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Archive for the 'C.I.A.' Category

28
Jul

Lawyer asks Taoiseach for information on CIA flights

By Dazeylin 0 Comments
Categories: C.I.A., CIA Black Sites, Extraordinary Rendition and Reprieve

CAROL COULTER, Legal Affairs Editor

THE LAWYER representing a British resident detained in Guantánamo Bay has written to Taoiseach Brian Cowen seeking information on CIA flights involved in his client’s “extraordinary rendition” which landed in Shannon in 2002 and 2004.

Clive Stafford Smith wrote to Mr Cowen on Friday on behalf of Binyam Mohamed, whom he is representing in the US military commissions process and US habeas corpus litigation.

Mr Mohamed, a janitor from Kensington in London, was 30 on Thursday last, and has been detained for the past six years, four in Guantánamo and before that for two years in Morocco and Afghanistan.

Click here to read the rest of Lawyer asks Taoiseach for information on CIA flights

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

15
Jun

America’s prison for terrorists often held the wrong men

By Dazeylin 0 Comments
Categories: "Enhanced Interrogation Techniques", Abuse, C.I.A., Detainee, Detainee Abuse, Torture and habeas corpus
By Tom Lasseter | McClatchy Newspapers

GARDEZ, Afghanistan — The militants crept up behind Mohammed Akhtiar as he squatted at the spigot to wash his hands before evening prayers at the Guantanamo Bay detention camp.

They shouted “Allahu Akbar” — God is great — as one of them hefted a metal mop squeezer into the air, slammed it into Akhtiar’s head and sent thick streams of blood running down his face.

Akhtiar was among the more than 770 terrorism suspects imprisoned at the U.S. naval base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. They are the men the Bush administration described as “the worst of the worst.”

But Akhtiar was no terrorist. American troops had dragged him out of his Afghanistan home in 2003 and held him in Guantanamo for three years in the belief that he was an insurgent involved in rocket attacks on U.S. forces. The Islamic radicals in Guantanamo’s Camp Four who hissed “infidel” and spat at Akhtiar, however, knew something his captors didn’t: The U.S. government had the wrong guy.

Click here to read the rest of America’s prison for terrorists often held the wrong men

09
Jun

All in the name of War on Terror

By Dazeylin 0 Comments
Categories: "Enhanced Interrogation Techniques", Bush Lies, C.I.A., Detainee, Detainee Abuse, Mohamed al-Qahtani, Torture, USA, Use of doctors in torture, Yoo Memo and religious abuse

Fahad Faruqui

Detainee number 063, Mohamed Al-Kahtani, was one of the many hundreds housed in the Guantanamo (known as “Gitmo”) Bay detention camps who was subjected to 20 hours of interrogation on only four hours of sleep.

The Haynes memo, which approved controversial and harmful interrogation techniques, was signed by Donald Rumsfeld, the former United States Secretary of Defense, in early December of 2002. Entitled, “Counter-Resistance Techniques,” this was the memo that opened the door for partial drowning (called water boarding), along with humiliation, mental destabilization and other illegal methods of obtaining information from detainees.

Al-Kahtani, a citizen of Saudi Arabia, is the alleged 20th hijacker, but the U.S. Military Commissions dropped key 9/11 suspect charges against him on May 11 this year.

Click here to read the rest of All in the name of War on Terror

06
Jun

U.S. Secret Prison Ships Hold Untold Number of Detainees

By Dazeylin 0 Comments
Categories: "Enhanced Interrogation Techniques", Abuse, Bush Lies, C.I.A., Detainee, Detainee Abuse, Extraordinary Rendition, Torture, USA and human rights

From: Invictus

The UK Guardian is reporting the United States is holding hundreds of detainees from its international wars on at least 17 “floating prisons” in different harbors around the world. The detainees are interrogated, and then many of them sent via extraordinary rendition to other countries for further interrogation and torture.

According to research carried out by Reprieve, the US may have used as many as 17 ships as “floating prisons” since 2001. Detainees are interrogated aboard the vessels and then rendered to other, often undisclosed, locations, it is claimed.

