Wednesday, December 31, 2008

Ring in the New Year with SURVIVORS

Dear Friends,

We would like to wish you a peaceful, happy, and healthy new year. Thank you for all that you have done to contribute to making San Diego a safe haven for torture survivors. We are so grateful.

Sincerely,
The Staff of SURVIVORS

P.S. There's still time to contribute to our year-end campaign! To qualify for the current tax year, your gift must be given online or postmarked by December 31, 2008.

Thursday, December 18, 2008

CAN YOU MAKE A DIFFERENCE TODAY?

As the year comes to a close, we are reflecting on the successes and struggles of this past year. Increasingly as survivors seek asylum in our country they are being detained in prison-like settings while their cases are evaluated. This year, more than 50% of our new clients- people we have evaluated and identified as survivors of torture-were or continue to be detained.
Providing services to detained clients is logistically difficult, time-consuming, and expensive, but the services we provide are critical. Detained torture survivors are already traumatized; the isolation and uncertainty of detention frequently deepens their trauma, and makes their ultimate recovery that much more difficult. Without the support of SURVIVORS, detained torture survivors are much less likely to be granted the political asylum they so desperately need.
We would like to invite you to make a difference for this group of San Diegans in crisis - torture survivors. Your contribution will be used to support services that help survivors to recover from torture through a holistic program that includes medical, dental, psychiatric, psychological, and social services. Your support helps torture survivors from all over the world to become integrated, healthy, and productive members of our communities.
Let's work together to show that we won't let torture survivors suffer alone. By making a thoughtful year-end donation, you will continue to help us meet the needs of individuals and families who have fled torture in pursuit of safety in San Diego County. All services are provided at no cost to the survivors and 91% of our funding is spent directly on our programs.
You can make a tax-deductible donation online through our secure website. Thank you for considering a year-end contribution to our effort to help survivors of torture and to help bring hope to them in their healing process.

Monday, November 24, 2008

Wishing You a Wonderful Thanksgiving!

We have so much to be thankful for this year. All of our supporters have offered so much help and encouragement to us and we are very thankful for that! Help us keep the good work moving forward. Please go online and donate now www.notorture.org Happy Thanksgiving!

Interesting article:

Obama to Take On Torture?
By Michael Isikoff NEWSWEEK
Published Nov 22, 2008
From the magazine issue dated Dec 1, 2008

Despite the hopes of many human-rights advocates, the new Obama Justice Department is not likely to launch major new criminal probes of harsh interrogations and other alleged abuses by the Bush administration. But one idea that has currency among some top Obama advisers is setting up a 9/11-style commission that would investigate counterterrorism policies and make public as many details as possible. "At a minimum, the American people have to be able to see and judge what happened," said one senior adviser, who asked not to be identified talking about policy matters. The commission would be empowered to order the U.S. intelligence agencies to open their files for review and question senior officials who approved "waterboarding" and other controversial practices.
Obama aides are wary of taking any steps that would smack of political retribution. That's one reason they are reluctant to see high-profile investigations by the Democratic-controlled Congress or to greenlight a broad Justice inquiry (absent specific new evidence of wrongdoing). "If there was any effort to have war-crimes prosecutions of the Bush administration, you'd instantly destroy whatever hopes you have of bipartisanship," said Robert Litt, a former Justice criminal division chief during the Clinton administration. A new commission, on the other hand, could emulate the bipartisan tone set by Tom Kean and Lee Hamilton in investigating the 9/11 attacks. The 9/11 panel was created by Congress. An alternative model, floated by human-rights lawyer Scott Horton, would be a presidential commission similar to the one appointed by Gerald Ford in 1975 and headed by Nelson Rockefeller that investigated cold-war abuses by the CIA.

Read whole article here

Monday, November 17, 2008

Obama Commits to Close Guantanamo Bay and Ban Torture on 60 Minutes

Did you see 60 Minutes last night? Obama made a commitment to close Guantanamo Bay and ban torture in order to, "regain America's moral stature in the world."

Click here to watch video

Thursday, November 13, 2008

We Still Need Help With the Phone Bank on Wednesday Nov. 19th

We still have slots to fill for our phone bank on Wednesday Nov. 19th from 5pm-8pm. If you are interested in helping out please contact Sara at svaz@notorture.org

Interesting Article:

Obama's plans for probing Bush torture
President Bush could pardon officials involved in brutal interrogations -- but he may also face a sweeping investigation under the new president.
By Mark Benjamin

Nov. 13, 2008 WASHINGTON -- With growing talk in Washington that President Bush may be considering an unprecedented "blanket pardon" for people involved in his administration's brutal interrogation policies, advisors to Barack Obama are pressing ahead with plans for a nonpartisan commission to investigate alleged abuses under Bush.
The Obama plan, first revealed by Salon in August, would emphasize fact-finding investigation over prosecution. It is gaining currency in Washington as Obama advisors begin to coordinate with Democrats in Congress on the proposal. The plan would not rule out future prosecutions, but would delay a decision on that matter until all essential facts can be unearthed. Between the time necessary for the investigative process and the daunting array of policy problems Obama will face upon taking office, any decision on prosecutions probably would not come until a second Obama presidential term, should there be one.

Read whole article here

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

STILL TIME TO SIGN UP FOR PHONE BANK NOV. 17-21

Email Sara at svaz@notorture.org to sign up for the fundrasing phone bank next week. We need your help!

Campaign against torture gears up to lobby Obama
Mercer professor instrumental in organizing effort
By CHRISTOPHER QUINN
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Tuesday, November 11, 2008
An extensive network of religious leaders, including an Atlanta Baptist leader, will begin a lobbying campaign to get President-elect Barack Obama to issue an executive order banning torture as one of his first acts Wednesday.

Read whole artcile here

Monday, November 10, 2008

Sign up for our Fundraising Phonebank Nov. 17-21

Please sign up for our fundraising phone bank. We will be calling all of our supporters the week of Nov. 17-21 from 5pm-8pm nightly. If you are interested in helping please email Sara at svaz@notorture.org

Interesting Article:

Obama Plans Guantanamo Close, US Trials
MATT APUZZO and LARA JAKES JORDAN November 10, 2008 12:13 PM EST

WASHINGTON — President-elect Obama's advisers are quietly crafting a proposal to ship dozens, if not hundreds, of imprisoned terrorism suspects to the United States to face criminal trials, a plan that would make good on his promise to close the Guantanamo Bay prison but could require creation of a controversial new system of justice.
During his campaign, Obama described Guantanamo as a "sad chapter in American history" and has said generally that the U.S. legal system is equipped to handle the detainees. But he has offered few details on what he planned to do once the facility is closed.
Under plans being put together in Obama's camp, some detainees would be released and many others would be prosecuted in U.S. criminal courts.

