2A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, September 16, 2004 NATION/WORLD Three U.S. soldiers convicted of tortunng Afghans in private jail . NEWS IN BRIEF HAD E FM CNl ' -' :.:i:: . / KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) - Three Americans - led by a former Green Beret who boasted he had Penta- gon support - were found guilty yes- terday of torturing Afghans in a private jail and were sentenced to prison. After a 7 1/2-hour session in a stuffy Kabul courtroom, the three-judge panel was unanimous in convicting the former soldier, Jonathan Idema, and his right- hand man, Brent Bennett, on charges of entering Afghanistan illegally, making illegal arrests, establishing a private jail and torturing their captives. They were sentenced to 10 years. Edward Caraballo, a cameraman who said he was making a film about America's war on terrorism, received an eight-year term. Four young Afghan accomplices were sentenced to terms ranging from one to five years. One of them burst into tears with the verdict. Idema, who has a previous fraud con- viction, claimed to have had high-level support from the Pentagon and Afghan officials in his group's efforts to hunt down terrorists, but the U.S. military says the men were freelancers operating out- side the law and without its knowledge. Judge Abdul Baset Bakhtyari dis- missed a string of video clips showing Idema talking with Afghan leaders, purported U.S. intelligence officials and NATO troops and said they were operat- ing alone. Idema, who wore sunglasses and khaki fatigues bearing an American flag throughout the trial, denounced the trial as a throwback to the times of the hard-line Islamic Taliban movement. "It's the same sick Taliban judges, the same sick sense of justice," Idema said as he was led, handcuffed, out of the courtroom. "I knew that the American government wasn't going to help me." The lawyers for Idema and Caraballo said they would appeal. It was unclear whether Bennett, who represented him- self, would do so. Idema spent three years in jail in the 1980s for bilking 60 companies out of more than $200,000. He and Bennett are from Fayetteville, N.C.; Caraballo is from New York. The group was arrested July 5 after Afghan security forces raided a house in Kabul and discovered eight Afghans who said they had been detained and tortured by the Americans. Several of them testi- fied they were beaten, burned with scald- ing water and deprived of food and sleep. Idema said the prisoners were sub- jected to "standard interrogation tech- niques" but no abuse. Idema claimed to have unearthed a plot to bomb the main American military base north of Kabul and assassinate Afghan leaders. In an interview with The Associ- ated Press, he also claimed to be hot on the trail of Osama bin Laden. AP PHOTO American Jonathan Keith Idema, 48, arrives at the court in Kabul, Afghanistan yesterday. He and three other Americans were found guilty of torturing prisoners. ABUJA, Nigeria Darfur talks end with no progress Sudan's rebels and government broke off internationally brokered peace talks for the bloodied Darfur region yesterday after three weeks with little progress and no deal. The government blamed the United States for the failure. Both sides said the talks had collapsed, although they left open the possibility of trying again after a halt of at least three weeks. Sudan's government - under threat of international sanctions over 19 months of violence in Darfur - insisted U.S. criticism had heartened rebels past the point of compromise. Sudan's top negotiator cited Secretary of State Colin Powell's declaration last week that Sudan's government and allied militia had committed acts of genocide against Darfur's non-Arab villagers. "The attitude of Colin Powell and America generally was the main cause of the stalemate," Sudanese envoy Majzoub al-Khalifa Ahmad said. "It sent a wrong message to the rebels, and that resulted in their hardening their position at the talks," Ahmad said, insisting Sudan's problems "will never be solved from outside Africa." WASHINGTON U.S. censures Saudis for religious policies In an unusual censure of a key ally in the war on terrorism, the Bush adminis- tration yesterday accused Saudi Arabia of "particularly severe violations" of reli- gious freedom. The State Department also included the kingdom for the first time on a list of countries that could be subject to U.S. sanctions because of religious intolerance. Nations in this category carry a special designation: "countries of particular concern," or CPCs. "Freedom of religion does not exist," the State Department said, summing up the situation in Saudi Arabia in a report that covered religious freedom in 191 countries. Those who do not adhere to the officially sanctioned strain of Sunni Islam prac- ticed in the country can face "severe repercussions" from religious police, the report said. It also cited instances in which government-paid mosque preachers "used vio- lent anti-Jewish and anti-Christian language in their sermons." NEW YORK Martha Stewart to reclaim 'good life' in jail Even at a wrenching moment of surrender, Martha Stewart was - as always - under impeccable control. Her announcement yesterday that she would report to prison as soon as possible came in a light-bathed studio, before a brilliant backdrop of color swatches, per- fectly choreographed for television. She lamented that she would miss her beloved pets - cats, dogs, horses, canaries and chickens - and hoped to be free in time for her cherished spring gardening. "I must reclaim my good life," the 63-year-old millionaire businesswoman declared. "I must return to my good works and allow those around me whp work with me to do the same." Her lawyers stressed that her appeal would proceed. THE HAGUE, Netherlands Witness troubles force Milosevic trial delay Just two weeks after resuming Slobodan Milosevic's much-delayed trial, the U.N. war crimes tribunal adjourned for a month yesterday to allow his frustrated court-appointed lawyer to prepare a case stymied by reluctant witnesses and an uncooperative defendant. Steven Kay, who was assigned to lead the defense over Milosevic's angry objectiors, told the three judges that 20 defense witnesses have refused to appear in court - among them ambassadors, politicians and professors from the United States and elsewhere. Many have refused to testify unless the ousted Serb leader takes charge of his own case.