Click here to read the rest of U.S. Secret Prison Ships Hold Untold Number of Detainees

05
Jun

9/11 Suspects Appear in Court

By Dazeylin 0 Comments
Categories: C.I.A., Detainee, Guantanamo and Kangaroo Kourt

Having spent three years in secret CIA prisons [outsourced torture] and then transferred to Guantanamo in September 2006, captives Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, Ali Abdul Aziz Ali, Ramzi Binalshibh, Mustafa Ahmed al-Hawsawi, and Walid bin Attash appeared in court for the first time this Thursday. Charged with 2973 counts of murder, terrorism, and conspiracy with al Qaeda, the five suspects will be facing the death penalty if convicted.  [in a kangaroo kourt - not a true legal justice system]

Pakistani captive Mohammed, the [ALLEGED] highest ranking al Qaeda operative in U.S. custody, praised Allah in a song and happily welcomed the death penalty, expressing his wish to become a martyr. As the judge attempted to convince Mohammed to accept an appointed U.S. lawyer to defend him, he sang in Arabic and then proceeded to tell the judge that he would act as his own attorney for his religion forbid him from accepting.
Last year’s transcripts from a military review panel hearing revealed that Mohammed asserted that he was responsible for the initial plan to hijack and crash passenger planes into U.S. buildings. On Thursday’s hearing, however, he said that his statements from the hearing were mistranslated and misunderstood. The other defendants are accused of choosing, training, and funding the 19 hijackers.

Source: Reuters [Reuters I am not impressed]

05
Jun

Confessed 9/11 mastermind: “I wish to be a martyr” for organizing attacks

By Dazeylin 0 Comments
Categories: "Enhanced Interrogation Techniques", Abuse, C.I.A., Detainee, Detainee Abuse, Detainee Treatment Act, Guantanamo, Kangaroo Kourt and Khalid Sheikh Mohammad

Hmm.. ten mil for a kangaroo kourt.. but can’t give poor kids health care.. tsk tsk tsk… what a farce..

The flight to Guantanamo Bay is in a word, long. Sitting side by side in web seats in the middle of a C-130 cargo plane for more than five hours was an adventure in itself. After arriving and getting an ID badge, the group of 60 or so journalists boarded buses, which were then driven to a ferry for a short ride across the bay.

The bay itself is beautiful. Rolling hills frame the clear blue waters on all sides. Guard posts and American flags dot the landscape. After arriving at the other side of the base, we made our way to an old airplane hangar that is serving as the media center.

Click here to read the rest of Confessed 9/11 mastermind: “I wish to be a martyr” for organizing attacks

03
Jun

Report on FBI interrogations omits the Lindh case of torture

By Dazeylin 0 Comments
Categories: "Enhanced Interrogation Techniques", Abuse, Activists, Afghanistan, C.I.A., Detainee, Detainee Abuse, Guantanamo, Heroes and Whistleblowers, High Profile, John Walker Lindh, Torture, USA, human rights and qala-i-janghi

Late last month, the Department of Justice Office of Inspector General issued a positive report on the FBI’s involvement in detainee interrogations in Afghanistan, Guantánamo Bay and Iraq.I applaud the OIG’s recognition of a handful of career Justice attorneys and FBI officials who challenged abusive interrogation techniques - and warned correctly that torture would likely taint any legal proceedings against suspected terrorists. But praise for OIG’s demi-candor in an atmosphere of absolute secrecy obscures the whitewash that the report really is. The report finds, “We believe the FBI should be credited for its conduct and professionalism in detainee interrogations.” But to reach this conclusion, the OIG omits one of the earliest and most obvious cases of torture and FBI misconduct - that of “American Taliban” John Walker Lindh.

Click here to read the rest of Report on FBI interrogations omits the Lindh case of torture

25
May

FBI agents watch Gitmo abuse - report

By Dazeylin 0 Comments
Categories: "Enhanced Interrogation Techniques", Abuse, C.I.A., Detainee, Detainee Abuse, Extraordinary Rendition, Guantanamo, Released, Torture, Torture flights, USA, religious abuse and war crimes

AN FBI agent watched Australian detainee Mamdouh Habib repeatedly vomit during a marathon interrogation session at Guantanamo Bay in 2004, according to a long-awaited US Justice Department report released today.