Read whole article here

Friday, November 07, 2008

Volunteer Orientation Wednesday Nov. 12th at 6:00pm

Volunteer Orientation Wednesday Nov. 12th at 6:00pm

To sign up please email Sara at svaz@notorture.org

Interesting article:

Rodrigo Abd / AP
The Guantanamo Bay facility presents a number of headaches for the incoming administration.
THE ROAD TO THE INAUGURATION
The Gitmo Dilemma
Four reasons Obama won't close the controversial prison soon
By Dan Ephron NEWSWEEK
Published Nov 7, 2008

The detention center at Guantanamo Bay and the flawed justice system created to try terrorist suspects held there are among the most complicated legacies of the Bush administration. They're Obama's problem now. The president elect has said he will shutter Gitmo and put some of the detainees on trial in American criminal courts or military courts martial (his campaign did not return calls seeking comment. But the prisoner mess created by Bush with the stroke of a pen in November, 2001, and made messier over seven years, will take time and resourcefulness to clean up. Here are four reasons the controversial facility will probably still be open for business a year from now.

Read whole article here

Friday, October 31, 2008

What are the Presidential Candidates Records on Torture-related Issues?

The following scorecard is based on records of Senators’ actions on major pieces of torture-related legislation in the 109th and 110th Congresses (2005 – 2008).

If you would like to see the full scorecard click here

Please get out there and VOTE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Thursday, October 30, 2008

Join us at the Pledge to Vote Event Sunday Nov. 2nd

Join us at the Pledge to Vote Event on Sunday November 2nd!
Time: 12-7
Place: Legacy Plaza in Liberty Station- 2801 Rosecrans
Let's make sure we demand our next President bans torture from Day 1!

Check out this article:

Ex-Liberian president's son convicted of torture


(CNN) -- Federal jurors convicted the son of former Liberian president Charles Taylor Sr. of torture and conspiracy charges Thursday, said a spokeswoman for the U.S. attorney's office in the southern district of Florida.

Former Liberian President Charles Taylor's son, Charles McArthur Emmanuel, is shown during his trial.

Former Liberian President Charles Taylor's son, Charles McArthur Emmanuel, is shown during his trial.

Charles "Chuckie" Taylor Jr., also known as Charles McArthur Emmanuel, was found guilty on one count of torture, one count of conspiracy to commit torture and one count of possession of a firearm during the commission of a violent crime, said Alicia Valle, special counsel to the U.S. attorney.

Taylor's case, tried in Miami, Florida, was the first brought under a 1994 United States law saying those accused of committing torturous acts overseas can be tried in a U.S. federal court.

Read whole article here

Monday, October 27, 2008

LAST CHANCE TO SIGN UP FOR VOLUNTEER ORIENTATION ON WEDNESDAY!

LAST CHANCE TO SIGN UP FOR VOLUNTEER ORIENTATION ON WEDNESDAY!

Please email svaz@notorture.org if you are interested in attending the Volunteer Orientation on Wednesday October 29th. We only have a few more seats available so please RSVP as soon as possible! You will learn all the ways you can help get involved with SURVIVORS during this orientation.

Check out this article:

"UN torture sleuth awaits new US government on Iraq"
By Patrick Worsnip UNITED NATIONS, Oct 24 (Reuters) - The U.N.

The U.N. investigator on torture said on Friday he was waiting to see whether a new U.S. administration would change Washington's policy of not allowing him into its prisons in Iraq.The United States has turned down two requests by Manfred Nowak to visit facilities where it holds thousands of Iraqis suspected of involvement in attacks against its troops."They were very clear in saying at the moment we won't change. Might change under a new administration," Nowak, the U.N. special rapporteur on torture, told reporters.Republican John McCain and Democrat Barack Obama face off in a Nov. 4 U.S. presidential election. The winner takes office on Jan. 20.

Read whole article here

Monday, October 20, 2008

2nd Volunteer Orientation Added on October 29th at 6:00pm

We have added a 2nd Volunteer Orientation because of the overwhelming response to the 1st one. The Orientation will be held on Wednesday, October 29th, at 6:00pm. Please email svaz@notorture.org for more information.

This is a very interesting article and something to really consider:


John Feffer
Posted October 20, 2008 09:20 AM (EST)

The Art of Torture

Reposted from Foreign Policy In Focus
The pictures from Abu Ghraib have achieved iconic status. The hooded man on the box, his arms outstretched, has superceded the image of the toppling of Saddam Hussein's statue. The Bush administration will forever be remembered as "the administration that tortured."
Iconic images have a concentrated power. The Abu Ghraib pictures convey, in visual shorthand, a range of messages - the sufferings of all Iraqis under U.S. occupation, the double standards of U.S. human rights policy, the failures of "democracy promotion." They are pictures that are worth a thousand protests. The enduring images from the Vietnam War - the young girl running naked down the street to escape her napalmed village, the bullet-to-the-head execution of a Vietcong officer - acquired the same power of concentration.
But iconic images have their disadvantages, too. Victims of violent crimes frequently talk of feeling victimized all over again when they recount their traumas. Even as we use the images to decry U.S. policy in Iraq, do we continue to torture the detainees from Abu Ghraib when we reproduce the images of their prison abuses?

Read whole article here

Friday, October 17, 2008

Join us at the Social Ministry Fair at St. Andrew's Lutheran Church

Join us at the Social Ministry Fair at St. Andrew's Lutheran Church
8350 Lake Murray Blvd
San Diego, Ca 92119
Saturday October 18th after the 5:30pm service
Sunday Octiber 18th after the 8:00am 9:30am and 10:45am services

Interesting Editorial from the Orlando Sentinel:

We think: The next president needs to restore U.S. moral authority
October 17, 2008
Republican John McCain fired off the most memorable line of this week's presidential debate when he told Democrat Barack Obama, "I am not President Bush. If you wanted to run against President Bush, you should have run four years ago."Whichever one of them moves into the White House in January, there's a simple but critical step they could take right away to make a clean break from Mr. Bush: Outlaw, once and for all, the use of torture against prisoners in U.S. custody.Torture isn't just un-American; it's counterproductive. Veteran U.S. interrogators have testified that it doesn't yield reliable intelligence. It encourages enemies to keep fighting rather than surrender and submit to interrogation. It puts captured U.S. troops in greater peril.

Read whole article here

Thursday, October 16, 2008

VOLUNTEER ORIENTATION

Volunteer Orientation
Wednesday, October 22, 2008 at 6:00 p.m.
Please email svaz@notorture.org for details!

Check out this article:

WashPost: Dick Cheney briefed on torture; secret memos detail CIA tactics
There's a healthy Internet buzz today on a Washington Post story saying the CIA endorsed such harsh interrogation techniques as waterboarding against Al Qaeda suspects in 2003 and 2004 -- and eventually got a written endorsement from Bush administration higher-ups.
According to the Post, the existence of two specific memos endorsing the practice had not been disclosed. It said Vice President Dick Cheney and then-national security advisor Condoleezza Rice were briefed by the CIA director, who wanted White House "policy approval."

