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Archive for the 'Detainee Abuse' Category

07
Aug

PRESS RELEASE: Aafia Siddiqui claims she was held by the US in Bagram for years

By Dazeylin 1 Comment
Categories: Angel/Attorney, Children, Detainee Abuse, Dr. Aafia Siddiqui, Female Detainee, Ghost, Grey Lady of Bagram, Lies and War Crimes of the US Government, Sexual Abuse and Torture

PRESS RELEASE
Aafia Siddiqui claims she was held by the US in Bagram for years

aafia31Cageprisoners has received new information that Aafia Siddiqui was held for years in Bagram Airbase. According to her lawyer, Elaine Whitfield Sharp,

“We do know she was at Bagram for a long time. It was a long time. According to my client she was there for years and she was held in American custody; her treatment was horrendous.”

Siddiqui’s claim is contrary to the heavily contested position of the US administration that she was detained in July by Afghan forces while attempting to bomb the compound of the governor of Ghazni. The US has previously denied the presence of female detainees in Bagram and that Aafia was ever held there, bar for medical treatment in July 2008.

Sharp also commented about Siddiqui’s current condition and in particular the gunshot wound she has received. Not having been given proper medical treatment for the wound, there is a real concern that it will become infected as it is believed to be septic. She is extremely weak and had to be wheeled into her legal visit.

Click here to read the rest of PRESS RELEASE: Aafia Siddiqui claims she was held by the US in Bagram for years

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.

Click here to read the rest of Pakistani Scientist Charged with Trying to Kill US Authorities in Afghanistan

05
Aug

Pakistani Suspected of Qaeda Ties Is Held

By Dazeylin 0 Comments
Categories: Children, Detainee, Detainee Abuse, Dr. Aafia Siddiqui, Extraordinary Rendition, F.B.I., Female Detainee and USA

..This is such an obvious lie!  How do they expect us to believe these things?  Be sure to read her background under ‘profiles’!

WASHINGTON — An American-trained Pakistani neuroscientist with ties to operatives of Al Qaeda has been charged with trying to kill American soldiers and F.B.I. agents in a police station in Afghanistan last month, the Justice Department said Monday night.

aafia2

The scientist, Aafia Siddiqui, who studied at Brandeis University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, was transferred to New York on Monday, and is to be arraigned Tuesday in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, the department said in a statement.

Ms. Siddiqui, 36, disappeared with her three children while visiting her parents’ home in Karachi, Pakistan, in March 2003, leading human rights groups and her family to believe she had been secretly detained. But in interviews Monday and in a criminal complaint made public later Monday, American officials said they had no knowledge of Ms. Siddiqui’s location for the past five years until July 17, when Ms. Siddiqui and a teenage boy were detained in Ghazni, Afghanistan, after local authorities became suspicious of their loitering outside the provincial governor’s compound.

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04
Aug

FBI concedes Aafia Siddiqui in US custody: lawyer

By Dazeylin 0 Comments
Categories: Afghanistan, Bagram, CIA Black Sites, Children, Detainee, Detainee Abuse, Disappeared, Dr. Aafia Siddiqui, Extraordinary Rendition, Kabul Prison, Pakistan, Torture, Torture flights, USA, human rights and war crimes

aafia1

By Anwar Iqbal

WASHINGTON, Aug 3: Five years after her mysterious disappearance in Karachi, the FBI has finally conceded that an MIT-trained Pakistani neuroscientist is alive and is in US custody in Afghanistan.

Aafia Siddiqui, 36, disappeared with her three children while visiting her parents’ home in Karachi in March 2003, around the same time the FBI announced that it wanted to question her over her alleged links to Al Qaeda.

Her family’s lawyer Elaine Whitfield Sharp said she believed recent media reports about Mrs Siddiqui’s incarceration increased pressure on the US and Pakistani authorities to divulge more information.

“I don’t believe that they just found Aafia,” she said. “I believe that she was there all along.”

The fate of her three young, American-born children is still unknown.

Click here to read the rest of FBI concedes Aafia Siddiqui in US custody: lawyer

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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01
Aug

Source: British Territory Used for US Terror Interrogation

By Dazeylin Closed
Categories: Detainee Abuse, Extraordinary Rendition, Ghost, Torture, Torture Ships, Torture flights, UK and war crimes

diego_garcia_0729

The U.S. military base on the island of Diego Garcia in the

Indian Ocean.

