Sentences with phrase «terror suspects who»

He also cultivated a close relationship with the US: Mukhabarat cells became one of the destinations for terror suspects who had been «renditioned» by the CIA.
As far as they are concerned those evils involve foreign rapists who can't be deported and terror suspects who can't sent home, which means they will be able to bang a populist drum on crime and immigration while blaming foreign European judges — all in one hit.
He welcomed her to her role and without mentioning the newspaper reports asked about terror suspects who had fled Britain to join Islamic State while on police bail.
Today's failed challenge is likely to impact upon the fate of the 15 other Algerian terror suspects who the government is trying to deport on the grounds of national security.

Not exact matches

Salah Abdeslam, who is suspected of involvement in the Paris terror attacks, will not fight extradition from Belgium to France, the BBC reports.
Pataki did say it's appropriate to make distinctions between non-citizen terror suspects and US citizens like Faisal Shahzad, who has admitted to his role in the Times Square plot, adding: «The Christmas Day bomber should not have been given the Miranda warnings... he is an enemy combatant, a terrorist without those rights.»
Liz Cheney's group Keep America Safe, which has led the resurgent Republican attacks on President Obama's national security policies, is releasing a video this morning that questions the loyalties of Justice Department lawyers who advocated for detained terror suspects during the Bush Administration.
The 46 - page report, «Cruel Britannia: British Complicity in the Torture and Ill - treatment of Terror Suspects in Pakistan,» provides accounts from victims and their families in the cases of five UK citizens of Pakistani origin - Salahuddin Amin, Zeeshan Siddiqui, Rangzieb Ahmed, Rashid Rauf and a fifth individual who wishes to remain anonymous - tortured in Pakistan by Pakistani security agencies between 2004 and 2007.
Many believe the inquest into the death of Jean Charles de Menezes - who was shot dead after being mistaken as a terror suspect on a London Underground station in July 2005 - would have been held in private had the legislation already been passed.
Reflecting the anxiety of the age, this year's best thrillers have run a gamut of phobias, from the environmental terror of Norwegian disaster movie The Wave to the paranoia of ill intentions that informs Karyn Kusama's supremely creepy slow burn The Invitation, about a seemingly friendly dinner party and the one guest who begins to suspect that things are not what they seem.
In a related story, the Supreme Court «agreed Monday to review a constitutional challenge to the Bush administration's military trials for foreign terror suspects, stepping into a high - stakes test of the president's wartime powers,» writes Gina Holland of The AP, in a report on four terror suspects (including Bin Laden's driver) who are to be tried in military court.
The legislation raises a plethora of issues and significantly alters the security landscape: It gives the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) powers beyond intelligence gathering (to actively target threats and derail plots); creates new offences (criminalizing «terrorist propaganda» and the «promotion of terror»); lowers the legal threshold to trigger detention to those who may carry out an offence from the existing standard of will carry out to may carry out; extends preventive detention for «suspected» terrorists from three days to seven days (inconsistent with the constitutional presumption of innocence); legally entrenches a no fly list; and grants government agencies explicit authority to share private information with domestic and foreign entities.
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