Read whole article here

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Amnesty International Walk

Amnesty International North County Chapter’s 20th Anniversary & Candlelight Walk for Human Rights
Sunday, October 19, 2008 at 5:30pmAt the Oceanside Amphitheater - Next to the Pier(I-5 Exit in Oceanside @ Mission Ave. - West to the end)
Featuring speakers
• REBIYA KADEER: An "adopted" Prisoner of Conscience
• BRIDGET SUHR: International Criminal Court
• PETER SCHEY: Reconciliation Process in South Africa
• Joan B. Kroc Institute for Peace & Justice will receive the Digna Ochoa Human Rights Defender Award 2008 Find details at the Amnesty International web site

Check out this article:


CIA Tactics Endorsed In Secret Memos
Waterboarding Got White House Nod
By Joby WarrickWashington Post Staff Writer Wednesday, October 15, 2008; Page A01

The Bush administration issued a pair of secret memos to the CIA in 2003 and 2004 that explicitly endorsed the agency's use of interrogation techniques such as waterboarding against al-Qaeda suspects -- documents prompted by worries among intelligence officials about a possible backlash if details of the program became public.
The classified memos, which have not been previously disclosed, were requested by then-CIA Director George J. Tenet more than a year after the start of the secret interrogations, according to four administration and intelligence officials familiar with the documents. Although Justice Department lawyers, beginning in 2002, had signed off on the agency's interrogation methods, senior CIA officials were troubled that White House policymakers had never endorsed the program in writing.

Read whole article here

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

"My Guantanamo Diary" event with author Mahvish Rukhsana Khan
Tuesday, October 21, 2008 at 7:00 p.m.
Location: Multipurpose Room in the student services center, UCSD.Address: 9500 Gilman Dr, La Jolla, CA, 92093
Cost: Free


Mahvish Rukhsana Khan's 'My Guantánamo Diary'

My Guantánamo Diary The Detainees and the Stories They Told Me. By Mahvish Rukhsana Khan. Illustrated. 302 pages. $25.95. PublicAffairs.
In 2005, while a law student at the University of Miami, Mahvish Rukhsana Khan decided to volunteer as an interpreter for Afghan detainees at Guantánamo Bay. The American daughter of Afghan immigrants (her parents are Johns Hopkins-educated physicians), Khan thought it unfair that the detainees could not understand their lawyers, who did not speak Pashto, and although she didn't know whether they were guilty, she believed they were entitled to prove their innocence.

Read the whole Article

Monday, October 13, 2008

Please join us for the Academy Award Winning Documentary Screening of
"Taxi to the Dark Side"
Tuesday, October 21, 2008 at 9:30 a.m.
Location: San Diego City College, Room D121A1313 Park Blvd, San Diego, CA 92101
Cost: Free
This event is co hosted with the Amnesty International Club at City College

In 2002 taxi driver Dilawar was picked up by US forces with his passengers in the desert and taken to Bagram prison in Afghanistan. Five days later he was dead. Injuries to his legs were compared with those he would have sustained if he had been run over by a truck – had he lived it was likely that his legs would have had to have been amputated due to the damage. With this as the starting point, this documentary tells the story of the role of "torture" in the war on terror, from Abu Ghraid to Guantanamo

Check out this article on the potential release of Chinese Muslims from Guantanamo Bay:

After nearly 7 years at Guantanamo, Chinese Muslims set to be freed this week are told to wait
By HOPE YEN Associated Press Writer
8:14 AM EDT, October 9, 2008
WASHINGTON (AP) _ A group of Chinese Muslims set to be freed into the U.S. this week from Guantanamo Bay found their freedom stymied yet again after a simple government plea: What's a couple more weeks or so in jail after nearly seven years?That in essence was the Bush administration's argument to a federal appeals court in a 19-page emergency request that maintained there would be only "minimal harms" if the detainees were to stay at Guantanamo a while longer.Late Wednesday, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit agreed, halting the 17 men's release for at least another week to give the government more time to make arguments in the case.

Read the whole article

Wednesday, September 10, 2008

A “little death penalty” case: One refugee’s story of seeking protection in the United States.

A fascinating interview from inthefray.org about the story of a Kenyan farmer who, after being tortured for organizing a protest, applied for asylum in the United States .

David Kenney was a political activist in his native Kenya in the early 1990s. He didn’t choose to become a political activist; he was a peasant farmer trying to grow tea and making a living. By doing so he discovered he couldn’t make a living growing tea because the price the government was paying was so low that it was causing him to lose money to grow tea. And yet the contract he had signed with the government monopoly prevented him from growing any other crops on his land.

So he organized a farmers’ boycott and protest to try to get the government to justify its policy or change it. And as a result, he was put in jail [and] nearly executed at gunpoint in a forest. He was saved at the last minute because the security forces of Kenya thought he could be more useful to the regime alive than dead. So they tortured him for a week, putting him in a water-filled cell in which he was in constant threat of being killed by drowning, and eventually put in solitary confinement for eight months.

...

He ended up coming to the United States on a basketball scholarship. He got a U.S. college degree, and when his education was over, Daniel arap Moi, who was in charge of Kenya when he was jailed and tortured, was still in power. So he applied for asylum. The book tells the story of his four-year struggle with our immigration services, in which he was constantly denied asylum by one bureaucracy after another, and eventually forced to go back to Africa, where he was nearly killed once again.


Read the whole article

Wednesday, September 03, 2008

Lawyers for Detainee Assert Coercion

A brief article from The New York Times relating an account by Salim Hamdan, Osama Bin Laden's driver and the first detainee tried for war crimes, of sexual humiliation and coercion at Guantanamo.

A secret government document submitted at the trial of the first detainee to face a war crimes trial confirms the detainee’s account of having been sexually humiliated while interrogated by a female government agent, defense lawyers said at the tribunal here on Wednesday.

The lawyers described the document as an account by the unidentified agent and said it bolstered their claim that their client, Salim Hamdan, was subjected to measures at Guantánamo including late-night interrogations that amounted to coercion.

One of the lawyers, Harry H. Schneider Jr., said in the courtroom that Mr. Hamdan was “right on the money” in his description of a female interrogator’s physical contact with him in a way that a Muslim man would find nearly unbearable.


read the brief article

Wednesday, August 27, 2008

California Becomes First State to Condemn Use of Torture in ‘War on Terror’

An encouraging article from California Progress Report about the State of California's strong stance against torture and initiative in challenging the interrogation policies of the federal government.

On Thursday, the California Legislature adopted SJR 19, a resolution to prevent the state’s licensed health professionals from engaging in torture.

