vendredi 20 février 2015

PÊCHE MIRACULEUSE: ILS DECOUVRENT 2.000 PIECES D'OR AU FOND DE LA MER...






C'est le plus important trésor numismatique jamais mis au jour en Israël. Des plongeurs ont découvert, au fond du port antique de Césarée, 2.000 pièces d'or vieilles de 1.000 ans, annonce l'autorité israélienne des antiquités mardi 17 février.
Les membres d'un club de plongée ont fait la découverte totalement par hasard. Une pêche dont auraient rêvé la plupart des archéologue. Pourquoi le trésor n'a-t-il été découvert que maintenant ? Plusieurs tempêtes ont remué les fonds marins du port antique de Césarée.
"Ils ont d'abord cru avoir repéré une pièce de jeu" et ne se sont détrompés que quand ils ont ramassé plusieurs pièces, explique l'autorité. Ils ont alerté le directeur de leur club qui, à son tour, a informé l'autorité des antiquités.
C'est l'institut qui a ensuite pris en charge les recherches. Les plongeurs ont détecté environ 2.000 pièces en dinars, demi-dinars et quarts de dinars. La plus ancienne pièce a été frappée à Palerme, en Sicile, dans la seconde moitié du IXe siècle.
La plupart des pièces remontent à deux califes fatimides, qui ont régné de la fin du Xe siècle au premier tiers du XIe sur un territoire recouvrant une grande partie de l'Afrique du Nord, la Sicile et une partie du Proche-Orient.
En excellent état de conservation malgré un millier d'années passées au fond de l'eau, les pièces n'ont même pas eu besoin d'être nettoyées, indique Robert Cole, un expert en numismatique. Certaines portent des traces de morsure montrant que leurs propriétaires ont éprouvé leur qualité avec leurs dents. D'autres encore paraissent tout juste avoir été frappées.
D'où provient ce trésor ?
L'autorité espère que l'étude du contexte permettra d'en savoir plus.
La dynastie fatimide passe pour avoir été fabuleusement riche. Son avènement a coïncidé avec un renouveau du commerce maritime dans l'est du bassin méditerranéen. Césarée, construite par le roi de Judée Hérode 1er au 1er siècle av. J.-C., et d'autres villes portuaires se sont développées sous la coupe des Fatimides. Le commerce entre musulmans et croisés a prospéré en temps de paix, sans cesser en temps de guerre.
Les vestiges importants des époques romaine et médiévale font de Césarée un des grands sites touristiques d'Israël.










La voiture préférée de Cristiano Ronaldo



La voiture préférée de Cristiano Ronaldo !

 20 modèles très rares vendus à plus d'un million de dollars ! 

