Come to DC for Torture Awareness Week

News // Film

Join Witness Against Torture (WAT) in Washington DC during Torture Awareness Week (June 21 to 28, 2015) for the trials of WAT members who were arrested on January 12 for witnessing in Congress. Twenty-two people spoke out on behalf of those who have been detained, tortured and murdered by our government, in two different places in the Capitol.   Details of the trials are below.

The trials are timed to coincide with Torture Awareness Week, when WAT traditionally gathers in support of Torture Abolition and Survivors Support Coalition, Inc (TASSC), whose members — torture survivors from all over the world — come together for solidarity and advocacy. The week culminates with the TASSC vigil on Saturday in Lafayette Square in front of the White House. Join us for all or part of the week! We’ll be at St Stephens Episcopal Church. Contact Helen Schietinger to sign up (h.schietinger@verizon.net).

Senate Gallery Trial, 9:30 a.m. Monday June 22:

Eleven WAT members were arrested after their witness in the Senate Gallery on January 12. They were responding to the Senate’s Torture Report and the continued suffering of our Muslim brothers at Guantanamo. Their message was US Torture: It’s Official. Prosecute Now!  Waterboarding: Its Official. Prosecute Now!

Where: Courtroom 116
Superior Court of the District of Columbia
500 Indiana Ave, NW
Washington, DC 20001

Visitors Center Trial, 2:00 p.m. Thursday June 25:

Nine people held a Teach-In in Emancipation Hall at the US Capitol Visitor Center on January 12.  Their banners read From Ferguson 2 Guantánamo: White Silence =  State Violence and We Demand Accountability for Torture & Police Murder.   Their goal was to link mass incarceration at home and indefinite detention overseas and impunity for police murder and for CIA torture as dual dimensions of a system of state violence rooted substantially in racism. They were arrested and charged with Incommoding and Unlawful Demonstration.

Where: Courtroom 120
Superior Court of the District of Columbia
500 Indiana Ave, NW
Washington, DC 20001

 

Full schedule of events: 

 

Monday June 22
9:30 a.m. WAT Senate Gallery Trial
Courtroom 116, Magistrate Judge Karen Howze
Superior Court of the District of Columbia
500 Indiana Ave, NW, WDC 20001
(trial likely to continue until Tuesday)

Tuesday June 23
6 to 8 p.m.: Panel: Legalized Torture: Gitmo to Rikers
Friends Meeting of Washington
2111 Florida Ave NW, DC 20008-1912

Wednesday June 24
9 to 5: TASSC Conference on Torture
9 a.m. to 2 p.m. speakers, 2 to 5 p.m. advocacy training (required for those doing advocacy Thursday)
Aquinas Hall, Catholic University (near Brookland Metro)
(entrance for cars at Michigan Ave NW and 4th St NE)

Thursday June 25
10:30 to 11:30 a.m.: Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission
Testimonies by TASSC Survivors at the Lantos Commission
United States House of Representatives

2 p.m.: WAT Visitors Center Trial
Courtroom 120, Magistrate Judge Rainey Brandt
Superior Court of the District of Columbia
500 Indiana Ave, NW WDC 20001
(trial likely to continue Friday morning)

Friday June 26 – All Day Fast for Justice
4:00 p.m.: Rally at the Department of Justice
Constitution Ave between 9th St & 10th St NW WDC
(Amnesty Int’l, WAT, CCR, NRCAT, NCPCF, and others)

7:30 p.m.: Iftar (breaking Ramadan fast)
White House on Pennsylvania Ave
(AI, NCPCF)

Saturday June 27
10 a.m. to 5 p.m.: Torture Abolition and Survivor Support Coalition Vigil
TASSC annual vigil in Lafayette Square

Sunday June 28
6:30 p.m.: Targeting Muslims: State Violence in the War on Terror
Ramadan Iftar fundraiser and documentary for National Coalition to Protect Civil Freedoms (CPCF): $20
Impact Hub DC, 419 7th St NW WDC 20004
(cosponsored by Impact Hub and Washington Peace Center)

Join us for all or part of the week! We’ll be at St Stephens Episcopal Church. Contact Helen Schietinger to sign up at h.schietinger(at)verizon(dot)net

twitterFacebooktumblrmailtwitterFacebooktumblrmail

Newsletter: Join us in Cleveland, No Separate Justice, More

News // Film

 

WAT-LetterheadSMALL VERSION---Black---8.5x11

Dear Friends,

Witness Against Torture continues to engage in the work of our home communities: building connections and widening the circle. Currently, we are busy preparing for our annual planning meeting and retreat for the weekend of April 10th. If you are planning on coming, please let us know. We are also excited to announce that we have joined the No Separate Justice Campaign and will be collaborating on the August 3rd vigil outside the Metropolitan Correctional Center (MCC) in New York City.  In Washington, DC, Witness Against Torture Member, Helen Schietinger, was arrested for standing up and reminding the Senate Foreign Relations Committee that the “The United States is killing innocent people with drones.”  As our work continues and grows, we hope that you will continue to support us through your participation and/or donations.

Thanks,
Witness Against Torture


Witness Against Torture gathers in Cleveland, Ohio! You are invited!

When:  Friday Morning, April 10th, to Sunday Afternoon, April 12th, 2015

Where: Cleveland, Ohio.