By ADAM ZAGORIN

Almost two years have passed since President George W. Bush publicly acknowledged the existence of a CIA program in which agency-leased aircraft fly terror suspects between secret prisons and interrogation sites around the world. “This program has helped us to take potential mass murderers off the streets before they have a chance to kill,” the President said on Sept. 6, 2006. Since that admission, the White House has declined to elaborate or comment further on the program’s specifics, although multiple reports have surfaced regarding the existence of secret facilities in Poland and Romania.

According to a former senior American official, it appears another locale can be added to the international roster of interrogation sites — one both more obscure and potentially more controversial than the alleged sites in Poland and Romania. The source tells TIME that, in 2002 and possibly 2003, the U.S. imprisoned and interrogated one or more terrorist suspects on Diego Garcia, an island in the Indian Ocean controlled by the United Kingdom.

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01
Aug

Guantanamo judge allows disputed interrogation

By Dazeylin 0 Comments
Categories: "Enhanced Interrogation Techniques", Detainee Abuse, Guantanamo, Kangaroo Kourt and travesty of justice

By MIKE MELIA

In this file photograph of a sketch by courtroom artist Janet Hamlin, reviewed by the U.S. Military, defendant Salim Hamdan watches as FBI agent Craig Donnachie testifies about his interrogations of Hamdan, while a picture of disguised U.S. agents is displayed on a screen, during Hamdan\'s trial inside the war crimes courthouse at Camp Justice, the legal complex of the U.S. Military Commissions, at Guantanamo Bay U.S. Naval Base, in Cuba, Thursday, July 24, 2008. Hamdan, the former driver for Osama bin Laden, is the first prisoner to face a U.S. war-crimes trial since World War II. (AP Photo/Janet Hamlin, Pool, File)

In this file photograph of a sketch by

courtroom artist Janet Hamlin, reviewed

by the U.S. Military, defendant Salim

Hamdan watches as FBI agent Craig

Donnachie testifies about his

interrogations of Hamdan, while a

picture of disguised U.S. agents is

displayed on a screen, during

Hamdan’s trial inside the war crimes

courthouse at Camp Justice, the legal

complex of the U.S. Military Commissions,

at Guantanamo Bay U.S. Naval Base, in

Cuba, Thursday, July 24, 2008. Hamdan,

the former driver for Osama bin Laden, is

the first prisoner to face a U.S. war-crimes

trial since World War II.

(AP Photo/Janet Hamlin, Pool, File)

GUANTANAMO BAY NAVAL BASE, Cuba (AP) — A U.S. military judge allowed prosecutors to use a disputed interrogation as evidence at the first Guantanamo war crimes trial, ruling Thursday the defendant was not coerced into saying he swore allegiance to Osama bin Laden.

In a heavily redacted ruling, Judge Keith Allred, a Navy captain, rejected defense claims that Salim Hamdan made the May 2003 statement under the influence of sleep deprivation or other coercive programs at the detention center on this U.S. Navy base.

The ruling cleared the way for Robert McFadden, an agent with the Naval Criminal Investigative Service, to describe the interrogation to jurors as the final prosecution witness.

Hamdan, a Yemeni, faces up to life in prison if convicted of conspiracy and aiding terrorism.

McFadden, one of nearly a dozen interrogators to testify at the trial, said Hamdan swore an Islamic oath, or “bayat,” to bin Laden.

Although Hamdan supported the killing of Jews and Christians on the Arabian peninsula, he told bin Laden he would withdraw from the oath if “the jihad became Muslim on Muslim or political violence,” McFadden said.

“Mr. Hamdan said he was convinced by the need for seeking jihad,” he said.

In the nine-hour interrogation, McFadden said Hamdan also provided extensive details about bin Laden’s security convoys in Afghanistan.

Click here to read the rest of Guantanamo judge allows disputed interrogation

31
Jul

Army says U.S. soldiers shot detainees at Iraq canal

By Dazeylin 0 Comments
Categories: Death in Custody, Detainee, Detainee Abuse, Iraq, US Troops and US Troops charged

By Seth Robson, Stars and Stripes

GRAFENWÖHR, Germany — Four Germany-based soldiers charged with conspiracy to commit premeditated murder in Iraq allegedly took male detainees to a canal and shot them, according to details released by the Army on Tuesday.

An Article 32 hearing for Staff Sgt. Jess Cunningham, Sgt. Charles Quigley, Spc. Stephen Ribordy and Spc. Belmor Ramos is set for Aug. 26 in Vilseck, a Joint Multinational Training Command news release said.