The agent said Mr Habib, a former Sydney taxi driver held at the US military prison at Guantanamo for more than two years, endured two 15-hour interrogation sessions with only a short break in between.

The report said “(Mr)Habib’s condition did not bother” the agent at the time of the interrogation, “but in retrospect she questioned whether the treatment of (Mr) Habib was appropriate”.

Click here to read the rest of FBI agents watch Gitmo abuse - report

25
May

transcript of interview with ex-Guantanamo Bay detainee Mamdouh Habib (2005)

By Dazeylin 0 Comments
Categories: "Enhanced Interrogation Techniques", Abuse, Australia, Black Site, C.I.A., Detainee, Detainee Abuse, Extraordinary Rendition, Guantanamo and Hunger Strike
February 13, 2005 - good interview!

Australian 60 Minutes program - Channel Nine - transcript of interview with ex-Guantanamo Bay detainee Mamdouh Habib.

Transcript: Under suspicion

Reporter: Tara Brown
Producer: Stephen Taylor

Mamdouh Habib.

INTRO
TARA BROWN: Everyone has an opinion. Either Mamdouh Habib is a dangerous terrorist who should have been left to rot in jail or he is an innocent man persecuted because he was in the wrong place at the wrong time. It’s one or the other, simple as that, if you believe the propaganda. But so far, you’ve not seen this mysterious Mr Habib, never heard a single word from him. Now, after more than three years in prison, his story of terrorism and torture, and I have to say, some of his allegations are shocking and quite explosive. For the first time, your chance to judge Mamdouh Habib for yourself.

Click here to read the rest of transcript of interview with ex-Guantanamo Bay detainee Mamdouh Habib (2005)

23
May

FBI agents created “war crimes file” documenting US torture

By Dazeylin 0 Comments
Categories: C.I.A., F.B.I. and Torture
By Joe Kay

FBI agents who witnessed the torture of detainees at the US prison camp in Guantánamo Bay, Cuba created what they called a “war crimes” file documenting what they had seen, according to a report released Tuesday by the Justice Department’s Office of the Inspector General (OIG).

The file, initiated in 2002, was ordered shut down by higher-ups in 2003 and agents were told to stop keeping records of the illegal acts that they had seen. Nonetheless, the use of the term “war crimes” by the US government’s main domestic intelligence arm, an agency with its own long record of political repression, is an extraordinary confirmation of charges that have long been leveled by opponents of the Bush administration and the criminal practices it has carried out in the so-called “global war on terror.”

Click here to read the rest of FBI agents created “war crimes file” documenting US torture

22
May

Report cites inaction on FBI’s interrogation worries

By Dazeylin 0 Comments
Categories: "Enhanced Interrogation Techniques", Abuse, C.I.A., Detainee Abuse and F.B.I.

WASHINGTON — FBI agents repeatedly complained that harsh interrogation techniques used on detainees in Iraq and Afghanistan and at Guantanamo Bay might violate the law and jeopardize future criminal trials, but administration officials did little to address the concerns, a government watchdog concluded in a report released Tuesday.
topten1
At one point in 2003, several top Justice Department officials took the concerns about interrogation practices used by the military at Guantanamo to the National Security Council, Justice Department Inspector General Glenn Fine said in his report. However, Fine said the complaints did not appear to trigger any response from the National Security Council, which includes President Bush, Vice President Dick Cheney and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice.

Although the FBI’s concerns about harsh interrogation techniques were previously known, Fine’s report provides the most detailed narrative yet of how top law enforcement and military officials were slow to respond to the agents’ complaints and how, in some instances, administration officials appear to have disregarded them.

Several witnesses told Fine’s investigators that then-Attorney General John Ashcroft also brought the matter to the attention of the National Security Council or the Pentagon.

Fine couldn’t verify the accounts because Ashcroft refused to be interviewed.