As a result of SJR 19, state medical boards will inform health professionals of their obligations under both domestic and international law regarding treatment of prisoners and detainees. They will be warned that if they participate in interrogations that do not conform to these standards, they risk future prosecution. The state will also request the Department of Defense and Central Intelligence Agency to remove California doctors and psychologists from settings that fall short of international standards of treatment.

The myth that the U.S. does not torture is coming apart at the seams. Every week there are new revelations of misconduct. The abuses are not the result of “a few bad apples,” but rather stem from a short-sighted and reckless policy that has damaged the lives of countless people held in U.S. custody, attacked the emotional and spiritual well-being of American soldiers who have witnessed it and undermined the moral authority of America in the world community.

Read the entire article

Wednesday, August 20, 2008


Two Women Sentenced to ‘Re-education’ in China


An interesting and revealing article in The New York Times about disturbing human rights violations and the suppression of freedom of speech in China.



Two elderly Chinese women have been sentenced to a year of “re-education
through labor” after they repeatedly sought a permit to demonstrate in one of
the official Olympic protest areas, according to family members and human rights
advocates.

The women, Wu Dianyuan, 79, and Wang Xiuying, 77, had made five visits to
the police this month in an effort to get permission to protest what they
contended was inadequate compensation for the demolition of their homes in
Beijing.

Tuesday, August 19, 2008

Nobel nominee in torture ban call

Brief blurb in the BBC about a call for an international ban on torture during the 12th World Congress on Pain.

A several-time nominee for the Nobel Peace Prize has led calls at a
conference in Glasgow, for an international ban on torture.
Dr Inge Genefke
urged more than 45 countries to sign the United Nations Convention Against
Torture.
The Danish activist was speaking at the 12th World Congress on Pain
on Tuesday.
About 5,000 delegates are expected to attend between 17 and 22
August. The congress will also discuss the latest research and treatment of
pain.

link to article here

Friday, August 15, 2008


Detainee Death

The New York Times has created an excellent video relating the story of Boubacar Bah who died in the at an Immigration Detention Center:

Word spread quickly inside the windowless walls of the Elizabeth Detention Center, an immigration jail in New Jersey: A detainee had fallen, injured his head and become incoherent. Guards had put him in solitary confinement, and late that night, an ambulance had taken him away more dead than alive.

But outside, for five days, no official notified the family of the detainee, Boubacar Bah, a 52-year-old tailor from Guinea who had overstayed a tourist visa. When frantic relatives located him at University Hospital in Newark on Feb. 5, 2007, he was in a coma after emergency surgery for a skull fracture and multiple brain hemorrhages. He died there four months later without ever waking up, leaving family members on two continents trying to find out why.

Mr. Bah’s name is one of 66 on a government list of deaths that occurred in immigration custody from January 2004 to November 2007, when nearly a million people passed through.



Watch the video.

Wednesday, August 13, 2008


Ill and in Pain, Detainee Dies in U.S. Hands

This New York Times article describes some of the inadequate care and shameful neglect that detainees often suffer in detention facilities throughout the United States. Diseases are left undiagnosed and detainees often endure great pain without any relief or concern shown to them.

But when Mr. Ng, who had overstayed a visa years earlier, went to immigration headquarters in Manhattan last summer for his final interview for a green card, he was swept into immigration detention and shuttled through jails and detention centers in three New England states.

In April, Mr. Ng began complaining of excruciating back pain. By mid-July, he could no longer walk or stand. And last Wednesday, two days after his 34th birthday, he died in the custody of Immigration and Customs Enforcement in a Rhode Island hospital, his spine fractured and his body riddled with cancer that had gone undiagnosed and untreated for months.

...

In federal court affidavits, Mr. Ng’s lawyers contend that when he complained of severe pain that did not respond to analgesics, and grew too weak to walk or even stand to call his family from a detention pay phone, officials accused him of faking his condition. They denied him a wheelchair and refused pleas for an independent medical evaluation.

Instead, the affidavits say, guards at the Donald W. Wyatt Detention Facility in Central Falls, R.I., dragged him from his bed on July 30, carried him in shackles to a car, bruising his arms and legs, and drove him two hours to a federal lockup in Hartford, where an immigration officer pressured him to withdraw all pending appeals of his case and accept deportation.

“For this desperately sick, vulnerable person, this was torture,” said Theodore N. Cox, one of Mr. Ng’s lawyers, adding that they want to see a videotape of the transport made by guards.


Read the whole article

Tuesday, August 12, 2008


Detention at Guantanamo

The BBC recently published an informative article that deals with the legality of the detainees at Guantanamo and the various processes that defendants are subjected to.


What about evidence obtained by torture or coercion?

Evidence obtained under torture will not be permitted, but evidence obtained by coercion could be.

One problem is that "waterboarding" is not classified as torture by the Bush administration.

If evidence was obtained before 30 December 2005 (that is, the date when the Detainee Treatment Act came into force, outlawing "cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment"), the military judge can allow the evidence if "the totality of the circumstances renders the statement reliable" and "the interests of justice would best be served".

This suggests that some evidence obtained in the so-called "secret prisons" operated by the CIA might be admissible. If it was obtained after 30 December 2005, then the judge would also have to be satisfied that no "cruel, degrading or inhumane treatment" had been used.


Read the whole article

Tuesday, August 05, 2008

American Purgatory

A new project has been launched to take a detailed look at the political asylum system since 9/11. This website offers commentary from all sides, an audio of interviews, and a list of credible resources:

American Purgatory is a rare look into the asylum process from start to finish through the eyes of an asylum applicant. The documentary takes listeners into the process of applying for asylum through the eyes of "H", an asylum seeker from a former Soviet country who came to New York in 2005.

H was represented by lawyers from a large New York law firm that took on his case pro bono (free of charge). Very few asylum seekers are lucky enough to have lawyers. H goes through the process with their help, but throughout, he struggles to pay his rent and support himself without financial assistance or the legal right to work.

H's journey is surrounded by stories from others who have been through the asylum process—some without lawyers, some who were in detention—along with people involved in the system, including asylum officers, lawyers, advocates and critics, as well as the US immigration service and Homeland Security.

Through the voices of asylum seekers, asylum advocates and those responsible for enforcing U.S. asylum laws, American Purgatory explores the contradictions of a process that is there to protect people in distress, but also has to vet fraudulent applications and infiltration by terrorists.


Visit the website.