Click here to read the rest of Army says U.S. soldiers shot detainees at Iraq canal

30
Jul

US soldiers charged with conspiracy

By Dazeylin 0 Comments
Categories: Death in Custody, Detainee Abuse, Iraq, US Troops, US Troops charged and war crimes

The Unites States Army has brought charges against four soldiers in connection to the deaths of several detainees in Iraq in early 2007.
torabi20080723220328437“The soldiers were charged with conspiracy to commit premeditated murder,” a statement released by the US Army said on Tuesday.

“The charges relate to an incident that occurred during April/May 2007 in Baghdad, Iraq, while the soldiers were serving in the 1st Battalion, 18th Infantry (Regiment),” it added.

Click here to read the rest of US soldiers charged with conspiracy

29
Jul

Security services are accused of role in detainee’s torture

By Dazeylin 0 Comments
Categories: Detainee Abuse, Torture and UK

· UK shared information with US, court told
· Lawyers want government to disclose secret files

Richard Norton-Taylor The Guardian,

The security and intelligence agencies were “mixed up in wrongdoing” in cooperating with the US in the unlawful treatment of a UK resident now held in Guantánamo Bay, the high court heard yesterday.

They allegedly gave information to the US about Binyam Mohamed, held incommunicado in Pakistan before being secretly rendered to Morocco where he said he was tortured. In return, the US “provided the UK with the fruits of his interrogation”, the court was told.

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29
Jul

UK torture coverup unravels

By Dazeylin 0 Comments
Categories: Detainee Abuse, Torture and UK

by smintheus

The British governments of Tony Blair and Gordon Brown have been shockingly complicit with the Bush administration both in using, encouraging, and facilitating torture, as well as in helping to cover up the traces. Some CIA torture flights passed through the UK, and British-controlled Diego Garcia has served as one of the primary staging grounds for those flights and itself is one of the network of ‘black sites’. Indeed MI5 agents have arranged the arrest of men who ended up at Guantanamo, and taken part in interviews there - as for example in the case of Bisher al Rawi.

In other words, Tony Blair fu title=lly integrated the UK into Bush’s torture regime. That’s made even clearer in a new parliamentary report just published in Britain. The Joint Committee on Human Rights has been investigating the torture and murder of Baha Musa in Iraq in 2003. Musa was beaten and suffocated.

The Committeee found that top military officials misled it when they claimed that Bush-style “conditioning techniques” used by the British military had not been approved for interrogations in Iraq. Such techniques (e.g. hooding, sleep deprivation, and stress positions) were prohibited by law more than 30 years ago. Since 2004 UK military officials have pled the few bad apples defense, both in their own internal review and in testimony to Parliament.

Click here to read the rest of UK torture coverup unravels

28
Jul

Devoid of the Rule of Law: Pakistan’s War on Terror PDF

By Dazeylin 0 Comments
Categories: Detainee, Detainee Abuse, Disappeared, Extraordinary Rendition, Musharraf and Pakistan

INTRODUCTION

Since shortly after 9/11 – when many Al Qaeda members fled Afghanistan and crossed the border into Pakistan – we have played multiple games of cat and mouse with them. The biggest of them all, Osama bin Laden, is still at large at the time of this writing, but we have caught many, many others. Some are known to the world, some are not.

We have captured 672 and handed over 369 to the United States. We have earned bounties totalling millions of dollars. [President Pervaiz Musharraf]

A question hangs over the international community at the moment. Who is the grey lady of Bagram?

In 2003, prisoner 650 was heard screaming in the detention facility at Bagram Airbase. Her abuse at the hands of the US soldiers led to mass protests amongst the male inmates being detained there. To this day, no one knows the identity of that tortured woman; what we do know, is that she was sent from Pakistan.

Click here to read the rest of Devoid of the Rule of Law: Pakistan’s War on Terror PDF

28
Jul

Guantanamo Brit: ‘I Was Tortured’

By Dazeylin 0 Comments
Categories: Binyam Mohammed, Detainee Abuse, Extraordinary Rendition, Reprieve and Torture

A British citizen facing a military trial in America’s Guantanamo Bay prison camp is launching a legal battle over claims he was tortured into confessing to terror offences.

Binyam Mohamed

Binyam Mohamed was detained in Pakistan.  He says the British government is refusing to release evidence

that backs up his allegations that he was the victim of extraordinary rendition by the US.

