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Clooney beard Amal Alamuddin defended Islamic terrorist Abdullah Senussi


George Clooney's publicity arrangement "wife" Amal Allahmuddin is the niece of Islamist arms dealer Ziad Takieddine who collaborated with Libya's Colonel Gaddafi and supplies Middle East.
http://www.reuters.com/article/us-scotland-lockerbie-libya-idUSKCN0SA14V20151016

Amal Alamuddin is part of the defense team of ISLAMIST EXTREMIST TERRORIST Abdullah al-Senussi who was charged as the Lockerbie PanAm103 bomber.

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http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/africaandindianocean/libya/10807651/Clooneys-fiancee-to-take-on-the-International-Criminal-Court.html


Amal Alamuddin soon she will come before judges of a very different kind when she represents one of Colonel Gaddafi’s most notorious henchmen, who is fighting for a fair trial at the International Criminal Court (ICC).
The human rights barrister will argue that Abdullah al Senussi, the former dictator’s ruthless intelligence chief who oversaw torture, assassinations and town square hangings, cannot receive a fair trial in his native country and must be sent to The Hague.
Senussi was charged with war crimes and crimes against humanity by the ICC, along with Gaddafi’s second son Saif al-Islam, in 2011.
United Nations rules stated that the ICC must host the trial unless Libya could prove it was “willing and able genuinely” to carry out a fair hearing itself.



Moreover, Amal Allahmuddin's arms dealer uncle Ziad Takieddine has collaborated with Colonel Gaddafi's regime since the 1990s to supply the Middle East.


Speaking to the Telegraph, Ms Alamuddin said: “At this stage the ICC case is not about whether Mr Gaddafi and Mr Al-Senussi are guilty of committing crimes against humanity; it is about where their trial should be held.
“In Libya - where they will face a show trial and then be executed- or before an international court in The Hague?
“No one is arguing that there should be no trial. But we are arguing that there should be justice.” J
As one of Gaddafi’s closest aides Senussi has been implicated in an infamous Libyan massacre in 1996, in which more than 1,000 inmates were killed at the Abu Salim prison in Tripoli.
And, in 1999, he was tried in absentia in France and sentenced to life imprisonment for the shooting down of a UTA airliner over Niger a decade earlier.

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http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/crime/lockerbie-bombing-scottish-police-and-fbi-identify-two-new-suspects-in-libya-a6695656.html


Lockerbie bombing: Scottish police and FBI identify two new suspects in Libya
Scotland's Lord Advocate and the US Attorney General have requested permission to question the suspects in Tripoli
Lizzie Dearden Thursday 15 October 2015


The attack on Pan Am 103 killed 270 people in 1988
Scottish police and the FBI have requested permission to question two men identified as suspects in the Lockerbie bombing.

They believe the two individuals were accomplices of Abdelbaset al-Megrahi - the only person to have been convicted of the 1988 atrocity that killed 270 people.

Megrahi, who was released from jail by the Scottish Government in 2009 on compassionate grounds after being diagnosed with prostate cancer, died in 2012 while still protesting his innocence.

Abdelbaset al-Megrahi remains the only person ever convicted for the attack.
Scotland's Lord Advocate, Frank Mulholland QC ,recently met the US Attorney General, Loretta Lynch, in Washington to review progress made in the ongoing investigation.

They have now requested permission from the Libyan authorities for Scottish police and the FBI to interview the two named suspects in Tripoli.

Lockerbie families to launch appeal against conviction of al-Megrahi
Lockerbie bomber al-Megrahi was guilty of 1988 attack, says Scotland's
New Lockerbie report says Libyan was 'framed'
A spokesperson for the Crown Office said: “The Lord Advocate and the US Attorney General have recently agreed that there is a proper basis in law in Scotland and the United States to entitle Scottish and US investigators to treat two Libyans as suspects in the continuing investigation into the bombing of flight Pan Am 103 over Lockerbie.

“The Lord Advocate has today, therefore, issued an International Letter of Request to the Libyan attorney general in Tripoli which identifies the two Libyans as suspects in the bombing of flight Pan Am 103.


“The Lord Advocate and the US Attorney General are seeking the assistance of the Libyan judicial authorities for Scottish police officers and the FBI to interview the two named suspects in Tripoli.

“The two individuals are suspected of involvement, along with Abdelbaset Ali Mohmed al-Megrahi, in the bombing of flight Pan Am 103 in December 1988 and the murder of 270 people.”

