JORDAN - Mar 14 - State Security Court Indicts 11 For Nov 9 Bombings.The public prosecutor of Jordan's State Security Court charges 11 militants, including the Jordanian fugitive Abu Mussab Zarqawi, in connection with the Nov. 9 suicide bombings at three Amman hotels that killed at least 60 people and injured more than 90. The key suspect is the Iraqi woman Sajeda Al Rishawi, 35, who was arrested a few days after the blasts, which were carried out by three Iraqis, including her husband. Rishawi confessed over the state-run Jordan television of being part of the suicide gang, but alleged her belt failed to detonate det·o·nate intr. & tr.v. det·o·nat·ed, det·o·nat·ing, det·o·nates To explode or cause to explode. [Latin d at Radisson SAS (1) (SAS Institute Inc., Cary, NC, www.sas.com) A software company that specializes in data warehousing and decision support software based on the SAS System. Founded in 1976, SAS is one of the world's largest privately held software companies. See SAS System. , one of the targeted hotels. Also indicted INDICTED, practice. When a man is accused by a bill of indictment preferred by a grand jury, he is said to be indicted. is the Jordanian citizen Mazen Shehadeh, who fled to Iraq along with other five Iraqis after the bombings. Rishawi is the only defendant to appear before the court during the trial which was expected to start in within a few weeks, a judicial source said. The other 10 suspects are due to be tried in absentia in absentia (in ab-sensh-ee-ah) adj. or adv. phrase. Latin for "in absence," or more fully, in one's absence. Occasionally a criminal trial is conducted without the defendant being present when he/she walks out or escapes after the trial has begun, since the accused , he added. Zarqawi recently received his third death sentence in Jordan for masterminding the first chemical attack in the country. The operation was foiled when the Jordanian authorities arrested its leader Azmi Jayyousi and other members of the cell before carrying out the attack in April 2004. Jordan's military court yesterday convicted seven militants of plotting to attack US forces in Iraq as well as Iraqi police The creation of this unit was guided by the Coalition Provisional Authority however the command of the Police belongs to the new Government of Iraq. Overview The Iraqi Police Forces are part of the Iraqi Ministry of the Interior (MOI) which in conjunction with the Civilian , sentencing them to prison terms from 20 months to four years. The defendants, mostly Jordanians of Palestinian origin between the ages of 23 and 33, were detained in March and May of 2005. They were charged with sending at least six militants to Iraq. The prime suspect, identified as Palestinian Zeid Saleh Al Horani, 27, and five others were originally sentenced to five years in prison, but the judge then gave them lesser terms to offer the "chance to repent re·pent 1 v. re·pent·ed, re·pent·ing, re·pents v.intr. 1. To feel remorse, contrition, or self-reproach for what one has done or failed to do; be contrite. 2. ". Horani allegedly worked with the other members of his Jordan-based cell to recruit militants and send them to neighboring Syria to prepare for suicide bombings. One recruit was Raed Mansour Al Banna, the Jordanian who was wrongly blamed for the Feb. 28 bombing in Hilla south of Baghdad that killed 125 people, according to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. allegations in an indictment sheet detailing the charges. Banna's family and Jordan's government have said he carried out a different suicide bombing in Mosul city, and Zarqawi's group ultimately claimed responsibility for the Hilla attack. Banna and five other suicide bombers are accused of being sent to Iraq through Syria in three batches since the start of 2005. It was not immediately clear whether the men - who were also charged with plotting to damage relations with Iraq - would appeal the verdicts handed down by the State Security Court, a military tribunal A military tribunal is a kind of military court designed to try members of enemy forces during wartime, operating outside the scope of conventional criminal and civil matters. The judges are military officers and fulfill the role of jurors. It is distinct from the court martial. that tries cases dealing with national security. |
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