Greatest military powers in 2015




You wonder sometimes which country has the best armed ?  Here let us repons it  




lundi 16 février 2015

Crime counters humanity



           Crime counters humanity


crime counters humanity, category of criminal infringements including the assassination, the extermination, the reduction in slavery, the deportation and any other inhuman act made against any civil population before or during the war, as well as persecutions for political, racial reasons or monk  —whom these acts or persecutions constituted or not a violation of the national law of the country where they were perpetrated.
This definition was given by article 6, subparagraph C, of the statute of the court of Nuremberg, the international military tribunal charged to judge the criminals of the Second World war, in Europe (see  War crimes). In Asia, the agreement of London of August 8, 1945 instituted a court in Tokyo, which was charged to judge the criminals of the Far East.
The definition perduré in spite of the disappearance of the two jurisdictions and was taken again, with some modifications, in several International Conventions (conventions of the United Nations of December 9, 1948 and December 26, 1968).
One distinguishes the crimes against humanity from the war crimes and the crimes against peace, also definite during the agreement of London of 1945. The crimes against peace are consisted the direction, the release or the continuation of a war of aggression, in violation of the treaties or international agreements. The war crimes correspond to the violation of the laws and the habits of the war. Thus, are prohibited the assassination, the ill treatments and the deportations for forced work  —or any other goal — of the civil populations in the occupied territories, the assassination or the ill treatments of the prisoners of war, the plundering of the public and deprived goods (see  Guerre). The prohibition of the crimes against peace had been stated already in the pact of the Company of the Nations and in the Briand-Kellog pact of August 27, 1928. The prohibition of the war crimes as for it was contained in conventions of the Hague of 1899 and 1907. However, no penal sanction was envisaged in the event of violation of these international prohibitions.
The repression of the crimes against humanity is organized in a very different way according to whether an international jurisdiction or a national jurisdiction of it is charged. The courts of Nuremberg and Tokyo were created especially to judge and punish the criminals of the Second World war and disappeared at the same time as their mission was completed. However, of new organizations were instituted since: the establishment of the international penal Tribunal (TPI) of the Hague, decided within the framework of UNO (resolution 827 of the Security Council of May 25, 1993), answers the same requirement to judge the war criminals, but this time in ex-Yugoslavia. The statute of each one of these ad hoc  courts  (created for the circumstance only) envisages the crimes and the sanctions which the court will have to judge and determines the procedure which will be followed before the Court. The States must then accept, not only the jurisdiction of the Court, i.e. the competence and the authority of its decisions, but also to cooperate with the international court in order to deliver the defendants. This poses many problems of national sovereignty and international police force and supposes that each State adopts a law organizing the dispossession of its own penal legal system to the profit of the international authority.
There is not permanent international penal jurisdiction which would be competent to judge the authors of the crimes against odious humanity and another crimes for the human conscience, in spite of the many elaborate projects either at the international level or at the European level. Consequently, it returns to the national laws to envisage the methods of repression of these crimes. In France, the new French Penal code organizes from now on the repression of these crimes, thus supplementing the decisions of the Court of cassation, elaborate at the time of the businesses Barbie and Touvier.The French right applies, indeed, the rule of the principle of the imprescribility of the crimes against humanity, which means that supposed guilty can be translated into justice without no time being able to cancel the right to the action at law, even very a long time after the accused facts. The imprescribility is exceptional in French right and does not concern, moreover, that the crimes against humanity. All the infringements, even criminal, of the criminal law are prescriptible. This is why the distinction with the war crimes is essential, because the war crimes are subjected to the normal regulation of the criminal law. Gravity out of the commun run of the crime against humanity allows also the implementation of derogatory processes compared to the French general criminal law. Thus, the Supreme court of appeal admitted that the arrest of Klaus Barbie was regular, in spite of the very particular conditions of its expulsion of Bolivia towards France (stop of October 6, 1983). Moreover, the defendant of crime against humanity cannot defend himself to have acted as conformity with the law in force in the country where the facts were made and at the time when they were made, because that does not allow the exemption of the penal responsibility for the infringements made by the defendant, who he was a simple executant or a leader. These exemptions are justified by the world recognition of a kind of natural justice penal, commune with very whole humanity, which authorizes a more severe repression.

International penal court [ CPI ]



    International penal court [ CPI ]


1

PRESENTATION
International penal court [ CPI ], permanent court international, independent of the United Nations, charged to judge the authors of the international crimes: génocides, crimes against humanity, war crimes, and, in the long term, crimes of aggression.
The international penal Court (CPI) is based in the Hague (Netherlands). Entry into force the 1 er July 2002, it gathers, at this date, 139 countries signatories and 76 ratifications.
2

CREATION OF THE CPI

2. 1

A project of long date
Since 1946, in an international context marked by the traumatism caused by Shoah, one of the first initiatives of United Nations (UNO) is to create the Commission of the international law (TDCI), charged to work out and codify the international law, but also to prepare the statute of an international criminal court. In its turn, Convention for the prevention and the repression of the crime of génocide, adopted on December 9, 1948, considers the creation of an international criminal court. But the project once again remains outstanding, regarded as a Utopia of humanistic. In the years 1990, work of the TDCI leads nevertheless to the establishment of two international penal Tribunals: for ex-Yugoslavia (TPIY) in 1993, and for Rwanda (TPIR) in 1994. With a competence reduced to the territories for which they were created, these courts thus represent a considerable limitation of the preliminary draft.
The will to create a permanent international court becomes again of topicality in 1995 pennies the impulse of the Coalition for the international penal Court, an association joining together more than 100 nongovernmental organizations (ONG) with vocation of defense of the humans right (of which Amnesty International and the international Federation of the Leagues of the humans right).
2. 2

