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Other countries probing Bush-era torture — Why aren't we?

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maddezmom Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Aug-19-10 03:43 AM
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Other countries probing Bush-era torture — Why aren't we?

WASHINGTON — In June, the Supreme Court refused to hear the case of a Canadian man who contends that U.S. authorities mistook him for an al Qaida operative in 2002 and shipped him to a secret prison in Syria, where he was beaten with electrical cables and held in a grave-like cell for 10 months.

Four years earlier, however, the Canadian government had concluded an exhaustive inquiry and found that the former prisoner, Maher Arar, was telling the truth. Canada cleared Arar of all ties to terrorism and paid him $10 million in damages, and his lawyers say he's cooperating with an investigation into the role of U.S. and Syrian officials in his imprisonment and reported torture.

Arar's case illustrates what lawyers and human rights groups call a shameful trend: While U.S. courts and the Obama administration have been reluctant or unwilling to pursue the cases, countries that once backed former President George W. Bush's war on terrorism are carrying out their own investigations of the alleged U.S. torture program and the role that their governments played in it.

Judges in Great Britain, Spain, Australia, Poland and Lithuania are preparing to hear allegations that their governments helped the CIA run secret prisons on their soil or cooperated in illegal U.S. treatment of terrorism suspects. Spanish prosecutors also have filed criminal charges against six senior Bush administration officials who approved the harsh interrogation methods that detainees say were employed at U.S. military prisons in Afghanistan, Iraq, Guantanamo Bay and other sites.

Another former prisoner whose case the Supreme Court dismissed, Khaled El-Masri of Germany, has sued the government of Macedonia for handing him over to CIA agents, who he charges tortured him in Afghanistan. His case is pending in the European Court of Human Rights, in France.



Read more: http://www.miamiherald.com/2010/08/18/1782010/detainee-torture-cases-proceed.html#ixzz0x2ViYjvi
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midnight Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Aug-19-10 03:57 AM
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1. We are too busy tripping over the homeless, and the joblessness
that this debacle has created.
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mwb970 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Aug-19-10 05:24 AM
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2. IOKIYAR. /nt
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GodlessBiker Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Aug-19-10 07:04 AM
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3. The professional political class protecting its own.
Ford pardoning Nixon is another example.
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Demeter Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Aug-19-10 11:41 AM
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4. Because We Must "Look Foraward, Not Back"
Our President said so. Fuck the Constitution, full speed ahead!
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