WAT Torture Abolition and Accountability Platform

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Torture is always and in every sense wrong. It is a violation of human rights; a breach of domestic laws and international conventions; a sin to all faiths; a moral outrage; a profound abuse of the body, the psyche and the soul; and an enduring trauma that can destroy individuals, families, and whole communities.

Witness Against Torture calls for the total abolition of torture throughout the world. We demand, in particular, that the United States fully repudiate torture, which became a systematic state practice following September 11, 2001. We sharply denounce the pro-torture candidacy of Republican nominee Donald Trump. Trump’s call to “bring back” plainly illegal torture techniques like waterboarding should alone disqualify him from consideration for the presidency. However, both Republican and Democratic administrations and politicians have been complicit in torture policies over the last 15 years. All lawmakers and candidates have an obligation to relegate torture to the US past.

Repudiating torture entails, most immediately: the rapid closure of the US detention camp at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba; apologies, monetary payments, and other restitution to the post-9-11 victims of torture, as required under the United Nations Convention Against Torture (CAT); the unequivocal disavowal of torture by all presidential and congressional candidates, all elected representatives, and leaders of the US military and intelligence agencies; and meaningful, legal accountability for those who designed, authorized, and carried out torture policies.

Varieties of Torture

Torture may be committed by militaries, police, other state security forces, insurgents, or terrorists. It may be used as a means of interrogation of captives in war and other conflicts or in campaigns of state repression to control and terrorize people. It may seek “information,” coerced “confessions,” or simply to brutalize its victims. It may be applied with obvious sadism or clinical precision. It may even follow protocols developed by lawyers, policymakers, and psychologists — and overseen by medical observers — so as to evade the law and blunt public concern.

Torture may be physical or psychological in nature. It may be a secret, rogue operation, or have the blessing of elected officials and voices in the media and popular culture. It may be used against perceived enemies in military operations; to punish dissidents so that others remain silent; to break the protests of detained men, such as in the forced-feeding of hunger strikers at Guantanamo Bay; or as a standard procedure in detention regimes, such as extended solitary confinement in US prisons and jails.

No matter the means and circumstances, potential sanction by the state, the justifications offered, and the promise to the torturers of immunity, torture always remains criminal and wrong. Torture has permanent debilitating effects on its victims, its perpetrators, and on the population of others who might be tortured.

US Torture Before and After 9-11

The United States has long been an outspoken defender of human rights and the rule of law. But the country also has a long history of practicing, sponsoring, and training others in torture. Waterboarding mirrors a similar technique given the ironic name “the water cure” by US soldiers, who used it in the Philippines at the turn of the 20th century. US military and intelligence personnel used torture during the Vietnam War, notably in the interrogation and assassination program “Operation Phoenix.” In the 1970s and 1980s, the United States instructed Latin America security forces in the use of torture and other terror tactics against civilians. The CIA even paid millions of dollars for academic research into torture, collected in its 1963 “KUBARK” manual, which details how to apply specific torture techniques. That manual was reissued in 1983, and used by U.S.-supported forces in Central America. Torture, in sum, is part of the United States’ modern imperial history. Directed at South Asian, Latin American, and now Muslim peoples (from many regions), it is also an expression of US racism.

In the aftermath of 9-11, the United States fully committed to a program of state torture, validated by Department of Justice (DoJ) attorneys and approved by the country’s highest elected officials, including President Bush. Dozens or even hundreds of men were tortured by the CIA in its “enhanced interrogation” program. That torture took place in “black sites” in such countries as Afghanistan, Poland and Thailand. Other victims were “rendered” to countries like Syria and Egypt for torture on behalf of US officials.

Many hundreds or thousands more people were tortured by the United States in its conduct of the so-called “war on terror” and its wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. This includes the great majority of the nearly 800 men brought to Guantanamo, tortured at various sites (including Guantanamo itself); men brutalized in prisons in Abu Ghraib, Bagram Air Base and other facilities; and captives abused by uniformed, US military and civilian contractors in multiple theatres of conflict. Indeed, the US abuse of detainees has been rampant in post-9-11 wars and security operations.

That the United States committed widespread torture after 2001 has been proven beyond any reasonable doubt. In late 2014, the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence released the “Findings and Conclusions” and a 500-page executive summary of its 6,700-page Study on the CIA’s Detention and Interrogation Program. Using the CIA’s own documents, it chronicles the origins and evolution of the CIA torture program, concluding that it plainly violated US laws. The report also refutes persisting claims that torture yielded valuable, actionable intelligence.

In 2013 the non-partisan Constitution Project issued the report of its Task Force on Detainee Treatment. It identified “indisputable” breeches of US laws and international treaties based on the detailed reading of specific laws against documented US conduct. Journalists, academic researchers, attorneys and filmmakers have rigorously exposed post-9-11 torture. (Notable works include Alfred McCoy, A Question of Torture; Jane Mayer, The Dark Side; the ACLU and Larry Siems, et. al., The Torture Report; Polly Nash and Andy Worthington, Outside the Law, and Rebecca Gordon, Mainstreaming Torture.) Finally, international human rights bodies like Amnesty International, the UN Committee against Torture, and the International Committee of the Red Cross have also documented and condemned US torture.