Mr Mohamed, who worked as a janitor in London, says he was taken to Afghanistan and later Morocco, where he was interrogated and his genitals slashed with razor blades.

His legal team, led by Clive Stafford Smith, said the case against him before a US Military Commission would be based on statements made during interrogation.

Evidence obtained by torture is inadmissible before the Commission.

The US government denies there was rendition or torture.

Click here to read the rest of Guantanamo Brit: ‘I Was Tortured’

28
Jul

Guantanamo detainee in court battle

By Dazeylin 0 Comments
Categories: Binyam Mohammed, Detainee, Detainee Abuse, Guantanamo, Kangaroo Kourt and Torture

aleqm5gcjiq1j7sc9riyrvmp3m7yyhpudgA British resident facing a military trial in Guantanamo Bay is due to launch a legal battle to force the release of evidence allegedly held by the UK Government.

Lawyers acting for Binyam Mohamed, who is accused of terrorism offences, say there are strong grounds for believing the UK security and intelligence services hold the evidence, said to support his claim that he was the victim of extraordinary rendition and horrific torture.

But the Government is refusing to release it. The two-day hearing starts before Lord Justice Thomas and Mr Justice Lloyd Jones at the High Court in London.

27
Jul

‘UK covered up use of torture in Iraq’

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

taabbodi20080727183233453A photo published by the British Daily Mirror on the abuse of Iraqi detainees
The British government has tried to cover up the use of prohibited interrogation techniques by British soldiers in Iraq, lawmakers say.

The Joint Committee on Human Rights, consisted of twelve members from both the House of Commons and the House of Lords, said in a report on Sunday that British troops in Iraq ” had used ‘conditioning techniques’ to maintain the ’shock of capture’ in advance of tactical questioning”.

Wall standing, hooding, subjection to noise, sleep deprivation and deprivation of food and drink constitute the five banned ‘conditioning techniques’. They can be used by interrogators to extract information and obtain confessions from detainees under physical and psychological coercion.

Click here to read the rest of ‘UK covered up use of torture in Iraq’

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

25
Jul

Moazzam Begg: Who Cares For This Boy? (ACTION included)

By Dazeylin 0 Comments
Categories: Activists, Detainee Abuse, High Profile, Kangaroo Kourt, Minor, Omar Khadr, Torture and action

By Moazzam Begg - Cageprisoners.com
omar4His hair has grown, his voice sounds a little deeper and his wounds appear to have healed somewhat. But what isn’t clear from the first ever Guantánamo interrogation video to be released for public consumption is that Omar Khadr is blind in one eye.

The Bagram airbase lies some 30miles north of the Afghan capital, Kabul. Inside the airbase is a prison, a converted machine-factory built by the Soviets during their occupation of Afghanistan. Inscriptions in Russian are still visible on the walls and doors. During the day, this place is usually deathly quiet. But at night, the sounds of soldiers as they patrol, chains clinking along the concrete floor as prisoners are frog-marched to and from interrogation rooms and screams of interrogators and interrogated usually keep you awake. It is worse than Guantanamo. In this place I witnessed two separate killings by American soldiers - the subject of this year’s Oscar-winning documentary, Taxi to the Dark Side - before I too was sent to Guantanamo. It is here too that I first met Omar Khadr, a boy from Canada who’d just turned sixteen.

Click here to read the rest of Moazzam Begg: Who Cares For This Boy? (ACTION included)

24
Jul

Pakistan accused of disappearing terrorism suspects

By Dazeylin 1 Comment
Categories: Detainee, Detainee Abuse, Disappeared and Pakistan

By Saeed Shah | McClatchy Newspapers

366-world-news-pakistan-mctembeddedprod_affiliate91ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — Pakistan’s intelligence agencies and police have disappeared hundreds of Pakistanis, including children as young as 9, as part of the U.S.-led war on terrorism, Amnesty International charged Wednesday.

The missing Pakistanis frequently were tortured and have been moved among secret detention centers regularly so that they become impossible to trace, the human rights group said.

Amnesty said that allied countries, primarily the United States, had “benefited from this activity,” which began under the regime of President Pervez Musharraf. Some citizens were handed over to foreign intelligence agents for questioning in Pakistan or abroad, it said.

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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

21
Jul

SECOND GUANTANAMO

By Dazeylin 0 Comments
Categories: Bush Lies, Close Guantanamo, Detainee and Detainee Abuse

KABUL: The US plans to build a vast ’second Guantanamo’ were condemned yesterday. Human rights lawyers said they will attack America’s use of its main Afghan base in Bagram as a legal black hole, as a place “where no laws apply”.