The 370-page report took four years to complete, with its release delayed by the Pentagon’s attempt to keep a larger portion of the report classified, according to Fine. His investigators interviewed more than 230 witnesses and surveyed 1,000 FBI agents.
Click here to read the rest of Report cites inaction on FBI’s interrogation worries

20
May

Report Details Interrogation Debate

By Dazeylin 0 Comments
Categories: "Enhanced Interrogation Techniques", ACLU, Abu Ghraib, Abuse, Bagram, C.I.A., Camp X-Ray, Detainee, Detainee Abuse, DoD, Guantanamo, Kabul Prison, Kandahar, Torture, Torture flights, USA, human rights and war crimes

By ERIC LICHTBLAU and SCOTT SHANE

WASHINGTON ? F. B. I. agents complained repeatedly, beginning in 2002, about the harsh interrogation tactics that military and C. I. A. interrogators were using in questioning terrorism suspects, like making them do dog tricks and parade in the nude in front of female soldiers, but their complaints appear to have had little effect, according to an exhaustive report released Tuesday by the Justice Department?s inspector general.

The report describes major and repeated clashes between F. B. I. agents and their counterparts over the rough methods being used on detainees in Guant?namo Bay, Afghanistan and Iraq ? some of which, according to the inspector general, may have violated the Defense Department?s own policies at the time.
Click here to read the rest of Report Details Interrogation Debate

20
May

Iran busts CIA terror network

By Dazeylin 0 Comments
Categories: C.I.A. and Lies of the U.S. Administration

TEHRAN - The Intelligence Ministry on Saturday released details of the detection and dismantling of a terrorist network affiliated to the United States.

In a coordinated operation on May 7, Iranian intelligence agents arrested the terrorist network?s members, who were identified in Fars, Khuzestan, Gilan, West Azerbaijan, and Tehran provinces, the Intelligence Ministry announcement said.
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17
May

FBI assists with detainee cases, differs with CIA

By Dazeylin 0 Comments
Categories: Abuse, Bush Blowback, C.I.A., Death Penalty, Detainee, Detainee Abuse and F.B.I.

By Randall Mikkelsen

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The FBI is helping to get information from detainees and prepare terrorism cases against suspects at Guantanamo Bay, despite differences with the CIA over harsh interrogation techniques, the bureau’s director said on Friday.

But, in an appearance at the National Press Club, Federal Bureau of Investigation Director Robert Mueller declined to say whether a single U. S. interrogation standard was needed to prohibit coercive tactics like waterboarding, a form of simulated drowning widely criticized as torture.
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15
May

CIA refuses to release info on secret detentions

By Dazeylin 0 Comments
Categories: C.I.A., Detainee and Ghost

By William Fisher

  • Five Years of My Life: An Innocent Man in Guantanamo by Murat Kurnaz (UK Guardian, 04-23-2008)
  • Pentagon?s Guantanamo tribunals are ruled illegal (FCN, 02-17-2005)

Graphic: MGN Online


We need to know what is being done in our name. Indeed, the documents withheld by the government demonstrate that this basic accountability is what they have been worried about from the very beginning.’
Emi MacLean, Attorney
Center for Constitutional Rights


NEW YORK(IPS/GIN) - The Central Intelligence Agency has asked a federal judge to dismiss a lawsuit demanding the disclosure of more than 7,000 documents related to the agency’s programs of secret detentions, renditions and torture.

The agency refused to release the documents in response to a lawsuit brought by three human rights groups: Amnesty International USA, the Center for Constitutional Rights and the International Human Rights Clinic at the New York University School of Law.

The CIA filed a motion with the court for a summary judgment to end the lawsuit and avoid turning over more than 7,000 documents related to its secret ‘ghost’ detention and extraordinary rendition programs.

The CIA claimed that it did not have to release the documents because many consist of correspondence with the White House or top George W. Bush administration officials, or because they are between parties seeking legal advice on the programs, including guidance on the legality of certain interrogation procedures. The CIA confirmed that it requested, and received legal advice from attorneys at the Department of Justice Office of Legal Counsel concerning these procedures.

Click here to read the rest of CIA refuses to release info on secret detentions

12
May

Renditions ruin the EU case on human rights

By Dazeylin 0 Comments
Categories: C.I.A., Disappeared, Extraordinary Rendition and human rights
IPS
Credit: Istockphoto
Collusion between European Union governments and a secret U.S. torture and kidnapping programme has damaged the EU?s efforts to promote human rights throughout the world, an internal paper drawn up by Brussels officials has admitted.