Continued denials by some politicians, military and intelligence officials, and media voices that the United States committed torture — or their contradictory insistence that torture produced key intelligence — have no bearing on the reality of US conduct.

US Torture and the Law

Torture is illegal under US federal law and international treaties to which the United States is a signatory, and therefore have the force of law. The 1984 United Nations Convention Against Torture defines torture as “an act by which severe pain or suffering, whether physical or mental, is intentionally inflicted on a person for such purposes as obtaining from him . . . information, punishing him. . . or intimidating or coercing him.”

Based on the Convention, US criminal statute 2340 declares torture, “an act committed by a person acting under the color of law specifically intended to inflict severe physical or mental pain or suffering.” Other federal statutes and international conventions, such as the War Crimes Act and the Geneva Conventions, outlaw the torture and other abuse of detainees.

The long-rescinded “torture memos” of Department of Justice lawyers John Yoo and Jay Bybee, which sought to define torture out of existence, have no meaning with respect to the understanding and application of anti-torture laws and treaties.

The United States — as asserted in the Senate Torture Report and by the Constitution Project — violated the above laws and treaties in its treatment of post-9-11 detainees. President Obama himself admitted in August 2014, “We tortured some folks.”

Torture Abolition and Accountability – Platform Positions

 There exists no precedent in US history of state torture on the scale since 9-11. So too, there is no direct precedent for how to reckon with this history, nor agreement among legal and human rights advocates as to the best way forward, especially given current political and legislative constraints and pressures, and the balance between short and long term goals. Below we offer broad imperatives, specific demands and recommendations, and options for their implementation.

Close the Guantanamo Prison

The US detention camp at Guantanamo Bay is both a primary site and enduring symbol of post-9-11 US torture. The prison must close immediately. Its closure should entail:

  • The immediate repatriation or re-settlement of all remaining detained men who are not under indictment for serious crimes. Repatriation to Yemen should be an option for Yemeni nationals. All detained men, simply put, should be fairly tried or released.
  • An end to the unjust and unworkable Military Commissions. Those prisoners currently on trial, or awaiting trial, before Military Commissions should be transferred into competent, civilian courts or international courts under international sovereignty. All evidence regarding allegations made against them, and all pertinent documentation regarding treatment of defendants while under government custody, must be made available to defendants and their counsel. Any evidence obtained under torture is inadmissible under law. If valid evidence is insufficient to prosecute, the charges must be dropped and the defendants must be released.
  • The revocation of the current legislative ban on the transfer of Guantanamo detainees to the United States.
  • The establishment of a fair and well-managed process for all formerly detained men to swiftly secure damages for their unjust detention and abuse.
  • The removal of all onerous bans on the travel of formerly detained men to the United States, so that they may address US media and participate in various forums seeking accountability.
  • The disbursement of substantial US monetary and other resources to aid the resettlement and well-being of formerly detained men.
  • The initiation of serious negotiations with the sovereign state of Cuba to return the entire US Naval base at Guantanamo to the Cuban state and people. It is an unpardonable indignity that the United States committed torture on Cuban soil, in a facility that by treaty was only ever to be used for the refueling of naval vessels.

End Indefinite Detention

President Bush asserted, and President Obama formally claimed by Executive Order, the right to detain captives indefinitely without charge or trial. This is illegal and wrong. We call for:

  • The immediate and absolute renunciation of indefinite detention without charge, which has no place in a democratic order and our Constitutional system of law.

End Government Secrecy

A full and unsparing record of US torture, based on government documents and internal government investigations, must be made public (with reasonable measures to protect potentially sensitive information). The full Senate Torture Report should be released immediately, along with any and all other investigations by US military and civilian agencies into the US treatment of detainees.

Ensure Accountability for Torture

Torture policies were devised or condoned by our highest elected officials and their staffs, including the President and Vice President, and leading cabinet heads, notably the Secretary of Defense. Torture was carried out by US intelligence officials, civilian contractors, and uniformed US military. It was sometimes assisted by professionals in the fields of medicine and psychology. (The American Psychological Association has since taken a position prohibiting its members from participating in these interrogations.)

And yet almost no one — whether they concocted, facilitated, or executed torture policies — has ever been held to legal account for their treatment of detainees. Shortly after becoming Attorney General in 2009, Eric Holder announced that the DoJ would not pursue criminal investigations of US intelligence and military personnel operating under the aegis of since-discredited DoJ memos that essentially authorized torture. This was an unconscionable whitewash of criminal activity, as it both effectively immunized torture and accepted the power of the Executive to unilaterally rewrite laws to its liking.

Without accountability for torture, the rule of law and the US justice system stand shattered. The law, moreover, is removed as a deterrent to current and future torturers.

