position:defense lawyer

  • Le crabe EST une espèce sédentaire, et donc une ressource naturelle. Il est donc protégé par l’exclusivité de la #ZEE.

    Intéressant débat juridique, avec conséquences sur la maîtrise par la Norvège de ses ressources d’hydrocarbures.

    À noter, l’absence de position sur le traité du #Svalbard

    Abide by the claw : Norway’s Arctic snow crab ruling boosts claim to oil | Reuters
    https://www.reuters.com/article/us-norway-eu-snowcrab-idUSKCN1Q3115


    A fisherman holds a snow crab in Kjoellefjord, Norway, November 1, 2017.
    NTB Scanpix/Terje Bendiksby via REUTERS

    A court delivered a painful nip to European Union fishermen on Thursday by tightening Norway’s grip on snow crab catches in the Arctic, a ruling that may also let Oslo claw more control of oil and gas from other nations.

    Fishermen from the European Union must ask permission from Oslo to catch snow crab — whose meat is a delicacy for gourmets from Canada to Japan — in Arctic waters north of Norway, the Norwegian Supreme Court said in a unanimous ruling.

    The court dismissed an appeal by a Latvian fishing firm and its Russian captain against fines imposed by a lower court for catching snow crab around the remote Svalbard Islands in 2017 with only an EU license.

    Latvia’s Foreign Ministry said it would review the decision at a government meeting.

    Norway is tightening its grip,” in the Arctic, said Oeystein Jensen, a researcher in international law at the independent Fridtjof Nansen Institute in Oslo.

    The court clarifies that if you are going to fish, or search for oil and gas, you need permission from the Norwegian authorities,” he told Reuters.

    At issue was whether the snow crab was a sedentary species living on the seabed or moves around like fish, and who gets to control the stocks.

    The court agreed with non-EU member Norway that snow crabs are sedentary, like corals or oysters, and that as such under the U.N. Law of the Sea they are a resource belonging to the continental shelf of Norway extending hundreds of miles (kms) offshore.

    Had Norway lost the case, the EU could have staked a claim over the snow crab and it could have been harder for Oslo to regulate access to potential oil and gas resources beneath the Arctic seabed.

    For the Norwegian coastguard this is a big relief - they can arrest any ships fishing illegally in the Svalbard area,” chief public prosecutor Lars Fause told Reuters.

    The Latvian firm, SIA North Star, argued that the crabs are not sedentary because they scurry around and so should be regulated under regional fisheries accords signed by parties including the European Union, Norway and Russia.

    It argued that it had a valid EU permit.

    We’re very disappointed,” defense lawyer Hallvard Oestgaard told Reuters. He said that his client would consider whether to try to appeal to international tribunals.

    And SIA North Star argued that Norway is obliged under an international 1920 treaty to allow other nations access to the waters around Svalbard.

    That treaty grants sovereignty to Norway but gives other signatories rights to engage in commercial activities on and around Svalbard. Russia, for instance, runs a coal mine on Svalbard.

    But Oslo says rights to exploit resources around Svalbard extend only to a narrow band of just 12 nautical miles offshore. The court ruled that the Latvian catches were illegal under Norwegian law, irrespective of the Svalbard Treaty.

  • France, Where Age of Consent Is Up for Debate - The Atlantic
    https://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2018/03/frances-existential-crisis-over-sexual-harassment-laws/550700

    On April 24, 2017, a 28-year-old-man met an 11-year-old girl in a park in Montmagny, just north of Paris, after which, he took her home where he had oral and vaginal sex with her. When it was over, the girl called her mother and described what had happened, and her mother called the police. “She thought … that she didn’t have the right to protest, that it wouldn’t make any difference,” the mother told Mediapart, a French investigative site which first reported on the allegations of the case. The accusations were of an adult raping a child—a crime that, in France, can lead to a 20-year prison sentence for the perpetrator when the victim is 15 or younger.