David Cronin/IPS, Brussels - In 2001, the EU approved guidelines on how diplomats representing it should raise concern over the ill-treatment of detainees with the authorities in foreign countries. These guidelines stemmed from a stated commitment to “carry out systematic and sustained action in the fight against torture.”

A new EU assessment of how the guidelines are being applied acknowledges that some governments have accused the Union of double standards because some of its member states have been implicated in the so-called extraordinary rendition scheme operated by the Central Intelligence Agency of the U.S.

Click here to read the rest of Renditions ruin the EU case on human rights

11
May

Pentagon: CIA Op Arrested In Iraq

By Dazeylin 0 Comments
Categories: C.I.A. and Iraq

InfoWars
Kurt Nimmo

Now that ?a joint US-Iraqi operation? has supposedly captured Abu Hamza al-Muhajir, the Pentagon does not have to fork out the $5 million price they put on his head back in 2006. Abu Hamza al-Muhajir, as you may recall, was the successor to Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the miraculous al-Qaeda terrorist killed several times, only to rise like Phoenix from the ashes. According to the official version of history, al-Muhajir heads up al-Qaeda in Iraq.
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27
Apr

Torture Question Hovers Over Chertoff

By Dazeylin 0 Comments
Categories: "Enhanced Interrogation Techniques", ACLU, Abu Ghraib, Activists, Bagram, Black Site, C.I.A., Detainee, Detainee Abuse, Detainee Treatment Act, DoD, Michael Chertoff, Yoo Memo, war crimes and waterboarding

By Andy Worthington

The latest diclosures further erode claims by President Bush, Vice President Dick Cheney and then-Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld that prisoner abuses at Gardez – or the torture of prisoners at Abu Ghraib – were isolated acts by a few ‘bad apples’, says Jason Leopold. John Yoo and some other Bush administration lawyers who built the legal framework for torture are now out of the U. S. government, but one still holds a Cabinet-level rank – Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff.

In the summer of 2002, Chertoff, then head of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division, offered assurances to the CIA that its interrogators would not face prosecution under anti-torture laws if they followed guidelines on aggressive techniques approved by the Department’s Office of Legal Counsel, where Yoo worked.

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27
Apr

Report: CIA tactics given legal cover

By Dazeylin 0 Comments
Categories: "Enhanced Interrogation Techniques", C.I.A., Detainee, Detainee Abuse, Detainee Treatment Act, Guantanamo, Lies of the U.S. Administration, Torture and human rights

Justice Department letters say interrogation rules may not bind U. S.

NEW YORK - Recent letters from the U.S. Justice Department to Congress state that intelligence agents working on counterterrorism can legally use interrogation techniques that might otherwise be banned by international law, The New York Times reported in its Sunday editions.

The Justice Department’s interpretation shows the Bush administration is contending that the boundaries should have a degree of latitude, the Times said, despite the president’s order last summer that he said meant the CIA would hew to international norms on the treatment of detainees.

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25
Apr

The Bush Team’s Geneva Hypocrisy

By Dazeylin 0 Comments
Categories: "Enhanced Interrogation Techniques", Bagram, Black Site, Bush Lies, C.I.A., Detainee, Detainee Abuse, Detainee Treatment Act, DoD, Drugs, Executative Powers Abuse, Extended Solitary Confinement, Extraordinary Rendition, Female Detainee, Geneva Conventions, Guantanamo, Hayden, Kabul Prison, Lies of the U.S. Administration, Rumsfeld, Sleep Deprivation, Torture, Torture flights, USA, human rights, war crimes and waterboarding

By Jason Leopold

Newly released U. S. government documents, detailing how Bush administration officials punched legalistic holes in the Geneva Convention’s protections of war captives, stand in stark contrast to the outrage some of the same officials expressed in the first week of the Iraq War when Iraqi TV interviewed several captured American soldiers.

Then, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, President George W. Bush and other administration officials orchestrated a chorus of outrage, citing those TV scenes as proof of the Iraq’s government contempt for international law in general and the Geneva Convention in particular.

