he said in Arabic through an English interpreter.
The judge, Col. James L. Pohl of the Army, gave Mr. Mohammed permission to speak and did not interrupt him, but said he would not hear any further personal comments from the five defendants who are accused of recruiting, financing and training the hijackers.
Mr. Mohammed did not indicate why he wore a camouflage vest, but his wardrobe choice suggested that he might try to invoke protections reserved for soldiers. His lawyers had argued earlier that he should be allowed to wear a woodland-patterned camouflage vest to court because he wore one as part of a mujahedeen force armed by the United States that fought against Soviet troops occupying Afghanistan in the 1980s.
The United States is trying the five defendants as unlawful belligerents who are not entitled to the combat immunity granted to soldiers who kill in battle. Colonel Pohl ruled on Tuesday that the defendants could wear what they wanted to court, as long as it did not pose a security risk or include any part of a United States military uniform like those worn by their guards.
National Geographic Bee 2012 - KS FinalistGanesh Aruna is a 14-year-old 8th grader at Overland Trail Middle School in Overland Park, a suburb of Kansas City. He hopes to become a doctor and travel the world with "Doctors Without Borders," helping people in need. He likes reading, biking, basketball and tennis. He wants to see the Taj Mahal in India. Ganesh will be competing at the National Geographic Bee championship in Washington, DC Watch on the National Geographic Channel Thursday, May 24 at 8 pm ET. The finals will be broadcast later on public television stations. Check local listings.
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