    But it initially wasn’t charged that way. When the case first went to court in September, the man faced only charges of “sexual infraction,” a crime punishable with a maximum of five years in jail and a €75,000 fine. Under French law, a charge of rape requires “violence, coercion, threat, or surprise,” even if the victims are as young as the girl in the Montmagny case. When the case, initially postponed, went back to court in February, the man’s attorneys did not deny the sexual encounter but argued that the girl had been capable of consenting. “She was 11 years and 10 months old, so nearly 12 years old,” defense lawyer Marc Goudarzian said. Sandrine Parise-Heideiger, his fellow defense lawyer, added: “We are not dealing with a sexual predator on a poor little faultless goose.”

    Such a defense flies in the face of legal and cultural consensus in most Western nations, and much of the world. “With children there is inevitably coercion,” Ernestine Ronai, co-president of the gender-based violence commission at the government’s High Council for Equality between Women and Men, told me. “It is indefensible that a girl of 11 could be considered consenting with a 28-year-old man. This is shocking,” she added.

    Indeed, the judge did ultimately order that rape charges be filed, in what Carine Durrieu-Diebolt, the attorney for the girl and her family, called a “victory for victims.” The case has been postponed to allow for a more thorough investigation into the allegations. But in the meantime, it has also provoked an unprecedented backlash that has resulted in France considering a change to a longstanding, anomalous feature of its laws: Up to now, there has been no legal age of consent for sex.

    Under French law, “rape” is defined as “any act of sexual penetration, of whatever nature, committed on the person of another by violence, coercion, threat or surprise.” Yet unlike elsewhere, there is no presumption of coercion if a sexual minor is involved. Most other countries in Europe, including Spain, Belgium, Britain, Switzerland, Denmark and Austria, have a legal age of consent. Most of the age minimums range between 14 and 16 years of age. Fixing a specific age of consent means that children and adolescents below that age cannot, regardless of circumstances, be considered consenting to sex; their very age renders them incapable. As a result, an adult in most European nations who has sex with someone under this age would be charged with rape, even if violent force is not used.

    • Most other countries in Europe, including Spain, Belgium, Britain, Switzerland, Denmark and Austria, have a legal age of consent. Most of the age minimums range between 14 and 16 years of age. Fixing a specific age of consent means that children and adolescents below that age cannot, regardless of circumstances, be considered consenting to sex; their very age renders them incapable. As a result, an adult in most European nations who has sex with someone under this age would be charged with rape, even if violent force is not used.

    • After May 1968, French intellectuals would challenge the state’s authority to protect minors from sexual abuse. In one prominent example, on January 26, 1977, Le Monde, a French newspaper, published a petition signed by the era’s most prominent intellectuals—including Jean-Paul Sartre, Simone de Beauvoir, Gilles Deleuze, Roland Barthes, Philippe Sollers, André Glucksmann and Louis Aragon—in defense of three men on trial for engaging in sexual acts with minors. “French law recognizes in 13- and 14-year-olds a capacity for discernment that it can judge and punish,” the petition stated, “But it rejects such a capacity when the child’s emotional and sexual life is concerned.” Furthermore, the signatories argued, children and adolescents have the right to a sexual life: “If a 13-year-old girl has the right to take the pill, what is it for?” It’s unclear what impact, if any, the petition had. The defendants were sentenced to five years in prison, but did not serve their full sentences.

      In 1979, Liberation published another petition, this time in support of Gérard R., a man on trial for having sex with girls between the ages of six and 12. It was signed by 63 people, many of them well-known intellectuals like Christiane Rochefort and Pascal Bruckner. It argued that the girls in question were “happy” with the situation. “The love of children is also the love of their bodies,” they wrote. “Desire and sexual games have their place in the relationship between children and adults. This is what Gérard R. thought and experienced with [the] girls … whose fulfillment proved to everyone, including their parents, the happiness they found with him.”

      What the endorsements from prominent French intellectuals suggested was that young children possessed a right to govern their own sexuality. Under this interpretation of liberté, young children were empowered to find happiness in sexual relationships; their ability to consent was a foregone conclusion. Any effort to suggest otherwise would be a condescension, a disrespect to them as fully realized human beings. In a radio interview in 1978, Michel Foucault said of sex with minors that assuming “that a child is incapable of explaining what happened and was incapable of giving his consent are two abuses that are intolerable, quite unacceptable.”

