Qatar Tribune
First Page Gulf / Middle East World
United States South Asia India
Europe Pakistan  
  
United Kingdom Philippines /SE Asia  
Home About Us Advertising Archives Subscribe Site Map Contact Us
 
 
 
We must emulate Maathai´s green deeds: Kenyan envoy
AS the world continues to mourn the death of Nobel Laureate for Peace Wangari Maathai, Kenyan Ambassador to Qatar HE Galma Mukhe Boru advised the people to follow her example and learn from her life. Professor Maathai, who passed away on September 25, was the first African woman to be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2004 for her contribution to sustainable development, democracy and peace...
Mad Hatter´s Tea Party
CURIOSER and curioser, as Alice said in her adventures in Wonderland. The longer the crisis in the eurozone has gone on, the more it has come to resemble something penned by Lewis Carroll. Here are just a few of the surreal aspects of the current state of affairs. The answer to a lack of growth in struggling countries such as Greece is austerity of such ferocity that recessions deepen. The solution to a...
HOLDING CHINA TO ACCOUNT
THE dire state of the world economy reflects destructive actions on the part of many players. Still, the fact that so many have behaved badly shouldn´t stop us from holding individual bad actors to account. And that´s what Senate leaders will be doing this week, as they take up legislation that would threaten sanctions against China and other currency manipulators. Respectable opinion is aghast. But respectable opinion has...
Al Watan - Arabic Newspaper
Jamila - Monthly Women Magazine
Nation Business Sports Chill Out
Knox freed, leaves Italy to head home to US

AP

PERUGIA (ITALY) AMANDA KNOX headed home to the United States a free woman on Tuesday, the morning after an Italian appeals court dramatically overturned the American student’s conviction of sexually assaulting and brutally slaying her British roommate.

The Italy-US Foundation, which has championed Knox’s cause, said she departed shortly after noon (1000 GMT) from Rome’s Leonardo da Vinci airport on the way to London, from where she will catch a connecting flight to the United States.

The 24-year-old Knox, who is returning to Seattle, arrived at the airport in a Mercedes with darkened windows and waited for boarding inside a private waiting area, out of public view.

Back in Perugia, the family of slain British student Meredith Kercher remained stunned by the verdict and searching for answers.

“It was a bit of a shock,” said Stephanie Kercher, the victim’s older sister. “It’s very upsetting ... We still have no answers.” Lyle Kercher, a brother, said the family is still trying to understand how a decision that “was so certain two years ago has been so dramatically overturned.” Lyle Kercher said the family has been left to wonder who is guilty in the 21-year-old Kercher’s death after the release of Knox and her one time boyfriend Raffaele Sollecito on appeal. A third man has been convicted in the brutal slaying, however his trial concluded he did not act alone.

“If the two released yesterday were not the guilty parties, we are obviously left to wonder who is the other guilty person or people. We are left back at square one,” Lyle Kercher said.

Prosecutor Giuliano Mignini expressed disbelief in the verdict, and vowed an appeal to Italy’s highest criminal court.

“Let’s wait and we will see who was right. The first court or the appeal court,” Mignini told The Associated Press on Tuesday.

“This trial was done under unacceptable media pressure.

The decision was almost already announced; this is not normal,” he said.

If the highest court overturns the acquittal, prosecutors would be free to request Knox’s extradition to Italy to finish whatever remained of a sentence. It is up to the government to decide whether they make such a request.

Knox and Sollecito were convicted in 2009 of sexually assaulting and murdering Kercher, a 21-year-old British student who shared an apartment with Knox in Perugia.

Knox was convicted to 26 years, Sollecito to 25. Both had been in prison since Nov. 6, 2007, four days after Kercher’s body had been found at the apartment.

But, the prosecution’s case was blown apart by a courtordered DNA review that discredited crucial genetic evidence.

Knox dissolved into tears as the verdict was read in a packed courtroom after 11 hours of deliberations, and she needed to be propped up by her lawyers on either side.

Two hours later she was in a dark limousine that took her out of the Capanne prison just outside Perugia, where she had spent the past four years, and headed to Rome.

“During the trip from Perugia to Rome, Amanda was serene,” said Corrado Maria Daclon, the secretary general of the Italy-US Foundation, who was with Knox in the car.

“She confirmed to me that in the future she intends to come back to our country.” On Tuesday, Knox thanked those Italians “who shared my suffering and helped me survive with hope,” in a letter to the foundation.

“Those who wrote, those who defended me, those who were close, those who prayed for me,” Knox wrote. “I love you, Amanda.” Sollecito, meanwhile, arrived back home near the southern Italian city of Bari before dawn on Tuesday. He was quoted by Italian news agencies on Monday night as saying he was looking forward to seeing the sea, but he declined to make any appearances after reaching home.

Sollecito’s father Francesco said that his son remained stunned by the events.

“He is trying to recover himself,” Sollecito’s father told reporters outside, the news agency ANSA reported.

“He is going around touching things as if he is a child who needs to take back the things of his life, to acquire forgotten elements.” While waves of relief swept through the defendants’ benches in the courtroom, members of the Kercher family, who flew in for the verdict, appeared dazed and perplexed. Her sister Stephanie shed a tear, while her mother Arline looked straight ahead.

“We still trust the Italian justice system and hope that the truth will eventually emerge,” the Kerchers said in a statement.


Euro bailout fund size could be boosted, says Reynders
Don’t attack Syrian exiles, Paris warns Assad
Cash-strapped NATO trying to make ends meet on defence

  About Us Advertising Subscribe Careers Contact Us