CELEBRITY IN CHIEF BARRY O WAS TAKEN BY SURPRISE WHEN BILL DAILEY DECIDED TO BAIL.
DON'T THEY EVER HAVE SINKING SHIPS IN INDONESIA?
| Before we get to Iraq, an anniversary.  On this week's Law and Disorder  Radio -- a weekly hour long  program that airs Monday mornings at 9:00 a.m. EST on WBAI and around the country throughout  the week, hosted by attorneys Heidi Boghosian,  Michael S. Smith and Michael Ratner (Center for Constitutional Rights) --  topics explored include an update on Guantanamo by Michael Ratner on the tenth  anniversary of the Guantanamo Bay prison, attorney Roger Wareham discusses the  January 12th International People's Tribunal on War Crimes and Other Violations  of International Law, California State University professor David Klein on the  plan to build the Cornell and The Technion of Israel in NYC and CCR attorneyy  Darius Charney on NYC's stop and frisk policies.  Excerpt from opening  segment. Michael Ratner: January 11th, here we are.  We've completed ten  years after 9-11, going into the eleventh year.  The tenth anniversary of  Guantanamo opening, entering its 11th year now.  On the actual annivesary,  January 11th, I will be in London commemotrating the opening of Guantanamo with  other lawyers but particularly with men who have been freed from Guantanamo, a  group called Caged Prisoners.  Commemorating the 11th year of the practices that  underlie imprisonment at Guantanamo:  the capture of detainees anywhere in the  world or their kidnapping; their imprisonment indefinitely or forever under a  preventive detention scheme; and their trials, if at all, by rump trials or  military commissions.  Here we are, the Guantanamo Syndrome -- that series of  illnesses, sickness and outrage that represent both Republican and Democratic  administrations are still with us. I'm commemorating it with a group set up  after Guantanamo, set up by some of the very people who were formerly impisoned  in Guantanamo, a group called Caged Prisoners. And I'm in London going through  three days of commemoration of not just those who remain in Guantanamo, but of  those who remain in secret prisons all over the world, particularly Bagram.  And  I'm with a number of the people who have been freed -- freed from Guantanamo.  Some of those prisoners. for example, Moazzam Begg was freed from Guantanamo  even before we won our court case in June 2004.  And I'm with him today in  London and his story actually tells us a lot about what happened at Guantanamo.   And then I want to give a little history of the Center [for Constitutional  Rights]'s  involvement and my own.  I met Moazzam Begg in February 2004 in the  United Kingdom.  He'd been freed because of the huge amount of efforts by the  British citizens -- led by the Redgraves [the late Corin Redgrave and his sister  Vanessa Redgrave of the British acting family dynasty] in  particular and others to get the British citizens to get the British citizens  out of there.  And when I walked into the room, I remember it like it was  yesterday,  here were these young men -- I mean they were young like my own  children in a way -- and the idea that these three men were ever kept in  Guantanamo as the 'worst of the worst' or 'terrorists' just struck me as  completely impossible.  They could joke with me, they could tell the stories of  what happened, they could talk about Guantanamo, they could talk about their own  lives and, of course, they were kept in Guantanamo after being picked up in  Pakistan and forced to give 'confessions' when they were at Guantanamo.  They  figured when they were at Guantanamo that after they were being tortured in  various ways that they were better off just saying, 'Yeah, we knew Osama bin  Laden, etc.'  And they thought it would go better for them but of course it went  worse.  And even though they had alibis of where they were at the time and why  they were in Afghanistan -- and good ones, correct ones -- the government forced  these 'confessions' out of them under torture and kept them there year after  year.  When I met them, they talked about the torture.  And when I talk to you,  our listeners, about it, you have to understand that when I met them, no one  knew publicly what was going on in Guantanamo, there'd been no access to  Guantanamo.  But there was the testimony of the Tipton Three.  And everybody  said, 'Oh, they're lying, they're not telling the truth.'  And in the room with  me that day, they went over what's called a "Rumsfeld Technique."  Those are  what we now know are everything from hooding, stripping, dogs, sexual assault --  all these kind of terrible things that Rumsfeld Techniques did to people at  Guantanamo as a means of coercing what turned out to be false confessions out of  people.  And I sat there and I believed them.  