The People’s Convention seeks meaningful legal and other forms of accountability for US torture. We are motivate not by a desire for punishment but rather the desire for justice for survivors of torture and assurance that the United States will never again torture anyone in its custody. We therefore demand:

  • That US Justice Department discontinue invoking states’ secrets, executive privilege, and other nation security grounds to stop lawsuits from victims of US torture, rendition, and other abuse against individuals in the US government, government agencies, and private companies. Victims of US policies and practices should have their day in criminal and civil courts.
  • That the US Department of Justice scrutinize the entirety of the Senate Torture Report to determine the existence of evidence of indictable crimes. Should such evidence exist, DoJ should bring appropriate indictments against CIA and other personnel.
  • That the US government honor its obligation under the UN Convention Against Torture to seriously investigate alleged violations of the Convention by its citizens and agencies of the government itself.
  • That all branches of the US government, working with human rights bodies, journalists, legal advocates, religious figures, and torture victims, devise a comprehensive legal process to investigate and, when warranted, prosecute all those who criminally participated, or were criminally complicit, in torture. These investigations should not regard rank, title, or position in the US government in determining eligibility for prosecution. Such a process could be directed by a special prosecutor, exist within conventional courts, or in an international forum.
  • That the United States sign and ratify the treaty creating the International Criminal Court, which would allow US citizens to be tried for war crimes in an internationally-recognized venue.

Strengthen Anti-Torture Provisions

 As indicated, US and international law already prohibits torture and the cruel, inhumane, and degrading treatment of detainees. Nonetheless, existing laws can be strengthened. We therefore insist that:

  • Congress pass legislation making torture a federal crime inside the United States, and not only outside the United States (as currently stipulated in Section 2340 of the federal criminal code).
  • The US government US Army Field Manual on Interrogations be amended so as to a) eliminate appendixes that permit abusive treatment and b) explicitly prohibit stress positions and abnormal sleep manipulation.
  • The United States work with the international community to amend the Convention Against Torture so as to explicitly describe and prohibit all forms of psychological torture.
  • The US government proactively challenge all nations — especially its allies — that torture their own or other citizens to cease this practice.
  • The US grant asylum to additional survivors who have fled their countries after being brutally tortured.

Expand the Recognition of Torture and Cruel, Inhumane, and Degrading Treatment

 The torture techniques used on detainees in the so-called “war on terror” have shocked the conscience of the world. But cruel, inhumane, and degrading treatment of prisoners is routine with the US penal system. In particular, the extended use of solitary confinement in prisons and jails — including against minors — has been denounced by credible human rights and medical bodies as itself a form of torture. Organizations such as Amnesty International have also decried the widespread institutional tolerance of rape in U.S. prisons. The People’s Convention therefore calls for the abolition of extended solitary confinement in any and all US detention facilities and urges that other harsh and controversial penal practices be challenged in their morality, legality, and consequences.

– Witness Against Torture

 

 

 

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July 15-18 (Cleveland, Ohio): The People’s Convention in Response to the RNC

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Join the WAT community  as we participate in the People’s Justice and Peace Convention and the first day of the Republican National Convention protest in Cleveland, Ohio. WAT will be in Cleveland from July 15th thru 18th participating in the following activities to speak against the pro-torture stances of Donald Trump and to protest the racist and islamophobic rhetoric that has permeated his campaign. As torture and closing Guantanamo have been treated with horrifying humor, this is an important opportunity to remind the public that torture is always wrong and Guantanamo should be closed today.

If you are interested in attending and need accommodations, please RSVP by July 8th to witnesstorture@gmail.com. We can host people from July 15th to the 18th, but space is limited.

WAT’s activities for the weekend include:

Friday, July 15th to Sunday, July 17th: People’s Justice and Peace Convention

Activists and progressives will be gathering in Cleveland the weekend before the RNC to construct the people’s platform which will be presented to both the RNC and Democratic National Convention (DNC). The weekend will include educational opportunities, speakers and workshops. We have been invited to join people from across the country to lift up issues and problems. WAT has volunteered to write the Anti-Torture Platform.  Registration is also required for the Convention and you can do that here.

Sunday: July 17th, 7pm to 9pm: The People’s Mic: Word to our Resistance

Communities will be rising up to resist injustices, hatred, racism, islamophobia and torture. The night before the RNC starts local poets, musicians, and the New York based, Peace Poets will come together to speak peace and put music over hate. Join us for this night of open mic, #movementmusic, and community building.

Monday, July 18th, 2pm: End Poverty Now March

In 1966, welfare recipients marched from Cleveland to Columbus demanding that they be treated like human beings. This was the launch of the Welfare Rights Movement. It is in this tradition that we call on all who care about justice to join and to deliver a message to the Republicans gathering in Cleveland. Your membership status in the human race should not depend on the size of your income. Check out the Facebook page for more info.

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June Newsletter: Join upcoming events, Presente Joe, Dan and Michael

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Dear friends,

Thank you for all of your support these past few months. We want to give you an update on some of our projects and invite you into events happening this month.

We are excited to announce that we have raised $1700 for the Ramadan Project of the National Coalition to Protect Civil Freedoms (NCPCF). This fund will provide Muslim detainees in the U.S. with commissary money during Ramadan (June 6-July 6). Thank you to all who donated and to Maha Hilal from NCPCF for organizing us.

This month brings sad and encouraging news. First, we are saddened by news that U.S. District Judge Robert Kugler denied the Duka brothers’ final appeal.  During 2016’s Fast for Justice members of Witness Against Torture traveled to Camden, New Jersey to stand with the Duka brothers and their family. We then published an article to highlight the case. In 2008, they were found guilty of conspiracy to commit terrorism and other charges. Yet, the whole plan was conceived and planned by two FBI-paid informants and preemptively prosecuted by the legal system. Ultimately, these three Muslim men from a working-class family in Cherry Hill, New Jersey became victims of the post-9/11 counterterrorism frenzy that engulfed the United States.

