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Archive for the 'Abuse' Category

06
Aug

Pakistani Scientist Charged with Trying to Kill US Authorities in Afghanistan

By Dazeylin 0 Comments
Categories: Abuse, Afghanistan, Children, Death in Custody, Detainee Abuse, Dr. Aafia Siddiqui, Extraordinary Rendition, Female Detainee, Ghost, Grey Lady of Bagram, Prisoner 650 and Sexual Abuse

..The USA are the new Nazis, as you can clearly see from this photograph of her after her concentration camp experience.  Surely the death of her two youngest children and her sexual abuse is enough!  Does she look like she is healthy enough to have picked up a rifle, much less shot it???

By Scott Stearns
Washington

aafia3

Aafia Siddiqui in the custody

of Counter Terrrorism

Department of Ghazni

province in Ghazni City,

Afghanistan, 17 Jul 2008

A Pakistani scientist is charged with trying to kill U.S. military and civilian authorities in Afghanistan. VOA Correspondent Scott Stearns reports, human rights groups say the U.S. government secretly detained Aafia Siddiqui for five years before bringing the charges.

The 36-year-old neuroscientist was arraigned before a federal judge in New York City, Tuesday, on charges of attempted murder and assault. She faces up to 20 years in prison on each charge if convicted.

Siddiqui did not enter a plea at her arraingment. A bail hearing is set for Monday.

Siddiqui was shot and wounded in Afghanistan last month during a confrontation with U.S. intelligence officials who wanted to question her about alleged ties to the terrorist group al-Qaida.

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03
Aug

Pakistani scientist alive, in custody

By Dazeylin 0 Comments
Categories: Abuse, Afghanistan, Bagram, Detainee, Detainee Abuse, Dr. Aafia Siddiqui, Female Detainee, Grey Lady of Bagram, Kabul Prison, Khalil Janahi and Prisoner 650

By Farah Stockman
Globe Staff

300h

Female activists rallied in Karachi, Pakistan,

on Thursday demanding the release of

Aafia Siddiqui, who is in custody in

Afghanistan.

(RIZWAN TABASSUM/ AFP/ Getty Images)

WASHINGTON - Five years after her disappearance, an MIT-trained Pakistani neuroscientist accused of belonging to an Al Qaeda cell based in Boston, is alive and in custody in Afghanistan, her family’s attorney said yesterday.

“It has been confirmed by the FBI that Aafia Siddiqui is alive,” said Elaine Whitfield Sharp, a lawyer for Siddiqui’s family, who said she spoke to an FBI official on Thursday. “She is injured but alive, and she is in Afghanistan.”

The news sheds some light on one of the most intriguing local mysteries in the war on terrorism.

Siddiqui, who lived in Roxbury and studied at Brandeis University as well as the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, disappeared with her three children while visiting her parents’ home in Karachi, Pakistan, in March 2003, around the same time the FBI announced that it wanted to question her.

For five years, US and Pakistani authorities have denied knowing her whereabouts. But human rights groups and Siddiqui’s relatives have long suspected that she had been captured in Karachi and secretly taken into custody.

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26
Jul

“Prisoner Boxes” in Iraq

By Dazeylin 0 Comments
Categories: Abuse, Detainee Abuse, Iraq, Torture and war crimes

By Russ Kick

First Published Photographs of Wooden Imprisonment Crates

In Iraq, some prisoners/detainees are kept in wooden crates known as “prisoner boxes,” so I filed a Freedom of Information Act request with the US Central Command asking for the following:

“Vanity Fair (Feb 2005 issue) has reported the existence of wood “prisoner boxes” being used by the US military in facilities in and around Baghdad. They are used to hold individual prisoners and detainees.

“I hereby request all photographs of these boxes, including empty boxes as well as boxes holding prisoners and detainees.”

Around nine and a half months later, CentCom responded by sending the three photographs on this page.

You are seeing the photos exactly as they were sent to me - as black and white printouts on standard printer paper, with creases from being folded into thirds. Two of the photos are extremely blurry and pixelated.

Considering that the average summer temperature in Baghdad is 111 F, and that temps can easily go above 120 F [source], it’s hard to imagine what it’s like to be inside these boxes.

