There are numerous headlines this week about torture:Bush: “Damn right” I authorized waterboardingBush says waterboarding is legal “because the lawyer said it was legal”, even though the head of the 9/11 Commission – Thomas Keane – said they got legal …
Posts Tagged ‘Torture’
Congratulations, America. Torture Has Led You On a Wild Goose Chase, Destroyed the Rule of Law and Made You Less Safe
General Petraeus: Torture is Unnecessary, Hurts Our National Security and Violates Our American Values
General Petraeus – the military commander overseeing the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan – told Meet the Press Friday that torture is counterproductive:I have always been on the record, in fact, since 2003, with the concept of living our values. And I th…
US militant suspects complain of torture
Torture Is Continuing Under the Obama Administration, Creating More Terrorists and Further Destabilizing the Economy
As I pointed out in May 2008:The U.S. has imprisoned 2,500 children since 9/11 as “enemy combatants”, in violation of the Geneva Convention against classifying children as POWs …Pulitzer-prize winning reporter Seymour Hersh says that the U.S. Governm…
REVIEW: Lexar JumpDrive SAFE S3000 FIPS Survives Torture Testing, Keeping Data Intact and Safe
In eWEEK Labs’ tests, Lexar’s ruggedized JumpDrive SAFE S3000 FIPS survived a stint in the dishwasher and a four-story drop, among other torture tests. And, if anyone was able to compromise the actual device, the data stored on it would be wiped. Using a smart card for authentication and encryption, the JumpDrive SAFE S3000 FIPS is a safe (literally) bet for individuals, but it lacks some of the management capabilities of its rivals.
– Lexars JumpDrive SAFE S3000 FIPS is the first USB flash memory storage device to use a smart card for authentication and encryption to keep the data stored on it safe from prying eyes. And, in eWEEK Labs’ tests, the ruggedized device took a beating and kept on reading.
The Lexar device is an exce…
Supreme Court Ruling Means Torture May Return
The Supreme Court has just ruled that four Guantanamo prisoners cannot sue the government for torture. The Center for Constitutional Rights notes:It is an awful day for the rule of law and common decency when the Supreme Court lets stand such an inhuma…
Can Nobel Prize Winner Obama At LEAST Stop the Torture?
On Thursday, President Obama said: We lose ourselves when we compromise the very ideals that we fight to defend.Presumably, complying with American and international law are some of the ideals that we fight to defend.Torture is a violation of both inte…
Britain ordered to release “torture” papers
The British government has failed in its legal attempt to prevent the release of details of the alleged torture of a former UK resident. The papers are a summary of what American agents told Britain about Ethiopian-born Binyam Mohamed before he was secretly interrogated in 2002. He welcomed the High Court’s ruling:
Iranian regime accused of using torture, murder and rape to suppress opposition
The father of an Iranian student, who died in jail after being arrested for protesting against President Ahmadinejad’s disputed re-election, has claimed that his son was beaten, got his bones broken and toenails pulled out while in prison.
Amir Javadifar, 24, was so badly beaten that he had to treated in hospital before being taken to [...]
UN Rights Chief Says Torture Probe Must Go To The Top . . . Paging Mr. Cheney
The head of the U.N.’s human rights arm is demanding that the torture investigation go to the very top:The U.S. prosecutor’s investigation into alleged criminal CIA interrogation techniques must go right to the top political level, the chief U.N. right…
New Torture Photo Shows Prisoner’s Testicles Being Crushed
Note: Top counter-terrorism experts say that releasing the torture photos will NOT harm U.S. national security, but that detaining prisoners indefinitely without trial WILL.Warning! Extremely graphic and disturbing image. Not suitable for children or w…
MPs demand British torture investigation

A parliamentary committee has called for an independent inquiry into claims of UK security services’ complicity in the torture of terrorism suspects.
The Joint Human Rights Committee of MPs and peers said it was unable to establish whether British officers were involved in mistreatment of suspects.
It also criticised ministers and the head of MI5 for refusing to testify to a parliamentary probe into the claims.
A spokesman said the government would neither solicit nor encourage torture.
In a highly critical report, the joint parliamentary committee said there was now a "disturbing number of credible allegations" of British complicity in torture.
These allegations include the rendition and alleged abuse of British resident Binyam Mohammed from Pakistan to Morocco, prior to being taken to Guantanamo Bay.
"It is unacceptable both for Ministers to refuse to answer policy questions about the Security Services, and for the Director General of MI5 to answer questions from the press but not from a Parliamentary committee"
Andrew Dismore, committee chairman
The Metropolitan Police is investigating the role of one MI5 officer in Mr Mohamed’s case.
Last week the High Court revealed that the same officer visited Morocco three times during the period that Mr Mohamed says he was being secretly tortured there.
The committee also looked at other cases where British men, two of whom have been convicted of terror offences, say they were visited by British intelligence officers while they were detained and allegedly mistreated by Pakistani authorities.
But in all the cases, the parliamentary committee said it could not get to the facts because too many questions were not being properly answered.
It said that both the foreign secretary and home secretary, as well as the director general of MI5, had declined to give evidence on what was known about torture or mistreatment.
The ministers appeared "determined to avoid parliamentary scrutiny", said the report, and had batted away important questions with standardised answers.
Committee chairman Andrew Dismore MP said: "The allegations we have heard about UK complicity in torture are extremely serious.