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25
Apr

CIA Admits To Seeking White House Support For Interrogation Techniques

By Dazeylin 0 Comments
Categories: "Enhanced Interrogation Techniques", C.I.A. and war crimes

Kris Alingod - AHN News Writer

aphayden

C.I.A. Director Michael Hayden

Washington, D. C. (AHN) - A court filing by the CIA this week said that the agency expected to be questioned about its controversial interrogation techniques, the Washington Post reported on Thursday.

In its filing for a New York court, the CIA revealed that agency officials had sought the support of the White House since they believed that questions about their interrogation techniques, such as waterboarding, would inevitably arise.
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25
Apr

CIA admits they will continue rendition program, which allows torture overseas

By Dazeylin 0 Comments
Categories: "Enhanced Interrogation Techniques", Bush Lies, C.I.A., Detainee, Detainee Abuse, Detainee Treatment Act, Diego Garcia, Disappeared, DoD, Egypt, Executative Powers Abuse, Extraordinary Rendition, Geneva Conventions, Ghost, Guantanamo, Lies of the U.S. Administration, Rumsfeld, Torture, Torture flights, USA, human rights and war crimes

The Central Intelligence Agency knew from the beginning that its secret detention and torturous interrogation tactics probably bordered on illegal from the start, according to new documents identified through a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit.
bushpresident021407
In a filing yesterday, the CIA said it had identified 7,000 pages of classified memos, emails and other records relating to President Bush’s secret detention and interrogation program. Human rights groups quickly jumped on the filing — which came after their own Freedom of Information Act lawsuit seeking information about those detained.

The CIA also acknowledged in their filings that the program “will continue.” Terror suspects detained or “renditioned” by the United States are transferred to third party countries that allow torture which gives the US a legal loophole to allow harsh interrogation without being legally liable. Such suspects, who effectively disappear, are held without access to courts. The US has refused to produce a list of the suspects it is holding in sites overseas, and only recently provided a list of those held captive at Guantánamo Bay.
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24
Apr

To Kill a Mockingbird, Again?

By Dazeylin 0 Comments
Categories: Bagram, Black Site, C.I.A., Detainee, Detainee Abuse, Detainee Treatment Act, Disappeared, Extraordinary Rendition, F.B.I., Family, Female Detainee, Ghost, Guantanamo, High Profile, KSM, Lies of the U.S. Administration, Military Tribunal, Minor, Pakistan, Torture, Torture flights, URGENT Health Issue, Withholding Medical Treatment and human rights

By Miral Sattar

2006

I had been following Uzair Paracha’s trial closely in the news. I, like many others, was confident the jury would announce a ‘not guilty’ verdict.

Uzair Paracha, 26, is a Pakistani native and a graduate from the elite business school IBA, Institute of Business Administration. He is a legal immigrant who grew up in both the US and Karachi, Pakistan. To further his family’s ventures, he started his real estate business in February 2003. On March 28, 2003, he was arrested by FBI agents at his office and taken to the Metropolitan Detention Center in Manhattan.

Uzair Paracha’s father had asked him to check the immigration status for a friend of a friend, Majid Khan. Unbeknownst to Paracha, Majid Khan was a suspected Al-Qaida operative. After Uzair Paracha made that call to the INS, he was arrested for impersonating an Al-Qaida operative.

In November 2005, a jury found Paracha guilty of terrorism charges for helping a suspected al-Qaida operative sneak into the US. He could face up to 75 years in prison for making a phone call.

The verdict surprised and shocked me. It reminded me of Harper Lee’s “To Kill A Mockingbird,” a novel which takes place in the 1960s. Lee’s story revolves around two children and their father, Atticus Finch. In the novel, Atticus defends Tom Robinson, a black man wrongly accused of sexually assaulting a racist’s daughter. Despite Atticus’ strong defense, the jury in the novel finds Tom Robinson guilty.

Surely, a lot has changed since the 1960s. After all, isn’t justice blind? In the novel Atticus states:

“But there is one way in this country in which all men are created equal - there is one human institution that makes a pauper the equal of a Rockefeller, the stupid man the equal of an Einstein, and the ignorant man the equal of any college president. That institution, gentlemen, is a court. It can be the Supreme Court of the United States of the humblest J. P. court in the land, or this honorable court which you serve. Our courts have their faults, as does any human institution, but in this country our courts are the great levelers, and in our courts all men are created equal.”