This January, we came together in Washington D.C. to remind the nation of the plight of our brothers who continue to endure the brutality of Guantanamo. We took action in front of the White House, at the Pentagon, Union Station, CIA Headquarters, and Dick Cheney’s and John Brennan’s houses.  We also connected Guantanamo and indefinite detention to U.S. police brutality and domestic racism. We partnered with local activists, bringing the message, “Ferguson 2 Guantanamo; White Silence = State Violence” to the U.S. Capitol building and D.C. Police headquarters. We were inspired, strengthened, stretched, and reminded of both our power and responsibility to fight torture, racism, and other injustices.

This spring, we want to gather to continue to strengthen our community, deepen our relationships, clarify our analysis, make more connections and think strategically about how to close Guantanamo.

The Witness Against Torture Community will therefore hold strategic planning and community building retreat from April 10th -12th in Cleveland, Ohio.  We are currently in the process of planning the details of the weekend, but it will be a time of reflecting and planning.  Please consider joining us!

Space is limited, so we need to know if you are interested in attending. If you can attend, please RSVP by April 3rd to witnesstorture@gmail.com.


Witness Against Torture joins the No Separate Justice Campaign

The human rights and civil rights abuses taking place in the military prison at Guantanamo Bay have, rightly, been placed under a spotlight by people of conscience around the world. Some believe that if only those detained at Guantanamo could be transferred to American soil, to be held and tried as civilians, the abuses would end and justice would be done.

Yet many of the same abuses can be found in the hundreds of “war on terror” cases that have been processed through courtrooms and federal prisons across the United States since 9/11. These abuses–which include inhumane conditions of confinement both pre- and post-trial; secret evidence; intrusive surveillance; vague material support charges; FBI-created plots brought into communities through paid informants; and the criminalization of Islamic speech and association–remain largely invisible.

The mission of the No Separate Justice campaign is to place these abuses, taking place in prisons and courtrooms across the United States, firmly on the agendas of human and civil right organizations, the media, and the U.S. public through education and activism that draws directly upon the experiences and voices of those most directly affected.

Contact Jeremy Varon at jvaron@aol.com to get involved in the August 3rd Vigil.


“Not Another Useless Military Fiasco” Letter to John Kerry from members of Witness Against Torture

On March 11, 2015, top administration officials appeared before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee to beg for a new and improved Authorization of the Use of Military Force (AUMF).  Helen Schietinger attended with Code Pink to provide another perspective, holding up signs saying Another Useless Military Fiasco.  Helen was arrested when she contributed to the testimony, “The United States is killing innocent people with drones.”  Here’s an open letter from Helen and Jeremy Varon to Secretary Kerry responding to what he said at the hearing.

Helen_AUMF

Click here to read the full letter


Friday Fast for Justice:

We invite you to join us in our Friday Fast for Justice in solidarity with our brothers in Guantanamo. Individuals who sign up are asked to fast—in any form they like—on Friday, make phone calls to government officials, contribute a photo to our social media campaign, and write a letter to a prisoner at Guantánamo.  Those who sign up will get more specific instructions via email.

More than 50 people regularly participate in our Friday Fast for Justice. We’d love to have more!

Sign up for the fast here.


Witness Against Torture on Social Media:

Please “like us on Facebook & follow us on Twitter & Instagram

Check out our latest news and updates on Tumblr.

Post any pictures of your local activities to our flicker account and we will help spread the word.


Donate to support our work:

Witness Against Torture is completely volunteer driven and run. We have no paid staff, but do have expenses associated with our organizing work. If you are able, please donate here. www.witnesstorture.org

twitterFacebooktumblrmailtwitterFacebooktumblrmail

Open letter to John Kerry from Helen Schietinger and Jeremy Varon

News // Film

Helen_AUMF

12 March 2015

Dear Secretary Kerry,

I am Helen Schietinger, the woman who was arrested while speaking to you from the audience at the March 11th Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing on possible revisions to the Authorization of the Use of Military Force passed just after September 11, 2001. You were asking for Congressional authority to demolish the so-called Islamic State (IS), or Daesh. You made it sound as though you have an explicit military target that can easily be bombed into obliteration, wiping out the group.

We are both members of Witness Against Torture, which has long sought to close the US detention camp at Guantanamo and end US torture. I raised my voice on behalf of this group and the millions of Americans who feel that there is a better way than the vision of vengeance, militarism, and aggression that the United States has pursued for the last fourteen years.

At the hearing, Arn Menconi from Code Pink challenged you, saying the American people are tired of endless war and don’t want to kill more innocent people. In response, you invoked the terrorists’ beheading of foreign journalists and burning alive of a Jordanian pilot. We are all horrified by these atrocities, which have no justification whatsoever. Indeed, the Islamic State is a menace, which victimizes Muslims, Kurds Christians and Jews, various religious minorities, women, and gay and lesbian peoples. It must be stopped.

But I felt compelled to speak out against the devastating violence perpetrated by the United States. It both fuels further hatred against our country and badly compromises the American claim to any moral high ground, in the fight against the Islamic State and beyond. In light of Abu Ghraib, CIA torture, a war in Iraq based on documented lies, and wanton drone strikes, how can the world accept that the United States uses military force to protect and promote democracy, human rights, and the rule of law? Will more US military aggression further the cause of peace and justice, or lead to more mistrust, hatred, and violence? Must the United States meet perceived threats with military force? Or is there a way to prevent the endless escalation of war, and the harm it does to all sides, including our own?

