Most US mass media that controlled by the Jews such as
CNN have betrayed the principle of journalism:
Balanced Journalism or Coverage both sides of the
stories. On the dispute between Afghanistan and Osama
Bin Laden with US on the other side, they only cover
US story, but not from Taliban’s or Osama’s. This is
unbalanced journalism.

They made ridiculous excuse for their betrayal by
saying Osama could send “hidden” instruction to his
followers to attack US! Well, Osama of course hates
US, and if Osama want to attack US, he could send the
instruction through radio, telephone, courier, etc.
Not in front of the TV. “Hey my follower, kill all
Americans,” perhaps that what the US mass media and US
government afraid of if they release News about Osama.
That’s very absurd and unreasonable.

Now most US mass media are nothing but US’ government
propaganda tool. The US mass media news is garbage
comparing to Qatar TV Broadcaster Al Jazeera’s news 
that cover both side of the stories.

Anyway, while most US media only agitate their readers
to war and killing through systematic public opinion
forming, there is a very good rational article from
Newsweek. It proposes the Bin Laden trial through
International Court. It’s a peaceful solution for all.

If George Bush agrees about this idea, then the world
later  will know him as a part of solution. But if
George Bush continuing bombing Afghanistan, then he is
part of the problem. Attacking Afghanistan only
creating more problems than already are. Not solution.
Who know that the US-Afghanistan war is not the
beginning of World War III? A disaster for all
mankind?

Here is the good article:

Lawyer William Pepper: 'There is a vested interest
around the world in justice being realized' 
 
Trying Bin Laden 
 
Should the U.N. set up an international tribunal to
judge America’s prime terror suspect? 
 
By William Underhill
NEWSWEEK WEB EXCLUSIVE 
 
      Oct. 15 —  America says it wants justice for
last month’s attacks on Washington and New York. But
how to persuade Afghanistan to surrender the principal
suspect, Osama bin Laden? One option: pledge a hearing
before an international tribunal especially created by
the United Nations along the lines of the courts
already hearing cases arising out of the conflict in
former Yugoslavia and the massacres in Rwanda. To bin
Laden’s Taliban hosts, the promise of an impartial
trial, with Islamic jurists among the judges, might be
an acceptable compromise. The proposal may shortly go
before the U.N. General Assembly. Among its leading
advocates is William Pepper, an American who practices
international, human rights and constitutional law and
who has close ties to the Pakistani government. Pepper
spoke to NEWSWEEK’s William Underhill in London.
Excerpts:    


     NEWSWEEK: There are already national courts that
could indict and try those believed responsible for
last month’s attacks. What purpose would an
international tribunal serve?
       Pepper: If such a tribunal were established,
and it was agreed that bin Laden should be subject to
it, there would be no need for further military
action. That would allow the food convoys to roll
again. After Nov. 7, when the winter starts, that
isn’t going to be possible and the amounts we are
talking about are astronomical: 600,000 tons of food
are needed.
       
       Isn’t it naïve to think that these states
harboring the alleged culprits would be willing to
surrender those charged? 
       It seems to me that any nation that is
sheltering people who commit these kinds of crime
would find it very difficult [to continue] if there
was an established tribunal, under U.N. auspices,
which included jurists from the Islamic world. The
task of getting people before tribunals is always a
difficult one, but if someone is duly indicted or
charged, then the burden is reversed. It falls on the
state that is holding them to justify itself. All that
we have now is a range of allegations and alleged
evidence which has not been confirmed or given a stamp
of approval by a juridical body or independent
tribunal. 
        It may still not prevent the Taliban from
trying to protect those like the alleged criminals in
their midst, but it makes it increasingly difficult
for them to stand up against the nations of the world.
I would also have thought that someone like Osama bin
Laden, who has claimed not be responsible for these
attacks, might very well say, ‘Don’t shoot me like a
dog. Give me my day in court before an impartial
international tribunal.’ 
       
       Won’t Americans want to see bin Laden tried
before an American court? 
       The Americans might want it to be, but the
reality is that there are certain events and
procedures in the world that they cannot control. If
they want an event to take place, they are simply
going to have to compromise as they did with the
Lockerbie trial. It is also important to keep in mind
that over 80 nations lost nationals in the World Trade
Center, so there is a vested interest around the world
in justice being realized here. 
       
       Aren’t you adding to a class of cases that
dispense with trial by jury? 
       That [principle] is overruled by the inability
of the courts in the country where the crimes took
place to provide an impartial proceeding. [Besides,]
Anglo-American jurisprudence provides for jury trial,
but that is not the case for most of the world and it
is not the format for The Hague and Arusha tribunals
[on Yugoslavia and Rwanda]. 
          
       Wouldn’t American public opinion be against the
inclusion of Islamic jurists? 
       You are dealing with people who are devoutly
Islamic, so you have to have an Islamic presence.
Whether Americans like it or not, Muslims constitute
around 1 billion people on the planet and Sharia
[Islamic] law is a major area of developed law. I
think there is a great deal of ignorance about Islamic
law on the part of Americans—and of western jurists.
In a case like this, if they came to understand some
of the premises, they might well find it more their
liking. I’m not speaking in favor of these provisions
because my grounding is in Anglo-American law, but the
rules on acceptable evidence, for example, can be much
less onerous under Sharia law than in Anglo-American
jurisprudence. 
       
       If this incident is treated as a special case,
won’t there be many more that demand similar handling?

       I would envisage that this kind of special
tribunal, dealing with particular crimes against
humanity, would ultimately collapse into the
International Criminal Court (planned by the U.N.).
The court would be available to adjudicate charges of
such crimes wherever they occurred and would have to
have regional branches around the world. 
        [To date] the U.S. has been adamantly opposed
to such a court. A lot of that has to do with
distrust. It might be that if this tribunal were to
perform in a proper, professional judicious manner,
the U.S. might well see the value of a [permanent]
body and slowly come around to supporting it.
          
       How do you rate your chances of success? 
       If [the proposal] went to the Security Council
in the first instance, it would probably be vetoed.
The strategy therefore is to have it placed before the
General Assembly so that the nations of the world—189
of them—will have an opportunity to consider it and to
vote. My sense is that the General Assembly will
overwhelmingly approve such a resolution. I think that
the Security Council will then be hard pressed not to
be responsive. 
       
       Does the use of the word ‘war’ complicate the
legal issue? 
       From a precise legalistic point of view, it
doesn’t complicate it. It is loose-lipped jingoistic
rhetoric. In a non-legal sense they are saying this is
a war. This term war has been used before in the same
way. In America at one time they said that there was a
war on poverty. It’s no more a war against Afghanistan
than it was a war against Sudan, when 14 cruise
missiles were used to level a pharmaceutical company
[in 1998].

http://www.msnbc.com/news/643143.asp#BODY


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