The plane exploded as it passed over Lockerbie, killing everyone on board, and 11 more people died when large sections of the aircraft hit the ground.

Additional reporting by PA

The suspects

Abu Agila Mas’ud

Born in Tunisia, the 64-year-old worked for Abdullah al-Senussi, Libya’s former head of intelligence, and was known as an expert in bomb-making. Ma’sud greeted Adelbaset Al-Megrahi on his return to Libya in August 2009 after his release from a Scottish jail on compassionate grounds. He is named on a declassified CIA cable which claims he accompanied Megrahi to Malta in December 1988, and described him as “a tall black Libyan male who is approximately 40 to 45 years of age.” And Ma’sud is also referred to in German police files relating to the bombing of a disco in Berlin in 1986 which killed two US servicemen and a Turkish woman, and wounded more than 220 people. He was in Berlin at the time of the attack, and used aliases and code names, according to the files. Ma’sud is currently in jail, serving a ten year sentence he was given earlier this year after being found guilty by a Libyan court of using bombs to booby-trap cars belonging to opponents of Gaddafi in 2011.

Abdullah al-Senussi

Gaddafi’s long-serving spy chief, and the husband of Fatma Farkash, the sister in law of the late Libyan dictator. The 65-year-old was sentenced to death by firing squad in July this year after a trial in Tripoli found him guilty of war crimes for the brutal suppression of protests in Benghazi in 2011. Senussi has also been linked to a number of other atrocities in recent years. He ordered guards to fire on prisoners during a protest at the Abu Salim prison in 1996 in which 1,200 people were killed, according to witnesses. Senussi has long been suspected of being behind the Lockerbie bombing, and in 1999 was convicted in absentia in France of the bombing of a passenger jet over Niger in which 170 people died a decade earlier. The Libyan has also been linked to an air disaster in which 157 people died, when a Libyan Arab Airlines plane broke up in mid-air as it approached Tripoli, killing all those on board, in December 1992.

Ken Dornstein idolised his older brother David, who helped raise him as their divorced mother struggled with mental illness.

So when the 25-year-old David Dornstein, who had hoped to become a writer, was among the 270 killed in the 1988 Lockerbie bombing, it hit his student brother hard.

Ken Dornstein wanted to find out who was behind the bombing and, after graduating, he began working for a detective agency in Los Angeles. “I was interested in the tradecraft of how you find people,” he told New Yorker magazine recently.

Mr Dornstein, who now works on TV documentaries, could not believe Abdelbaset al-Megrahi, the only person convicted of the bombing, had acted alone, and decided to pursue the other bombers.

He went to Libya and began to focus on a technical expert, Abu Agila Mas’ud, and Abdullah al-Senussi, Muammar Gaddafi’s intelligence chief. He found Mas’ud and Senussi had probably both been present when Megrahi arrived back in Libya after his release from a Scottish prison. “It’s like a ... belated victory party for the Lockerbie plotters.”

Eventually, Mr Dornstein discovered Mas’ud was facing trial, with Senussi, in Libya, for putting bombs in the cars of opposition members in 2011.

Ian Johnston

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https://thenewlibyareport.wordpress.com/2014/07/01/john-jones-amal-alamuddin-libya-financial-icc/

We suggest that Ms. Alamuddin disclose NOW the source of the private fund before it festers and the RNC start to make speculations. Before headlines begin to surface such as Did George Clooney’s Fiancee receive payment from Frozen Assets of the Libyan People? or Did George Clooney’s Fiancee receive money from Gaddafi’s Niece? Finally, if it is subject to the assets freeze of 1970, return the money to its rightful owners, the Libyan people. SEE PDF: UN Security Council Resolution 1970.

https://thenewlibyareport.wordpress.com/2014/05/06/amal-alamuddin-dismissing-libyas-legitmate-legal-right-since-2012/

Doughty Street Chambers: Amal Alamuddin and her co-counsel AND ALL their Libyan clients in the Libyan International Criminal Court case. Is there a conflict of interest ? Amal Alamuddin, John R.W.D. Jones and Wayne Jordash are co-iLawyers for the iLawyer blog. These three lawyers simultaneously represents three DIFFERENT clients on BOTH sides of the Libyan ICC case. Although on OPPOSITE sides in the dispute they are all members in the SAME law firm: Doughty Street Chambers. Amal Alamuddin represents Abdulla Senussi, John R.W.D. Jones represents Saif Gaddafi and Wayne Jordash represents the Government of Libya.

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