icon1234
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So i have this school project where i need to collect articles from papers within the last two weeks and show how they relate to the US Constitution. I found this article in USA Today (shown below) and i am having a hard time where to place in regrades to what article/amendment it could be. I bold and underlined the most important part of the article, does anyone know where that bold/underlined statement can go?
Thanks, and +karma
http://www.usatoday.com/printedition/news/20081008/a_capcol08.art.htm
clickabilityRefresh=15mstartclickprintinclude
"Judge orders release of Chinese Muslims
The
Bush administration plans to appeal a federal judge's decision Tuesday
to immediately free 17 Chinese Muslims at Guantanamo Bay into the USA.
U.S. District Judge Ricardo Urbina said the Uighurs (pronounced
WEE'-gurz), who have been jailed nearly seven years at the naval
facility in Cuba, must be freed because the U.S. military ruled in 2004
that they are no longer considered enemy combatants.
The Bush
administration said the detainees are s dangerous and cannot be
released until another country agrees to take them. China calls them
terror suspects and has demanded their return, but the U.S. fears the
men might be tortured there.
Ruling "the Constitution
prohibits indefinite detentions without a cause," Urbina ordered the
Uighurs released in Washington by Friday.
Justice Department
spokesman Brian Roehrkasse said the administration plans to appeal the
order. He said the Uighurs received weapons training in Afghanistan and
are a national security risk."
				
			Thanks, and +karma
http://www.usatoday.com/printedition/news/20081008/a_capcol08.art.htm
clickabilityRefresh=15mstartclickprintinclude
"Judge orders release of Chinese Muslims
The
Bush administration plans to appeal a federal judge's decision Tuesday
to immediately free 17 Chinese Muslims at Guantanamo Bay into the USA.
U.S. District Judge Ricardo Urbina said the Uighurs (pronounced
WEE'-gurz), who have been jailed nearly seven years at the naval
facility in Cuba, must be freed because the U.S. military ruled in 2004
that they are no longer considered enemy combatants.
The Bush
administration said the detainees are s dangerous and cannot be
released until another country agrees to take them. China calls them
terror suspects and has demanded their return, but the U.S. fears the
men might be tortured there.
Ruling "the Constitution
prohibits indefinite detentions without a cause," Urbina ordered the
Uighurs released in Washington by Friday.
Justice Department
spokesman Brian Roehrkasse said the administration plans to appeal the
order. He said the Uighurs received weapons training in Afghanistan and
are a national security risk."