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Kastelein of V.O.F. Expathos, in the Netherlands along with Chris Cook- CFUV radio journalist and Editor in Chief of Pacific Free Press. Cook is based in , Victoria, British Columbia.
The site is a sister to Atlantic Free Press and Brick Ogden an American Expatriate in Amsterdam has been a key supporter of this project.
The mission of Pacific Free Press is simple: to dig out nuggets of truth from
the slag-heap of lies, ignorance and witless diversion that has buried
public discourse today. Pacific Free Press provides a new venue for
disseminating hard news and insightful, fact-based analysis of the
harsh realities too often ignored or distorted by the mainstream press.
The Independent has a remarkable story on Sami al-Haj, the Sudanese journalist who has been held in George W. Bush's concentration camp in Guantanamo Bay for five years.
Haj has not been charged with any crime, but he is undoubtedly guilty of a grave sin in the eyes of the Bush Regime: he is a cameraman for Al Jazeera.
[For complete article links, please see original here.]
He was captured while trying to enter Afghanistan, on a
valid visa, to cover the war there in June 2002. Pakistani authorities
detained him without any cause, then turned him over to the Americans.
No doubt someone -- or many people -- collected one of the hefty
bounties that American forces were handing out in Pakistan and
Afghanistan in those days for anyone whom the paid denouncer declared
was a "terrorist suspect.
" Hundreds of people ended up in the Gitmo concentration
camp this way, and Haj was one of these. Yet as the Independent notes,
Haj has "continued to act like a reporter, detailing and documenting
what he has seen and experienced inside Guantanamo and then passing
this on to his lawyers."
His eyewitness account of life
inside the Bush gulag is harrowing -- and humiliating for every
American in whose name the Bush Regime has perpetrated this filth. Some
excerpts:
"For more than four years many of us have been
isolated in a small cell, less that 10ft by 6ft, with the intense neon
lights on 24 hours a day, " [Haj wrote]. "Many of us are not allowed to
exercise outside these cells for more than one hour, just once a week.
We are provided with food and drinks which are not suitable for the
iguanas and rats that live beside us on Torture Island."
Haj is a Sudanese citizen who had been working for the
Qatar-based Al Jazeera network for only a matter of months when he was
seized close to the Afghan border. The order for him to be detained
apparently contained the number of his old passport, which had been
lost two years previously and Haj thought the matter would quickly be
cleared up. He was very wrong.
The US authorities have never
formally charged Haj, though during the time of his incarceration at
Guantanamo they have leveled various accusations at him accusations
that have changed from year to year. Among the allegations that have
emerged during a series of Combatant Status Review Tribunals (CSRT) is
that Haj ran a website supporting terrorism, that he sold Stinger
missiles to Islamic militants in Chechnya and that he interviewed Osama
bin Laden. He denies all the charges, though his lawyers point out that
another Al Jazeera cameraman was present during an interview with Bin
Laden. Could this be a case of guilt by association?
Remarkably,
during 130 separate interviews, his interrogators have questioned him
very little about his alleged links to the al-Qa'ida leader or other
radicals. Rather their questions have focused almost exclusively on the
operation of Al Jazeera. One of his lawyers reported that Haj said he
had been told by several people that he would be set free if he agreed
to return to Al Jazeera and spy for them. Each time he turned them down.
This
is a pattern that we've seen over and over with Bush's Terror War
captives. Innocent people are seized -- or bought -- by American
security forces, who then attempt to force the captive to become an
informant. Those who refuse are then plunged into the bowels of Bush's
torture-and-terror apparatus. It is a crude, brutal, indeed Stalinist
way of trying to create an intelligence network on the fly, and on the
cheap.
In Haj's case, however, there was also the added
incentive of penetrating Al Jazeera, whose independent reports on
Bush's Terror War were considered highly dangerous by the Regime's
media manipulators. And it was of course a further act of intimidation
against the Qatar-based station, whose operatives have been killed by
American forces in both Afghanistan and Iraq. We also know that Bush
discussed bombing Al Jazeera's headquarters in Qatar with Tony Blair,
who evidently dissuaded him from this course. The UK government has
never disavowed the revelation of this bloodthirsty conversation
between the two Christian statesmen -- although it has recently
prosecuted the two brave whistleblowers responsible for revealing it.
Haj has seen the handiwork of the Christian statesman from Crawford first hand:
"During our days, months and years of detention we
are constantly hauled off for interrogation sessions which are a
by-word for abuse," Haj writes. "Here we encounter the 'Enhanced
Interrogation Techniques'. One such method is solitary confinement
which, for a selected number of prisoners, has been known to last for
years. Interrogation itself can last for 28 hours without interruption,
the prisoner forced to crouch or stand in stress positions, deprived of
sleep, sexually humiliated without any clothes, sometimes even having
Israeli or US flags wrapped around their heads. If they want to
frighten us, then when we are bound and hooded they bring in the dogs."
More than five years of protesting his innocence, of thinking
about his family, has taken its toll on Haj. Back in January he started
a hunger strike in protest at his incarceration. Twice a day the prison
authorities strap him to a chair using 16 separate restraints and
force-feed him using a tube that has on occasion been forced,
inadvertently, into his lungs rather than his stomach.