- "Groups of witnesses have banded together and have stated they are not pre- pared, under the conditions of the assignment of counsel, to cme to the'triunal and testify," Kay told the panel. - Compiled from Daily wire reports 0 l i Senators unite to berate Iaq policy WASHINGTON (AP) - Senate White House spokesman Scott coming less than seven weeks before Republicans and Democrats yesterday McClellan said circumstances in the presidential election in which Pres- denounced the Bush administration's Iraq have changed since last year. ident Bush's handling of the war is a slow progress in rebuilding Iraq, saying "It's important that you have some top issue. the risks of failure are great if it doesn't flexibility." "Our committee heard blindly opti- act with greater urgency. But Hagel said the shift in funds mistic people from the administration "It's beyond pitiful, it's beyond "does not add up in my opinion to a prior to the war and people outside the embarrassing, it's now in the zone of dangerous," said Sen. Chuck Hagel (R- Neb.), referring to figures showing only about 6 percent of the reconstruction money approved by Congress last year has been spent. Foreign Relations Committee mem- bers vented their frustrations at a hearing where the State Department explained its request to divert $3.46 bil- lion in reconstruction funds to security and economic development. The money was part of the $18.4 billion approved by Congress last year mostly for public works projects. The request comes as heavy fighting continues between U.S.-led forces and a variety of Iraqi insurgents, endan- gering prospects for elections slated for January. "We know that the provision of ade- quate security up front is requisite to rapid progress on all other fronts," said Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Ron Schlicher. pretty picture, to a picture that shows that we're winning. But it does add up to this: an acknowledg- ment that we are in deep trouble." Hagel, Committee Chairman Richard Lugar (R-Ind.), and other commit- tee members "This is an extraordinary, ineffective administrative procedure. It is exasperating from anybody looking at this from any vanage point." - Sen. Richard Lugar (R-Ind.) Foreign Relations Committee Chair administra- tion - what I call the 'danc- ing in the street crowd' - that we just simply will be greet- ed with open arms," Lugar said. "The nonsense of all of that is apparent. The lack of plan- ning is appar- ent." have long argued - even before the war - that administration plans for rebuilding Iraq were inadequate and based on overly optimistic assump- tions that Americans would be greeted as liberators. But the criticism from the panel's top Republicans had an extra sting He said the need to shift the recon- struction funds was clear in July, but the administration was slow to make the request. "This is an extraordinary, ineffective administrative procedure. It is exas- perating from anybody looking at this from any vantage point," he said. Congress to debate ntel. spending WASHINGTON (AP) - House leaders yesterday promised to overhaul the nation's fractured intelligence com- munity before going home to campaign for re-election, while Senate leaders unveiled an intelligence reorganization blueprint they plan to have approved before the end of the month. Senators plan to start voting on final language next week that would create a national intelligence director with spend- ing authority over much of the nonmili- tary intelligence agencies, with a target date of Sept. 27 for final Senate passage. The House is not that far along on its plan to create an intelligence director to force-intelligence agencies to work- together as envisioned by the Sept. 11 commission. "We will vote on a final bill before Congress adjourns in October," said House Majority Leader Tom DeLay (R- Texas). "We're going to make sure we do the job right, and we will do it before Congress adjourns." The Sept. 11 commission recom- mended creation of a national intel- ligence director to control almost all of the nation's intelligence agencies because it said the 15 U.S. intelligence agencies did not work together properly to stop the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on New York City and Washington. Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine), chair- woman of the Senate Governmental Affairs Committee, plans to have her committee vote next week on final legislation to create the national intel- ligence director. She and Sen. Joseph Lieberman of Connecticut, the panel's ranking Democrat, announced a plan, similar to the recommendation of the 9/11 commission, to create a strong national intelligence director with spending power over the agencies the person would control. Giving the intelligence director power to decide how much money each agency receives and how that agency can spend that money will force the intelligence agen- cies to follow the director's, they said. "Without budget authority, we would just be creating another level of bureau- cracy," Collins said. Collins and Lieberman spurned the 9/11 commission's recommendation that all of the nation's intelligence agen- cies be under control of the national intelligence director, leaving the Penta- gon in control of some of the military intelligence agencies. The intelligence director would con- trol the budgets of the CIA, the National Security Agency, the FBI's Office of Intelligence, the Homeland Security Department's intelligence directorate, the National Reconnaissance Office, which operates spy satellites, and the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, which analyzes satellite pictures, and any other agency that has a "national" scope. The Defense Department would keep control of the Defense Intelligence Agency, which collects intelligence for military planning and operations, and a www.michigandaily.com The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Mondays during the spring and summer terms by students at the University of Michigan. Subscriptions for fall term, starting in September, via U.S. mail are $110. Winter term (January through April) is $115, yearlong (September through April) is $195. University affiliates are subject to a reduced subscription rate. Yearlong on-campus subscriptions are $40. 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