These fundamental questions are scarcely being asked in the national debate on IS and, more broadly, on how the United States should navigate the staggering complexities in the wake of its invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq. Nor did I hear them in your testimony before Congress or in the response of the committee. And so I spoke out in hopes that we might, as a nation, bravely ask at least the right questions. Drone strikes lie at the heart of these questions. U.S. drone attacks — supposedly “surgical” in nature — do not simply behead; they blow bodies into scattered pieces such that even families members cannot recognize their loved ones. Go speak to the traumatized villagers who have survived our attacks, as Americans in Code Pink have done. Listen to the bereaved fathers, mothers, and children and then ask how the United States, in good conscience, can execute such attacks.

I reiterated in the hearing that the United States is killing innocent people with drones. Drones are not like guns; they don’t hit one person. A drone fires a missile that explodes on the ground in a blast that kills everything and everyone nearby. Hellfire missiles burn people alive, reminiscent of the terrible napalm that burned the flesh off of children in the Vietnam War, which you so rightly came to oppose. According to Micah Zenko of the Council on Foreign Relations, 500 drone strikes outside Iraq and Afghanistan have killed 3,674 people, including 473 civilians (http://blogs.cfr.org/zenko/2014/11/21/americas-500th-drone-strike/, 21 Nov 14). To assassinate the Taliban commander Qari Hussain in Pakistan, the U.S. deployed a total of 6 drone strikes over a period of months. The last drone fired the missile that finally killed Hussain, but by then 128 other people, including 13 children, had also been killed. (WAPO, Miller, 18 Aug 14; http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/national-security/yemeni-victims-of-us-military-drone-strike-get-more-than-1million-in-compensation/2014/08/18/670926f0-26e4-11e4-8593-da634b334390_story.html)

In a BBC interview you claimed, “The only people that we fire a drone at are confirmed terrorist targets at the highest level after a great deal of vetting that takes a long period of time. We don’t just fire a drone at somebody and think they’re a terrorist.” (BBC, May 28, 2013; http://www.bbc.com/news/world-radio-and-tv-22690918) This is a fantasy, either childish in its naiveté or chilling in its cynicism. As you know — or should know — drone strikes are hardly so “precise.” As The Intercept documents, “trace killings” by drones often identify their targets by the crude use of anonymous cell-phone data. (https://firstlook.org/theintercept/2014/02/10/the-nsas-secret-role/) It remains far from clear that the people who are singled out are implicated in any acts of aggression. “Collateral damage” — the accepted killing of civilians in the process — adds additional, reckless killing to the charade of targeted executions.

To be clear, we are talking here about extrajudicial assassinations.The United States condemns such violence as human rights violations when conducted by other countries, but excuses them when part of our “war on terror.” At the hearing, I heard you defending drone killings without even acknowledging that they often result in the gruesome deaths of innocent bystanders.

Another issue absent from serious discussion in the United States is our own country’s role in creating IS. The Islamic State, according to credible journalists and other analysts, arose from the desire of Iraq’s Sunni Muslims to defend themselves against the US-backed, Shia government in Iraq, which brutally oppressed Sunni populations in post-invasion Iraq. More particularly, the IS was born in Camp Bucca — a US-run detention facility in Iraq notorious for human rights abuses including torture. (http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/morning-mix/wp/2014/11/04/how-an-american-prison-helped-ignite-the-islamic-state/.) There, al-Baghdadi and other Sunni militants radicalized the victims of Iraqi and US abuse, sowing the seeds of IS. How long will we stab at the monsters of our own, partial creation? How long will we chase the ghosts of “blowback”? When can we have an honest discussion, based on a thorough reckoning with our own conduct, of what it means to make the world more safe, democratic, and freedom-loving?

The cheapening of life by the Islamic State is deplorable. America’s reckless bloodletting is also lamentable. Whether for the sake of some demented conception of what IS believes is “pure Islam” (which degrades a noble religion, as President Obama acknowledges) or for the limitless pursuit of National Security, the deliberate or reckless killing of civilians remains a crime. So long as our policies do not change, the United States will continue to suffer the moral consequence of our actions and continue to engender the hatred of those who see us as an enemy — and not a champion — of human rights.

The image of IS victims dressed in orange jump suits — deliberately mimicking the uniforms worn by US detainees at Guantanamo — is seared in the minds of Americans. The Islamic State’s message is clear: human rights violations by the United States will not be forgotten. We ignore or excuse these violations at our own peril. That is the urgent message I sought to share with you and the world with my untimely words in Congress.

You, Secretary Kerry, know well the long record of US abuse. In May 1971, you confronted as a veteran of the Vietnam War the very same Senate Foreign Relations Committee with your passionate denunciation of the conflict, emphasizing how American “boots on the ground” bore the worst brunt of state lies. (https://facultystaff.richmond.edu/~ebolt/history398/johnkerrytestimony.html) Your words remain among the most eloquent denunciations of war ever uttered in our nation’s history. We cannot imagine that you have forgotten the spirit of your own testimony, which cast a suspicious eye on the sacrifice of life on behalf of supposed national interests. We urge that you revisit your own words as you consider how — and if — more war can further the values of peace and justice our nation purports to defend.

The solution to terrorism, we maintain, is not brute force. That path has been tried, and has failed. The Islamic State is, in part, the bitter fruit of our own benighted policies.

As my sign in the hearing said: There is no military solution.