But I had trouble believing it  because, of course, I'd always looked at Guantanamo as a horrible place because  it was incommunicado detention -- we couldn't get them into court to test their  detentions, we couldn't get them lawyers, we couldn't visit -- and I looked at  that as the worst aspect.  And while I suspected that there might be  interrogation issues, I didn't realize that there would be abuse amounting or  equivalent to torture.   And was I naive in that respect?  Possibly so. But of  course within a couple of months after my interview with the Guantanamo Three or  the Tipton Three, the Abu Ghraib photos came out on April 24th of 2004 and then,  of course, it was public for everybody.  The Rumfseld Techniques came out and  then the Tipton Three's testimony -- that people had said, 'Oh, we don't believe  it' -- was proven to be utterly, utterly accurate to the actual use of the  Rumsfeld Techniques, the dozen techniques. And so then Guantanamo became  synonymous not just with incommunicado detention but with torture as well.  And  today, of course, Guantanamo is still there.  And as we talk about Guantanamo, I  want to give people the numbers. Guantanamo is still there.  171 men remain in  Guantanamo.  46 have been approved -- whatever that means -- for indefinite  detention and will be there forever as far as I know.  36 men have been referred  for prosecution.  What kind of prosecution? Most likely military commissions  which are just rump courts which are just rump trials for nothing.  The  remainder?  Not clear. But most of the remainder have been approved for  release.  So that means the remainder shouldn't be there at all.  People like  the Uighurs from western China who were picked up wrongly -- admittedly wrongly   -- and have now been there for ten years and will be going on  I don't know how  many years. So that total is about 89 people, most of whom have been approved  for transfer.  So of those 89 almost none of them should be there.  So there's  our numbers again.  46 indefinitely detained forever, 36 supposedly subject to  prosecution and 89 who shouldn't be there at all -- or most of whom should not  be there at all, some of whom they may not have decided yet. That's Guantanamo  today. This is an important issue, it does have connections to Iraq (including how  Rumsfeld Techniques migrated from Guantanamo to Iraq).  It's one of the reasons  that (offline) this will be a crazy end of the week for me (as I noted last  week) and also Michael Ratner's worked like crazy to get attention on this issue  for ten years now.  Ideally, we will continue to note Guantanamo every day in  this week's snapshots due to the anniversary; however, the rest of the week we  will save it for the end of the snapshot. And the above is an excerpt, there is  more to Michael Ratner's analysis on the topic in the broadcast.  And for more  on Guantanamo, all this week, World Can't Wait will be drawing attention to  Guantanamo.  It generally covers Guantanamo every week regardless but due to the  anniversary and various actions, there will be even more attention so refer to  World Can't  Wait throughout the week. Iraq?  AFP's Prashant Rao Tweets: prashantrao Prashant Rao    Another day of political crisis, another day of extreme violence.  AP notes 2 Baghdad car bombings left "at  least 14 people" dead with "dozens" injured.  Kareem Raheem (Reuters) notes the death  toll rose to 15 and fifty-two were injured.  AFP reports that bombings today  targeting pilgrims in Iraq have resulted in one death and twenty-four people  being left injured -- 1 dead and nine injured in Owairij and fiften injured in  Hilla.  Jomana Karadsheh (CNN)  explains, "Hundreds of  thousands of Shiites are making their way to Karbala to commemorate the Arbaeen  pilgrimage this weekend. Arbaeen is the pilgrimage marking the end of a 40 day  mourning period for the death of Imam Hussain, the grandson of the Prophet  Mohammed, a seventh century imam and one of the  Shiaa Islam's holiest  figures."  Al Jazeera adds, "As part of the Arbaeen  ceremonies, Shia pilgrims walk to Karbala from across Iraq.  Devotees also  descend on the city from around the world."  Reuters notes the Hilla bombing was  yesterday and the injured were Afghanistan pilgrimas, they count 2 dead in a  Baghdad roadside bombing with twelve more pilgrims injured, they also note the  following Sunday night violence just making the news cycle: a Balad home bombing  targeting a police officer which left him "his wife and three children" injured,  a Falluja home bombing targeting a police officers home which injured two of the  officers' relatives, Baghdad police shot dead a suspect, Iraqi soldiers in  Mahmudiya shot dead a suspect, and 1 city government worker was shot dead in  Kirkuk. And the political crisis?  