Monday, August 04, 2008


Activist Sentenced to Egyptian Prison

The Jurist is reporting that a dual US and Egyptian professor is accused of defaming Egypt:

A judge in an Egyptian court Saturday convicted a prominent human rights activist and outspoken critic of President Hosni Mubarak in absentia of defaming Egypt and sentenced him to two years in prison. Saad Eddin Ibrahim [profile], a dual US and Egyptian citizen who is a professor of sociology at the American University in Cairo and who founded the Ibn Khaldoun Centre for Development Studies [academic websites] in Egypt, had been accused of defaming Egypt by criticizing its human rights practices and politics. Following the accusations, he decided to leave Egypt in 2007, writing [text] in the Washington Post:
Sadly, this regime has strayed so far from the rule of law that, for my own safety, I have been warned not to return to Egypt. Regime insiders and those in Cairo's diplomatic circles have said that I will be arrested or worse. My family is worried, knowing that Egypt's jails contain some 80,000 political prisoners and that disappearances are routinely ignored or chalked up to accidents. My fear is that these abuses will spread if Egypt's allies and friends continue to stand by silently while this regime suppresses the country's democratic reformers.
Ibrahim reportedly agreed to return to Egypt if he received assurances that he would not be immediately arrested. The judge Saturday said that Ibrahim could pay 10,000 Egyptian pounds ($1,890 USD) for bail, and that he would have the opportunity to appeal. Reuters has more. AFP has additional coverage.


Read the whole article

Tuesday, July 29, 2008


Guantanamo Bay Trials Begin

The New York Times reports the beginning of the Guantanamo Bay trails. The report concludes that this is not only a trial for Salim Hamdan but also a trial for these tribunals:

Mr. Hamdan’s trial is, in a sense, two trials. Mr. Hamdan is being tried on accusations of conspiracy and material support of terrorism. And the Bush administration’s military commission system itself is on trial. After years of debate, protest and litigation, the legal standing of the tribunal system at Guantánamo remains a question for American courts and officials around the world.

The chief Guantánamo prosecutor, Col. Lawrence J. Morris of the Army, said this first Guantánamo tribunal was “the most just war crimes trial that anybody has ever seen.”

Matt Pollard, a legal adviser for Amnesty International who is an observer here, sees it differently. He said he was struck by a sense that the proceedings were more of a replica of a trial than a real one.

“We are within a frame of a beautiful picture,” created by the Pentagon, Mr. Pollard said. “When you’re inside that frame, everything looks nice.”

The Guantánamo legal system was intended to try “unlawful enemy combatants” caught on the post-Sept. 11 battlefield. Prosecutors say there is little room for the usual legal restrictions in interrogations intended to prevent a terrorist attack. The administration’s strategy in using the Guantánamo naval station was based on its belief that the Constitution would not apply here.

Legal challenges to that assertion are among a number of factors that have delayed the government’s efforts to conduct trials here for years.


Read the whole report.

Friday, July 25, 2008

More Visas for Iraqis

The New York Times reports that the United States has expanded its Visa program ten fold for those Iraqis employed by the American government in Baghdad:

Although the program was established by law in January, it has become a practical reality just in the last two to three weeks as guidelines have been finalized and the embassy has brought in staff members and started processing applications.

The decision is the latest step in the administration’s attempt to answer sharp criticism over its failure to help even those Iraqis who have made the American presence in Iraq possible by serving as translators and supervisors on embassy projects, for the American military and for the Agency for International Development. But critics in the refugee relief community noted that the State Department had promised several times that it would try to speed up the process, and that it had not come through.

State Department officials attribute the gap between words and deeds to a cumbersome refugee resettlement system that includes fingerprinting, job checks, name checks and interviews.

The program will allow 5,000 Iraqis to go to the United States for each of the next five years. Each person can take immediate family members, who include spouses and children. More distant relatives, including siblings, parents and grandchildren, can apply under another program. So the actual numbers emigrating will probably be considerably higher. The average Iraqi household is estimated to have about six people, according to officials from the International Organization for Migration.


Read more.

Tuesday, July 22, 2008


Radovan Karadzic Captured

Bosnian Serb war criminal Radovan Karadzic was captured this week in Belgrade. The BBC has created an intense and thorough report on the rise and fall of Karadzic:

The former Bosnian Serb leader was arrested on Monday near Belgrade after more than a decade on the run.

He has been indicted by the UN tribunal for war crimes and genocide relating to the war in Bosnia in the mid-1990s.

The UN says Mr Karadzic's forces killed up to 8,000 Bosniak men and boys from Srebrenica in July 1995 as part of a campaign to "terrorise and demoralise the Bosnian Muslim and Bosnian Croat population".

He has also been charged over the shelling of Sarajevo, and the use of 284 UN peacekeepers as human shields in May and June 1995.


Go here to read the full report.

Tuesday, July 15, 2008


ICC Warrant for President Omar Hassan al-Bashir

According to the New York Times:

The prosecutor at the International Criminal Court formally requested an arrest warrant on Monday for Sudan’s president, Omar Hassan al-Bashir, on charges of genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity committed during the past five years of bloodshed in the Darfur region of his country.

The prosecutor’s pursuit of Mr. Bashir introduced new volatility to the already chaotic situation in Darfur. While some diplomats and analysts worried that the move would undermine efforts to negotiate peace and provide aid to the millions displaced by violence, others said it offered new leverage to pressure the Sudanese government to end the conflict in Darfur.

Read the whole report.

Friday, July 11, 2008


"My Guantanamo Diary"

Mahvish Khan is recent law graduate who took more than thirty trips to Guantanamo Bay to act as an interpreter for the detainees and their lawyers. She has now written book:

During our meeting, Nusrat's emotions range from anger to despair. In his desperation, he begins to promise Peter that he will make him famous if he helps him get home. "Everyone in Afghanistan will know your name," he says. "You will be a great, famous lawyer."

As I interpret, I feel a lump growing in my throat. Suddenly, I can't speak. Peter and Nusrat pause as the tears flood down my face and drip onto my shawl.

The old man looks at me. "You are a daughter to me," he says. "Think of me as a father." I nod, aligning and realigning pistachio shells on the table as I interpret.

As the meeting ends and we collect our things to go, the old man opens his arms to me and I embrace him. For several moments, he prays for me as Peter watches: "Insha'allah, God willing, you will find a home that makes you happy. Insha'allah, you will be a mother one day. . . . "

He lets me go and asks me to say dawa, prayers, for him. "Of course," I promise. "Every day."

And until the next time I see him, I will.

Read Mahvish's Washington Post Article.


Monday, July 07, 2008



Is Waterboarding Torture?

The discussion continues as Gasper Tringale reports on his experience in Vanity Fair:

What more can be added to the debate over U.S. interrogation methods, and whether waterboarding is torture? Try firsthand experience. The author undergoes the controversial drowning technique, at the hands of men who once trained American soldiers to resist—not inflict—it.


Tringale voluntarily underwent waterboarding. He describes the effect of waterboarding:

Also, in case it’s of interest, I have since woken up trying to push the bedcovers off my face, and if I do anything that makes me short of breath I find myself clawing at the air with a horrible sensation of smothering and claustrophobia.


Read about his experience.

Thursday, July 03, 2008

Governor Schwarzenegger June 26 Proclamation

Sadly, far too many people around the world suffer from torture every day. These tragedies are horrifying and unacceptable, and California joins with others across the world in demanding change and offering support for these victims.