But the legal system consistently fails the very people it is supposed to defend. The government offered Paracha a plea to plead guilty a month before his trial. If Paracha plead guilty he would only have to serve five years. Since Paracha had already served three, that meant he would only have had to serve 15 more months. He went to trial to clear his name and instead could now face up to 75 years in prison. After 5 short hours of deliberation Paracha’s jury found him guilty on all accounts.

According to his friends and family, Uzair Paracha was on the path to success. He traveled back and forth between NYC and Pakistan for his family ventures. In Pakistan, Paracha’s father worked in Karachi, shipping clothing made in Pakistan to companies in the United States such as K-Mart. Paracha’s father is a well known philanthropist in Karachi, Pakistan who has built schools, orphanages and hospitals. During one trip in 2003, Paracha says he was subject to 72 hours of interrogation and torture until he told the FBI what they wanted to hear. According to Paracha his confession was a direct result of fear and exhaustion during his interrogation.

The U. S. Government has kept Uzair Paracha in solitary confinement for almost three years. Before his detainment, Uzair Paracha weighed 170 lbs. Currently, his weight is at 114 lbs. He is held in solitary confinement in a room the size of an average household closet. There is no heat and the light is on 24 hours a day.

The Paracha family tragedy is doubled. Paracha’s father, Saifullah Paracha, has been held as an enemy combatant since 2003. Right now, he is detained at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. There has been pressure from the United Nations to close down the camp due to inhumane conditions for inmates. The Bush Administration recently released the names of the detainees being held at Guantanamo Bay. There are approximately 500 inmates imprisoned at the military base without any formal charge. The prisoners at Guantanamo Bay are imprisoned indefinitely.

Even more than 40 years after Harper Lee’s novel was written, I find myself asking, is justice really blind? Racial bias and prejudice again have won. Uzair Paracha awaits sentencing at the Metropolitan Correctional Center. As the war against terror continues, we realize justice is not blind. For some, America is the land of opportunity, but for others who arrive here it is the land of crushed spirits and dreams.
Urge Congress to shut down Guantonomo Bay and Secret Prisons by sending a letter to your Congressman
Urge Attorny General Gonzales to appoint an independent council and release all Torture Documents though the ACLU.
Stop force feeding of detainees on the hunger strike through Amnesty International
Write a letter about the prisoners held at Bagram in Afghanistan
Educate yourself.
Sign the petition for Uzair Paracha and Saifullah Paracha. Sign here

24
Apr

Springtime for Bushies: Torture, torture, torture!

By Dazeylin 0 Comments
Categories: "Enhanced Interrogation Techniques", Abu Ghraib, Afghanistan, Bagram, C.I.A., Detainee, Detainee Abuse, Detainee Treatment Act, Extraordinary Rendition, F.B.I., Guantanamo, Torture and Torture flights

Americans are paying for it, literally, with their tax dollars, and symbolically, diplomatically and politically, too, since now, human-rights-abusing governments around the world are simply ignoring their calls for justice against whomever they may apply their heavy-handed crackdowns. And someday, somewhere, if the news ever emerges that American civilians or military personnel have been tortured by another country’s troops or by terrorists, and perhaps even photographed and mocked in their humiliation as detainees were by giggling U.S. soldiers at Baghdad’s Abu Ghraib prison, what will the American government say? Will it whine, “Hey, that’s not fair!”?

The United States under the Bush-Cheney-Rumsfeld-Rice-Powell-Ashcroft-Tenet political machine is and has been in the torture business - and American taxpayers who are funding it don’t even know where some of the secret facilities are where the abuse is taking place in their names.

In an undated photo, a shackled detainee is transported to an interview with U.S. officials at the prison at the American naval base at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba

An editorial in Switzerland’s Le Temps looks forward to the forthcoming, presidential-election change that will sweep the White House clean of its current occupants, who have done so much in such a short time to deplete the United States’ once considerable resources - including its credibility on the world diplomatic stage - destroy its political institutions and weaken its military. Meanwhile, France’s Le Monde wonders if “Bushism, after George [W.] Bush” can ever effectively be cleaned up by a new White House leadership team.

Click here to read the rest of Springtime for Bushies: Torture, torture, torture!


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