Sincerely,

Helen Schietinger, Registered Nurse, Witness Against Torture
Jeremy Varon, Witness Against Torture

twitterFacebooktumblrmailtwitterFacebooktumblrmail

February Newsletter: Protest at Senate Hearing , Friday Fast for Justice, April Retreat

News // Film

 

Dear Friends,

The work of Witness Against Torture continues. Below, you will find a link to a reflection on a WAT protest at a US Senate hearing, as well as an invitation to join our Friday Fast for Justice.  And we are excited to gather in Cleveland in April for our yearly retreat – please RSVP at witnesstorture@gmail.com or consider donating to cover the expenses.


Witness Against Torture Responds to Senate hearing on Guantanamo

On February 5th Helen Schietinger from Witness Against Torture and David Barrows from CODEPINK were arrested for speaking out during a Senate Armed Services Committee hearing about Guantanamo Bay prison. The following is an excerpt from Helen Schietinger’s letter to committee chair Senator John McCain denouncing the hateful remarks made by U.S. Senators and US detention policy more broadly.

Dear Senator McCain,

I am the woman who spoke out in the Senate Armed Services Committee hearing on the status of the prison camp at Guantanamo Bay on February 5th.  I’m sure you heard my words, “Give them the rights of prisoners of war!” before I was arrested. 

I attended the hearing in an orange jump suit to silently protest the very existence of Guantanamo prison, and I expected to hear a reasonably rational discussion of the prison and its future.  I planned to listen respectfully . .  I was so shocked, however, by the vitriol of the senators who chose to attend the hearing that I felt I had to respond.

Click here to read the full letter.


Friday Fast for Justice Continues

In March 2013, the world became aware of a massive hunger strike at Guantánamo to protest indefinite detention and ongoing abuses at the prison. In response, on March 24 members of WAT and other human rights organizations embarked on a seven-day fast and held solidarity actions throughout the world.

By the end of that fast, the number of men hunger striking at the prison had increased.  Rather than end our solidarity fast, WAT initiated a “rolling fast,” in which at least one person per day fasted from midnight to midnight, made phone calls to people in power, and sent one letter to a prisoner at Guantánamo.  The rolling fast lasted nearly ten months.  More than 250 people participated, fasting for a total of 31,272 hours.

Currently, we have a Friday Fast for Justice. Individuals who sign up are asked to fast—in any form they like—on Friday, make phone calls to government officials, contribute a photo to our social media campaign, and write a letter to a prisoner at Guantánamo.  Those who sign up will get more specific instructions via email.

More than 50 people regularly participate in our Friday Fast for Justice. We’d love to have more!  If you are Christian, we invite you to fast for one or more Fridays during Lent and beyond, until the prison at Guantánamo is closed.

Sign up for the fast here.

Click here to read the history of the Friday Fast for Justice 


Witness Against Torture Retreat and Strategic Planning: Save the Date! You are invited!

When:  Friday Morning, April 10th, to Sunday Afternoon, April 12th, 2015

Where: Cleveland, Ohio.

This January, we came together in Washington D.C. to remind the nation of the plight of our brothers who continue to be endure the brutality of Guantanamo. We took action in front of the White House, at the Pentagon, Union Station, CIA Headquarters, and Dick Cheney’s and John Brennan’s houses.  We also connected Guantanamo and indefinite detention to U.S. police brutality and domestic racism. We partnered with local activists, bringing the message, “Ferguson 2 Guantanamo; White Silence = State Violence” to the U.S. Capitol building and D.C. Police headquarters. We were inspired, strengthened, stretched, and reminded of both our power and responsibility to fight torture, racism, and other injustices.

This spring, we want to gather to continue to strengthen our community, deepen our relationships, clarify our analysis, make more connections and think strategically about how to close Guantanamo.

The Witness Against Torture Community will therefore hold strategic planning and community building retreat from April 10th -12th  in Cleveland, Ohio.  We are currently in the process of planning the details of the weekend, but it will be a time of reflecting and planning.  Please consider joining us!

Space is limited, so we need to know if you are interested in attending. If you can attend, please RSVP by April 3rd to witnesstorture@gmail.com.


Witness Against Torture on Social Media:

Please “like us on Facebook & follow us on Twitter & Instagram
Check out our latest news and updates on Tumblr.
Post any pictures of your local activities to our flicker account and we will help spread the word.


Donate to support our work:

Witness Against Torture is completely volunteer driven and run. We have no paid staff, but do have expenses associated with our organizing work. If you are able, please donate here. www.witnesstorture.org

twitterFacebooktumblrmailtwitterFacebooktumblrmail

A Brief History of the Friday Fast for Justice

News // Film

This kind [of unclean spirit] can be driven out only by prayer and fasting.
                                                                                   — Mark 9:29

Witness Against Torture’s Friday Fast for Justice started in 2005.  In the months prior to their trip to Guantánamo Bay to protest the detention facility there, a group of 25 people began fasting on Fridays in solidarity with the prisoners engaged in hunger strikes, protesting their innocence and the conditions of their detention.  Upon their arrival the group was denied entry, and they vigiled and fasted for three days outside the gates.  Every January since 2009, WAT has gathered in Washington, DC to vigil, act, and participate in a multi-day liquids-only fast, in protest of Guantánamo and in recognition of the detainees’ hunger strikes there.

In March 2013, the world became aware of a massive hunger strike underway at Guantánamo; the strike was to last for months, with all but a few elderly prisoners refusing food and medicine from prison authorities.  Lawyers for the detainees reported that hunger strikers were losing consciousness and experiencing severe drops in body weight.  Some were hospitalized, and dozens—up to 46 on any given day, according to the government count—were brutally force fed in defiance of the United Nations, the World Medical Association, and the International Red Cross.  In response, on March 24 members of WAT and other human rights organizations embarked on a seven-day fast and series of actions in solidarity, to amplify the protest of the 166 men imprisoned at that time.

