US: President Barack Obama Vetoes 9-11 bill

vetoes 9-11 bill

obama vetoes invoice that would have allowed families of victims of September 11, 2001, to sue authorities of saudi arabia.

obama said the bill would be "unfavourable to us national pastimes" [Joshua Roberts/Reuters]

us president barack obama has vetoed a invoice that could have allowed the households of the victims of the Sept. 11, 2001 assaults to sue the authorities of saudi arabia.

in a statement accompanying his veto message, obama stated on friday he had "deep sympathy" for the 9-11 victims' families and their choice to look justice for their relatives.

the president said, however, that the invoice could be "damaging to us national interests" and will cause proceedings in opposition to the united states or american officers for moves taken by means of corporations armed, skilled or supported by using the us.
"if any of these litigants had been to win judgments - based on foreign home legal guidelines as applied with the aid of foreign courts - they would start to look to the assets of the united states government held abroad to satisfy the ones judgments, with probably extreme economic results for the united states," obama stated.


saudi arabia denies involvement inside the assaults on the arena change center and the pentagon 15 years ago, and has strongly objected to the invoice.

the justice against sponsors of terrorism act (jasta) cleared congress in advance this month just ahead of the fifteenth anniversary of the attacks. 

congress ought to override the veto with -thirds majorities in both chambers, that's possible because of the degree's large bipartisan aid. the white residence has been running to persuade politicians not to attempt this sort of circulate.

big apple senator chuck schumer, a democrat, issued a declaration within moments of receiving the veto promising that it would be "swiftly and soundly overturned".

a group of survivors and families additionally pressed congress to uphold the law, calling obama's veto explanation "unconvincing and unsupportable".

"this is just the today's snub of saudi arabia from the us congress," al jazeera's white house correspondent patty culhane, reporting from washington, stated in advance of obama's veto.

"two months ago it launched the so-called '28 pages' - files from an research that have been categorised for a decade. the ones papers traced a link between some saudi diplomats and citizens and the hijackers before the attack. the saudi authorities has denied it was involved."

fifteen of the nineteen men who finished the attacks have been saudi nationals.

in a 2003 file, america government's September 11 commission stated there has been no evidence saudi arabia had funded al-qaeda.

source: al jazeera information and information companies

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