On the encouraging side, we understand that the Obama administration is pushing for the release of twenty or so men from Guantanamo. This would mean freedom for the majority of those cleared for release. Nevertheless, this is not enough and we will continue to pressure the administration to bring this ugly history to an end and permanently close Guantanamo.

Torture Survivor Awareness Week: June 22nd-26th

If you are in the east coast area, please consider supporting the Torture Abolition and Survivors Support Coalition (TASSC) by attending their activities in Washington, DC for International June Survivors Week. The theme is “We Will Not Be Silent.” Email Kelsey@tassc.org for more information.

Wednesday, June 22: Conference at Gowan Hall, Catholic University, 9:00am-5:00pm (located opposite Brookland metro)

Thursday, June 23: Capitol Hill Advocacy:  9:00am – 5:00pm

Saturday, June 25: White House Vigil at Lafayette Park: 11:00am – 4:00pm

Commemorate victims of torture by keeping vigil, celebrating life, remembering lost friends and family, and renewing our commitment to a world where torture is banned forever. Listen to music, poetry, survivor testimonies and statements of solidarity from human rights groups and interfaith allies who are part of this ongoing struggle.

Sunday, June 26: Celebration at Busboys and Poets: 6:00pm – 10:00pm 2021 14th St, NW Washington DC

You may also mark the week by organizing your own events and vigils that focus on sharing the stories of the men in your local communities and public spaces. Email witnesstorture@gmail.com to let us know what you have planned.

Take Action

The ACLU has launched #FreeSlahi petition. Mohamedou Slahi, the author of Guantanamo Diary, has been unlawfully imprisoned for 14 years by the U.S. government. Thirteen of those years have been at Guantánamo Bay prison, where he was subjected to gruesome torture. The U.S. has never charged Slahi with a crime.

The U.S. government’s justifications for holding Slahi fail because he has never taken part in any hostilities against the United States. He poses no threat to the United States. A former chief military prosecutor in the Guantanamo military commissions, Colonel Morris Davis, has said he couldn’t find any crime with which to charge Slahi.

In 2010, a federal judge ordered Slahi’s release, rejecting the government’s arguments since evidence was tainted by torture and coercion or was otherwise not credible. But the government appealed. Now, the U.S. is currently holding him indefinitely despite his innocence.

Slahi just had the Periodic Review Board hearing he should have had four years ago, and hopes to prove he’s not a threat to the United States. Read more here.

Save the Date: Witness Against Torture Resisting the RNC (July 15-17 Cleveland, Ohio)

WAT has accepted an invitation to participate in the People’s Convention the weekend before the Republican National Convention July 15th -17th. We will be gathering to offer an anti-torture viewpoint and confront the pro-torture and hate-filled rhetoric of Donald Trump. We are also planning on sticking around to find creative ways to engage the RNC. If you are interested in joining us in Cleveland, please RSVP at witnesstorture@gmail.com

Joe Morton – Daniel Berrigan, S.J. – Michael Ratner: Presente!

The Witness Against Torture community continues to grow – in our shared analysis, in our expanding leadership, and in our work. But now we pause to remember those who have left our circle. Over the last few months, three people who were integral to the founding of our community passed from this plane. None of them would have sought or acknowledged their particular contributions to our community – all of them would have focused on the need not to mourn, but organize.

But in order to keep organizing, we must also take a moment to remember their witness.  And express our deep, deep gratitude.

Joe Morton (December 7 1935 – April 7, 2016) was a mentor, a friend, an example, a teacher, a resister, a gardener. a lover of people and life. He was part of conversations planning the trip to Cuba in 2005. He was part of every WAT action since then. He would always show up. He would chop firewood. He would deliver juice during our fasts. He would put on a jumpsuit and go to jail.  Joe would always be present in the moment, but never fail to ask what’s next. It’s hard to imagine what’s next without Joe. We’ll all have to figure that out, alone and together.

Dan Berrigan, SJ (May 9, 1921 – April 30, 2016) was a poet, priest, and prophet. Without the imagination, words, and creative action of Dan Berrigan, Witness Against Torture would never have begun.

“Our apologies, good friends, for the fracture of good order, the burning of paper instead of children, the angering of the orderlies in the front parlor of the charnel house. We could not, so help us God, do otherwise…..We say: killing is disorder, life and gentleness and community and unselfishness is the only order we recognize. For the sake of that order, we risk our liberty, our good name.”

Dan’s softness of speech, sense of humor and humility, boldness of action, and call to friendship and community were part of the initial conversation that led to a trip to Cuba in 2005, and the subsequent beginning of the Witness Against Torture community. He has been part of everything we have done. We were fortunate to share the earth with Dan for as long as we did.

Michael Ratner (June 13, 1943 – May 11, 2016), in the introduction to our book about the work of Witness Against Torture, recounts one of our first meetings — when we went to the Center for Constitutional Rights to share our plan about traveling to Cuba to protest the Guantanamo prison. He writes: “I thought it was a great sentiment, and an important initiative, but I also thought they were out of their minds.”