WAT held demonstrations in various locations—from New York City, to Chicago, to Perrysburg, Ohio.  Over 100 people nationwide participated in the fast.  Fasters also wrote letters to the detainees and made phone calls to the White House, U.S. Southern Command and the Department of Defense asking that the prison close.

At the end of that seven day fast, the number of men hunger striking at the prison had continued to increase.  Rather than simply end the fast, WAT decided to initiate a rolling fast.  At least one person per day fasted from midnight to midnight, made phone calls to people in power, and sent one letter to a prisoner at Guantánamo.  The rolling fast initially lasted 30 days, and was eventually extended for ten months.  Over 250 people around the world participated in WAT’s rolling fast, with a total of 31,272 hours fasted.

In January 2014, 155 men remained at Guantánamo.  WAT felt compelled to continue some form of fasting in solidarity with those who continued to hunger for justice at the prison, and so we re-initiated the Friday Fast for Justice.  There are over 50 people who currently participate.

We are committed to continuing the Friday Fast for Justice, and are asking people to consider joining.   As we enter the Christian season of Lent, we invite you to fast for one or more Fridays during Lent and beyond, until the prison at Guantánamo is closed.

Individuals who sign up are asked to fast—in any form they like—on Friday, to make phone calls, contribute a photo to the anti-Guantánamo social media campaign, and to write a letter to a prisoner at Guantánamo.  Those who sign up to fast will get more specific instructions via email.  You can sign up here  for the fast.

twitterFacebooktumblrmailtwitterFacebooktumblrmail

An Open Letter to John McCain

News // Film

Senator John McCain
241 Russell Senate Office Building
Washington DC, 20510

Dear Senator McCain,

I am the woman who spoke out in the Senate Armed Services Committee hearing on the status of the prison camp at Guantanamo Bay on February 5th. I’m sure you heard my words, “Give them the rights of prisoners of war!” before I was arrested.

I attended the hearing in an orange jump suit to silently protest the very existence of Guantanamo prison, and I expected to hear a reasonably rational discussion of the pris-on and its future. I planned to listen respectfully, holding my sign reading “I died waiting for justice: Adnan Latif, Died September 8, 2012,” to remind the Senators and admin-istration officials that Adnan Latif either committed suicide or was killed at Guantanamo after ten years of torture and unjust detention, and six years after being cleared for re-lease. The Capitol police appropriately allowed me to peacefully express my opposition to Guantanamo in that public forum.

I was so shocked, however, by the vitriol of the senators who chose to attend the hear-ing that I felt I had to respond. I was appalled by their hateful statements — statements that contribute to a hostile climate that foments tragic hate crimes. Less than a week after the hearing three young Muslim Americans were murdered in North Carolina al-most certainly because they were Muslim.

Although Senator Graham talked about following the laws of war and the principles of the Geneva Conventions, his Senate colleagues made it clear that they care little about such things. Senator Cotton would have more Muslim men locked up as terrorists in Guantanamo without due process. He certainly wouldn’t want them tried in an open court where they could face their accusers and challenge the evidence used against them: “The only problem with Guantanamo Bay is that there are too many empty beds and cells…. We should be sending more terrorists there to keep this country safe. As far as I’m concerned, every last one of them can rot in hell. But as long as they don’t do that then they can rot in Guantanamo Bay.”

Senator Manchin thinks the detainees are not being treated harshly enough: “I’d like to see a few of them in the United States hardened prisons… to see if they’d change their attitude just a little bit. I know we could do a little different job on ‘em here than they’re doing over there.”

And when I exhorted the committee to at least give the men at Guantanamo the rights of prisoners of war, Sen. Manchin responded by saying, “I just want to say — their attack on this country — they lost their rights.” Think about that: a U.S. Senator doesn’t think that human beings in U.S. custody should have rights. Not one Senator spoke up in disagreement.

I wonder if Sen. Manchin shares the attitude of former vice president Dick Cheney who, when asked for comment on the torture practices revealed by the Senate Intelligence Committee report of early December, replied: “I’d do it again in a minute.” Indeed, it sounded to me as though several of your colleagues are of Cheney’s mindset.

I must ask, what about you, Sen. McCain? And, if not, why have you not publicly dis-tanced yourself from Cheney’s remarks and those of your Senate colleagues?

I remember admiring your doing what you could to rebuff Cheney and then CIA Director Porter Goss, when they descended on your office to plead for a CIA exemption from the amendment you were pushing banning torture.

As a captive in North Vietnam, you had first-hand experience with torture. Given that, and recalling your principled opposition to torture a decade ago, it is painful for me to watch you sit placidly as some of your colleagues indulge in hateful demagoguery. I trust that you are particularly aware of the importance of upholding the rights and dignity of all prisoners, including those held in U.S. custody.

As ranking member of the Senate Armed Services Committee, you took active part in the Senate Armed Forces Committee Inquiry Into the Treatment of Detainees in U.S. Custody. The “First Conclusion” of the report released on December 11, 2008 stated that a Presidential Order signed by President George W. Bush “opened the door to con-sidering aggressive techniques.”

The report noted specifically that on Feb. 7, 2002, the President issued a written deter-mination that the Geneva Convention protections for POWs did not apply to al-Qaeda or Taliban detainees, and that following that determination, techniques like waterboarding were authorized for use in interrogation. It would take more than four years for the U.S. Supreme Court to rule, in June 2006, that the prisoners’ right to habeas corpus rights was being violated by the Military Commissions Act.