Utopia with the concretization: the statute of Rome
Three years later, July 17, 1998, within the framework of a conference at this meeting in Rome under the aegis of the United Nations, 120 of the States present adopt the treaty of creation of the international penal Court: it is the statute of Rome "Affirming that the most serious crimes which touch the whole of the international community could not remain unpunished and that them repression must be actually ensured by measures taken within the national framework and by the reinforcement of the international co-operation, determined to put a term at the impunity of the authors of these crimes and to thus contribute to the prevention of new crimes (…)" (preamble), the countries signatories agree on an entry according to the international penal Court three months after the sixtieth ratification. To the 1 er July 2002, effective date of birth of the CPI, the statute of Rome was signed by 19 additional States, and was ratified by 76 nations.
3

COMPETENCES AND MISSIONS
The CPI aims to consider the "crimes most serious which touch the whole of the international community (…) [ It ] competence with regard to the following crimes has: a) The crime of génocide; b) Crimes against humanity; c) war crimes; d) The crime of aggression "It can judge any person (the CPI is not qualified to judge disagreements between States) being made guilty such crimes, civil or military, and this whatever its rank or its official function, the political decision maker or top graded with the simple executant. It can be seized by a State left (i.e. which signed the statute of Rome), the prosecutor or the Security Council of the United Nations.
The creation of the CPI thus devotes the concept of "universal criminal law", instrument of protection of the international law and order. In fact, beyond its mission of sanction of the international crimes, the CPI also posts a clear will of prevention  —according to words' of the Secretary General of the United Nations Kofi Annan: "We wish to see it dissuading the future war criminals, and making so that no government, no State, no junta and no army can nowhere attack the humans right with impunity".
Contrary to the two international penal Courts (TPI) respectively created for ex-Yugoslavia and Rwanda, the CPI does not have an action limited on a given and restricted territory, but can consider all the crimes committed on the territory of any country having ratified the statute of Rome. On the other hand, if the TPI have, as long as they remain in force (namely as long as the objectives which were assigned to them will not have been achieved), primacy on national justices, the CPI intervenes only in second recourse, if justices of the nations concerned cannot or do not want to continue the people committal for trial.
If it has vocation with the universality, the CPI is however confronted with limits registered in its same statutes. Thus, except for a sasine by the Security Council for UNO, the CPI is qualified only if the person committal for trial is amenable to one of the Member States or if the crimes occurred on the territory of a Member State. In addition, it cannot have any retroactive action: only complaints for crimes committed as from the date of its entry into force can thus be admissible, the 1 er July 2002, and for the countries having ratified the treaty on this date. For the countries ratifying the treaty after the 1 er July 2002, only the crimes committed starting from the effective date of ratification can be taken into account. Lastly, several countries refuse to ratify the statute of Rome, in particular the United States, which refuses to see their nationals exposed to international continuations, whereas they have many troops abroad.
4

COMPOSITION AND OPERATION
The CPI is made up of four bodies: the presidency, the rooms, the office of the prosecutor and graft it. The presidency, which is in charge of the good administration of the Court, is consisted the president, the first and the second vice-presidents; those are elected in the majority absolute of the 18 judges of the Court for one three years renewable duration.
The judges of the Court (elected by the States left for a nine years renewable mandate) are divided into sections (rooms): the preliminary room studies the validity of the requests, authorizes or not the opening of an investigation and prepares the procedure; the room of first authority considers the businesses validated by the preliminary room; the room of call considers the businesses carried in call by the prosecutor or the person accused against a judgement given by the preliminary room or of first authority.
The office of the prosecutor is composed of the prosecutor (and possibly of assistant prosecutors), who is elected for nine years by the Parliament of the States left. Its role is to inquire in all independence into the crimes coming under the responsibility of the Court. Lastly, it clerk's office is in charge of the nonlegal aspects (like the information management concerning a business or the communication between the Court and the States).
In 2005, the president of the CPI is the Canadian Philippe Kirsch (elected in March 2003) and the prosecutor is the Argentinian one Shine Moreno-Ocampo (elected in April 2003). The CPI informs three businesses concerning of the crimes committed in democratic Republic of Congo (RDC), in Uganda and in the area of Darfour (Sudan)  —in this last case, sasine comes from the Security Council of UNO.