Click here to read the rest of “Prisoner Boxes” in Iraq

24
Jul

ACLU: Memos authorized CIA torture

By Dazeylin 0 Comments
Categories: ACLU, Abuse and Torture

Nick Juliano

As long as CIA agents could convince themselves they were not deliberately inflicting severe pain or suffering on detainees, they were free to do virtually anything in their questioning of suspected terrorists, including waterboarding. Furthermore, the agents’ belief they weren’t in fact torturing their captives didn’t even need to be “reasonable.”
These are the implications of a controversial August 2002 memo from the Justice Department to the CIA that was released Thursday. The American Civil Liberties Union obtained several internal Bush administration documents it says authorizes the CIA to torture detainees.

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22
Jul

The Abu Ghraib Prison A Gift From the Sons of The Devil and Raping Iraqi’s

By Dazeylin 0 Comments
Categories: Abu Ghraib, Abuse, Detainee Abuse, Sexual Abuse and human rights

As a former Special Operations commander from the sixties and having been substantially involved with the training of US Army combat troops during the Vietnam and Berlin Crisis era – I have a good feel for the nature of the American serviceman, - or at least I THOUGHT that I did. Apparently there has been a substantial change in the moral complexion of young men in this once great country.

There is now a disease – a malady so pervasively evil – among our youth, that it can only be described as demonic. This shameful phenomenon did NOT happen over night but was the result of decades of moral rot in our schools homes and everyday lives. I was once proud to be called an American and would have laid down my life to preserve those freedoms and ideals which were the wellspring of American tradition in the very best spirit of the memories of our Founding Fathers and their Christian based foundations for this brave new world in which I was raised.

Click here to read the rest of The Abu Ghraib Prison A Gift From the Sons of The Devil and Raping Iraqi’s

18
Jul

Abuses of power

By Dazeylin 0 Comments
Categories: Abu Ghraib, Abuse, Detainee, Detainee Abuse, Physicians for Human Rights, Sexual Abuse and Torture

Spencer Ackerman

bilde21If the era of unconscious American patriotism that began on September 11 ended in April 2004, when CBS News and the New Yorker magazine published the infamous torture photographs from Iraq’s Abu Ghraib prison, then perhaps the hangover of euphemism that clouded America’s understanding of its post-September 11 wars began to lift on June 18, 2008. On that day Physicians for Human Rights released a report documenting the experiences of 11 men who had been tortured in US prisons in Iraq, Afghanistan and Guantanamo Bay. The humiliation, degradation and violence had broken them, the report showed, and the men endured substance abuse, psychological afflictions and even suicidal tendencies long after their release.

As difficult to read as the report itself is – it speaks in matter-of-fact terms about the ruined lives of men who, among other things, confess to being raped by US troops – in a sense, it is less important than its short foreword. In it, a respected military leader issued a stark judgment on America’s turn to what Vice President Dick Cheney euphemistically called “the dark side” in the days after the September 11, 2001 attacks.

“After years of disclosures by government investigations,” wrote US Army Major General Antonio Taguba, “media accounts and reports from human-rights organisations, there is no longer any doubt as to whether the current administration has committed war crimes.”

Click here to read the rest of Abuses of power

13
Jul

British soldiers accused of sickening sex assault on 14 year old Iraqi boy

By Dazeylin 0 Comments
Categories: "Enhanced Interrogation Techniques", Abuse, Detainee Abuse, Iraq, Islamophobia, Minor and war crimes

Just days after the MoD has to pay out millions to the father of a man UK soldiers beat to death, fresh claims of abuse emerge

By Andrew Johnson

The IoS has pixellated this image of the boy making the complaint because he is consumed by shame, and lives in fear of retribution from former friends

The IoS has pixellated this image of the boy making the complaint because he is consumed by shame, and lives in fear of retribution from former friends

British soldiers forced a boy of 14 to carry out an act of oral sex on a fellow male prisoner in Iraq, according to shocking new allegations made about the behaviour of British troops.

The Ministry of Defence confirmed yesterday that the Royal Military Police (RMP) have launched an investigation. If the allegations are proved, it would mark a sordid low in the behaviour of British troops in Iraq, and damage further the reputation of Britain in the Middle East.

The victim, now 19, whom The Independent on Sunday has agreed to identify only as Hassan, says he was rounded up with a friend while trying to steal milk cartons from a food distribution centre. He was whipped, beaten and forced to strip naked.

“They made us sit on each other’s laps,” he said. “They were enjoying humiliating and abusing us, I wished I was dead at this moment. Then they made me sit with Tariq… where I was forced to put Tariq’s penis in my mouth. The other two were made to do the same.”

Court action is ongoing over a series of allegations surrounding the British base Camp Breadbasket and incidents that took place there in May 2003. There have been allegations of simulated sexual abuse of Iraqis by British troops, but this, if true, would be the first example of actual sexual abuse.