This year marks the 800th anniversary of the Magna Carta with which courageous Eng-lish nobles wrested from King John the writ of habeas corpus and other rights. I am embarrassed for my country that President Bush suspended that fundamental right for so many years, and “opened the door” for torture. Worse still, torture continues at Guantanamo, and you and others in high office have the power to stop it.

Guantanamo detainees were subjected to torture techniques masked as “enhanced in-terrogation” (waterboarding, multiple forms of sensory deprivation, sensory overload and sexual humiliation — the list goes on and on). And you and your Senate colleagues should remember that they are still being subjected to torture (e.g., long-term solitary confinement, brutal forced-feeding procedures, forcible cell extractions) as well as out-rages upon their personal dignity (e.g., genital searches and cavity searches before and after meeting with their lawyers).

Senator McCain, I imagine you may regret calling “lowlife scum” those of us who, at Congressional hearings, speak out against consigning the Magna Carta, the Constitu-tion, and the rule of law to the dustbin of history. With all due respect, it is “lowlife” for public officials to pander to the worst of human instincts – revenge, racism, and scape-goating – no matter how many votes such appeals might garner. It does you no credit to preside – and sit by nonchalantly – at the shameful hearing on February 5 at which I am proud to have been arrested.

You need to use your chairmanship to restore respect for the rule of law, and lift the United States out of the category of rogue state. In the name of common decency, I urge you, as Chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, to insist that the U.S. begin according the Guantanamo prisoners in U.S. custody their lawful human rights.

Yours truly,

Helen Schietinger
Washington, DC

twitterFacebooktumblrmailtwitterFacebooktumblrmail

Listen to Excerpts from Mohamedou Slahi’s New Book

Fast for Justice 2015 // Film

I’ve just finished reading Mohamedou Ould Slahi’s new book, Guantánamo Diary. It is the first book published by a still-detained Guantánamo detainee, and, as one might expect, it is a harrowing read. However, the pages are also full of humor, compassion, and forgiveness, which is somewhat shocking coming from someone who has suffered as much abuse as Slahi has. It seems to perfectly capture the circuitous nature of interrogation of an entire decade and the no-win situations detainees were placed in over and over again, despite any evidence against them. It’s well worth the read, and I encourage you to both purchase it and sign the petition to free its author right away. Below are some excerpts read by Benedict Cumberbatch (The Hobbit, Sherlock, The Imitation Game), Stephen Fry (V for Vendetta, narrator of the Harry Potter book series), Colin Firth (The King’s Speech, Pride and Prejudice), and Dominic West (The Wire, The Affair), who narrates an 8-minute documentary about the book’s creation.

— Justin

twitterFacebooktumblrmailtwitterFacebooktumblrmail

Inside the Uniform, Under the Hood, Longing for Change

News // Film

From January 4 – 12, 2015, Witness Against Torture (WAT) activists assembled in Washington D.C. for an annual time of fasting and public witness to end the United States’ use of torture and indefinite detention and to demand the closure, with immediate freedom for those long cleared for release, of the illegal U.S. prison at Guantanamo.

Participants in our eight day fast started each day with a time of reflection. This year, asked to briefly describe who or what we had left behind and yet might still carry in our thoughts that morning, I said that I’d left behind an imagined WWI soldier, Leonce Boudreau.

I was thinking of Nicole de’Entremont’s story of World War I, A Generation of Leaves, which I had just finished reading.  Initial chapters focus on a Canadian family of Acadian descent. Their beloved oldest son, Leonce, enlists with Canada’s military because he wants to experience life beyond the confines of a small town and he feels stirred by a call to defend innocent European people from advancing “Hun” warriors. He soon finds himself mired in the horrid slaughter of trench warfare near Ypres, Belgium.

I often thought of Leonce during the week of fasting with WAT campaign members.  We focused, each day, on the experiences and writing of a Yemeni prisoner in Guantanamo, Fahd Ghazy who, like Leonce, left his family and village to train as a fighter for what he believed to be a noble cause.  He wanted to defend his family, faith and culture from hostile forces.  Pakistani forces captured Fahed and turned him over to U.S. forces after he had spent two weeks in a military training camp in Afghanistan.  At the time he was 17, a juvenile.  He was cleared for release from Guantanamo in 2007.

Leonce’s family never saw him again.  Fahd’s family has been told, twice, that he is cleared for release and could soon reunite with his wife, daughter, brothers and parents.  Being cleared for release means that U.S. authorities have decided that Fahd poses no threat to the security of people in the U.S. Still he languishes in Guantanamo where he has been held for 13 years.

Fahd writes that there is no guilt or innocence at Guantanamo.  But he asserts that everyone, even the guards, knows the difference between right and wrong. It is illegal to hold him and 54 other prisoners, without charge, after they have been cleared for release.

Fahd is one of 122 prisoners held in Guantanamo.

Bitter cold had gripped Washington D.C. during most days of our fast and public witness.  Clad in multiple layers of clothing, we clambered into orange jumpsuits, pulled black hoods over our heads, our “uniforms,” and walked in single file lines, hands held behind our backs.

Inside Union Station’s enormous Main Hall, we lined up on either side of a rolled up banner.  As readers shouted out excerpts from one of Fahd’s letters that tell how he longs for reunion with his family, we unfurled a beautiful portrait of his face. “Now that you know,” Fahd writes, “you cannot turn away.”