      “People have a hard time admitting they were colonized by the discourse of pedocriminals,” Salmona told me. France in the 1970s and 1980s, she said, was an “atrocious” era for children, an active time for a very unapologetic “pedocriminal lobby.”

      Yet it’s hard to know exactly how widespread the so-called pedocriminal lobby’s influence reached. On the one hand, as sociologist and criminologist Patrice Corriveau wrote in 2011, the number of sexual abuse cases involving children in France had been on the rise since 1972. By 1982, he found, sexual offenses against minors had increased by nearly 22 percent—meaning, it seemed as though the stigma against child sex abuse was encouraging victims to come forward. At the same time, while the number of reported cases was on the rise, convictions for homosexual acts with minors were decreasing. As Corriveau explained: “In France … sexual behaviors, homoerotic or not, dropped in importance on the level of judicial intervention as the sexual revolution took hold. In fact, morals offense represented only 0.54 percent of overall criminality in France in 1982.”

      #pedocriminalité #pedosexualité #pedophilie #viol #culture_du_viol #enfance #domination_adulte #domination_masculine #deni #cocorico #liberation_sexuelle #mai68

  • The Hateful Monk
    http://www.nybooks.com/daily/2017/08/31/the-hateful-monk-venerable-w

    Schroeder, an Iranian-born Swiss filmmaker, has spent decades documenting the morally despicable. His “Trilogy of Evil” began in 1974 with General Idi Amin Dada: A Self Portrait, a character study of the Ugandan dictator. The second installment, Terror’s Advocate (2007), was on the French-Algerian defense lawyer Jacques Vergès, whose clients have included Klaus Barbie, Carlos the Jackal, the Khmer Rouge leader Khieu Samphan, and the Holocaust denier Roger Garaudy. Wirathu is Schroeder’s final subject, and, for him, the most terrifying. “I am afraid to call him Wirathu because even his name scares me,” he said in a recent interview with Agence France-Presse. “I just call him W.”

    The film charts Wirathu’s rise from provincial irrelevance in Kyaukse to nationwide rabble-rouser. It centers on the crucial moments of his budding ethno-nationalism, such as in 1997, when he says his eyes were “finally opened” to the “Muslims’ intentions” after reading a pamphlet entitled In Fear of Our Race Disappearing, which appeared in print by an unknown author; or 2003, when he delivered a chilling sermon—caught on camera—against Muslim “kalars” (kalar is the equivalent of “nigger”). “I can’t stand what they do to us,” he says to rapturous applause. “As soon as I give the signal, get ready to follow me…I need to plan the operation well, like the CIA or Mossad, for it to be effective…I will make sure they will have no place to live.” One month later, in Kyaukse, eleven Muslims were killed, and two mosques and twenty-six houses were burned to the ground. Wirathu was arrested by the military junta for inciting violence, and spent nine years in Mandalay’s Obo prison.

    • Personnellement j’ai trouvé ce film mal fait alors que L’avocat de la terreur était beaucoup mieux.
      De bonnes intentions ne font pas un bon film. C’est vrai qu’il est important de parler de ce qu’il se passe en Birmanie mais là on a l’impression que c’est fait à la va-vite, qu’on survole le sujet. Le montage est pas terrible en plus. Un peu comme si c’était destiné à passer sur les chaînes de télé à une heure de grande écoute (bon j’exagère un peu là, à une heure de grande écoute les musulmans ont toujours le même rôle donc c’est pas possible).