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12
Jul

Sex Crimes in the White House

By Dazeylin 2 Comments
Categories: "Enhanced Interrogation Techniques", Abuse and Sexual Abuse

Naomi Wolf

NEW YORK - Sex crime has a telltale signature, even when those directing the outrages are some of the most powerful men and women in the United States. How extraordinary, then, to learn that one of the perpetrators of these crimes, Condoleezza Rice, has just led the debate in a special session of the United Nations Security Council on the use of sexual violence as a weapon of war.

I had a sense of déjà vu when I saw the photos that emerged in 2004 from Abu Ghraib prison. Even as the Bush administration was spinning the notion that the torture of prisoners was the work of “a few bad apples” low in the military hierarchy, I knew that we were seeing evidence of a systemic policy set at the top. It’s not that I am a genius. It’s simply that, having worked at a rape crisis center and been trained in the basics of sex crime, I have learned that all sex predators go about things in certain recognizable ways.

Click here to read the rest of Sex Crimes in the White House

12
Jul

Book Cites Secret Red Cross Report of C.I.A. Torture of Qaeda Captives

By Dazeylin 0 Comments
Categories: "Enhanced Interrogation Techniques", Abuse, Afghanistan, Bagram, Black Site, C.I.A., Camp X-Ray, Detainee Abuse, Guantanamo, ICRC, Lies and War Crimes of the US Government, Lies of the U.S. Administration and human rights
By SCOTT SHANE

WASHINGTON — Red Cross investigators concluded last year in a secret report that the Central Intelligence Agency’s interrogation methods for high-level Qaeda prisoners constituted torture and could make the Bush administration officials who approved them guilty of war crimes, according to a new book on counterterrorism efforts since 2001.

The book says that the International Committee of the Red Cross declared in the report, given to the C.I.A. last year, that the methods used on Abu Zubaydah, the first major Qaeda figure the United States captured, were “categorically” torture, which is illegal under both American and international law.

Click here to read the rest of Book Cites Secret Red Cross Report of C.I.A. Torture of Qaeda Captives

06
Jul

Painful Past Still A Reminder For Former Gitmo Detainees

By Dazeylin 0 Comments
Categories: Abdullah Majid Al Nuaimi, Abuse, Adel Kamal, Bahrain, Detainee, Detainee Abuse, Detainee Followup, Isa Al Murbati, Jumah Al-Dossari, Salah Al Beloushi and Shaikh Salman Al Khalifa

Sandeep Singh Grewal - AHN Middle East Correspondent

Manama, Bahrain (AHN) - They suffered torture and humiliation in Guantanamo Bay for years. But even after their release, the six Bahraini men carry with them the dreaded tag as “criminals,” a reminder of their painful past.

It’s going to be one year in August since the last Bahraini detainee, Isa Al Murbati, was released from Camp Delta. Things have not changed since then for Murbati or the other men who have faced problems of adjusting to their situations.

“I want my basic rights of job, housing which is the responsibility of the state. This is how we Guantanamo Guys are treated, no one to look after us. I want to go for Hajj this year, but have no documents,” former Internment No. 052 Al Murbati told AHN.

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05
Jul

US Private Contractor Leads Torture Training in Mexico

By Dazeylin 0 Comments
Categories: "Enhanced Interrogation Techniques", Abuse, Detainee Abuse and Torture
Posted by Kristin Bricker

Mayor says torture training will continue and public officials will not be punished.
[videos below]
Exactly one day after George Bush signed the first year of the $1.6 billion Plan Mexico into law–giving Mexican military and police US training, armament, and resources–videos surfaced showing Mexican police undergoing torture training in León, Guanajuato. The torture training is directed by a British man from an unidentified US private security company.

The videos show the English-speaking contractor directing and participating in the torture of members of the Special Tactical Group (GET in its Spanish initials) of the León municipal police force during a 160-hour training over twelve days in April 2006. Alvar Cabeza de Vaca, the Secretary of Public Security in León, says the participants volunteered to be tortured as part of the training.

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03
Jul

Washington Report Correspondent Mohammed Omer Hospitalized Following Detention by Israeli Soldiers at Allenby Bridge Crossing

By Dazeylin 0 Comments
Categories: Abuse, Detainee, Detainee Abuse, Israel, Israeli War Crimes, Journalist and Mohammad Omar

Sign the Petition

Palestinian journalist Mohammed Omer, Gaza correspondent for the Washington Report on Middle East Affairs and co-recipient of the 2008 Martha Gellhorn Prize for Journalism, was hospitalized with cracked ribs and other injuries inflicted by Israeli soldiers at the Allenby Bridge crossing from Jordan into the occupied West Bank.

