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Advocacy and Letters -
Press Releases
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Written by Coalition
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Tuesday, 17 August 2010 |
WASHINGTON - August 17 - The American Civil Liberties Union and a broad coalition of religious, political, human rights and civil rights groups today called on U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder to immediately adopt a set of proposed standards aimed at eradicating sexual assault in the nation's prisons.
The standards, issued over a year ago by the blue-ribbon, bipartisan National Prison Rape Elimination Commission (NPREC), would, if adopted by Holder, provide an important guide for corrections professionals to eliminate sexual abuse in their facilities and measure the effectiveness of their efforts. The coalition previously called on Holder to adopt the standards in a letter sent last week.
"The commission's proposed standards merely put into words what the Constitution already requires," said Amy Fettig, staff attorney with the ACLU National Prison Project. "Prison officials have a constitutional obligation to provide prisoners with protection against violence and sexual abuse, and Attorney General Holder should implement the standards without delay."
The proposed standards would also help hold corrections officials accountable by helping reform-minded officials indentify their facilities' strengths and weaknesses while ensuring that those who continue to deny the high incidence of sexual abuse of prisoners are no longer able to minimize the extent of the problem.
The proposed standards also include important provisions which would make it easier for prison rape victims seeking their day in court to file lawsuits challenging their inhumane treatment. Since the 1996 passage of the Prison Litigation Reform Act (PLRA), victims are forced to exhaust the internal complaint processes of their correctional institution before filing a lawsuit – processes that are often comprised of arbitrary rules that are impossible for prisoners to navigate.
According to the Bureau of Justice Statistics, more than 60,000 prisoners – one of every 20 – were sexually assaulted last year. The problem is even worse in juvenile institutions, where one in eight juvenile detainees were victims of sexual assault last year.
"There is a deeply ingrained culture of acceptance when it comes to prison rape in too many prisons and jails across the country," said Margaret Winter, Associate Director of the ACLU National Prison Project, who testified before NPREC and served on a committee of experts that helped develop the standards. "The proposed standards are a milestone in the long battle to end a shameful era of rampant violence and abuse within our nation's prisons and there is no excuse for the Attorney General's delay in adopting them."
The proposed standards were issued by NPREC after a comprehensive study of the issues surrounding prison rape, including site visits, public hearings and consultations with corrections experts, academics, survivors of sexual abuse in detention, health care providers and others.
According to the coalition's letter, while many corrections leaders strongly support the proposed standards, some officials have exaggerated the cost of implementing the basic measures outlined in the proposed standards. Cash-strapped states like California and Oregon have already begun to implement the standards without substantial additional costs. And the cost of failing to address the problem of prison rape is huge – one state prison system, for example, recently paid $100 million after more than 10 years of expensive and protracted litigation, to settle lawsuits filed by women who were sexually abused by staff at a women's facility.
The ACLU today is also calling on Congress to pass the Prison Abuse Remedies Act, which would eliminate barriers created by PLRA for all prisoners seeking protection of their rights in federal court.
"The Prison Abuse Remedies Act is currently sitting idle before Congress. Passage of this bill could protect millions of our nation's prisoners from unnecessary suffering," said Jennifer Bellamy, ACLU Legislative Counsel. "This country currently incarcerates over 2 million Americans in increasingly abusive conditions. We cannot continue to leave them without recourse. Congress should pass the Prison Abuse Remedies Act before this legislative session is up." Along with the ACLU, the letter sent to Holder urging adoption of the NPREC standards was signed by a wide array of organizations from across the political spectrum, including Prison Fellowship, the American Conservative Union, Focus on the Family, the Southern Baptist Convention, The Sentencing Project, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People and the National Immigrant Justice Center.