supreme court



             supreme  court


1

PRESENTATION
supreme courses, jurisdictional bodies located at the top of the legal hierarchy of a country.
The concept of court supreme varies deeply according to the legal systems of the States. Indeed, the role of a court is truly "supreme" when there is only one higher jurisdiction in the legal organization of the State (case of the United States and Canada), having an extremely broad competence in all the fields of the legal, legal system and policy of this State. Contrary, it may be that a court is known as supreme because it is located at the top of an order of jurisdiction, but that the existence of another court, also supreme for another order of jurisdiction, comes to limit its supremacy to the level of the whole of the legal and political institutions of the State (case of France, Italy and Belgium).
2

SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES



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Supreme court of the United States
This majestic marble building of Washington D.C. shelters, since 1935, the supreme Court of the United States. It is the American architect Cass Gilbert who is the author of this neo-classic structure, symbol of the power of the Court.
In the first direction, it is quite clear that the Supreme Court of the United States is the supreme Court par excellence. Sitting in Washington, capital of the federal State, this one have a plenitude of competences, which means that it is not only qualified to rule out of legal matter on all the litigations in call formed in front of it, but also to appreciate the validity of the laws compared to the American Constitution. It is thus at the same time a constitutional court and a legal court. There does not exist, in the United States, of another of the same jurisdiction row, whose role would come to imitate or limit to it his. All the courts and run of call of the State are lower to him. Its supremacy on the whole of the legal institutions is thus particularly of primary importance. The role of the American Supreme Court, whose international fame is with the measurement of its power in the legal system of the United States, is exemplary. It is justified by the history and the American tradition, but also by the political structure of this State, which is a federal State: the American Constitution of 1787 works out a division of the capacity between the States known as federate and the federal State, which is superimposed on the federate States. This distribution of the capacity on two levels, that of the federal State (or central State) and that of the federated State, must be protected, in order to preserve the political form of the State. In the American system, it is thus allocated to the Supreme Court to guarantee the federalism. One generally finds the same type of Supreme Court in the States with federal structure; their role is particularly essential (the ex-USSR, Canada), as well at the legal level as with that of the political institutions.
The characteristics of the composition and the work of the American Supreme Court show the extent of its competences. It is made up of nine members  (justices)  irremovable (in practice, it happened that certain of these judges resign at the seventy years age, whereas that is not obligatory), in order to guarantee their independence compared to the political power. The judges of the Supreme Court are named by the president of the United States, which despite everything is a particularly manifest factor of dependence, even if it is corrected by the principle of irremovability. They are generally selected according to their socio-professional competences. Their nomination must be confirmed officially by the Senate and it happened that this one refuses that of an applicant, which represents a true public affront for the president (two refusal under Nixon, three Reagan pennies).
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Judges of the supreme Court of the United States
The supreme Court of the United States is made up of nine judges, of which president (Chief Justice), named with life (by the president of the United States with the approval of the Senate) and irrevocable. In 2006, sit there (sitted, of left on the right) Anthony Kennedy, John Paul Stevens, John Roberts (the president), Antonin Scalia and David Souter; upright, of left on the right: Stephen Breyer, Clarence Thomas, Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Samuel Alito.
Matthew Cavanaugh/EPA/Landov
Under its constitutional matter competences, the Court can check if the law passed by a legislative body (the Congress) is in conformity with the Constitution. Thus, if the Court estimates that the law is not in conformity with the Constitution and/or its amendments, it can declare it unconstitutional and draw aside it. It is what one calls  the judicial review.  This competence was not registered in the Constitution of 1787; it neither was envisaged, nor prohibited, but the Supreme Court quickly conquered this capacity in an extremely famous and very daring stop with respect to the capacity, which constitutes all the base of the American constitutional law: the Marbury stop counters Madison of 1803. The Supreme Court has by this decision subjected the capacity to the Constitution, such as it exists in its form written, and worked out a technique of questioning possible of the law,  the judicial review,  by jurisdictional control. From now on, it is allowed that the law, whereas it was already voted by the Congress, can be called into question,  a posteriori,  as for its constitutional validity by the Supreme Court. Thus the American Supreme Court gained in power and authority. Today, the principles of the tender of the capacity to the Constitution and the jurisdictional control of the laws are acquired, and of many foreign countries adopted them as democratic principles.
In addition, the Supreme Court has jurisdiction in the disputes which are carried in call in front of it. In this respect  —and contrary in the majority of the courses higher of the States—, a system of selection of the businesses which it will examine in last spring is carried out. As a higher legal judge and of last call, the Supreme Court examines, indeed, only the businesses likely to contribute a share to the state of the right, and its decisions, which relate to essential aspects of the American social life (right to the abortion, death penalty, rights and personal freedoms), are the subject generally of a very great mediatization.
3