It is estimated that around a quarter of the refugees in the United States have experienced some form of torture, and many of those refugees live in California. It is crucial that we assist them in their efforts to rebound and build happier, healthier lives. Our Golden State has a proud legacy of offering kindness and safety to torture victims, and I urge all those who have been persecuted to take advantage of the many resources available to them.

Additionally, I thank all those who have opened their hearts to help others recover from these difficult experiences. Torture victims have experienced unimaginable pain and grief, and by providing counseling, health care services, housing and food, compassionate individuals and organizations are rekindling hope and the belief in a brighter future.

On this day and all others, I encourage all Californians to help end persecution and take a stand to eliminate torture world-wide.

NOW, THEREFORE, I, ARNOLD SCHWARZENEGGER, Governor of the State of California, do hereby proclaim June 26, 2008, as "Day in Support of Survivors of Torture."


IN WITNESS WHEREOF,
I have hereunto set my hand and caused the Great Seal of the State of California to be affixed this 2nd day of June 2008.

ARNOLD SCHWARZENEGGER
Governor of California

ATTEST:

DEBRA BOWEN
Secretary of State

Wednesday, July 02, 2008

Abu Ghraib Inmates Sue For Torture

The AFP reports that four former Abu Ghraib prisoners are suing a U.S. firm for torture:
Their lawsuit is against private security contractor CACI International and two of its interrogators, Daniel Johnson and Tim Dugan, and the translation agency L-3 (formerly Titan Corp) and its interpreter, Abel Nakhla, lawyer William Gould told AFP in Istanbul on Monday.

One of the current plaintiffs, Suhail Najim Abdullah Al-Shimari, 49, was taken from his Bagdad home in November 2003 and spent more than a year at Abu Ghraib, where he claims to have been subjected to electroshock and night-long cold showers in the winter.

"We think there will be people there in the United States who will want to give us back our dignity... by bringing these people to justice," he told AFP via an interpreter.

Sa'adon Ali Hameed Al-Ogaidi, 39, said he was repeatedly beaten at Abu Ghraib and tied to door handles.

"At times, it seemed they were torturing people to have fun," said the former prisoner, who claims to have witnessed guards sodomising prisoners.

Taxi driver Mohammed Abdwihed Towfek Al-Taee, 39, was taken to Abu Ghraib in 2003.

He has scars on his leg and head that he said came from beatings with an iron rod. He also said he was forced to drink litres of water while his penis was tied to prevent him from urinating.

"I wish I would be the last person to be detained and to be tortured," he said.

Read more.

Monday, June 30, 2008

Sacramento Bee Op-ed

Torture survivors need more help from California

By Kathi Anderson and Gregory Hall -
Published 12:00 am PDT Thursday, June 26, 2008

Imagine waking up one morning and instead of carrying out your daily routine, you are kidnapped at gunpoint and taken to a location where you are systematically and brutally beaten, with the fear that death would be the only escape.

That was a real experience for Carlos Mauricio, who was kidnapped in El Salvador in 1983 and tortured by his captors over a two-week period. Luckily, he survived to tell his story, and so have thousands of other survivors of torture now residing in California.

As detailed in last week's Sacramento Bee series on the treatment of terror suspects, torture isn't just something that happened in Central America in the 1980s. It's been used in the so-called war on terror, in the genocide in Darfur, and in numerous other conflicts where perpetrators - be they dictators, police, paramilitary forces, government officials or opposition forces - find ways to justify its use and avoid accountability.

Our state is home to the largest number of refugees, asylum seekers and immigrants in the United States. Many of them had to flee their homelands from unspeakable cruelty. Some were students, professors or other professionals who excelled in fields such as medicine, government, business, agriculture and community leadership, yet were targeted for persecution by their governments for what they thought, said or did.

Others were tortured as a way of punishing family members accused of opposition to political activities. Some were members of persecuted religious, ethnic, national or social groups. Others were in the wrong place at the wrong time, tortured as part of a government's campaign to terrorize and intimidate populations.

As expected, the lasting physical and psychological repercussions for survivors of torture can be a daily struggle.

Many suffer in silence as they strain to hold down jobs and adjust to a new life in the United States. This is made worse by the fact that most asylum seekers lack access to basic health care until they are granted asylum, which can take years. This presents a public health hazard, in addition to needless pain and suffering on the part of the asylum seeker.

Across the state, treatment centers and law firmswork to minimize these obstacles to care. In the Bay Area, the Center for Justice and Accountability, the Center for Survivors of Torture, the Institute for Redress & Recovery, and Survivors International provide torture survivors with the specialized care they need.

In Los Angeles, survivors can turn to the Program for Torture Victims and the Legal Aid Foundation. In San Diego, Survivors of Torture, International provides a holistic program of services. All the organizations are part of the California Consortium of Torture Treatment Centers.

Mauricio is an example of the positive impact these services can have on a survivor of torture. The centers address the physical and psychological effects of torture, pursue justice for survivors, assist families and provide communities of healing where survivors can build positive relationships.

Yet the centers struggle to meet the needs of torture survivors who have come from more than 100 countries, speak dozens of languages and dialects, and have complex health and mental health needs. States such as Minnesota and New York already have taken the lead in creating health care programs that provide assistance to survivors of torture. Unfortunately, California has been slower to recognize and respond to the needs of survivors.

Today is June 26, the United Nations International Day in Support of Victims of Torture. Representatives from the California Consortium of Torture Treatment Centers are convening in Sacramento to educate state lawmakers about the importance and effectiveness of torture treatment centers.

We encourage members of the Legislature to recognize this unique population, to bring them out of our state's shadows, and to join our effort to ensure torture survivors have access to the specialized treatment they need to become healthy, productive members of our communities. It will benefit us all.

About the writer:

  • Kathi Anderson is the executive director of Survivors of Torture, International. Gregory Hall is a senior program officer with the California Endowment, which supports programs addressing the health care needs of torture survivors.

Wednesday, June 25, 2008


Join Amnesty International's campaign to End Torture

Torture is a worldwide plague that often remains hidden from society, despite the long lasting physical and psychological effects on individuals and their families. We need you to help us raise awareness about torture and the importance of providing a safe haven for survivors of torture from all over the world.

Click Here to Stop Torture Today (warning: videos and images on this site maybe startling and disturbing)



Monday, June 23, 2008



Palestinian Detainees Suffer Torture

A new report from the Public Committee Against Torture in Israel (PCATI) was released revealing that Israeli soldiers often beat and abuse Palestinian prisoners, even after they are detained and do not pose a threat.