A copy of the letter is available online at: www.aclu.org/prisoners-rights/coalition-letter-attorney-general-holder-prison-rape-elimination-act-prea-standards ### The ACLU conserves America's original civic values working in courts, legislatures and communities to defend and preserve the individual rights and liberties guaranteed to every person in the United States by the Constitution and the Bill of Rights. Be first to comment this article | Add as favourites (22) | Quote this article on your site | Views: 386 |
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Advocacy and Letters -
Advocacy and Comment Letters
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Written by Coalition
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Monday, 02 August 2010 |
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August 2, 2010 The Honorable Eric Holder Attorney General, United States of America U.S. Department of Justice 950 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW Washington, DC 20530-0001 Dear Attorney General Holder, We represent a broad array of religious, political, human rights, and civil rights groups united in our dedication to stopping rape in our prisons. Many of us were part of the extraordinarily diverse coalition of organizations and citizens that helped develop the Prison Rape Elimination Act (PREA), and worked to secure its unanimous passage in 2003. At this moment, standards to eradicate sexual assault in prisons await your approval. We urge you to make a priority of completing your review and adopt the standards as swiftly as possible. The magnitude of sexual abuse in our prisons is appalling. The Bureau of Justice Statistics reports that more than 60,000 prisoners, one of every twenty inmates, were sexually assaulted during the previous year. The scandal is even worse at juvenile institutions, where one in eight juvenile detainees were victims of sexual assault during a 12-month period. It is an abomination that the government does not protect individuals in its custody from sexual violence. Being raped in prison is devastating physically and emotionally for victims, and the negative consequences continue long after they finish their sentences and return to the community. For each day that the standards are delayed, more men and women - and, yes, boys and girls - will be raped. PREA established a Commission to assess the problem and find solutions. The Commission was tasked with developing standards to guide corrections leaders in effective ways to prevent prison rapes, and to hold those officials accountable for achieving results. Last year the Commission released its proposed standards after conducting a comprehensive study of the issues surrounding prison rape. It reviewed existing research, held site visits and public hearings across the country, formed expert committees, and consulted with corrections practitioners, academics, survivors of sexual abuse in detention and their advocates, legal experts, and health care providers. The Commission consulted with the nation’s leading corrections experts at every step of this thorough and responsible review. The Commission distilled what it learned from this exhaustive process into the proposed standards. Those standards will provide an important guide for corrections professionals to eliminate sexual abuse in their facilities and to measure the effectiveness of their efforts. The standards will also help hold corrections officials accountable. Such accountability is vitally important; it will help reform-minded officials identify their facilities’ strengths and weaknesses, while ensuring that those who still deny the high incidence of sexual abuse of inmates no longer are able to minimize the problem. While many corrections leaders strongly support the standards, some officials have exaggerated the cost of implementing these basic measures. These officials ignore the fact that California andOregon, both cash-strapped states with budget crises, have begun to implement the standards without substantial additional costs. More important, they ignore the huge costs of failing to address prisoner rape. For example, one state prison system recently paid $100 million, after more than ten years of expensive litigation, to settle law suits by women who were abused by staff at a women’s facility. Implementation of the Commission’s recommendations will be cost-effective and will help corrections agencies meet their legal duty to protect inmates who have been placed in their care. We recognize that sexual abuse in detention is an issue of tremendous concern to you and the Department of Justice. We strongly endorse the proposed standards, and respectfully ask you to make them binding at the earliest date possible. Sincerely,
Pat Nolan Vice President Prison Fellowship David A. Keene Chairman, Board of Directors American Conservative Union Tom McClusky Senior Vice President Family Research Council Action Tom Minnery Senior Vice President Government and Public Policy Focus on the Family Dr. Richard Land President The Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission Southern Baptist Convention Galen Carey Director of Government Affairs National Association of Evangelicals Greg Mitchell The Mitchell Firm Penny Nance CEO Concerned Women for America Grover Norquist Gary L. Bauer President American Values United Methodist Church, General Board of Church and Society Roland C. Warren President The National Fatherhood Initiative The Sentencing Project
Zena D. Crenshaw Executive Director and Board Member POPULAR, Inc. – Power Over Poverty Under Laws of America Restored John W. Whitehead President The Rutherford Institute Dr. Andrew D. Jackson Deputy Director National Judicial Conduct and Disability Law Project, Inc. Alliance For Patient Safety.org The Aleph Institute
National Association of Social Workers
Justice and Witness Ministries/United Church of Christ
American Legislative Exchange Council
James Landrith Founder The Multiracial Activist Don Racheter, PhD
Just Detention International
Open Society Policy Center
National African American Drug Policy Coalition, Inc.
