2012年10月29日 星期一

The Dark Knight Rises


Aurora cinema massacre: James Holmes 'mentally ill'

The man accused of last month's Colorado cinema massacre is mentally ill, defence lawyers have said.
The statement came during a court hearing on a motion by US media to weaken a gag order on the case against James Holmes.
His lawyers argued that they need more time and information from prosecutors to fully assess Mr Holmes' condition.
The 24-year-old former PhD student was present at the hearing and looked dazed, as in previous appearances.
"We cannot begin to assess the nature and the depth of Mr Holmes' mental illness until we receive full disclosure," defence lawyer Daniel King said.
He added that the prosecution has police reports, but not any photographs, recordings or expert testimony.
Prosecutors argued that police were still interviewing witnesses and finishing their reports.
"There is a large queue of information to be typed up," prosecutor Rich Orman said.
Twelve people died and 58 were wounded in the 20 July attack at a midnight screening of the new Batman film near Denver.
'Watchdog role'
More than 20 news groups have asked Judge William Sylvester to unseal documents related to the case.
Both prosecutors and defence lawyers are resisting the release.
Under the gag order, the University of Colorado Denver, where the accused was in the process of dropping out of a neuroscience PhD at the time of the shooting, is not allowed to release information about him.
The case file itself is also sealed.
Prosecutors have said it could jeopardise their investigation if information is made public, while Mr Holmes' lawyers have said it could risk his right to a fair trial.
Officials in Aurora have cited the order as a reason for declining to speak about the city's response to the shootings.
But members of the media say that court documents, which include search warrants, lists of evidence and police interviews with witnesses, can be important sources of public information.
"It is performing our watchdog role to look at the process and try to assess for the public how the police have handled the case and assembled the evidence and assure for the and the public that things are being conducted open and fairly," Gregory Moore, editor of the Denver Post, told the Associated Press.
"It goes way beyond what's necessary to protect the defendant's right to a fair trial."
Judge Sylvester said during the hearing that he would consider the media request and issue a written ruling later, but gave no timeline for a decision.
Eviction
Few details are currently known about how the accused allegedly planned the shooting, or the explosives that, according to the authorities, he set to booby-trap his apartment.
On Thursday, Mr Holmes was formally evicted from his apartment, the Denver Post reported, as his landlord said that booby-trapping the apartment, as well as murder, violated his lease.
Despite the gag order, some details about the accused have emerged in the US media.
It was reported this week that the suspect's university psychiatrist, Dr Lynne Fenton, told campus police weeks before the attack that she was concerned about his behaviour.
It has also been reported that the accused posted a package to the psychiatrist, containing a notebook with descriptions of an attack. The parcel was found in the university's mail room three days after the massacre.
9 August 2012 Last updated at 23:38 GMT
from BBC News

1.massacre 大屠殺
2.prosecutor 檢察官
3.disclosure 洩露
4.testimony 見證
5.queue 對列
6.unseal 啟封
7.neuroscience 神經科學
8. jeopardise 危害
9.cite 引用
10.warrant 保證
11.defendant 被告
12.eviction 趕出
13.allegedly 據稱


2012年10月15日 星期一

W1-Dokdo

Dokdo

DPP demand clarity on Diaoyutai talks



RESOLUTIONS NEEDED:The president said he would dispatch more patrols to the area and seek to prove Qing era claims over the disputed islands

By Chris Wang, Stacy Su and Jake Chung  /  Staff reporter and Staff writers, with CNA


President Ma Ying-jeou (馬英九) should clearly explain his view that Taiwan could negotiate with Japan on sovereignty of the disputed Diaoyutai Islands (釣魚台), the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) said yesterday following the release of Ma’s interview with state-run China News Agency (CNA).
“We are not sure what Ma meant in the interview about negotiations with Japan over the Diaoyutais’ sovereignty, as he had not done so in his first four-year term,” DPP spokesperson Lin Chun-hsien (林俊憲) said.
Ma said in the interview that Taiwan would negotiate with Japan about the fishing rights of Taiwanese fishermen around the Diaoyutais as well as the sovereignty of the disputed islands.
Ma should also pay attention to a false perception he had created that Taiwan intended to collaborate with Beijing on the issue, Lin said.
The DPP would not comment on Ma’s rhetoric, which described the DPP’s efforts to increase its exchange with China as “timid,” Lin said.
The party also said it considered a much-publicized meeting between Ma and opposition leaders to be “secondary” because “the priority for Ma now [should be] ... to do everything he can to improve Taiwanese people’s well-being, not to meet with the opposition,” Lin said.
In his interview, Ma pledged to push ahead with the objectives set forth in the East China Sea Peace Initiative based on the core principle of “no division of territory, and common share of resources.”
The initiative was proposed by Ma on Aug. 5 amid growing tensions in the East China Sea.
Ma’s proposal was followed by more confrontation by concerned parties in the resource-rich area — which has been at the center of escalating disputes between Taiwan, Japan and China for years because of conflicting claims over the islands.
“The purpose of submitting the peace initiative is for all interested parties to solve the matter peacefully, as escalating tension in the region would inevitably lead to collision, or even armed conflict. That is something no neighboring countries would be pleased to see,” Ma said.
Defending the nation’s sovereignty claims over the islands, Ma said that geographically, the distance from the island group to Taiwan was the shortest and it had remained an inherent territory of the Republic of China.
Traditionally, the region has also been a fishing region for Taiwanese fishermen for more than a century, Ma said.
As part of the government’s effort to safeguard the country’s interests and fishing rights in the area, Ma said that the Coast Guard Administration had dispatched vessels to escort and secure Taiwanese fishing vessels on 10 occasions, including one occasion that involved a five-hour standoff with Japanese patrol guards.
“The fishing rights of Taiwanese fishermen will not be the only issue we plan to bring up with Japan, as the government will also put the matter of sovereignty on our negotiation table,” Ma said, adding that if Japan refused to recognize the existence of sovereignty disputes over the islands, these aforementioned matters could never be fully addressed.
Ma said that Japan had sought to settle bitter rows with Russia over the Kuril Islands, known as Southern Kurils in Russia and Northern Territories in Japan, and with South Korea over the Liancourt Rocks, which is called Dokdo in Korean and Takeshima in Japanese, in the International Court of Justice.
Taipei Times
Tue,Aug 28,2012

1.sovereignty 主權
2.negotiation 談判
3. perception 感覺
4.collaborate 合作
5.escalate 升級
6. collision 碰撞
7.aforementioned 前述的
8.safeguard 維護
9.initiative 主動
10. well-being  福利