U.S. people have a lot of help in turning away.  Politicians and much of the U.S. mainstream media manufacture and peddle distorted views of security to the U.S. public, encouraging people to eradicate threats to their security and to exalt and glorify uniformed soldiers or police officers who have been trained to kill or imprison anyone perceived to threaten the well-being of U.S. people.

Often, people who’ve enlisted to wear U.S. military or police uniforms bear much in common with Leonce and Fahd.  They are young, hard pressed to earn an income, and eager for adventure.

There’s no reason to automatically exalt uniformed fighters as heroes.

But a humane society will surely seek understanding and care for any person who survives the killing fields of a war zone.  Likewise, people in the U.S. should be encouraged to see every detainee in Guantanamo as a human person, someone to be called by name and not by a prison number.

The cartoonized versions of foreign policy handed to U.S. people, designating heroes and villains, create a dangerously under-educated public unable to engage in democratic decision-making.

Nicole d’Entremont writes of battered soldiers, soldiers who know they’ve been discarded in an endless, pointless war, longing to be rid of their uniforms.  The overcoats were heavy, sodden, and often too bulky for struggling through areas entangled with barbed wire.  Boots leaked and the soldiers’ feet were always wet, muddy, and sore. Miserably clothed, miserably fed, and horribly trapped in a murderous, insane war, soldiers longed to escape.

When putting on Fahd’s uniform, each day of our fast, I could imagine how intensely he longs to be rid of his prison garb.Thinking of his writings, and recalling d’Entremont’s stories drawn from “the war to end all wars,” I can imagine that there are many thousands of people trapped in the uniforms issued by war makers who deeply understand Dr. Martin Luther King’s call for revolution:

A true revolution of values will lay hands on the world order and say of war, ‘This way of settling differences is not just.’ This business of burning human beings with napalm, of filling our nation’s homes with orphans and widows, of injecting poisonous drugs of hate into the veins of peoples normally humane, of sending men home from dark and bloody battlefields physically handicapped and psychologically deranged, cannot be reconciled with wisdom, justice, and love.”

This article first appeared on Telesur.   

Kathy Kelly (Kathy@vcnv.org) co-coordinates Voices for Creative Nonviolence (www.vcnv.org). On January 23rd, she will begin serving a 3 month sentence in federal prison for attempting to deliver a loaf of bread and a letter about drone warfare to the commander of a U.S. Air Force base.

twitterFacebooktumblrmailtwitterFacebooktumblrmail

January Newsletter: Fast for Justice Review

News // Film

 

In the end, we will remember not the words of our enemies,

but the silence of our friends.”
–Martin Luther King Jr.

 

Witness Against Torture has returned home from our annual Fast For Justice in Washington, D.C. We are tired and some of us are sick. Eight days of a liquid only fast, long meetings and sleeping on the floor, can take it out of you. We are also energized and renewed from the powerful time of reflection and witness in the streets. We remain committed to our work to close Guantanamo as the prison enters its 14th year. And we continue to be in solidarity with the 122 Muslim men who remain.

We thank all those who participating with us from afar: who fasted at home, kept us in prayer, donated money, and took to the streets in their own communities. We remain together in this work as we build a future where Guantanamo, torture, and all forms of cruel, inhuman, and degrading treatment are unimaginable.

This year was as busy an any: the liquids only fast, community-led reflections, public witnesses with orange jumpsuits, black hoods, non-violent civil resistance, and the sharing of the stories of men detained in Guantanamo. Our J11 Rally was well attended and our coalition solid. The prisoner procession was lead by our Muslim sisters from #MuslimsRally2CloseGitmo. Dr. Maha Hilal wrote an article on her experience (please read and share widely). She ends the article with a call to action saying, “We pray that these men find some sort of justice and that Muslims continue to grow in their role as advocates for justice, not observers of injustice.”

This year we also went deeper in our analysis, made new connections, and broadened our message. Jeremy Varon describes some of our process and work, as a predominantly white group, to connect Ferguson and Guantanamo – domestic racism and overseas torture (please read and share widely): “In dialogue with diverse voices, Witness Against Torture pieced together [a] skeletal analysis linking Ferguson and Guantánamo. The next step was to take it into the streets, the U.S. Capitol and the D.C. jail. The group decided not to speak out on behalf of an abstract, universal humanity, even as it invoked universal rights. Instead, it chose to acknowledge its status as a mostly white group working to break white silence and to invite other whites to do the same.”

“So this Martin Luther King Jr. Day, we ask you to join us in breaking white silence. First by resisting Islamophobia, which places Muslim men in Guantanamo and other black sites, and secondly, by working to dismantle white supremacy, which allows police to kill black and brown people with impunity.

We will continue to try and listen to the voices of those people and movements who have guided our work.

And we thank you for being in this struggle with us.

In peace-

Witness Against Torture

p.s. please watch & share the video recap of our week.


 Witness Against Torture on Social Media:

Please “like us on Facebook & follow us on Twitter & Instagram
Check out our latest news and updates on Tumblr.
Post any pictures of your local activities to our flicker account and we will help spread the word.


Donate to support our work:

Witness Against Torture is completely volunteer driven and run. We have no paid staff, but do have expenses associated with our organizing work. If you are able, please donate here. www.witnesstorture.org

twitterFacebooktumblrmailtwitterFacebooktumblrmail

Daily Update – Day 8 of the Fast for Justice

Campaigns // Film

Dear Friends,

A powerful day of action!