Kareem Raheem (Reuters) notes today,  "The crisis threatens to unravel Iraq's fragile coalition government of Shi'ite,  Sunni and Kurdish factions and has raised fears of renewed sectarian violence."   The editorial board of Canada's Globe &  Mail observes: Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki continues to purge his opponents and  consolidate his authority. He is now on the verge of abandoning last year's  power-sharing agreement, which formed a government of national unity.  Vice-President Tareq al-Hashemi has [. . . sought refuge in] Kurdistan after  authorities issued a warrant for his arrest, a decision that added to sectarian  tensions. In the weeks before the U.S. military withdrawal, Mr. al-Maliki  rounded up hundreds of Iraqis accused of being former Baath Party members.  Security forces detain and abuse dissenting academics, activists and journalists  with impunity [. . .]  Serena Chaudhry (Reuters) quotes the  Economist Intelligence Unit's Ali al-Saffar stating, "There is no doubt [the  arrest warrant] was choreographed to put down the marker, to eradicate any doubt  over who was in charge in the wake of the U.S. troop withdrawl." Patrick Cockburn (Independent of London) offers an  analysis and we'll note this paragraph: "I think it was a bad mistake for the US not to say in 2010 that Maliki was unacceptable to them," said a Western diplomat formerly posted to Baghdad. He argued that Mr Maliki should have been rejected because he was a sectarian Shia intent on building an authoritarian state and that this state is corrupt and dysfunctional. Corruption is at a level whereby state funds are simply transferred abroad to shell companies secretly owned by officials at home. Unemployment is between 25 and 40 per cent. Inability to provide an adequate supply of electricity has been a notorious failing of the post-Saddam state, but the electricity ministry still managed to agree to pay $1.3bn to a bankrupt German company and a non-existent Canadian one. The government's budget is spent mainly on salaries and pensions, with recipients often connected to the ruling parties. Not only did they refuse to say he was unacceptable, they demanded that he continue as prime minister. The Iraqi people voted in March 2010. Nouri's State of Law came in second to Ayad Allawi's Iraqiya. Instead of respecting the will of the voters and the Iraqi Constitution, the US government set out to circumvent both. It was as ugly and offensive as the US Supreme Court installing second place Bully Boy Bush over first place Al Gore. And it sent the message to Iraqis that (a) their votes didn't matter, (b) the Constitution didn't matter and (c) that the whole thing was a farce. This was a very big thing, the elections. Iraqiya was labeled "Ba'athists" by State Of Law, the Justice and Accountability Commission (whose term had expired) suddenly resurfaced to begin banning Iraqiya candidates from running, in the lead up to the elections, several Iraqiya candidates were shot dead, state media was claiming Nouri's State of Law would come in first. Despite all of that, Iraqis turned out and voted and, thanks to the US, were left to wonder why they even bothered? This was an issue raised in the Iraqi protests in 2011 -- that the prime minister stayed the same, that Jalal Talabani remained President and the two Vice Presidents remained the same, so why did they even vote? They also protested the corruption, the disappearance of loved ones into the so-called judicial system, the lack of jobs and the lack of public services (reliable electricity, potable water, etc.) Dar Addustour reports that protests took place in Sulaymaniyah Province today over public services and the claims were put forward that there are planned projects. Lots of 'planning' but Iraqis still see no results. Worse, they saw Nouri al-Maliki -- watching the unrest in Egypt -- insist  that problems would be fixed in 100 days.  Then 100 days passed and Nouri  claimed that he had not promised to fix anything just to identiy the problems.   The 100 days was nothing but a stalling technique (as we noted when he announced  it) a way to distract Iraqis.  The 100 days expired in June.  So, according to  him, that was time spent identifying problems.   And what was done in the over  180 days since Nouri 'identified' the problems?  Not a damn thing to impact the  average Iraqi in a positive manner. And this as the number of Iraqis who see  themselves as sufferin/enduring increases.  Gallup has a new poll out today.  It's a survey of Iraqis. Stafford Nichols  explains, "The percentage of Iraqis who rate their lives poorly  enough to be considered 'suffering' rose from 14% in in October 2010 to 25% in  September 2011."  RECOMMENDED: "Iraq snapshot" | 
 
 
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