The report titled “No Defense: Soldier Violence against Palestinian Detainees” focuses on a large number of incidents of violence against detainees after they had been arrested, bound, and no longer present a danger to the soldiers. Abuse occurs at various junctions - immediately following arrest, in the vehicle transporting the detainees, and during the time they are held in IDF military camps prior to their transfer to interrogation and detention facilities. At times abusive practices involve dogs that are employed by the military forces during arrest operations and transported in vehicles along with Palestinian detainees. On certain occasions, the ill treatment of Palestinian detainees is highly violent resulting in serious injury. At other times, abuse manifests itself in a routine of beating, degradation and additional abuse. Minors, who must be granted special protection under both Israeli and International Law, are also victims of abuse. The soldiers who carry out arrests do not treat minors with special care and at times – as revealed by various testimonies – exploit their weakness.

Read more.

Friday, June 20, 2008

Physicians for Human Rights Report

After years of disclosures by government investigations, media accounts, and reports from human rights organizations, there is no longer any doubt as to whether the current administration has committed war crimes. The only question is whether those who ordered the use of torture will be held to account.

Maj. General Antonio M. Taguba (USA-Ret.), preface to Broken Laws, Broken Lives

In PHR’s new report, Broken Laws, Broken Lives, we have for the first time medical evidence to confirm first-hand accounts of men who endured torture by US personnel in Iraq, Afghanistan, and Guantánamo Bay. These men were never charged with any crime.

The report.

CNN report.

Thursday, June 19, 2008

Op-ed in San Diego Union Tribune

Detaining asylum-seekers and torture victims

June 18, 2008

For a country founded by immigrants fleeing religious persecution, the United States is now implementing a policy on political asylum that mocks our noble history. This policy has incarcerated thousands of innocent individuals whose only offense was to suffer persecution abroad and then seek refuge in the United States. It is a policy that few Americans see but many innocents suffer.

Under U.S. law, individuals who have been persecuted because of race, religion, nationality, political opinion or membership in a particular social group may apply for political asylum. To be eligible for asylum, individuals must submit an application and supporting documentation to the Department of Homeland Security. These applications are then reviewed by immigration officials. If the application is granted, asylum-seekers are allowed to remain in the United States, apply for work authorization and eventually seek citizenship. For decades, this policy has offered comfort and protection to countless refugees, from political dissidents in Africa to religious minorities in Asia.

In the 1990s, U.S. immigration policies became increasingly restrictive toward asylum-seekers. Since 2001, these policies have become even more Draconian. In a tragic turn, individuals fleeing persecution are now regularly imprisoned in county jails, federal detention centers and private facilities while U.S. immigration officials process their applications.

Our treatment of these immigrants is not an American narrative our country should seek to write. Individuals who have neither violated the law nor been charged with a crime have languished in detention centers for months or even years. Families are often torn apart, and children have been separated from their parents.

Asylum-seekers are routinely transferred to detention centers far from relatives. In some facilities, visitors are not even allowed to touch detainees, and they are separated by Plexiglas and forced to communicate by telephone.

The conditions of detention are equally troubling. Asylum-seekers are regularly detained in facilities with convicted criminals. They are forced to undergo invasive searches and daily head counts. Even children are subjected to these security measures. Living conditions often fall well below U.S. and international standards. Medical treatment is spotty, and injuries may go untreated. Psychological care is seldom provided.

The plight of torture victims is particularly troubling. It is no surprise that many asylum-seekers are also victims of torture. But these victims are not receiving needed counseling while in detention. Studies have found high rates of anxiety, depression and post-traumatic stress disorder among detained asylum-seekers. And the psychological harm worsens as the length of detention increases. Even the bipartisan U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom has criticized this policy and the conditions of detention, arguing that they create a serious risk of psychological harm to asylum-seekers.

Detention of asylum-seekers should only be used as a last resort, particularly since alternative programs exist. Individuals whose asylum applications are pending can be monitored in numerous ways, each of which is more humane and less costly than current detention policies. Individuals can be required to post bond or make regular visits to immigration officials. If there are unique concerns, electronic monitoring is a less invasive method.

Earlier this year, the U.N. special rapporteur on migrants, who visited San Diego in 2007, expressed concerns about the overuse of immigration detention in the United States. Indeed, he argued that the “availability of effective alternatives renders the increasing reliance on detention as an immigration enforcement mechanism unnecessary.”

San Diego County currently maintains one private detention facility that houses about 700 immigration detainees, many of them asylum-seekers. The San Diego Correctional Facility in Otay Mesa has been denounced by human rights organizations for its treatment of detainees. Lawyers and health care professionals have complained that placing their clients in these facilities undermines their efforts to provide quality and effective assistance. The San Diego facility has been criticized by the inspector general for the Department of Homeland Security. It also has been the subject of a federal lawsuit alleging degrading conditions. This lawsuit seeks to ensure that the conditions of confinement are humane and comply with all appropriate constitutional and statutory safeguards. It is troubling, therefore, to consider that a second detention facility, which would house nearly 3,000 immigrants, is now in the planning stages in San Diego.

The cost of detaining one asylum-seeker at the San Diego Correctional Facility is estimated to be $89.50 per day, though total costs are undoubtedly higher. But the cost to these detainees, who have done nothing wrong, is immeasurable. When individuals seek refuge in our country, we should offer them protection, not prison bars.


Aceves is a professor of law and associate dean for academic affairs at California Western School of Law in San Diego.

Wednesday, June 18, 2008


June 26th 2008

Is the
United Nations International Day in Support of Victims of Torture. There are an estimated 500,000 survivors of politically motivated torture living in the United States. Recognize their strength by advocating on their behalf this June.


Tuesday, June 17, 2008


Series on Guantanamo Bay

The McClatchy News Group has released its findings after an eight month investigation into the men who have been detained at Guantanamo Bay. The conclusions of the story is that while many of the men held at Guantanamo were originally not affiliated in any way to a terrorist group, being tortured and abused at both Afghanistan and Cuba shifted their mind set.

This article is a great exploration into why torture is wrong and why it never works.

Read the report.

Monday, June 16, 2008

Supreme Court Rules in Favor of Detainees Rights

According to the BBC, the United States Supreme Court has ruled that detainees held at Guantanamo Bay have the right to challenge their detention in civilian court:

In a major legal setback for the Bush administration, the court overturned by five to four a ruling upholding a 2006 law which removed such rights.

It is not clear if the ruling will lead to prompt hearings for the detainees.

Some 270 men are held at the US naval base, on suspicion of terrorism or links to al-Qaeda and the Taleban.

US President George W Bush said he would abide by the court's ruling even if he did not agree with it.

Human rights groups have welcomed the move, Amnesty International saying it was an "essential step forward towards the restoration of the rule of law".


Read more.

Thursday, June 12, 2008

J.K. Rowling Speaks of Human Rights at Harvard Commencement Address



One of the greatest formative experiences of my life preceded Harry Potter, though it informed much of what I subsequently wrote in those books. This revelation came in the form of one of my earliest day jobs. Though I was sloping off to write stories during my lunch hours, I paid the rent in my early 20s by working in the research department at Amnesty International’s headquarters in London.