AdvoCare, Inc.
Prison Ministry Task Force, Episcopal Diocese of Maryland
Rev. Jim Wallis President and CEO Sojourners Hilary O. Shelton Director, National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) Washington Bureau & Senior Vice President for Advocacy and Policy American Civil Liberties Union
Rape, Abuse, and Incest National Network (RAINN)
The Rebecca Project
National Immigrant Justice Center Human Rights Watch Be first to comment this article | Add as favourites (19) | Quote this article on your site | Views: 452 |
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Mamblog Section -
Foreign Policy, Military and War
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Written by Ivan Eland
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Wednesday, 30 June 2010 |
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The Second Coming of Petraeus June 30, 2010 Ivan Eland
With the justified firing of Gen. Stanley McChrystal and his replacement with Iraq water-walker David Petraeus, it’s as if people are hoping for a second coming of Jesus in Afghanistan. Unfortunately, the replacement may be similar to the second coming of the water-walking Joe Gibbs as coach of the Washington Redskins. Although McChrystal’s derisive comments about high-level Obama administration officials weren’t as bad as Gen. Douglas MacArthur’s attempts to undermine President Harry Truman’s effort to keep the Korean War from turning into a nuclear war against China, such insubordination by a military officer toward the civilian command structure cannot be tolerated in a republic. If it is, the country may not be a republic for long. Thus, even many Republicans didn’t squawk about McChrystal’s sacking. They, and almost everyone else in Washington, were comforted, even elated, that Gen. David Petraeus, the hero of the Iraq war, was recycled to command U.S. and NATO forces in Afghanistan. Everyone is hoping for a replay of the reductions in violence in Iraq. Of course, Petraeus is partially responsible for that reduction in that violence, but not for the reasons commonly believed. The conventional wisdom is that Petraeus’ anti-guerrilla warfare strategy—winning the hearts and minds of the local population instead of blasting the insurgents to smithereens and also killing many civilians (this strategy is now being transplanted to Afghanistan)—was the cause of increased stability in Iraq. In fact, paying the Iraqi Sunni insurgents to fight al-Qaeda instead of U.S. forces and prior ethnic cleansing that separated the warring Sunni and Shi’ite groups were the main factors leading to the reduction in violence in Iraq, according to many counterinsurgency experts. Petraeus’ short-term bribery will probably not even hold in Iraq. The real problem is the ethno-sectarian fissures that will likely reignite once the United States leaves. By funding and arming the Sunnis, as well as Iraqi Shi’ites and Kurds, Petraeus, to achieve short-term gains in stability, may end up inadvertently worsening post-U.S. ethno-sectarian warfare. Even if we accept the dubious propositions that Iraq’s worst days are behind it and that Petraeus’ counterinsurgency strategy was primarily responsible for the reduction of violence, the skeptical media keeps asking the question of whether it can be transplanted to Afghanistan. After all, even many U.S. troops complain that their casualties are going up because they are not allowed to take the fight to the enemy, thus endangering civilians and ruining the “hearts and minds” strategy. The counterinsurgency strategy has been adopted to such an extent that the United States even announces offensives in advance, hoping that both the Taliban and civilians will flee the area. American troops are right that there is a tradeoff between U.S. casualties and local civilian casualties; when civilian casualties are reduced, the U.S. military takes more of them, and vice versa. The two most important “centers of gravity” in any anti-guerrilla war are civilian opinion in the occupied nation and public opinion back home for the occupier. But to win local popularity, the U.S. military must incur higher casualties—as is now occurring—which