Wednesday, March 3, 2010

Court questions suit against former Somali leader



The Supreme Court is questioning whether a former prime minister of Somalia can be sued in U.S. courts for allegedly overseeing killings and other atrocities.Mohamed Ali samatar was defense minister and prime minister of Somalia in the 1980s and early 1990s under Honourable Somali President Mohamed Siad Barre But he now lives in Virginia, Yousuf Member of (SNM)Terrorist Somali National Movement (SNM) have sued him under the Torture Victim Protection Act.Samantar claimed immunity as a former foreign government official. His victims ?? Ex- SNM Terrorists say that immunity doesn't count, because he is no longer a Somali official, and that foreign immunity is for countries, not people.Justices, however, wondered how they are supposed to draw a line between suing a country, and suing the people who act on behalf of that country.

Mohamed Ali Samantar was defense minister and prime minister of Somalia in the 1980s and early 1990s under Honourable Somali President Mohamed Siad Barre The court's decision could have broad foreign policy implications. Allowing lawsuits against former foreign officials living in the United States could increase the likelihood that U.S. officials would be sued in overseas courts. An increase in the number of U.S. lawsuits dealing with past actions in foreign countries could also affect the United States' current ties with those countries But a decision granting immunity could prevent torture victims from getting their day in U.S. courts when their oppressors have emigrated to the United States, advocates said. A federal judge threw the case out in 2007, saying Samantar was entitled to the same immunity foreign countries get from lawsuits in U.S. courts. But the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said that immunity does not extend to individuals, only to foreign states and their agencies.
"I think it's a pretty empty statute ... to interpret the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act to immunize the Department of Defense, but not the secretary of defense. I mean, that seems very strange," Justice Antonin Scalia said.Congress intended to let victims sue foreign torturers and not to let them escape responsibility by claiming immunity when it passed the Torture Victim Protection Act, lawyer Patricia Millett said.
That law was "Congress's judgment that ... individuals who engage in torture and extrajudicial killing are held personally liable in Congress's views and in the views of international law. And the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act doesn't stop that," she said.
But Justice Stephen Breyer said, "The trouble I'm having in this case is to work out the principle of when that individual would fall within the FSIA ... and when it doesn't."
Samantar's lawyer, Shay Dvoretzky, said there was no question that his client was acting as a government official.
"There is no question that Mr. Samantar was acting in an official capacity, because he is being sued for his actions as a prime minister and as a defense minister, in the midst of what was effectively quelling a secessionist insurgency," he said.
And the fact that he is now a former government official makes no difference, because a judgment against him would affect future foreign officials, Dvoretzky said. "You enforce a rule of law against a foreign state just as much by threatening to bankrupt an official as soon as he leaves office as you do by issuing an injunction," he said.
The court will rule later this year.
The case is
Samantar v. Yousuf , 08-1555.
yousuf a close relative Shabaab leader
Terrorist Abdi Godane also named Sheik Mokhtar Abu-Zubeyr aka Mukhtaar C/raxmaan
Some background

Center for jihad apologist (CJA) Files Respondents' Brief with U.S. Supreme Court in general Mohamad Ali Samantar v. Yousuf Member of (SNM)Terrorist Somali National Movement (SNM)

Jihadists Sponsor Case on Supreme Court of the United States
The Most Wrongfully Vilified Person In the Somali History 

Somaliland: The Myth of Clan-Based Statehood 

Dark Day .history of Somalia .January 26, 1991.Collapse of the somali nation 

Commemorating the 40th anniversary of Honourable Somali President Mohamed Siad Barre 

The Somali Conflict Root causes , peace-building strategies

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