Friday, March 16, 2007

USS Cole attack: Sudan ruled guilty

Sudan is responsible for the bombing of the USS Cole which killed 17 sailors in 2000, a US judge has ruled.


Robert Doumar, a district judge, said: "There is substantial evidence in this case presented by the expert testimony that the government of Sudan induced the particular bombing."



The victims' relatives had argued in the civil trial that the attack could not have happened without Sudan's support.
Sudan sought unsuccessfully to dismiss the lawsuit on the grounds that too much time had passed between the bombing and the filing of the lawsuit in 2004.






Suicide bombings

Sudan is accused of providing economic support, places for the suicide bombers to train and false documents.

The judge is still to decide on the amount of compensation


Experts testified that Sudan had given safe haven to Osama bin Laden's al-Qaeda terrorist network since 1991 – long before Yemeni operatives blasted a 12m hole in the side of the USS Cole in Yemen's port of Aden on October 12, 2000.

Lawyers representing the Sudanese government declined to comment after Wednesday's ruling.


Doumar said that he would issue a written opinion later to fully explain his ruling.

Damages demanded

Shalala Swenchonis-Wood, whose brother died in the attack, said on Wednesday: "Words can't express the loss my family has gone through.

"It's not financial, it's not material, it's always the things, the little things you don't see."


The families want $105m in damages, but potential damages could be reduced to $35m.

The judge, however, has said he is inclined to apply the 'Death on the High Seas Act', which permits compensation for economic losses but not for pain and suffering.


Four experts on terrorism, including R. James Woolsey, CIA director from 1993 to 1995, also testified to support the families' position that al-Qaeda needed the African nation's help to carry out the attack.

Intelligence report


"It would not have been as easy - it might have been possible - but it would not have been as easy,'' Woolsey said in a videotaped statement.

The experts cited testimony from other trials, a declassified Canadian intelligence report, US state department reports and their own studies as they testified that Sudan let terrorist training camps operate within its borders.

They also accused Sudan of giving al-Qaeda members diplomatic passports so they could travel without scrutiny and diplomatic pouches to ship explosives and weapons without being searched.


The US has listed Sudan as a state sponsor of terrorism since 1993.

Via al Jazeera.

1 comment:

Jimmie Dale Martin, Blogmaster said...

off topic
my screen name is bromide1937
and is my birth town in Oklahoma and my birth year. I have used it on boards for 11 years even before windows and just thought it would be a change on hounds. Bromide being my home town and bromides being my stock in trade as a poet and writer seems like a God thing to me.