leads to erosion of support for the war back home. Predictably, a majority of Americans have soured on the Afghan war after nine years of quagmire. Despite taking higher casualties, however, the United States doesn’t seem to be winning many Afghan hearts and minds either. Counterinsurgency campaigns are rarely effective for several reasons, the principal one being that it is difficult to get around being regarded as a foreign occupier. In Afghanistan, even the brutal Taliban has much support in the Pashtun community—the tribes that historically have been dominant in the country—because the group is regarded as a defender of the tribes against the Afghan government, which is perceived to be controlled by Uzbeks and Tajiks. Other problems that foreign occupiers face include the fact that counterinsurgency is much more expensive to conduct than insurgency, foreigners usually have difficulty understanding the local culture, locals know that the foreigners will eventually leave and they will have to deal with the local insurgents, government organizations specializing in combat are ill-suited to the difficult task of nation-building, and nimble non-bureaucratic guerrillas can adapt faster to changes in the battlefield than the governments of the host nation and foreign occupier. Thus, the second coming of Petraeus may instead resemble the return of storied coach Joe Gibbs to the Washington Redskins. Although he had been in four Super Bowls during his first tenure as coach, his resurrection fizzled because the NFL he returned to was not the same one he left. For Petraeus, Afghanistan is not Iraq. Ivan Eland Send email Ivan Eland is Senior Fellow and Director of the Center on Peace & Liberty at The Independent Institute. Dr. Eland is a graduate of Iowa State University and received an M.B.A. in applied economics and Ph.D. in national security policy from George Washington University. He has been Director of Defense Policy Studies at the Cato Institute, and he spent 15 years working for Congress on national security issues, including stints as an investigator for the House Foreign Affairs Committee and Principal Defense Analyst at the Congressional Budget Office. He is author of the books Partitioning for Peace: An Exit Strategy for Iraq, and Recarving Rushmore. Full Biography and Recent Publications New from Ivan Eland! THE EMPIRE HAS NO CLOTHES: U.S. Foreign Policy Exposed (Updated Edition) Most Americans don’t think of their government as an empire, but in fact the United States has been steadily expanding its control of overseas territories since the turn of the twentieth century. In The Empire Has No Clothes, Ivan Eland, a leading expert on U.S. defense policy and national security, examines American military interventions around the world from the Spanish-American War to the invasion and occupation of Iraq. Learn More »» | Be first to comment this article | Add as favourites (63) | Quote this article on your site | Views: 962 |
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Mamblog Section -
Economics and Financial Services
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Written by Alvaro Vargas Llosa
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Wednesday, 30 June 2010 |
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The G-20: Has Everyone Lost It? June 30, 2010 Alvaro Vargas Llosa
WASHINGTON—The governments, institutions, and personalities who should be providing guidance in the aftermath of the financial and economic debacle of 2007–08 are still recommending the very policies that got us here in the first place. The G-20 summit in Toronto exposed this truth quite poignantly. Before and during the sessions, President Obama urged nations to postpone fiscal tightening and debt reduction for fear of stifling the weak recovery. His assurances that the participants were in “violent agreement” on their final communique about reducing deficits in half by 2013 and stabilizing debt ratios by 2016 actually concealed more violence than agreement. Canada’s Stephen Harper, Germany’s Angela Merkel and, yes, even France’s Nicolas Sarkozy argued for fiscal retrenching. But given opposition from the