Curt Wechsler, The World Can't Wait: September 2011 Archives
The two Americans released this month by Iran have reported that when they complained about conditions in their Tehran prison, the jailers would "immediately remind us of comparable conditions at Guantanamo Bay." Photographed: Camp Delta, Guantanamo Bay. (John Riley / EPA)
The execution came 20 years after Davis was convicted of the murder of Mark Macphail, a 27-year-old police officer who was shot and wounded after intervening in a fight outside the store. The case has been in and out of court ever since, as increasing doubts were cast on his conviction.
There was no physical evidence, blood samples, or DNA linking Davis to the crime. The murder weapon was never found. His conviction instead relied on witness statements from nine people, seven of whom have since recanted their evidence, saying they were coerced into delivering it by police officers.
Several members of the jury have since come forward to say that they reached the wrong verdict. Meanwhile, a further witness has claimed that another man, Sylvester Coles, privately confessed to the murder.
-- Guy Adams, The Independent
c/o Citizens for Legitimate Government:
US to pay up to 100 million dollars to build new Bagram prison
As the Obama administration announced plans for hundreds of billions of dollars more in domestic budget cuts, it late last week solicited bids for the construction of a massive new prison in Bagram, Afghanistan. Posted on FedBizOpps.Gov website which it uses to announce new privatized spending projects, the administration unveiled plans for "the construction of Detention Facility in Parwan (DFIP), Bagram, Afghanistan" which includes "detainee housing capability for approximately 2000 detainees." It will also feature "guard towers, administrative facility and Vehicle/Personnel Access Control Gates, security surveillance and restricted access systems." The announcement provided: "the estimated cost of the project is between $25,000,000 to $100,000,000."
Shame on DePaul University "law" professor Alberto Coll's respect for the cruel and unusual actions of this government's prime advocate for torture.
And shame on NY Times columnist James Warren for attempting to lend legitimacy to academic complicity in the practice. Torture is always wrong, no exceptions.
c/o Deborah Dupre, Human Rights Examiner
photo above, plus VIDEO by Bill Carpenter
Activists March Across the Golden Gate Bridge
SAN FRANCISCO, CA (9/11)- Several hundred activists marched across San Francisco's Golden Gate Bridge today in a protest against the war in Afghanistan, continued U.S. presence in Iraq, and NATO's attacks on Libya. While there were no recorded U.S. deaths in Iraq in August, 66 soldiers died that month in Afghanistan, the highest for a single month since the war began in 2001. An additional nine troops have died in Afghanistan this month.
After gathering this morning at both the north and south ends of the Golden Gate Bridge, peace advocates simultaneously marched on the bridge tomeet in the middle of the span to honor those who died on 9/11 and the soldiers and civilians who have since died in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Manymarchers carried homemade signs or banners proclaiming, "Love Not War," "Bring the Troops Home," and "No More Wars." Activists from the World Can't Wait made an impressive statement dressed as prisoners in orange jumpsuits and carrying signs that read "9/11 was not a license for war or torture."
"We've been told to think about American lives lost since 9/11, but not to care about the loss of any other life in the ten years that the government used 9/11 as an excuse to go to war against the rest of the world," Stephanie Tang of World Can't Wait told the crowd at the after-march rally at Vista Point on the Marin side of the bridge. "The horrible loss of 3,000 lives on 9/11 is now being used to push America's war agenda. Today we remember every person killed by our government in the last ten years...American lives are not more important than other people on this planet."
Dean says torture probe could have prompted CIA 'revolt'
Obama transition team member Christopher Edley confirms the political calculation behind protection of war criminal John Yoo, belying his oft-quoted "academic freedom" defense.
For a really thorough discussion on what's at stake here, read
The prohibition against torture is universal. Meaning it is always wrong. There is no "torture lite".
Torture, whatever its guise, is always immoral. Whether if
happens "at home" or abroad. But it should really give us pause that it is
happening right under our noses, in prisons all around us, in this country.
Yoo's yammering that the law is whatever the president wants it to be from moment to moment gets an executive-privilege shrug from Obama. And Obama's successors, if they wish, can cite his non-response as legal precedent...
A Harvard law professor doesn't get to plead ignorance of that.
Nor do his functionaries at Berkeley Law.
Dahlia Lithwick challenges Zev Chafets' contention that because "Obama has largely adopted the Cheney playbook on combating terrorism, from keeping Gitmo open to trying suspected enemies of the state in military tribunals" that Cheney's policies have been thoroughly vindicated and we all live in Cheney's America:
[While] The Obama administration is responsible for Cheney's continued legitimacy in the debate about torture, as well as the legitimacy of the debate itself... By deciding to repudiate torture while doing everything in its power to protect the torturers, the Obama administration has succeeded in elevating not only Cheney but the idea that, in America, some torturers are too important to be punished...
Most of [us] agree that we should
not be a nation of torturers, and that torture has tarnished the reputation of
the United States as a beacon of justice. Most of us do not want warrantless
surveillance, secret prisons, or war against every dictator who looks at us
funny. We may be bloodthirsty, but we aren't morons. On his most combative and
truly lawless positions, Cheney still stands largely alone.
"Today, years later, darkness still enshrouds those who authorized and ran the 'black sites' on European territories...
-- Commissioner Thomas Hammarberg urges probe of CIA detention centers
c/o George Mason University's History News Network:
The annual meeting of the American Political Science Association was briefly interrupted this afternoon when a woman protesting the appearance of Bush administration official John Yoo loudly denounced him from the floor when he began to speak...
videoUC Berkeley Billboard
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Events & Calendars
Important Reading
Physicians for Human RightsBroken Laws, Broken Lives
NLG White Paper
ON THE LAW OF TORTURE...
The President's Executioner
Detention and torture in Guantanamo