"It is unacceptable both for ministers to refuse to answer policy questions about the Security Services, and for the director general of MI5 to answer questions from the press but not from a Parliamentary committee."
Revised guidance due
The prime minister has pledged to publish revised guidance to intelligence officers but Mr Dismore added: "General assertions of non-complicity are no longer an adequate response to the many detailed allegations.
"A more obvious case of outsourcing of torture, a more obvious case of passive rendition, I cannot imagine"
David Davis MP
Torture complicity: Key cases"An independent inquiry is the only way to get to the bottom of these stories, clear the air and make recommendations for the future conduct and management of the security services.
"The recent allegations should be a wake-up call to Ministers that the current arrangements are not satisfactory. We look to the Government to respond positively to our recommendations and not to continue to hide behind their wall of secrecy."
Shadow foreign secretary William Hague said: "We also call on the government urgently to clarify what legally constitutes complicity in torture.
"All credible allegations of complicity in torture should be thoroughly investigated if public trust is to be restored."
A spokesman for the government rejected the call for an independent inquiry, saying that oversight was already sufficient.
"The government unreservedly condemns the use of torture as a matter of fundamental principle and works hard with its international partners to eradicate this abhorrent practice worldwide," said the spokesman.
"The government has already made clear it is committed to publishing guidance to intelligence officers as well as asking the Intelligence and Security Committee to consider new developments on detention and rendition."
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Washington Post Endorses Abu Ghraib Scapegoating For Torture
The Washington Post Editorial Page — keeper of all establishment Washington wisdom — today advocates that low-level CIA interrogators who went beyond John Yoo’s torture guidelines, and only them, be criminally investigated and prosecuted by …
Fears grow over fate of Iran prisoners
• Two inmates die from meningitis in Evin prison
• Former detainees speak of harassment and torture
Fears are mounting over the safety of hundreds of political inmates in Iran’s most notorious prison following the deaths of two prisoners detained in the recent post-election unrest.
Mohsen Rouholamini and Amir Javadifar died in Tehran’s Evin prison after being arrested at a demonstration this month. Rouholamini, the son of a prominent Iranian scientist close to the country’s political elite, died from meningitis after injuries believed to have been inflicted by his jailers went untreated.
The deaths prompted fears of a meningitis outbreak in Evin and other overcrowded detention centres where opposition figures, journalists and students are kept following last month’s disputed election. News of the deaths coincided with reports of injuries to other detainees.
One inmate, Isa Saharkhiz, a prominent reformist journalist and commentator, is reported to have suffered broken ribs after being tortured under interrogation.
Campaigners are also concerned for the safety of Kian Tajbakhsh, an American-Iranian scholar said to be under pressure to confess involvement in an alleged western plot to orchestrate the protests following Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s re-election.
Prisoners recently released from Evin have described enduring countless beatings and being herded into tiny cells without air conditioning, where stifling temperatures regularly soar above 40C.
“I was beaten by batons and slapped thousands of times,” said one, who spent two weeks in the prison’s Section 209, reserved for political prisoners. “I can’t remember how many times I have been beaten and slapped while they were forcing me to confess whatever they wanted,” he told the Guardian.
Another prisoner, who spent three weeks in a block normally used for ordinary criminals, said: “I still have the screams and shouts of the prisoners in my ears, the prisoners whose legs and arms were broken under warders’ attacks.” Both did not wish their names to be published.
One recently released man was said to have become mentally ill.
“He is not like before, he is very weak,” his girlfriend said. “He was harassed, insulted and tortured. The warders pushed him from stairs while his hands were bound together. He was forced to crawl on the ground like a worm.”
Iran’s already divided political establishment has been shocked by Rouholamani’s death, disclosed days after his family was told he would be released. His father, Abdol Hossein Rouholamani, is a former head of one of Iran’s leading research bodies, the Pasteur Institution, and adviser to the defeated conservative candidate, Mohsen Rezai. Rouholamani, 25, was arrested on 9 July during a demonstration commemorating the 10th anniversary of a 1999 pro-reformist student uprising at Tehran University, where his older brother had once headed the basij, the hardline pro-government militia used to quell the recent protests.
Javadifar, a student, is thought to have suffered a broken nose and arm while being arrested at the same event.
A blog in the name of a high-ranking revolutionary guard member, Hossein Alaie, quoted Rouholamani’s father as saying his son’s jaw had been broken and that he had been denied medical treatment.
“I found out that after torturing him, they had not attended to his wounds and his temperature sky-rocketed and he was diagnosed with meningitis,” the blog quoted the father as saying.
Rouholamani bowed to political pressure to play down his son’s death by today cancelling a public memorial scheduled for the headquarters of Iran’s state broadcaster, IRIB. An eyewitness said security forces dispersed large numbers of people who turned up for the event.
The head of the parliamentary investigations committee, Hamid Reza Katouzian, called Rouhoulamini’s death “very ugly” and added: “Those who have turned society into a security state and deployed military measures should be held accountable.”
Your Taxpayer Dollars Were Used to Torture Children
I have repeatedly written that the U.S. has tortured children as part of the war on terror (and see this).In an excellent new article, Daily Kos adds the following information:President Jimmy Carter wrote that the Red Cross, Amnesty International and t…
Slow Torture: Detainee U
Frank Naif: Torture, wiretaps, lies to Congress: old spy cronies a drag on Obama’s ‘look to the future’
The Obama national security team talks a big game about not dwelling on past national security misdeeds, but the persistence of so many Bush-era spy…



