person > Khalid Sheikh Mohammed
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Administration calls 46 men too dangerous to release as State Department names special envoy to close military prison.
Suspects charged with terrorism and nearly 3,000 counts of murder could face death penalty if convicted.
Liberalism in the 1920s was strong enough to tolerate mass protests and respectful funerals for "terrorists".
US Military attorneys say Guantanamo Warden may have perjured himself, and may not be fit for command.
Alan Dershowitz's call to boycott a Political Science department should be dismissed by anyone concerned with justice.
Military judge orders government to dismantle system that halted the public broadcast of hearings for prisoners.
Three senior officials criticise "Zero Dark Thirty" for suggesting that US used torture in hunt for al-Qaeda leader.
Khaled Sheikh Mohammed accuses US president of torture and murder on third day of pre-trial hearing at Guantanamo Bay.
If the government prevails, observers at any of the 9/11 hearings would see, but not hear those on trial, writes Hajjar.
The modern US urge to torture did not begin on September 12, 2001, but can be traced back to the Cold War.
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Murder of Somali draws ire of foreign African nationals over rising xenophobic violence.
We look at the impact of increased sanctions against the Islamic Republic and ask who it really affects.
Tupamaros enforce rough justice in Venezuela's slums to support socialism, but critics say the group are violent thugs.
More than a decade ago the US launched a war against Afghanistan, but was it a justified battle?
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Two years since the start of the uprising, rebels and Assad's forces remain locked in conflict.
Extensive coverage of political unrest that spread from Istanbul to other areas.
Revelations over NSA spying are threatening president's European trip.
Some urbanites are returning to their rural roots to farm the land.
Kuwait's 'Bidoon' have been stripped of rights and treated as second-class citizens.
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