Omer was returning home to Gaza after a European speaking tour and the June 16 London ceremony at which he accepted the prestigious Gellhorn Prize.

Journalist John Pilger (c), a member of the Martha Gellhorn Prize judges panel, congratulates co-recipients Dahr?Jamail (l) and Mohammed Omer. Photo Paul de Rooij.

Journalist John Pilger (c), a member of the Martha Gellhorn Prize judges panel, congratulates co-recipients Dahr?Jamail (l) and Mohammed Omer. Photo Paul de Rooij.

Dutch MP Hans Van Baalen, head of the parliament’s foreign relations committee, and award-winning journalist John Pilger spent weeks lobbying Israel to issue an exit permit for the 24-year-old journalist. As has been the case before, diplomatic intervention was necessary to secure permission for his return as well. Nevertheless, Israeli authorities initially refused to allow Omer to return to his home in Rafah from Amman. Finally—after missing his brother’s wedding—he was told that arrangements had been made for him to cross the border on Thursday, June 26. Dutch diplomats awaited him on the other side to escort him to the Gaza Strip.

Click here to read the rest of Washington Report Correspondent Mohammed Omer Hospitalized Following Detention by Israeli Soldiers at Allenby Bridge Crossing

03
Jul

Jazeera ex-detainee to put focus on rights

By Dazeylin 0 Comments
Categories: "Enhanced Interrogation Techniques", Abuse, Detainee Abuse, Released, Sami al-Haj and human rights

AL JAZEERA television said yesterday it had appointed a cameraman held for six years without charge at the US prison in Guantanamo Bay as producer at its new freedoms and human rights programmes department.
“I will do my utmost to reveal to the world the violations committed against humans,” Sudanese-born Sami al-Haj, who was handed to Sudanese authorities in May, said in an Al Jazeera statement announcing the appointment.
“I hope Jazeera, through creating this department would be able to help those who suffer quietly due to such violations.”

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02
Jul

Learning From The Best - Must Read - chart below

By Dazeylin 0 Comments
Categories: Abuse, Detainee Abuse and Torture
By SCOTT SHANE
Published: July 2, 2008

WASHINGTON — The military trainers who came to Guantánamo Bay in December 2002 based an entire interrogation class on a chart showing the effects of “coercive management techniques” for possible use on prisoners, including “sleep deprivation,” “prolonged constraint,” and “exposure.”

Related

Communist Attempts to Elicit False Confessions From the Air Force Prisoners of War (pdf)

Documents Released at Senate Armed Services Committee Hearing on SERE Tactics(pdf)

What the trainers did not say, and may not have known, was that their chart had been copied verbatim from a 1957 Air Force study of Chinese Communist techniques used during the Korean War to obtain confessions, many of them false, from American prisoners.

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01
Jul

Renton man sued in Iraq torture claim

By Dazeylin 0 Comments
Categories: Abuse, Detainee, Iraq and Lawsuit

An interrogator from Renton and two other individual U.S. defense contractors were sued in federal court Monday by three Iraqis and a Jordanian…

By DAVID DISHNEAU

The Associated Press

HAGERSTOWN, Md. — An interrogator from Renton and two other individual U.S. defense contractors were sued in federal court Monday by three Iraqis and a Jordanian who say they were tortured while detained at the Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq in 2003 and 2004.

The lawsuits — filed in Seattle; Detroit; Greenbelt, Md.; and Columbus, Ohio — against the men and the companies for which they worked, say that those arrested and taken to the Baghdad prison were subjected to forced nudity, electrical shocks, mock executions and other inhumane treatment. They seek payments high enough to compensate the detainees for their injuries and to deter contractors from such conduct in the future.

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01
Jul

Bush’s top general quashed torture dissent

By Dazeylin 0 Comments
Categories: "Enhanced Interrogation Techniques", Abuse, Detainee Abuse and Torture

New evidence shows that despite warnings from across the military, former Gen. Richard Myers shut down legal scrutiny of brutal interrogation tactics.

By Mark Benjamin

U.S. Air Force Gen. Richard Myers listens to questions during a news conference March 16, 2005, in Kabul, Afghanistan.

U.S. Air Force Gen. Richard Myers listens to questions during a news conference March 16, 2005, in Kabul, Afghanistan.