By way of
punishment for his "difficult" behaviour he has been held in solitary
confinement. Those who have been permitted to visit him say he has lost
weight and is pale. And despite this the cameraman says he will not
give up his effort to speak out.
In another note, he writes: "I
sometimes ask myself, who are these people who are held in cages not
even fit for wild animals? How do these humans live? The Prophet Jonah
lived inside a whale and Moses lived inside a coffin, so the Guantanamo
cells are only for those who are strong and those who have a will to
adopt the path of the prophets. If I stay all my life in these cages,
let those who inflict this on me do what they wish, but I feel I am
living the life of a King."
As the Red Cross notes, the
situation of the prisoners in Bush's gulag -- held captive indefinitely
without charges and subjected to endless interrogation -- is itself a
form of torture, regardless of any other heinous act inflicted on the
prisoners. And as the Independent reports, an examination of the
Pentagon's own records by Seton Hall University shows that more than
half of the prisoners taken to Guantanamo have not even been alleged to
have committed any hostile act against the United States. That is, they
are so clearly and completely innocent that Bush's gulag minions could
not even come up with the kind of baseless and scattershot allegations
they have leveled against Haj. As the Independent notes:
Just
eight per cent are accused of fighting for a terrorist group while 86
per cent were captured by the Northern Alliance or Pakistani
authorities and handed over "at a time when the US offered large
bounties for the capture of suspected terrorists."
II. The Children's Crusade
"It is impossible but that offences will come: but
woe unto him, through whom they come! It were better for him that a
millstone were hanged about his neck, and he cast into the sea, than
that he should offend one of these little ones." -- Luke 17:1-2
But bear in mind that the prison in Guantanamo Bay is
meant to be the Theresienstadt of the Bush Gulag -- a "model camp," the
public face of the Terror War incarceration system, which journalists
and relief workers are allowed to visit, albeit under very restricted
conditions. Gitmo is actually the "first circle" of Bush's hell, the
best that it gets. Behind this public face lie the "secret prisons" of
the CIA and other agencies and entities in the hydra-headed,
ever-expanding "security organs" of the Regime. We know almost nothing
of the horrors that have gone on there -- or in the many dungeons of
the many tyrannical regimes to which Bush has "renditioned" an unknown
number of captives.
What we do know, however, is that the Regime
has kidnapped and apparently tortured the children of captives in an
effort to make them talk. This was one of the nuggets in the recently
released report by six human rights groups, which detailed 39 known
cases of captives being "disappeared" somewhere in the Bush Gulag. As
highlighted by Hilzoy at Obsidian Wings and Glenn Greenwald (among
others), these "disappeared" include Yusuf and Abed Al Khalid, the sons
of accused al Qaeda mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed. When the two
boys were nine and seven years old, they taken by Pakistani security
forces and later transferred directly to U.S. custody.
This is
not exactly news, however. In March 2003, The Daily Telegraph -- a
fiercely pro-war, pro-Bush paper, at that time controlled by neocon
impresario Conrad Black -- reported straightforwardly that the children
had been taken captive and "are being used by the CIA to force their
father to talk." The story goes on:
Last night CIA
interrogators confirmed that the boys were staying at a secret address
where they were being encouraged to talk about their father's
activities. "We are handling them with kid gloves. After all, they are
only little children," said one official, "but we need to know as much
about their father's recent activities as possible. We have child
psychologists on hand at all times and they are given the best of care."
Again,
the Telegraph has long been used as a conduit for British and American
intelligence services to put the best spin on their activities. (See
"Ulster on the Euphrates" for a recent and particularly egregious
example.) Here it served a two-fold purpose. First, it signaled to the
world that the Regime was willing to play the hardest of hardball in
its Terror War -- a point underscored by the unprovoked invasion of
Iraq just days after the story was published. Second, it sugarcoated
the hardball by assuring the world that the seven and nine year old
boys were being handled with "kid gloves" -- why, there was even a
child psychologist present during their interrogations.
A
glimpse of some of those interrogations was offered in the new
"Disappeared" report, from the testimony of Ali Khan, whose two adult
sons were taken captive by the Pakistani security forces. One son,
Majid, was sent to Gitmo, where he is still being held; the other,
Mohammed, was released after month. As noted by Hilzoy, Ali Khan
testified that
according to Mohammed, he and Majid were detained
in the same place where two of Khalid Sheik Mohammeds young children,
ages about 6 and 8, were held. The Pakistani guards told my son that
the boys were kept in a separate area upstairs, and were denied food
and water by other guards. They were also mentally tortured by having
ants or other creatures put on their legs to scare them and get them to
say where their father was hiding.
Remember, the young boys
were kidnapped because the American security organs were trying first
to capture then break their father. It is simply inconceivable that
U.S. agents were not involved in or aware of the "interrogation" of the
boys by Pakistani officials before they were turned over directly to
Bush's own tender mercies.
This system of torture, indefinite
captivity and (as we have often noted here before) outright murder is
the officially acknowledged and openly championed policy of the United
States government. This it what America officially represents in the
world today: this is the true face of the Terror War.