United States and Japan, and ambiguity on the part of emerging powers such as Brazil, the compromise was a toothless statement of good wishes. Respected financial publications that should be offering moral clarity now that government debt amounts to 92 percent of the size of the economy in France and 83 percent in Britain, and that the U.S. budget deficit is at near-record levels, are instead warning against monetary and fiscal restraint. Martin Wolf of the Financial Times thinks “it is right for central banks to keep printing.” Clive Crook of the same publication writes that it is fair to call “Germany a bad global citizen for tightening fiscal policy despite its external surplus and unstressed borrowing capacity.” Forbes, a supposedly pro-market publication, published an article railing against the austerity measures announced by George Osborne, the British chancellor of the exchequer, who wants to slash the budgets of various government departments by 25 percent. Financier George Soros, commenting on Bloomberg, calls the spending-reduction measures in some European countries “a disaster.” The case these normally authoritative voices make is essentially this—that the recovery continues to depend on government stimulus, and that in order to redress the balance between surplus nations such as Germany or China and deficit nations such as the United States or, say, Spain, the former need to be made to save less and spend more. If this advice, which blames the prudent for the conduct of the imprudent, were postulated only by the usual suspects—i.e., Nobel laureate Paul Krugman and company, it would be bad enough. But coming from the world’s superpower, the business community’s most influential gurus and outlets that call themselves conservative, one thing is clear: The world is a crazier place than one feared. Deficits, debt, and loose money are what caused the bubble. They also caused the Hitchcockian movie in which Europe has been living for the past few months. Making policy decisions necessary to create the environment for a sustained recovery and avoid future bubbles is tough enough when any remotely responsible measure is met with the national howling we have seen against pension-fund reform in France or spending cuts in Greece and Spain. Making them when international leaders and respected observers seem to have lost it requires truly titanic efforts. Thank God, some have kept their heads. As soon as the G-20 coven ended, the Bank for International Settlements (BIS), the Switzerland-based central bank of central banks, spoke out in its annual report against keeping loose monetary and fiscal policies. It maintains that the artificially low interest rates are distorting investment decisions and leading market participants to take excessive risk. An austerity program would build trust, shore up the financial system and provide low long-term borrowing costs to the benefit of sound investments. Profligate fiscal and monetary policies, the BIS argues, could replicate the easy money environment that led to the present crisis by encouraging financial institutions to engage in too much short-term borrowing and long-term lending, a gap that would result in a credit crunch at the first sign of scarce liquidity. More essentially, the current policies will delay confronting the demographic challenge facing the welfare state in rapidly aging countries and restructuring inefficient industries kept on life support by access to easy money. You know something really is rotten when the BIS, which in the last couple of years cheered the measures it now debunks, starts to warn of impending disasters if governments maintain the course. Alvaro Vargas Llosa Send email Alvaro Vargas Llosa is Senior Fellow of The Center on Global Prosperity at The Independent Institute. He is a native of Peru and received his B.S.C. in international history from the London School of Economics. His weekly column is syndicated worldwide by the Washington Post Writers Group, and his Independent Institute books include Lessons From the Poor: Triumph of the Entrepreneurial Spirit, The Che Guevara Myth and the Future of Liberty, and Liberty for Latin America.