WASHINGTON — The former Air Force general and chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Richard Myers, helped quash dissent from across the U.S. military as the Bush administration first set up a brutal interrogation regime for terrorism suspects, according to newly public documents and testimony from an ongoing Senate probe.

In late 2002, documents show, officials from the Army, Navy, Air Force and Marine Corps all complained that harsh interrogation tactics under consideration for use at the prison in Guantánamo Bay might be against the law. Those military officials called for further legal scrutiny of the tactics. The chief of the Army’s international law division, for example, said in a memo that some of the tactics, such as stress positions and sensory deprivation, “cross the line of ‘humane treatment’” and “may violate the torture statute.”

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30
Jun

Israelis Assault Award Winning IPS Journalist

By Dazeylin 0 Comments
Categories: "Enhanced Interrogation Techniques", Abuse, Israel and Journalist

By Mel Frykberg

GAZA CITY (IPS) - Mohammed Omer, the Gaza correspondent of IPS, and joint winner of the 2008 Martha Gellhorn Prize for Journalism, was strip-searched at gunpoint, assaulted and abused by Israeli security officials at the Allenby border crossing between Jordan and the West Bank on Thursday as he tried to return home to Gaza.

Omer, a resident of Rafah in the south of Gaza, and previous recipient of the New America Media’s Best Youth Voice award several years ago, was returning from London where he had just collected his Gellhorn Prize, and from several European capitals where he had speaking engagements, including a meeting with Greek parliamentarians.

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29
Jun

Bush Justice Department Indicts Dr. Sami Al-Arian: The Injustice (action)

By Dazeylin 0 Comments
Categories: Abuse, Dr. Sami Al-Arian, action and travesty of justice

ALEXANDRIA – The Bush Administration’s persecution of Dr. Sami Al Arian reached new heights on Thursday when prosecutors in the Eastern District of Virginia brought charges against him, entering a new phase in the politically-motivated campaign of the past five years.

The indictment charges Dr. Al-Arian with two counts of criminal contempt, relating to two attempts by Virginia prosecutors to bring him before a grand jury investigating other Muslim organizations.

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28
Jun

Guantanamo detainees made to feel like ‘nomads’

By Dazeylin 0 Comments
Categories: Abuse, Detainee, Detainee Abuse and Sami al-Haj

By FRANK JORDANS

GENEVA (AP) — Detainees at Guantanamo Bay are turned into “nomads” to keep them agitated and to punish those who break rules, a Sudanese journalist recently released from the U.S. military prison said Friday.

Sami al-Haj said moving detainees between camps and from cell to cell appeared to be part of an official policy to destabilize them. “They were made into nomads,” the Al-Jazeera journalist said.

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25
Jun

The war on teen terror

By Dazeylin 0 Comments
Categories: Abuse, Detainee Abuse, Guantanamo, Minor and Omar Khadr

Salon.com

GUANTÁNAMO BAY, Cuba — When Mohammed Jawad took the stand in a courtroom at the U.S. Naval base here late last week, he described a litany of abuse he has endured while detained at Guantánamo, including a sleep deprivation regime known colloquially as the “frequent flyer” program.

“Day and night, they were shifting me from one room to another room,” Jawad said. “I don’t remember how much time I slept, but it was only a short time before they were knocking on my door and shifting me from place to place. No one answered me why they were giving me this punishment.”

Military records showed that during a 14-day period in May 2004, Jawad was moved from cell to cell 112 times, usually left in one cell for less than three hours before being shackled and moved to another. Between midnight and 2 a.m. he was moved more frequently to ensure maximum disruption of sleep.

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25
Jun

Khadr aches for `chance in life’

By Dazeylin 0 Comments
Categories: "Enhanced Interrogation Techniques", Abuse, Afghanistan, Detainee Abuse, Guantanamo, Minor, Omar Khadr, Torture and human rights
Prisoner reaches out in letter to media

Noor Javed

Staff Reporter

Omar\'s letter to the CBCNB: Omar Khadr was born in Toronto and is a Canadian citizen, he is not a naturalized citizen as stated in this article.

Longing for a normal life and a chance to return to the country where his “soul” is “connected,” a letter by Omar Khadr to Canadian media offers a rare glimpse into the mind of the 21-year-old suspected terrorist who has been imprisoned at Guantanamo Bay for the past six years.

The handwritten letter was in response to six questions submitted by the CBC, asking the naturalized citizen about his memories of Canada, his aspirations, what he wants to tell Canadians, and what he would do to distance himself from his past.

The CBC avoided asking about his legal case because of the reluctance of the U.S military to allow details of the investigation outside of court.