The FRENCH SYSTEM
France does not know court equivalent to the American Supreme Court, which explains a certain number of reasons, especially historical, but also cultural. The French tradition is that of the unit State, i.e. there is one capacity, exchange and exclusive. There is one Parliament and its competence is national; in spite of the phenomenon of decentralization, the French Republic is an indivisible republic (article first of the Constitution of October 4, 1958). In addition, France inherited the French revolution a duality of the jurisdictional orders, by the famous law of August 16-24, 1790, which states solemnly that "the legal functions are distinct and will remain always separate administrative offices".
Consequently, there exists in France of the legal jurisdictions, which rule on the litigations of private law (interesting the relationship between the individuals, like the commercial law, law the labour or civil law), and of the administrative jurisdictions, which rule on the litigations of public law, i.e. relating to the activity of the State (administrative law). The respect of the principle of separation is thus ensured. Each one of these kinds knows a specific hierarchy; at the top is the supreme jurisdiction, the Supreme court of appeal and the Council of State.

3. 1

Supreme court of appeal
The Supreme court of appeal is located at the top of the courts and Courts of Appeals of the legal order; in Paris, it is a judge of the right only. In that, it is not a jurisdiction of third degree (after the second degree, which is the call); its role is confined with the examination of the right, in opposition to the bottom. Seized of "appeals in cassation" (name given to the recourse formed in front of it), it thus will decide if the right correctly were interpreted and applied in the litigation by the lower jurisdictions, but it will not decide a qualification of the facts of the litigation. It is also in that that the Supreme court of appeal is supreme, because it is the highest jurisdiction: the rejection by it of the request for a part involves the final classification of the business.
3. 2

The Council of State
The Council of State, created by article 52 of the Constitution of 22 Frimaire year VIII (December 13, 1799), is the supreme jurisdiction in the dispute of an administrative nature. He is a judge of cassation: there its higher role in the administrative hierarchy is expressed. This role for the first time was allotted to the Council of State by the law of November 18, 1940  —what is recent compared to the seniority of the institution. It is thus with the Council of State alone which returns the task to say if the right were indeed applied by the administrative courts and the courses administrative of call which are lower to him, to the image of the function allotted to the Supreme court of appeal in the legal order. The possibility of forming an appeal in front of the Council of State unlimited and is recognized, even if no text envisages this possibility expressly.
In addition, the French Constitution of 1958 (in its title VII) entrusts for the first time the examination of the conformity of the laws to a jurisdiction, a constitutional court, which one locates apart from the legal hierarchy, as "a class with share": it is about the constitutional Council. Its supreme character is thus dubious, even if its decisions are supreme since they are not likely of call.
3. 3