But Michael took us seriously. He counseled us. He supported us. He pushed us. He pulled us. He cried with us. He believed in us, and because of that belief, we put one foot in front of the other. Michael understood the link between the courtroom and the street. Our work would have never begun without him.

Our community would not exist if not for Joe, and Dan, and Michael.  And the work will be harder, but all the more important, in their absence.

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 flickr 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.

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Newsletter: Retreat Report Back and Calendar

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Dear Friends,

Witness Against Torture members gathered in Cleveland, Ohio earlier this month to reflect on the past year, renew our commitment to build together, and plan future projects. We have committed to implementing a variety of actions but will need our whole community to participate. We hope that you will join us in any and all of the actions that are being planned.

First, we want to celebrate and acknowledge the long road of healing ahead for Omar Khalifa Mohammed Abu Bakr (43) and Salem Abdul Salem Ghereby (55), who have been “resettled” in Senegal. As we celebrate their long awaited freedom, we continue to hold these men and their families in our hearts and minds because we know that healing from the trauma and torture of Guantanamo is so much more than “resettlement.” It requires time, community, and even reparations.

Read more by clicking here.

WAT Retreat Report Back

Over thirty members of the WAT community participated in the planning. Our work together focused on analysing the current political climate. We focused on Obama’s plan to close Guantanamo, the current elections, and the broadening climate of racism and Islamophobia.

Here is a short recap of the analysis offered by Jeremy Varon and Maha Hilal:

Jeremy spoke about how the state of Guantanamo is directly linked to Americans feeling “safe.”  The fear of ISIS is being overblown so that Americans think being safe requires them to be exclusionary and intolerant which has bred an ethnonational racism. This is one of the reasons we see the detainees being demonized in the service of this intolerant propaganda. In our work, WAT has historically addressed the US government and those with the power to release the men, while at the same time reaching out to the detainees to let them know they are not alone. While this work is important, we asked ourselves if we could in some way speak more directly to the culture of fear and hate by attempting to vocalize some sanity into the public sphere and discourse. Given the current racist rhetoric in the election process, we might be able to get public attention by placing our clear anti-torture voice into the mix. In other words, let’s use the election to get the public’s attention.

Maha spoke of distressing new developments concerning Muslim communities, particularly, the CVE (Countering Violent Extremism) campaign being promoted by the Obama administration. It is a “counter-terrorist strategy” that is completely focused on Muslim communities, which are expected to conduct surveillance on each other. It is penetrating and disrupting peace and conflict resolution efforts.

In addition to deepening our analysis, we also created some chants and songs with Frank, Luke and Enmanuel from the Peace Poets. We delved into identifying white supremacy in our work and the ways we act to resist the violent structures of racism and capitalism (see pictures below). We addressed questions about the intentions of our civil disobedience and committed to some website and social media work. Needless to say, we did a lot of work over the two days!

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WAT members embodying resisting white supremacy through tableaus.

Please mark your calendars for the following dates and activities and let us know if you are interested in helping plan them and or joining us: 

First Monday of every month (New York, NY): No Separate Justice Vigil

If you are in New York City, please join the No Separate Justice Vigils at the Metropolitan Correctional Center (MCC) in lower Manhattan. The monthly vigil aims to shed light on and end a pattern of human rights and civil liberties abuses in “War on Terror” cases in the U.S. criminal justice system. You can contact us for more information.

June 6 to July 6 (everyone and everywhere): Ramadan Project with the National Coalition to Protect Civil Freedoms

This project will work closely with WAT member and the director of the National Coalition to Protect Civil Freedoms (NCPCF), Maha Hilal to provide Muslim detainees in the U.S. with commissary money during Ramadan (June 6-July 6). We are currently looking for financial support for these efforts. Please consider making a donation to Witness Against Torture towards this work.

June 26 (everywhere): Torture Survivor Awareness Week

This year will be focused on sharing the stories of the men in our local communities and public spaces. We will organize some online discussion forums and participate in a rolling Ramadan fast. Folks are also welcome to join Torture Abolition and Survivors Support Coalition (TASSC) activities in DC. More to come on this soon.

July 15-17 (Cleveland, Ohio): The People’s Convention in Response to the RNC

WAT has accepted an invitation to participate in the People’s Convention the weekend before the Republican National Convention. We will be gathering to offer an anti-torture viewpoint and confront the hate-filled rhetoric of the Republican candidates. We are also planning on sticking around to find creative ways to engage the RNC. More details to be announced.

October 7-10 (Nogales Sonora, AZ): Mobilize to the US-Mexico Border for the SOA Watch Vigil

Members of WAT will be joining SOA Watch on the border October 7-10, in Nogales Sonora, AZ. The goal of the gathering is to resist border militarization and engage in nonviolent direct action. We stand in solidarity with those working to expose the root causes of migration and end U.S. intervention in the Americas.

Year long engagement into combating Communication Management Units:

Communication Management Units (CMU) are domestic prisons which hold an hold a majority Muslim population in terribly cruel ways. The people placed in these brutal units go without  human contact for years. This policy and practice is currently being challenged by the Center for Constitutional Rights.

Over the course of the next months WAT will begin a time of study and engagement in ending Communication Management Units (CMU). It will also involve reaching out to local groups who work to support families visiting their loved ones and overturning the court decisions that led to their detention. We will work to provide learning opportunities for the larger WAT community, as we study the relationships between detention of Muslim men in Guantanamo and those who are victims domestically through targeting, preemptive prosecution and incarceration.