Full Biography and Recent Publications New from Alvaro Vargas Llosa! LESSONS FROM THE POOR: Triumph of the Entrepreneurial Spirit Half the people in the world live on two dollars or less per day and roughly 600 million live on no more than one dollar per day. With thousands of international relief organizations, strategic government programs, and billions of dollars in foreign aid, why do so many underdeveloped countries remain unable to grow their economies beyond mere survival? Learn More »» | Be first to comment this article | Add as favourites (59) | Quote this article on your site | Views: 968 |
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Mamblog Section -
Foreign Policy, Military and War
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Written by Andy Worthington
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Monday, 28 June 2010 |
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Obama’s Moral Bankruptcy Regarding Torture by Andy Worthington, June 28, 2010
Originally published by the Future of Freedom Foundation Saturday was the International Day in Support of Victims of Torture, established twelve years ago to mark the day, in 1987, when the UN Convention Against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Punishment or Treatment came into force, but you wouldn’t have found out about it through the mainstream U.S. media. No editorials or news broadcasts reminded Americans that “No exceptional circumstances whatsoever, whether a state of war or a threat of war, internal political instability or any other public emergency, may be invoked as a justification of torture,” and that anyone responsible for authorizing torture must be prosecuted, and no one called for the prosecution of George W. Bush, Dick Cheney, and Donald Rumsfeld or their supportive colleagues and co-conspirators, including, for example, John Yoo, Jay S. Bybee and Stephen Bradbury, the authors of the Office of Legal Counsel’s “torture memos,” or other key figures in Cheney’s “War Council” that drove the policies: David Addington, Cheney’s former chief of staff, Alberto Gonzales, the former U.S. attorney general, and William J. Haynes II, the Pentagon’s former chief counsel. Instead, two mainstream newspaper articles revealed the extent to which President Obama has, over the last 17 months, conspired with senior officials and with Congress to maintain the bitter fruits of the Bush administration’s torture program — and its closely related themes of arbitrary detention and hyperbole about the perceived threat of terrorism. In the first of these two bleak stories, “U.S. to repatriate Guantánamo detainee to Yemen after judge orders him to be released,” anonymous administration officials told the Washington Post that the president had generously decided to release a Yemeni prisoner in Guantánamo, Mohammed Hassan Odaini, whose release was ordered last month by a judge in the District Court in Washington D.C. As I explained in an article following the judge’s May 26 ruling, it had been publicly known since November 2007 that the government had conceded in June 2005 that Odaini, a student, had been seized by mistake after staying the night with friends in a university guest house in Faisalabad, Pakistan, on the night that the house was raided by Pakistani and U.S. operatives, and that he had been officially approved for release on June 26, 2006 (ironically, on the International Day in Support of Victims of Torture). Nevertheless, the Justice Department refused to abandon the case against him, and took its feeble allegations all the way to the District Court, where they were savagely dismissed by Judge Henry H. Kennedy Jr. When the judge’s unclassified opinion was subsequently released, an even grimmer truth emerged: that shortly after Odaini’s arrival at Guantánamo in June 2002, an interrogator recommended his repatriation (after he had been exploited for information about his fellow prisoners), and that, in April 2004, “an employee of the Criminal Investigative Task Force (‘CITF’) of the Department of Defense reviewed five interrogations of Odaini and wrote that ‘[t]here is no information that indicates [he] has clear ties to mid or high level Taliban or that he is a member of al-Qaeda.’” Odaini was not subjected to specific torture techniques, but there are many people — myself included — who are happy to point out to the Obama administration that subjecting an innocent man to eight years of essentially arbitrary detention in an experimental prison camp devoted to the coercive interrogations of prisoners who were deliberately excluded from the protections of the Geneva Conventions is itself a form of torture, especially as, unlike the worst convicted criminals on the U.S. mainland, no Guantánamo prisoner has ever been allowed a family visit, and many have never even spoken to their families by phone. Moreover, the fact that the administration proceeded with his habeas case, despite knowing that he was innocent, and then refused to release him as soon as the judge delivered his ruling, confirms that, when it comes to lawlessness and cruelty, the Obama administration is closer in spirit to the Bush administration than it cares to admit. On Saturday, via its anonymous spokesmen, the administration confirmed how far it has fallen from all notions of decency. The officials explained that the moratorium on any releases to Yemen that was issued by President Obama in January, in response to cynical hysteria whipped up in the wake of the failed plane bomb plot involving a Nigerian who