*America**’s self-serving politicized double standard of ‘Justice’*

* *

*By Yvonne Ridley*

* *

*I wonder if Hillary Clinton really believes in the pompous invective that
shoots from her lips with the rapidity of machine gun fire.*

* *

*We had a classic example of it just the other day when she let rip in her
grating, robotic monotones over a Moscow court’s decision to jail an oil
tycoon.*

* *

*To be fair to Clinton, she was not alone. There was a whole gaggle of
disapproving foreign ministers who poured forth their ridiculous brand
of Western arrogance which has poisoned the international atmosphere for far
too long.*

* *

*The US Secretary of State said Mikhail Khodorkovsky's conviction raised
"serious questions about selective prosecution and about the rule of law
being overshadowed by political considerations".*

* *

*Although Khodorkovsky, 47, and his business partner, Platon Lebedev, 54,
were found guilty of theft and money laundering by a Moscow court, critics
like Clinton say the trial constitutes revenge for the tycoon's questioning
of a state monopoly on oil pipelines and propping up political parties that
oppose the Kremlin.*

* *

*Clinton's censure was echoed by politicians in Britain and Germany, and
Catherine Ashton, the EU foreign policy chief, urged Moscow to "respect its
international commitments in the field of human rights and the rule of law".
*



*Now while it may appear to be quite touching to see all these Western
leaders express their outrage over a trial involving the one-time richest
and most powerful man in Russia’s oil and gas industry, you have to ask
where were these moral guardians when other unjust legal decisions were
being made in US courts, for example?*



*So why have the Americans and Europeans rushed to make very public and
official statements so quickly on a matter of oil and gas, in another
country? Okay, so it is a rhetorical question!*



*But shouldn’t Clinton put a sock in it? The USA is still squatting in Cuba
overseeing the continuing festering mess caused by one of the biggest boil’s
on the face of human rights – yes, Guantanamo is approaching a decade of
incarcerating men without charge or trial. At least Khodorkovsky had his day
in an open court and can appeal.*



* Instead of sticking her nose in to other country’s courts, perhaps the US
Secretary of State would care to look into her own backyard and tell us why
one of her soldiers was given a mere nine month sentence earlier this month
after shooting unarmed civilians in Afghanistan?*



*And after he's served his sentence US army medic Robert Stevens can still
remain in the army, ruled the military hearing. His defence was that he and
other soldiers were purely acting on orders from a squad leader during a
patrol in March in Kandahar.*



*Five of the 12 soldiers named in the case are accused of premeditated
murder in the most serious prosecution of atrocities by US military
personnel since the war began in late 2001. Some even collected severed
fingers and other human remains from the Afghan dead as war trophies before
taking photos with the corpses.*

* *

*By comparison, just a few months earlier, Dr Aafia Siddiqui, was given 86
years for attempting to shoot US soldiers … the alleged incident happened
while she was in US custody, in Afghanistan. She didn’t shoot anyone
although she WAS shot at point blank range by the soldiers. The critically
injured Pakistani citizen was then renditioned for a trial in New York. The
hearing was judged to be illegal and out of US jurisdiction by many
international lawyers.*

* *

*Did Clinton have anything to say about that? Did any of the foreign
ministers in the West raise these issues on any public platform anywhere in
the world? Again, it’s a rhetorical question.*

*Of course a few poorly trained US Army grunts, scores of innocent Afghans,
nearly 200 Arab men in Cuba and one female academic from Pakistan are pretty
small fry compared to an oil rich tycoon who doesn’t like Vladamir Putin.*

* *

*But being poor is not a crime.*

* *

*Exactly how would the Obama Administration have reacted if Russian
President Dmitry Medvedev criticized the lack of even handedness in the US
judicial system and demanded Dr Aafia Siddiqui be repatriated? What would be
the response if Medvedev called an international press conference and
demanded to know why 174 men are still being held in Guantanamo without
charge or trial?*

* *

*Just for the record the US judicial system imposes life sentences
for serious tax avoidance and laundering of criminally-received income –
crimes for which the Russian tycoon has been found guilty. Sentencing will
not take place until Moscow trial judge, Viktor Danilkin, finishes reading
his 250-page verdict, which could take several days.*

* *

*In her comments Clinton said the case had a "negative impact on Russia's
reputation for fulfilling its international human rights obligations and
improving its investment climate".*

* *

*How on earth can anyone treat the US Secretary of State seriously when she
comes out with this sort of pot, kettle, black rhetoric? This from a nation
which is morally and financially bankrupt, a country which introduced words
like rendition and water-boarding into common day usage.*

* *

*My advice to Clinton is do not lecture anyone about human rights and legal
issues until you clean up your own backyard. In fact the next time she
decides to open her mouth perhaps one of her aides can do us all a favour
and ram in a slice of humble pie.*

* *

** British journalist Yvonne Ridley is the European President of the
International Muslim Women’s Union as well as being a patron of
Cageprisoners.*

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