TBD: Confronting White Supremacy Workshop/Retreat

This year WAT will host a workshop on dismantling white supremacy in our society. The past few years have brought to light our need to address white supremacy in our organizing and we will spend two days this year reflecting on ways we enact and resist this in our work to close Guantanamo and end torture everywhere.

TBD: Life After Guantanamo Documentary Project

We are beginning to explore a possible documentary project about life after Guantanamo. This project seeks to visit the men resettled around the world, in places such as Uruguay, and create a video that will spread awareness about life after detention with a focus on the long lasting effects of U.S. sponsored torture.

Fast For Justice (Washington DC): January 8- 21

Last but not least is our annual Fast for Justice, which will take place from January 8-21, 2017. We are encouraging our community to consider coming all the days of the fast this year. We will be building on the anniversary of January 11th to address the presidential inauguration.

In closing

We lift up the life of Joe Morton, a sustained and beautiful person in our WAT community, as he passed away last week. He was a loving and encouraging presence in Witness Against Torture’s memory and work.  We would not be who we are without Joe. We miss him dearly. We are reminded that even though we are spread out across the country and world, our creativity and desire for change, continue to fuel this work. As always, we cannot do this work without each other.

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: http://www.witnesstorture.org.

Witness Against Torture
www.witnesstorture.org
@witnesstorture

Witness Against Torture will carry on in its activities until torture is decisively ended, its victims are fully acknowledged, Guantánamo and similar facilities are closed, and those who ordered and committed torture are held to account.

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March Newsletter

News // Film


Dear Friends,

We did not plan for this newsletter to go out on such a news heavy day. Our hearts and prayers remain with all victims of violence. As the media uses the attacks in Bruxelles, Ankara, Istanbul and Abidjan, to scapegoat the muslim community, we hope that we can offer these alternative perspectives. We need to remind ourselves that Islamophobia is dangerous. It is at the foundation of Guantanamo Bay Prison’s existence and the fuel that carries the violence we see today. We continue to offer our love and support to our muslims sisters and brothers who will be targeted by violence fostered by hate speech. The work to dismantle racism and  xenophobia should be our call.


Responses to the President’s Plan to Close Guantanamo

Human rights groups around the world responded to President’s Obama’s plan to close Guantanamo – many finding it wanting insufficient, and dangerous. (You can read WAT’s response here.) Furthermore, as President Obama visits Cuba, we would like to share with you two powerful pieces challenging his plan which are written by two members of Witness Against Torture. First, Dr. Maha Hilal’s response challenges the normative rhetoric that continues to surround the prison and War on Terror. The article is entitled The Stories We Tell: Guantanamo Bay In Normative American History And The Present. (Please read and distribute)

A conference hosted by Human Rights First “promised to provide the inside scoop on how Obama is going to close the Guantanamo Bay prison and what the key roadblocks might be” The presenters were people that had worked closely with the Obama administration such as the Pentagon’s Paul Lewis, the State Department’s Lee Wolosky and their predecessor, Clifford Sloan. WAT’s own Helen Schietinger attended the conference and wrote about the experience in an article entitled, The Catch-22 of Closing Gitmo. She closes her thoughts by writing, “Too many remain silent regarding the fact that Obama’s plan not only perpetuates but strengthens the mechanisms by which basic Constitutional protections are being circumvented.”

The Duka Brothers, Islamophobia, and the Political Utility of Fear.

During the Fast for Justice members of Witness Against Torture traveled to Camden, New Jersey to stand with the Duka brothers. These three Albanian-American men who are now serving life sentences for a crime they never heard of and never participated in. In 2008, they were found guilty of conspiracy to commit terrorism and other charges. “Yet, the whole plan was conceived and planned by two FBI paid informants and preemptively prosecuted by the legal system. Ultimately, these three Muslim men from a working-class family in Cherry Hill, New Jersey became victims of the post-9/11 counterterrorism frenzy that engulfed the United States.”

In January, they were given a rare hearing to present a motion for retrial based on incompetent representation. WAT members, Frida Berrigan and Chris Knestrick, wrote an article based on that experience entitled, Can the Fort Dix 5 channel the power of the Camden 28? The article reflects on the political utility of fear and the fact that the courtroom that found the Duka brothers guilty in 2008 was the same courtroom that found the Camden 28 innocent in 1973.

You are Invited: WAT Retreat and Planning Session: April 1- 3, 2016

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Join us for our annual WAT retreat and planning weekend in Cleveland, Ohio. Every spring, we gather to reflect on the year’s work and plan how to continue moving forward. Please consider joining us as we build together. The retreat starts on Friday, April 1st @ 3pm and ends on Sunday, April 3rd @ 12:30 pm. There is simple housing available for those that are coming.  Please RSVP by March 25th to witnesstorture@gmail.com.

Witness Against Torture on Social Media:

Please “like” us on Facebook & follow us on Twitter
Check out our latest news and updates on Tumblr.
Post any pictures of your local activities to our Flickr 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.

Witness Against Torture
www.witnesstorture.org
@witnesstorture

Witness Against Torture will carry on in its activities until torture is decisively ended, its victims are fully acknowledged, Guantánamo and similar facilities are closed, and those who ordered and committed torture are held to account.