Please see our press release below, press coverage in Roll Call and the Washington Post, as well as a more detailed overview of the day.

And look through and share these powerful images.

Thank you for taking this journey with us as you have been able…and thank you for continuing on the journey.

In Peace,

Witness Against Torture
www.witnesstorture.org

Day 8 – Monday, January 12

Today, we conducted 1 action in 2 locations. At the Capitol, one group of us went in to the Senate Gallery and another group went to the Visitor’s Center. Later, yet another group went to the Department of Justice, then proceeded to the DC Central Cell Block.

In the Gallery, eleven people got arrested. Sitting in three different locations, they waited while Senator Dick Durbin, the only Senator on the floor, made a speech that began with expressing solidarity with French terror victims and then focused on Homeland Security and the Dream Act.  While he was talking about supporting the immigration reform bill, our group rose in three waves and chanting:

U.S. Torture
It’s official
Prosecute now! 

Waterboarding
It’s official
Prosecute now!

Rectal feeding
It’s official
Prosecute now!

Within five or so verses of “Prosecute now” they were ushered out of the chamber. They continued chanting while being removed into the hallway. There, they were interviewed by reporters and handcuffed. Surrounded by officers and members of the press, they called for Dick Cheney’s arrest and continued to chant loudly, “Prosecute torture,” “Torture is a crime,” and “Shut down Guantanamo,” their voices echoing through the tiled hallways as we observers walked away.

The action in the Visitors’ Center was set into motion as the observers returned from the Gallery.  Banner holders and chanters took their place, forming a large circle in the middle of the open floor.  The banners read, “Ferguson 2 Guantánamo: White Silence = State Violence” and “We Demand Accountability for Torture & Police Murder.”  A reading took place mic-check style, with three members of the group taking turns as the leader.  Police soon descended on the group, pushing observers out of the room and making arrests. Nine were arrested.

At 4 pm, we joined the Hands Up Coalition for their weekly vigil at the Department of Justice. With the enormous help of Tighe Berry of Code Pink, we arrived with three cardboard caskets draped in canvas, labeled with the names of Emmanuel Okutuga, Tanisha Anderson, Matthew Ajibade, three young people murdered by the police.

Olubunmi Oludipe, mother of Emmanuel Okutuga (“Mama Emmanuel,” as Marsha affectionately calls her) shared her grief with those gathered, crying at the microphone and saying, “My children do not want me to be out here because they do not think that I can get justice.  But I am here because I want to help save other mothers from going through this pain.  I don’t wish this on my worst enemy.”

Marsha Coleman-Adebayo of the Hands Up Coalition criticized the hypocrisy of our elected officials, who ostentatiously empathize with French victims of terror and say, “Je suis Charlie,” when we have never heard them say, “Je suis Tanisha Anderson.”  She called out the “pattern of abuse, genocide, reckless abandonment of laws of this country” and invited Witness Against Torture to describe the relationship between our two campaigns.

Uruj Sheikh spoke for WAT, saying that just as the military occupies Afghanistan, so the police occupy our streets here, picking off brown and black bodies. Incarceration and murder are not solutions to the problems of our society.  We challenge the white supremacy that underlies anti-black racism and islamophobia both, and we are here to break the silence.

We processed from the door of the DOJ down the block led by Emmanuel’s mother and the caskets carried by an honor guard of four, followed by the orange jump-suited and hooded detainees. As we walked we sang, “We remember all the people/the police kill/we can feel their spirits/ they are with us still.” Then several people spoke to the group, including Emmanuel’s mother, who cried as she talked about her son. She moved all of us so much.

We then took to the streets – took the streets – and marched with caskets and detainees to the Central Cell Block stopping traffic as we went, singing “I can hear my brother saying I can’t breathe/Now I’m in the struggle singing I can’t leave/Calling out the violence of the racist police/We ain’t gonna stop ’til our people are free/We ain’t gonna stop ’til our people are free.” There was a lot of visible support from people on the street.

Many of us stayed on the outside of the building, holding banners and singing. Each of us who identified as white took the mic and said why we were “breaking white silence” and invited other white people around the country to also break their silence and stand against racism. We also read the names of those black people murdered by the police this past year.

We had impromptu participants as well.  One man of color who stopped to listen and watch shared that he has been brutalized twice by the police.  A woman came forward as well, sharing her struggle as an African-American lawyer who cannot enter a courtroom without using hair product, as the very hair that grows from her head is criminalized.

Twenty of our group went inside the police station. They read the names of those killed by police. When they tried to go through the metal detectors, they were stopped by a black police officer. He said he agreed with the message, but asked us personally not to take it to the next level by pushing through to get arrested. He asked our group to just make their presence without coming further. Our group agreed and stayed for 28 minutes representing black men getting killed every 28 hours by a police officer, security agent, or vigilante.

Later in the evening, we met in a circle that included Mama Emmanuel. She thanked us and told us about how the police destroyed evidence, saying it’s as if her son weren’t killed by the police. She said she believes her son’s spirit is coming back from the grave to keep his case alive.

At this writing, our 22 comrades remain in jail. The word is that they will be there for the night. We can’t wait to see them soon.

As the week comes to a close, we are all exhausted, grateful, and so very moved. We hope we don’t have to come back again next year, but we are prepared to do so.

When I say we are, you say together. When I say we are, you say one family…

twitterFacebooktumblrmailtwitterFacebooktumblrmail