All questions had to be pre-approved by U.S. military censors beforehand and Khadr’s answers were also scrutinized by the military before being sent to the CBC.

The American military has allowed the young detainee to send letters to his friends and family in the past, but this appears to be the first time he has directly reached out to the Canadian public.

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25
Jun

Easing of laws that led to detainee abuse hatched in secret

By Dazeylin 0 Comments
Categories: "Enhanced Interrogation Techniques", Abu Ghraib, Abuse, Afghanistan, Black Site, Bush Lies, Detainee Abuse, Guantanamo and Iraq
By Tom Lasseter / McClatchy Newspapers  | http://www.bostonherald.com

WASHINGTON - The framework under which detainees were imprisoned for years without charges at Guantanamo and in many cases abused in Afghanistan wasn’t the product of American military policy or the fault of a few rogue soldiers.

It was largely the work of five White House, Pentagon and Justice Department lawyers who, following the orders of President Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney, reinterpreted or tossed out the U.S. and international laws that govern the treatment of prisoners in wartime, according to former U.S. defense and Bush administration officials.

Click here to read the rest of Easing of laws that led to detainee abuse hatched in secret

25
Jun

Interrogation for Profit

By Dazeylin 0 Comments
Categories: Abuse, Bagram, Blackwater, CIA Black Sites, Detainee Abuse and Torture

Congress is finally moving to ban one of the Bush administration’s most blatant evasions of accountability in Iraq — the outsourcing of war detainees’ interrogation to mercenary private contractors.

Operating free of the restraints of military rule and ethics, some of these corporate thugs turned up in the torture scandal at the Abu Ghraib prison and walked away with impunity. Others are now believed to be in the employ of the Central Intelligence Agency at secret prisons that remain outside the rule of law, exempted even from the weak 2006 rules on interrogating prisoners.

Click here to read the rest of Interrogation for Profit

24
Jun

Meet the people behind Abu Ghraib photos

By Dazeylin 0 Comments
Categories: Abu Ghraib, Abuse, Detainee, Detainee Abuse, DoD and Torture

By RENE RODRIGUEZ

The old saying claims a picture is worth a thousand words. But in his new documentary Standard Operating Procedure, Oscar-winning filmmaker Errol Morris argues that a thousand words aren’t always enough.

This is particularly true when the picture in question happens to be one of the photographs taken at Abu Ghraib, the U.S. military prison in Iraq where the abuse and humiliation of detainees, documented in snapshots taken by soldiers, resulted in worldwide anger and disgust.

A lot of that anger was specifically directed at the Americans who appeared in the photos, laughing while holding leashes attached to dog collars around the necks of prisoners or flashing a jolly thumbs-up sign while crouching above the corpse of a suspected terrorist.

Click here to read the rest of Meet the people behind Abu Ghraib photos

24
Jun

We are led by war criminals, says general

By Dazeylin 0 Comments
Categories: Abu Ghraib, Abuse, Bush Lies, Detainee, Detainee Abuse and Torture

By Jay Bookman

The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Army Maj. Gen. Anthony Taguba led the military’s investigation into the abuse at Abu Ghraib, and he did so honestly and forthrightly. As reward for doing his job well, he was forced to retire from the service he loved.

The two-star general has now written a forward to a report on widespread, systematic, officially sanctioned torture by U.S. soldiers and civilians. His conclusion is stunning:

“This report tells the largely untold human story of what happened to detainees in our custody when the Commander-in-Chief and those under him authorized a systematic regime of torture. This story is not only written in words: It is scrawled for the rest of these individuals’ lives on their bodies and minds. Our national honor is stained by the indignity and inhumane treatment these men received from their captors….

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  • [ALERT] Statement From Hider Hanani aka Amar Makhlulif
  • [ARTICLE] The Freshman
  • [PAGES] Five Years of My Life: An Innocent Man in Guantanamo by Murat Kurnaz
  • [RELEASED] 1/6/08 Gholum Ghaus Z
  • [RELEASED] Urgent Action Alert: Rabah Kadri - ‘Disappeared’ in Algeria 4/16/08
  • [RESOURCE] A Prison Camps Primer (Guantanamo)
  • [RESOURCE] Detainee Treatment Act
  • [RESOURCE] Detention and Torture
  • [RESOURCE] Document - USA: Trial and error - a reflection on the first week of the first military commission trial at Guantánamo
  • [RESOURCE] Extraordinary Rendition
  • [RESOURCE] Full Detainee List