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WAT Responds to Obama’s Guantanamo Plan

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Close, Don’t Move Guantanamo
Witness Against Torture Responds to Obama’s Guantanamo Plan

President Obama’s plan to close the prison at Guantanamo is finally here.  But it’s as useless as the Executive Order he signed almost eight years ago.

Republican candidates and leaders have shoved the plan back in Obama’s face, repeating the big lie that the prison houses only “the worst of the worst.”  The media has declared the proposal “dead on arrival,” quickly returning to its saturation coverage of a primary season verging on farce.

Obama’s plan proposes to close the facility but not end the legal and moral abomination it represents.  Indefinitely detaining men without charge or trial in the continental United States — in supermax prisons no less — is as unacceptable as indefinite detention at Guantanamo.  The Military Commissions are unworkable and unfair, and cannot be tweaked into legitimacy.  Saving money by changing the zip code of an unjust system does nothing to lessen its moral cost.  Any talk of expenses should be about how to offer compensation to the men the United States abused and provide proper resources for their resettlement.

The president’s plan is silent on our nation’s accountability for the torture it has perpetrated at Guantanamo. That torture continues through force-feeding those prisoners who protest their detention by hunger striking.  Indefinite detention is itself a means of torture, as the United Nations Special Rapporteur on Torture has stated.

The idea that Guantanamo was ever simply about national security is a fiction.  Guantanamo was, is, and will continue to be an internment camp for Muslim men that is designed to destroy human beings.  It both feeds and feeds off an Islamophobia that has gripped much of the country since 9-11.  It sustains the racism and fear-mongering behind the mass incarceration of African Americans, Latino/as, and the poor, challenged by a new movement Obama claims to support.  There can be no true tolerance so long as the prison at Guantanamo, or its terrible spirit, lives on.

Maybe Obama is naïve enough to believe that he really tried to close the prison.  Republican opposition has been sickening.  But Obama’s own lack of will, his political blunders, and his failure to truly reckon with Guantanamo have been among the greatest barriers. His speech presenting the plan was all about “our security” — what holding, or releasing, the men at the prison means for American safety — and not “our crimes” — what the United States did to the men there.  A sense of shame, above all, should drive action on the prison.

As we gathered in front of the White House last month to mark the prison’s opening fourteen years ago, we spoke a vision of justice beyond failed promises and the cynicism of politics:

We hear a beautiful sound.
It is the breaking of chains.
We see a path full of hope.
We have found the way.
Let them go home.  Let them go home.  Let them go home.
Let them go today.

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February Newsletter: Update, #MuslimsRally2CloseGitmo, Save the Date.

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We hear a beautiful sound
It is the breaking of chains
We see a path full of hope
We have found the way
Let them go home
Let them go home
Let them go home
Let them go today


Dear friends,

The detention facility at Guantanamo Bay has now been open longer during Obama’s presidency than the Bush administration. A month ago, on January 11, we gathered and brought our visions for the detainees’ homecoming to the White House.  See video here. We sang our hearts (and voices) out asking for the immediate release of the men detained in Cuba.  Over and over we sang our plea, “Let them go homeso they can return to their families, to their friends, to their homes. We celebrate the release of 12 men since leaving Washington D.C.  These men are free and one step closer to going home. We are excited to say that one of these men is Fahd Ghazy, who was detained in Guantanamo as a juvenile. Throughout 2015, we focused on Fahd’s story, holding a banner with his portrait and reading his words in front of the White House and throughout D.C. The freedom of these 12 men is a beautiful sound and we hope they are doing well.

President Obama has the power to continue to push for the release of the 91 men that remain in Guantanamo. Before he leaves office, he should use everything at his disposal to send these men home. Any plan to further detain them in the U.S. is unacceptable. The torture and indefinite detention they have and continue to suffer must end now. They have waited too long for their freedom.

During our trip to Cuba in November, we started formulating some demands concerning the release of the men left at the prison and communicated them to the U.S. Ambassador to Cuba, Jeffrey DeLaurentis. We in the WAT community insist that shutting down Guantanamo must mean shutting down indefinite detention. We submit the following demands as critical to the effort to “close Guantanamo” once and for all – Please share this with friends as widely as you can:

  1. Each Guantánamo detainee must either be charged and fairly tried in federal court, or be released to countries that will respect their human rights.
  1. Expedite the release of those that are cleared.  35 of the current prisoners have been cleared for release, yet they continue to languish behind bars.  Justice delayed is justice denied.
  1. Release the men who have been tortured.  The US is a signatory of the UN Convention Against Torture.  The UN Special Rapporteur on Torture has reported that the Guantanamo Bay prison is non-compliant to this Convention and has named indefinite detention as a form of cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment.  The U.S. Senate Intelligence Committee’s Torture Report has extensively documented instances of torture by the CIA.  Some of the victims are currently housed in Guantanamo.
  1. Provide reasonable resettlement options, including torture treatment services and reparations.  To ensure accountability for torture and indefinite detention, released prisoners should be provided with critical social services to facilitate their re-entry into society.
  1. Publicly acknowledge and apologize for the egregious human rights violation at Guantanamo during the War on Terror.  This acknowledgement is essential for preventing torture, indefinite detention, and other violations from being perpetrated by future administrations.
  1. Close the base. The U.S. must immediately relinquish Cuba’s sovereign territory.