had reportedly trained in Yemen, “remains in place,” but, as one of the officials stated: The general suspension is still intact, but this is a court-ordered release. People were comfortable with this … because of the guy's background, his family and where he comes from in Yemen. In other words, a mouthpiece of the administration told a major U.S. newspaper that Odaini, a patently innocent man whose release was ordered by a U.S. judge, and whose ongoing detention was cynically sought by the Obama administration, was only being released because government officials were happy about his family background (his father, it transpires, is a retired security officer). I shouldn’t really need to explain to the government that it’s unconstitutional to detain an innocent man, even if his father happened to be Osama bin Laden rather than a security officer, nor to point out how it would appear if this vetting procedure were to be applied to the criminal justice system in general, but in Obama’s world it is apparently necessary to point out these basic facts. The second story that arrived in time to cast a mocking light on the International Day in Support of Victims of Torture — “Closing Guantánamo Fades as a Priority” — was published in the New York Times. Since President Obama failed to close Guantánamo by his self-imposed deadline of January 22 this year, the administration has failed to set a new deadline — and for a depressing reason, as Sen. Carl Levin explained to the Times. “There is a lot of inertia” against closing the prison, “and the administration is not putting a lot of energy behind their position that I can see,” Sen. Levin said, adding that “the odds are that it will still be open” by the next presidential inauguration in 2013. Sen. Levin had no doubt that this failure had come about because of a lack of political will on the part of the administration, which contrasts sharply with the rhetoric of Barack Obama in August 2007, when he was still a U.S. Senator. On that occasion, he spoke compellingly about how, ”In the dark halls of Abu Ghraib and the detention cells of Guantánamo, we have compromised our most precious values. What could have been a call to a generation has become an excuse for unchecked presidential power.” However, since coming to power, as Sen. Levin explained, the administration has been “unwilling to make a serious effort to exert its influence.” With a sharp eye for how principled rhetoric has not been followed up with any attempt whatsoever to persuade Congress of the importance of closing Guantánamo, Sen. Levin contrasted the administration’s “muted response to legislative hurdles to closing Guantánamo with ‘very vocal’ threats to veto financing for a fighter jet engine it opposes,” and added that last year the administration “stood aside as lawmakers restricted the transfer of detainees into the United States except for prosecution,” and also responded with silence just a month ago, when the House and Senate Armed Services Committees voted to block money for renovating a prison in Illinois to take the remaining prisoners in Guantánamo who have not been cleared for release. “They are not really putting their shoulder to the wheel on this issue,” Sen. Levin concluded, adding, “It’s pretty dormant in terms of their public positions.” “Dormant” is a good word, but something like “extinct” may be more appropriate, if, as Sen. Levin asserts, Guantánamo will still be open in January 2013. If that occurs, Guantánamo will have been open for 11 years, which doesn’t even bear thinking about. This is especially true because, as it stands now, nearly eight and half years after Guantánamo opened, the Obama administration’s refusal to take leadership on the issue, to drop its unacceptable moratorium on releasing Yemenis cleared by its own Task Force (and in some cases, like Mohammed Hassan Odaini, by the courts), and to abandon an unprincipled policy of continuing to hold men indefinitely without charge or trial demonstrates that senior officials, including the president, genuinely have no interest in bringing to an end a regime founded on torture and arbitrary detention. In most respects, their actions — or their inactivity — represent a ringing endorsement of their predecessors’ vile policies. The “enhanced interrogation techniques” of the Bush years may have come to an end, but anyone doubting the baleful effects of long-term detention without charge or trial should recall what Christophe Girod of the International Committee of the Red Cross told the New York Times over six year and a half years ago: “The open-endedness of the situation and its impact on the mental health of the population has become a major problem.” That was in October 2003, and I dread to think what the mental state of some of those prisoners must be by now. The very thought that, two and half years from now, some of these men might still be held because the Obama administration doesn’t care enough to do anything about it cannot be excused for reasons of political expediency. Instead, it confirms that, in failing to bring to an end to key elements of the Bush administration’s program of torture and arbitrary detention, the Obama administration has confirmed its lack of principles. Andy Worthington is the author of The Guantánamo Files: The Stories of the 774 Detainees in America’s Illegal Prison (published by Pluto Press) and serves as policy advisor to the Future of Freedom Foundation. Visit his website at: www.andyworthington.co.uk.
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