El Dorado News-Times

Blackwater pardons worry rights office

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BERLIN — The United Nations’ human-rights office said Wednesday that it’s “deeply concerned” by President Donald Trump’s pardons of four former government contractor­s convicted in a 2007 massacre in Baghdad that left more a dozen Iraqi civilians dead.

The pardons were among 15 that the Trump administra­tion announced Tuesday.

Supporters of the former contractor­s at Blackwater Worldwide had lobbied for pardons, saying the men had been excessivel­y punished in an investigat­ion and prosecutio­n tainted by problems, with exculpator­y evidence being withheld.

“These four individual­s were given sentences ranging from 12 years to life imprisonme­nt, including on charges of first-degree murder,” U.N. human-rights office spokeswoma­n Marta Hurtado said in a statement. “Pardoning them contribute­s to impunity and has the effect of emboldenin­g others to commit such crimes in the future.”

The case caused an internatio­nal uproar over the use of private security guards in a war zone.

The killings occurred at Baghdad’s Nisoor Square in September 2007, when the men — former veterans working as contractor­s for the State Department — opened fire at a crowded traffic circle.

Prosecutor­s argued that the heavily armed Blackwater convoy opened an unprovoked attack using sniper fire, machine guns and grenade launchers. Defense lawyers said their clients returned fire after being ambushed by Iraqi insurgents.

 ?? (AP/Channi Anand) ?? An Indian migrant worker, who makes her living selling balloons and toys, cooks food for her family outside a tent on a cold Wednesday morning in a slum in Jammu, India.
(AP/Channi Anand) An Indian migrant worker, who makes her living selling balloons and toys, cooks food for her family outside a tent on a cold Wednesday morning in a slum in Jammu, India.

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