Daily Report
Spain: ETA ceasefire throws internment into question
The Basque separatist ETA has announced a permanent ceasefire after nearly 40 years and some 800 killings. Now, as this report from IOL notes, legal proceedings against accused ETA collaborators may be reconsidered. Note that Arnaldo Otegi faces prison time for, among other things, "defending terrorism by praising dead ETA members." As with the recent "anti-terrorism" legislation in the UK that criminalizes free speech, we see that "the West" betrays the very values it is supposedly defending in the War on Terrorism. And, of course, just as the war between ETA and the Spanish state is winding down, the war between al-Qaeda and the Spanish state may be just beginning...
Calabrian 'Ndrangheta Europe's leading crime machine —legacy of Kosova war?
From AP, March 22:
ROME — Italian police said Tuesday they have arrested five people suspected in the killing of a local politician who was shot last year at a polling station in southern Italy where he was voting in a nationwide primary.
Pakistan: Baluchistan insurgency grows
From Reuters:
QUETTA, Pakistan, March 23 - A bomb blew up a telephone call office in Pakistan's troubled Baluchistan province on Thursday, killing the owner and wounding eight other people, police said.
Pakistan: Waziristan insurgency grows
From Pakistan's daily Dawn:
WANA, March 22: A pro-government cleric was killed by gunmen in the Laddah subdivision of the South Waziristan Agency on Wednesday and a telephone exchange was blown up in the Shakai area. Witnesses told Dawn that the car of the pro-government cleric, Maulana Sibghatullah, was ambushed at Laddah, about 70 km south of here. The attackers, who were masked, killed Maulana Sibghatullah and took away with them three other people who were in the car.
Iraq: three CPT hostages freed
From AP, March 23:
BAGHDAD, Iraq -- U.S. and British troops Thursday freed three Christian peace activists in a rural area of Iraq without firing a shot, ending a four-month hostage drama in which an American among the group was shot to death and dumped on a Baghdad street.
Afghanistan: threats, violence meet Nowruz
From AP, March 22:
KANDAHAR, Afghanistan — Authorities launched a probe today into the killings by Afghan security forces of at least 15 people, who an Afghan army commander claimed were Taliban rebels but locals said were tribesmen wanting to attend a religious festival.
NYC: activists bring Rachel Corrie's censored words to stage
On March 16, 2003, Washington state-born activist Rachel Corrie, 23, was crushed to death by an Israeli bulldozer while acting as a "human shield" against the demolition of a Palestinian home in Rafah, on the Gaza Strip. Last year, Katherine Viner, an editor at The Guardian, and actor Alan Rickman (known for roles in Sense and Sensibility and Love Actually) adapted 184 pages of Corrie's journals and e-mails, beginning at the age of 10, into a stage play. My Name is Rachel Corrie, directed by Rickman and starring Meghan Dodds, ran to wide acclaim in London. It was scheduled to arrive on March 22 at the New York Theater Workshop, known for embracing such controversial material as Tony Kushner's Angels in America; Homebody, Kabul and the original pre-Broadway Rent. In late February, just weeks before the play was to begin, the theater's artistic director, James Nicola, announced in a statement that the play would be "postponed indefinitely," citing a "very edgy situation" following the illness of Ariel Sharon and the election of Hamas.
Pakistan: Baluch rebels blow up pipeline —again
From Reuters, via Khajeel Times, March 21:
QUETTA, Pakistan - Suspected militants blew up a gas pipeline in Baluchistan on Tuesday, the latest attack in the troubled southwest Pakistan province where rebels are fighting for greater autonomy, officials said.

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