Rights lawyers also accused Washington of targeting journalists to cover up its practices in Afghanistan and Iraq. “I think it is very clear that the reason the US chose to build it inside the base is that they did not like the independent decisions that would have come out of the Afghan judiciary,” said lawyer Barbara J Olshansky.

Click here to read the rest of SECOND GUANTANAMO

20
Jul

Torture As Official US Policy

By Dazeylin 0 Comments
Categories: Detainee Abuse and Torture

Stephen Lendman

Post-9/11, torture has been official US policy under George Bush - authorized at the highest levels of government. Evidence of its systematic practice continues to surface. First some background.



america_the_torturersOn September 17, 2001, George Bush signed a secret finding empowering CIA to “Capture, Kill, or Interrogate Al-Queda Leaders.” It also authorized establishing a secret global network of facilities to detain and interrogate them without guidelines on proper treatment. Around the same time, Bush approved a secret “high-value target list” of about two dozen names. He also gave CIA free reign to capture, kill and interrogate terrorists not on the list. It was the beginning of events that followed.

On November 13, 2001, the White House issued a Military Order regarding the “Detention, Treatment, and Trial of Certain Non-Citizens in the War Against Terrorism.” It “determined that an extraordinary emergency exists for national defense purposes, that this emergency constitutes an urgent and compelling government interest and that issuance of this order is necessary to meet the emergency.”

It defined targeted individuals as Al Queda and others for aiding or abetting acts of international terrorism or harboring them. These individuals shall be denied access to US or other courts and instead tried by “military commission” with the power to convict by “concurrence of two-thirds of the members.”

Click here to read the rest of Torture As Official US Policy

18
Jul

Ashcroft defends waterboarding before House panel

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

..Can we try Ashcroft by “Military Commission”?  No?  Why not?  It’s not legal?  But…

WASHINGTON (CNN) — The controversial interrogation technique of waterboarding has served a “valuable” purpose and does not constitute torture, former Attorney General John Ashcroft told a House committee Thursday.

John Ashcroft says waterboarding yielded more valuable information than other interrogation techniques.

Testifying on the Bush administration’s interrogation rules before the House Judiciary Committee, Ashcroft defended the technique while answering a question from Rep. Howard Coble, R-North Carolina.

“Waterboarding, as we all know, is a controversial issue. Do you think it served a beneficial purpose?” the congressman asked.

“The reports that I have heard, and I have no reason to disbelieve them, indicate that they were very valuable,” Ashcroft said, adding that CIA Director George Tenet indicated the “value of the information received from the use of enhanced interrogation techniques — I don’t know whether he was saying waterboarding or not, but assume that he was for a moment — the value of that information exceeded the value of information that was received from all other sources.”

Click here to read the rest of Ashcroft defends waterboarding before House panel

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

18
Jul

Preventing torture needs assurances

By Dazeylin 0 Comments
Categories: Detainee, Detainee Abuse, Release and Torture

..To bad we couldn’t assure they wouldn’t be tortured by us!

WASHINGTON, July 17 (UPI) — To assure detainees won’t be tortured after transfer from U.S. custody, assurances must be evaluated, a new report from the Council on Foreign Relations says.

The report, released Thursday by the non-partisan foreign policy organization, says if the United States is to improve its image after controversial interrogation techniques at the Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo Bay detention facilities, certain challenges must be overcome to make sure detainees transferred out of U.S. custody won’t be tortured by the receiving countries, the Council on Foreign Relations reported.

Click here to read the rest of Preventing torture needs assurances

16
Jul

Jonathan Kay: Free Omar Khadr

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

Jonathan Kay

This is a bad day for Canada. As I write this at 1pm Tuesday, piteous video images from Omar Khadr’s interrogation at Guantanamo Bay are not only the #1 news item on the National Post web site, but also the lead item on BBC News and USA Today. Millions of Web surfers are now wondering why Canada’s government has acquiesced — and as the video shows, even participated — in the unconscionable treatment of a blubbering boy-soldier.

As someone who otherwise considers himself one of the War on Terror’s noisiest Canadian cheerleaders, I submit that the bleeding hearts are right on this one: Omar Khadr needs to come home.

Here’s why:

Click here to read the rest of Jonathan Kay: Free Omar Khadr


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Recent Posts

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