    • @aude_v, ah oui effectivement. Ton analyse est beaucoup plus précise, j’ai pas pris la peine d’en faire autant et moi j’ai échappé aux punaises de plancher lol
      C’est vrai que je n’ai pas appris grand chose et j’avais oublié la voix off, qui je dois dire, m’a pas mal agacée sans que je ne sache vraiment pourquoi.
      J’ai pas trop aimé non plus le fait de centrer les choses à ce point sur W parce que la haine des musulmans en Birmanie ne se résume pas à lui. Il n’aurait pas le pouvoir de transformer un peuple ouvert et sans préjugé à un peuple de génocidaires en puissance. Quel est le terreau ?
      Et puis dernière chose, je ne supporte pas qu’on compare à chaque fois les « méchants » à Hitler. C’est vraiment tarte à la crème et ça bloque toute analyse politique. Voilà, une fois qu’on a dit ça, tous les occidentaux poussent des cris d’indignation en disant « mais c’est horrible ! » et on n’est pas plus avancé.

  • news from the 25th of january to the 31
    http://zad.nadir.org/spip.php?article3527

    Monday January 25 The big news for today is evidently the verdict of the trial against our comrades who are having their houses taken by eminent domain. Without surprise, the judge refused to transfer the affair, as the defense lawyer had asked, questioning the constitutionality of the trial. (...) — CZk6IP6WwAAEeZO.jpg, CYlseC-WcAAMuR3.jpg, Calais_migrants_st_3557389b.jpg, Calais-France-A-gr_3557390b.jpg, CZmZHfrUAAARdoh.jpg, CZgtJToWQAMaMiw.jpg, serveimage.jpg, Flash Infos

  • news from the 25th of january to the 31
    https://zad.nadir.org/spip.php?article3527

    Monday January 25 The big news for today is evidently the verdict of the trial against our comrades who are having their houses taken by eminent domain. Without surprise, the judge refused to transfer the affair, as the defense lawyer had asked, questioning the constitutionality of the trial. The judge declared the farms immediately evictable, along with three families who don’t have their main residence on the zone. He “gave” a two month delay to the others. He did refuse Vinci, whose lawyer (...)

    #Flash_Infos

  • STL Contempt Judge Sentences Karma Khayat to €10,000 Fine
    http://www.naharnet.com/stories/en/190779-stl-contempt-judge-sentences-karma-khayat-to-10-000-fine

    Special Tribunal for Lebanon Contempt Judge Nicola Lettieri on Monday sentenced al-Jadeed TV deputy chief editor Karma Khayat to a fine of 10,000 euros on charges of “interfering with the administration of justice” by failing to remove online content on alleged witnesses.

    After hearing the arguments of the Amicus Curiae Prosecutor, or Friend of the Court, and the Defense lawyer, Lettieri said he sentenced Khayat to “a fine of €10,000 to be paid in full by 30 October, 2015.”

    Et en live:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=acFpLQs5Vvg

  • #turkey keeps 11 police officers accused of wiretapping in custody
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/turkey-keeps-11-police-officers-accused-wiretapping-custody

    A Turkish court ordered that 11 more police officers be kept in custody pending trial over accusations that they used wiretaps to spy on Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan and his inner circle, a defense lawyer said on Wednesday. The latest arrests step up a battle between Erdogan and US-based Islamic scholar Fethullah Gulen, a former ally, whose followers have taken key posts in the police and judiciary during Erdogan’s 11 years in power. read more

    #Recep_Tayyip_Erdogan

  • #STL prosecution witness plays coy with the defense
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/stl-prosecution-witness-plays-coy-defense

    A former Lebanese military investigator who was involved in a probe of the 2005 assassination of ex premier Rafik Hariri offered little information when cross examined by a defense lawyer in court Tuesday. Speaking via video link from Beirut before #The_Hague-based Special Tribunal for #Lebanon (STL) with his picture and audio scrambled to conceal his identity, the witness claimed having a hazy recollection of simply no knowledge of events related to the Beirut blast that killed Hariri and 21 others. read more

    #STL

  • Defense lawyer cautions #Hariri tribunal against «show trial»
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/defense-lawyer-cautions-hariri-tribunal-against-show-trial

    A lawyer for one of five men accused over the 2005 assassination of former Lebanese prime minister Rafik Hariri on Thursday warned the court against hosting a “show trial” by rushing proceedings before the defense counsel was allowed adequate time to prepare. Mohammed Aouini, chief defense lawyer for Hassan Merhi, complained that prosecutors in the Special Tribunal for Lebanon (STL) had nine years to gather evidence, while his team was only assembled earlier this year and has not yet received reports from its two appointed experts to analyze data. read more

