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News South Africa court rules prosecutors may appeal Zuma charges dismissal
South Africa court rules prosecutors may appeal Zuma charges dismissal
Jake Oresick
October 23, 2008 10:07:00 am

A South African judge Wednesday gave prosecutors leave to appeal a ruling dismissing corruption charges against Jacob Zuma , head of the ruling African National Congress (ANC) . Zuma is expected to...

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Latest DISPATCHES
Kenya dispatch: High Court halts Kenya-US health deal over constitutional concerns

Kenya dispatch: High Court halts Kenya-US health deal over constitutional concerns

US dispatch, day 9: Luigi Mangione suppression hearings conclude, defense challenges mother’s alleged statement

US dispatch, day 9: Luigi Mangione suppression hearings conclude, defense challenges mother’s alleged statement

Latest COMMENTARY
Why Argentina’s Pioneering Privacy Law Is Now Playing Defense Against AI

Why Argentina’s Pioneering Privacy Law Is Now Playing Defense Against AI

by Valentina Camuglia and Dimitrios Ioannidis
Performative Cruelty and the Politics of Fear: From Vienna to the US Border

Performative Cruelty and the Politics of Fear: From Vienna to the US Border

by L. Ali Khan | Washburn University School of Law
Latest FEATURES
Explainer: The judiciary corruption scandal rocking Romania

Explainer: The judiciary corruption scandal rocking Romania

One of the World’s Most Climate-Vulnerable Nations, One of the Least Prepared: Sri Lanka’s Deadly Choice

One of the World’s Most Climate-Vulnerable Nations, One of the Least Prepared: Sri Lanka’s Deadly Choice

THIS DAY @ LAW

28 countries unite against Axis Powers

On January 2, 1942, twenty-eight countries formally agreed not to make peace with the Axis Powers separately. At the time, all twenty-eight were fighting against the Axis as Allies in World War II. The agreement was part of the Declaration by the United Nations, signed the previous day. In December of 1941, U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt referred to this group of allies as the "United Nations."

US government agents arrested thousands in Palmer raids

On January 2, 1920, over 500 government agents acting on the direction of US Attorney General Mitchell Palmer carried out a massive counter-terror operation in 33 US cities, arresting between six and ten thousand aliens suspected of Communism, radicalism and anarchism. The "Palmer Raids" and the detentions and deportation proceedings that followed them were denounced by a number of prominent lawyers and judges who later established the American Civil Liberties Union. Read an excerpt from Attorney General Palmer's 1920 article, The Case Against the 'Reds' and learn more about the Palmer Raids and the Red Scare of 1919-20.

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