The constitutional Council
The constitutional Council is qualified to examine whether the law in preparation before the Parliament is in conformity with the Constitution. This examination will be however carried out only if the constitutional Council is received, which depends on goodwill authorities having the right of sasine (the president of the Republic, the Prime Minister, the president of the French National Assembly, the president of the Senate, or sixty deputies or senators, according to article 61 of the Constitution). If nobody seizes the constitutional Council, then any judge, of the Supreme court of appeal or the Council of State, will not be able to declare the law not-in conformity with the Constitution.
The truly jurisdictional statute of the constitutional Council was the subject of very many debates, since this one examines the conformity of the laws before their promulgation, and not afterwards, and that no litigation opposed truly parts. The control of the constitutional Council is a control exerted  a priori,  contrary to the control  carried out  a posteriori in the United States by the Supreme Court. 
In France, there is not thus supreme court to be strictly accurate, since as well Supreme court of appeal as the Council of State are supreme within their own system of jurisdiction, and than the constitutional Council does not enter any hierarchy other than his. The meeting of attributions of these three bodies would correspond to the whole of competences reserved for the American Supreme Court, but the political system French interdict which are thus gathered so much of capacities between the hands of only one body.
Indeed, the fear of a "government of the judges" encourages the States not to give too supreme character to only one jurisdiction. The democracy, according to the traditional design, requires that the capacities be strictly separate from/to each other (even if a collaboration between them is wished), and the example of the Supreme Court of the United States shows that the capacities of which it lays out make it possible him to create right in a very great measurement, and thus to encroach on the capacities of the executive and the legislature. The French revolutionary tradition makes law the supreme reference, and only the representatives of the people can adopt it. The judges are confined with the simple role of interpretation (and not of creation) of the right.
4

The EUROPEAN SYSTEM
In the United Kingdom, it is the House of Lords which fills the supreme role of jurisdiction, but it is connected more with one jurisdiction of third degree (in that, it approaches the American Supreme Court in its legal function).It is not qualified to decide conformity of the law to the Constitution (which usual and is not written), Great Britain estimating that this would call into question the mode of the democratic parliamentarism which it applies.
Exceeding the framework of the national institutions, at community level, the function of the European Court of justice led certain authors to discuss the question of knowing if this jurisdiction were supreme compared to the whole of the Member States and their national jurisdictions. Indeed, the European Court of justice, whose seat is in Strasbourg, has the role essential to make apply the Community legislation inside the Member States, which necessarily passes by the respect of its decisions by the highest national jurisdictions, even supreme (in order to respect the principle of the precedence of the Community law on the national laws, posed by the decisions of the Court, Costa against ENEL, July 15, 1964). The hierarchy which was essential plays in favour of the European Court of justice, but the prejudicial mechanisms of the recourse (reference by the national judge of a question in interpretation or appreciation of validity of a Community standard at the Court) supported collaboration between the supreme jurisdictions of the Member States and the European Court of justice. An abstract hierarchy thus emerged thanks to this collaboration, which is a positive sign in favour of Community construction.
If the unit of the jurisdictions seems to be a significant factor, even necessary to the democracy in a State, the concept of court supreme is indissociable political and legal system of the State in question.


5

SUPREME COURT OF CANADA
Thus, the Supreme Court of Canada made the experiment of a certain number of contradictions and difficulties, which result from its lack of constitutional legitimacy. The will to create a court with the image of that of the United States sufficiently did not take into account the specificity of Canada as a dominion of the British Crown, which a long time obstructed the mission of the Supreme Court of Ottawa. The Canadian Supreme Court was created in 1875 by a simple law of the Parliament, under a general court of call. Just as that of the United States, the Canadian Supreme Court includes/understands nine judges; it acquired the plenitude of its competences only with the adoption by Canada of a Charter of the rights and freedoms allowing him émanciper and to sit its legitimacy within the institutions of the Canadian State.
6

SUPREME COURSES AND DEMOCRACY
The authority of the supreme courses thus varies according to their attributions, such as they are conferred by the Constitution (or the law, if necessary), and from the implementation of the institutions of the State by the political actors. The introduction of supreme courses fulfills the requirement of certain democratic principles. Indeed, the ideology of the democracy, such as it was described by Montesquieu, claims that the capacities are counterbalanced, in order to prevent the hegemony of only one source of the capacity. The supreme courses (with the legal direction) are intended to support the interest of the citizen, who can act in front of them, by the way of the recourse successive. Lastly, the supreme courses ensure the transparency and the credibility of the right near justiciable, ordinary citizens. The meeting of the constitutional and legal matter capacities between the hands of only one body, as in the United States, is very exceptional. Being given the role, considered to be very excessive by certain commentators, of the American Supreme Court, few States, indeed, are ready to as many recognize with only one jurisdiction capacities. No system is universal, nor transposable of a State with another, as shows it the Canadian example, and the creation of a supreme Court requires that the institutions of the State attach solids guaranteed of independence and recognition to the institution, so that this one can fill its role and enjoy legitimacy and autonomy essential to its mission.