    #show_trial #STL #The_Hague

  • Pakistani couple sentenced to death over “blasphemous” text message
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/pakistani-couple-sentenced-death-over-blasphemous-text-message

    A court in eastern #pakistan has sentenced a Christian couple to death for sending a blasphemous text message insulting to the Prophet #mohammad, their lawyer said Saturday. Judge Mian Amir Habib handed the death sentence to Shafqat Emmanuel and Shagufta Kausar in a jail in the town of Toba Tek Singh on Friday, defense lawyer Nadeem Hassan told AFP. Prosecution department officials confirmed the sentence. The impoverished couple, who are in their forties, have three children and live in the town of Gojra, which has a history of violence against Christians, Hassan said. read more

    #blasphemy #god #Top_News

  • Après les insultes au Roi (down with Hamad) qui sont les slogans de bon nombre de manifestations et qui s’étalent partout sur les murs (caviardés par les forces de l’ordre), la peine de prison pour insultes aux symboles. L’article ne dit pas cependant ce que ce fameux drapeau bahreinien avait d’injurieux.

    http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/M/ML_BAHRAIN?SITE=AP

    Bahrain demonstrator jailed for flag ’insult’

    MANAMA, Bahrain (AP) — A Bahrain demonstrator was sentenced to three months in prison Thursday for hanging a Bahrain flag from his truck during a 2011 rally, a defense lawyer said, in one of the first cases based on tougher codes for alleged insults to the Gulf nation’s ruler or symbols.

    The specific charges were unclear, but prosecutors argued that draping the flag over the truck during the protest gathering was an offense under the new rules.

    Many people in Bahrain, however, fly flags from vehicles during celebrations and other events. Flags also are common during anti-government marches.

    In April, Bahrain announced stricter penalties for insulting the Gulf state’s king or national symbols. The measures seek to quell more than two years of protests led by Bahrain’s majority Shiites seeking a greater political voice in the Sunni-ruled nation.

    Defense lawyer Hashim Saleh said 62-year-old Abdulla al-Sayegh plans to appeal the sentence and the 100 dinar ($265) fine. Al-Sayegh acknowledged he attended pro-reform rallies during the early days of the Arab Spring uprising.

    On Wednesday, six Twitter users in Bahrain were given one year each in prison for posts deemed offensive to the king.

  • http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/M/ML_BAHRAIN?SITE=AP

    A defense lawyer in Bahrain says a court has sentenced 31 protesters to 15 years in prison each for roles in firebomb attacks against security forces during an anti-government demonstration last year.

    The defendants, aged 16 to 34, all come from Sitra island, a hotbed of protests since early 2011 [et bien avant I dare say]. The court decision Sunday could touch off more unrest

    Defense layer Mohamed al-Tajir said the charges stemmed from clashes last year when protesters pelted riot police and their vehicles with homeland firebombs. The charges included attempted murder.

  • Pour la petite histoire, l’avocat de Michel Samaha est Malek Sayyed. Lequel est le fils de Jamil Sayyed, l’un des quatre généraux emprisonnés durant 4 ans, puis libérés sans charges, pour le meurtre de Rafik Hariri :
    http://www.examiner.com/article/top-officials-indicted-for-large-scale-syrian-bomb-plot-lebanon?cid=db_art

    Samaha’s defense lawyer, Malek Sayyed, warned Saturday that his team would suspend its attendance of the interrogation of Samaha, unless the judiciary holds security agencies responsible for media leaks.

    C’est donc un avocat déjà passablement remonté… voir par exemple en septembre 2010 :
    http://www.yalibnan.com/2010/09/16/sayyeds-son-calls-for-eliminating-those-behind-his-fathers-arrest

    “Justice won’t be achieved unless the judges and security officials such as State Prosecutor Said Mirza and Head of the Intelligence Bureau Col. Wissam al-Hassan “who have created false witnesses and caused the arrest of the four generals” were prosecuted, Sayyed told the Syrian daily.