There in my little office I read hastily scribbled letters smuggled out of totalitarian regimes by men and women who were risking imprisonment to inform the outside world of what was happening to them. I saw photographs of those who had disappeared without trace, sent to Amnesty by their desperate families and friends. I read the testimony of torture victims and saw pictures of their injuries. I opened handwritten, eye-witness accounts of summary trials and executions, of kidnappings and rapes.

Many of my co-workers were ex-political prisoners, people who had been displaced from their homes, or fled into exile, because they had the temerity to think independently of their government. Visitors to our office included those who had come to give information, or to try and find out what had happened to those they had been forced to leave behind.

I shall never forget the African torture victim, a young man no older than I was at the time, who had become mentally ill after all he had endured in his homeland. He trembled uncontrollably as he spoke into a video camera about the brutality inflicted upon him. He was a foot taller than I was, and seemed as fragile as a child. I was given the job of escorting him to the Underground Station afterwards, and this man whose life had been shattered by cruelty took my hand with exquisite courtesy, and wished me future happiness.

And as long as I live I shall remember walking along an empty corridor and suddenly hearing, from behind a closed door, a scream of pain and horror such as I have never heard since. The door opened, and the researcher poked out her head and told me to run and make a hot drink for the young man sitting with her. She had just given him the news that in retaliation for his own outspokenness against his country’s regime, his mother had been seized and executed.

Every day of my working week in my early 20s I was reminded how incredibly fortunate I was, to live in a country with a democratically elected government, where legal representation and a public trial were the rights of everyone.

Every day, I saw more evidence about the evils humankind will inflict on their fellow humans, to gain or maintain power. I began to have nightmares, literal nightmares, about some of the things I saw, heard and read.

And yet I also learned more about human goodness at Amnesty International than I had ever known before.

Amnesty mobilises thousands of people who have never been tortured or imprisoned for their beliefs to act on behalf of those who have. The power of human empathy, leading to collective action, saves lives, and frees prisoners. Ordinary people, whose personal well-being and security are assured, join together in huge numbers to save people they do not know, and will never meet. My small participation in that process was one of the most humbling and inspiring experiences of my life.

Unlike any other creature on this planet, humans can learn and understand, without having experienced. They can think themselves into other people’s minds, imagine themselves into other people’s places.

Of course, this is a power, like my brand of fictional magic, that is morally neutral. One might use such an ability to manipulate, or control, just as much as to understand or sympathise.

And many prefer not to exercise their imaginations at all. They choose to remain comfortably within the bounds of their own experience, never troubling to wonder how it would feel to have been born other than they are. They can refuse to hear screams or to peer inside cages; they can close their minds and hearts to any suffering that does not touch them personally; they can refuse to know.

I might be tempted to envy people who can live that way, except that I do not think they have any fewer nightmares than I do. Choosing to live in narrow spaces can lead to a form of mental agoraphobia, and that brings its own terrors. I think the wilfully unimaginative see more monsters. They are often more afraid.


Read the entire speech here.

Wednesday, June 11, 2008


Human Rights Watch Guantanamo Bay Report Released

Human Rights Watch has released a report on the prison conditions at Guantanamo Bay:

The 54-page report, “Locked Up Alone: Detention Conditions and Mental Health at Guantanamo,” documents the conditions in the various “camps” at the detention center, in which approximately 185 of the 270 detainees are housed in facilities akin to “supermax” prisons even though they have not yet been convicted of a crime. These detainees have extremely limited contact with other human beings, spend 22 hours a day alone in small cells with little or no natural light or fresh air, are not provided any educational opportunities, and are given little more than a single book and the Koran to occupy their time. Even their two hours of “recreation” time – which is sometimes provided in the middle of the night – generally takes place in single-cell cages so that detainees cannot physically interact with one another.


Download the whole report

Monday, June 09, 2008


June is Torture Awareness Month

Faith groups across the country are participating in Torture Awareness Month by displaying banners that make a clear statement: "Torture is Wrong." Leading the campaign is the National Religious Campaign Against Torture which believes that it is crucial for people of faith to stand up to the use of torture.

The Saint Louis Today reports places of worship that are participating in the campaign:

The black banner looked small, even modest, flapping in the wind against the old brick building. And though the banner's message — in white, lower-case letters — was modest, the issue it confronted was anything but:

"Torture is wrong."

The banner hung from the second floor of the Presbytery of Giddings-Lovejoy, the regional headquarters of the Presbyterian Church (USA) on Tower Grove Avenue, across from the Missouri Botanical Garden. It is part of an effort by the National Religious Campaign Against Torture to encourage Americans of faith to voice opposition to what its president calls "U.S.-sponsored torture."

Giddings-Lovejoy is one of just three religious bodies in the area participating in the program. The Sisters of Loretto, a Catholic order, and Westminster Presbyterian Church (USA) are the other two.


Read the whole story.

Wednesday, June 04, 2008


China encouraged to release Tiananmen Square Prisoners

The Jurist reports that Human Rights Watch is calling upon the Chinese government to release dozens of Tiananmen Square Protesters that are still in prison:


Human Rights Watch (HRW) [advocacy website] Tuesday called on China to release the remaining imprisoned Tiananmen Square [BBC backgrounder] protesters as part of a wider effort to improve the nation's human rights image before the 2008 Olympic Games. HRW urged [press release] the government to reverse its official 1989 classification of the protests as a "counterrevolutionary rebellion", release a complete list of casualties, compensate the victims, and allow future public demands for government accountability. Chinese officials have consistently refused to reverse [AFP report] the official 1989 classification, and a spokesman would not comment on the remaining HRW demands. Reuters has more.


Human Rights Watch Report

Monday, June 02, 2008

Human Rights Court Rules on Chechnya Disappearances

The Jurist reports that the European Court of Human Rights has found Russia responsible for the disappearance of civilians in Chechnya in 2002 and 2003.

Families of the victims, all of whom are presumed dead, had raised claims under the Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms [PDF text]. The court directed Russia to pay a total of more than €350,000 ($550,000) to the families. Russia has three months to pay or to appeal.

Read more.




Wednesday, May 21, 2008


SURVIVORS on YouTube

It is official, we have arrived. Survivors of Torture, International agency video (see previous post) is now posted on YouTube on its own non-profit channel.

Check it out!

Monday, May 19, 2008


Anti- Immigrant Attacks

The New York Times reported anti-immigrant violence is sweeping across Johannesberg:

Violence against immigrants, like some windswept fire, spread across one neighborhood after another here in one of South Africa’s main cities this weekend, and the police said the mayhem left at least 12 people dead — beaten by mobs, shot, stabbed or burned alive.

Thousands of panicked foreigners — many of them Zimbabweans who have fled their own country’s economic collapse — have now deserted their ramshackle dwellings and tin-walled squatter hovels to take refuge in churches and police stations.


Read more.