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U.S. Won't Work To Free Man Held In Ethiopia

ISSUE 270
Front Page
Index
Headlines

"We Will Be Treating Somaliland As A Self Governing Region," Swedish
Ambassador, Jen Olander

Human Rights Umbrella Concerned about Government's Human Rights Violations

Awdal Women Raise Funds For First Fistula Hospital In Somaliland, 2nd In Africa

Plane Aiding AU Peacekeepers Shot Down in Somalia

Somali Government Shuts Down Al-Jazeera Bureau

External Intervention Won't Help - EU

Eritrea Insists On UPDF Pullout

Somalia Tops Minority Report Danger List

Awdal Convention In North America To Be Held In June 2007

Mission Report on the Trial Observation of Detained Human Rights Defenders
in Somaliland

Regional Affairs

Horn Of Africa Fishermen Hope To Net Lucrative Western Markets

Rights Groups Accuse Kenya of Secret Deportations

Editorial
Special Report

International News

U.S.-led Terror War Victimizes World's Minorities

Kuwait bans import of live sheep from Somalia

Ban Ki-Moon Urges Immediate Cessation of Hostilities in Somalia

Horn of Africa much safer now: Premier

Remarks by Vice President Cheney to the Republican Jewish Coalition Leadership

China defends Darfur stance after French politician’s remarks

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

Eritrea Creates A Second Somalia Government In Eritrea

After 4 Years Of War, Congress Should Cut The Funds

Somalia/ Somaliland: Territory, State And Nation

The World Of Modern Child Slavery

Uganda Commander in Somalia Urges Speedy Deployment of More Troops

Food for thought

Opinions

Rayale’s Impeachment Is Inevitable

Mr. President, Back Off From Your Self-Defeating Mission: And Reform Your Leadership and Administration

Challenge In The Red Sea

Ungovernable Somalia and the imminent collision of hegemonic interests

My Response To The Gov. Response To Petition 'Somaliland'

Obstacles to peace in somalia- unchallencgeable certainties

A Reply to Cabdale Faarah Sigad's Report on the detained Haatuf Journalists

Petition For Impeachment Of Dahir Rayale Kahin


ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia, March 23, 2007 — The U.S. government will let Ethiopian authorities decide the fate of a 24-year-old American who was held here incommunicado for more than five weeks, the State Department said Thursday.

The Ethiopians haven't told American officials what charges, if any, they plan to bring against Amir Mohamed Meshal of Tinton Falls, N.J., at a hearing to determine whether he can be held as a prisoner of war — or when the hearing will occur.

The FBI has determined that Meshal wasn't a combatant in the recent war in Somalia and broke no U.S. laws. However, he could face life in prison or the death penalty if he's convicted of violating Ethiopia's anti-terrorism laws or taking up arms against Ethiopian forces, said Ethiopian lawyers familiar with such cases.

The State Department made clear Wednesday evening that it would allow the Ethiopian legal process to take its course.

"We have asked that his case be handled in a timely and a fair manner in accordance with local laws and procedures," said Gonzalo Gallegos, a State Department spokesman.

U.S. officials in Addis Ababa refused to answer a reporter's questions for several days, but they indicated frustration when they received permission from Washington on Thursday evening to describe their dealings with the Ethiopian authorities. U.S. officials gained access to Meshal on Wednesday after three weeks of "trying very hard," a U.S. official said. "We are still trying to understand the nature of his being held." The official and others spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the case.

Mohamed Meshal, the man's father, charged the U.S. government with being "very deceitful and untruthful."

"I felt all along that the State Department and the FBI have known my son's whereabouts from day one, and they know he was not accused of any crimes but handed him over to a third country. He has nothing to do with Ethiopia, and this happened under their supervision," he said.

Meshal's case has been shrouded in secrecy since he was arrested while fleeing hostilities in Somalia in late January. He's been held in Kenya, Somalia and Ethiopia.

Meshal told Kenyan human-rights monitors that he was twice interviewed by the FBI. According to Meshal's father, when the FBI determined that there wasn't sufficient cause to charge Meshal, the State Department told him that Meshal would be sent home. But for reasons that remain unclear, the Kenyan government then deported Meshal and about 80 other people who had sought refuge in Kenya back to war-torn Somalia, from which they were flown to Ethiopia.

State Department, FBI and CIA officials appear to disagree on who was to blame for Meshal's secret deportation. Some U.S. officials blame the CIA for not using its influence to prevent the deportation, which the State Department said it had formally protested. The FBI disavows any responsibility. Officials in other agencies are pointing at the Justice Department.

Source: McClatchy Newspapers


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