#MuslimsRally2CloseGitmo

Another important piece of the work to close the prison at Guantanamo Bay Prison is the fight to end Islamophobia. On January 29, 2016, our own Maha Hilal and Uruj Sheikh were part of an online panel discussion with Aliya Hussain from CCR and Noor Mir from Amnesty International to discuss their activism as muslims and how the continued detention of muslim men at Guantanamo bay is important in the fight against Islamophobia. The Panel was hosted by the National Coalition to protect Civil Freedoms. Here is the link to video,

WAT Retreat: Save the Date April 1- 3, 2016

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Join us for our Annual Retreat in Cleveland, OH from April 1-3 rd 2016.

Every spring, we gather to reflect on the year’s work and plan our work moving forward. You are invited to join us as we build together. Please email witnesstorture@gmail.com to RSVP or if you have any questions. There will be more details to coming soon.

Thank you for your participation in this work to shut down Guantanamo Bay Prison! We cannot do this without your continued support.

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: http://www.witnesstorture.org.

 

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Groups to Rally Monday at White House on 14th Guantánamo Anniversary

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Washington, DC – This Monday, a coalition of human rights activists, torture survivors, Guantánamo attorneys, and members of diverse faith communities will hold a rally at the White House to mark the 14th anniversary of the first arrival of detainees at Guantánamo on January 11, 2002.

The coalition is calling on the Obama administration in its last, crucial year in office, to close Guantánamo and end indefinite detention. With recent transfers, 104 men remain at Guantánamo, dozens of them cleared for release, the majority from Yemen.

The rally will include a giant, inflatable figure of Shaker Aamer – the last UK resident held at Guantánamo, released in October. The figure was displayed outside the British Parliament where MPs and celebrities posed with it to press for Mr. Aamer’s release. Members of the coalition will share the words of Mr. Aamer and of Mohammed Al Hamiri, Ghaleb Al Bihani, Zaher Hamdoun, and Mustafa al-Hawsawi, all of whom remain at Guantánamo. The rally will be followed by a “detainee procession” of figures in orange jumpsuits and black hoods and signs marking the anniversary.

The organizations drafted a call to action:

Last Chance for Leadership: Close Guantánamo

President Obama has just one year left to fulfill his first-term promise by closing Guantánamo and ending indefinite detention. Doing so will demonstrate leadership and fidelity to the principles on which he campaigned and won office.

On January 11, 2016, the prison at Guantánamo will enter its 15th year of operation. More than 100 men remain there; the vast majority will never be charged with crimes. Dozens of prisoners are cleared for transfer. Some remain on hunger strike and are force-fed, and a handful are facing charges in unfair trials. There has been no accountability for the torture that many detainees have suffered.

Though Congress has placed obstacles to closing Guantánamo, President Obama can and should make significant progress towards reducing the population and shuttering the prison. He must order the Secretary of Defense to expedite transfers and accelerate the Periodic Review Board process, and tell the Justice Department not to reflexively oppose habeas petitions in federal court. He must also reject a policy of indefinite detention, and formally try or release all detainees.

In addition, President Obama should order all relevant agencies to read the full Senate torture report. Refusing to read the report, more than a year after receiving it, reflects the “bury your head in the sand” mentality that will prevent the country from adequately learning from its past and permanently ending torture. Further, the Obama administration should prompt the Department of Justice to open a new, comprehensive investigation into the clear acts of criminality described in the report.

Now is the time for Obama to accomplish a central goal of his administration by closing Guantánamo. There is today a renewed climate of fear and hate reminiscent of the post-September 11 mindset that led to torture and indefinite detention in the first place. Guantánamo is the bitter legacy of a politics of fear, which must be rejected.

This is the president’s last chance to keep his promise and close Guantánamo. If he does not do so, there is a real chance that the current detainees will die there, and that more detainees will join them.

We cannot let that happen.  Close Guantánamo now.

Schedule

12:00pm:  Interfaith service in front of the White House sponsored by the National Religious Coalition Against Torture

12:30pm:  Rally and program in front of the White House, followed by procession

Sponsors: Amnesty International USA, Bill of Rights Defense Committee and Defending Dissent Foundation, Center for Constitutional Rights, CODEPINK, Council on American-Islamic Relations, CloseGuantanamo.org, Interfaith Action for Human Rights, National Coalition to Protect Civil Freedoms, National Religious Campaign Against Torture, No More Guantanamos, September 11th Families for Peaceful Tomorrows, Torture Abolition and Survivors Support Coalition (TASSC), Witness Against Torture, and others.

Organizational Quotes

“Every year, for the last seven years, concerned activists and citizens have called on President Obama to fulfill his promise during his first year in office and demanded that Guantanamo be closed once and for all; every year, these calls have remained unheeded. This is President Obama’s final year in office. That means this is also his final opportunity to follow through on his promise, shut down Guantanamo, and restore some semblance of dignity to our justice system. This opportunity must not be left ignored.” ~ Dr. Zainab Chaudry, Interfaith Action for Human Rights

“It’s not enough for President Obama to say he tried, but that Congress and other obstacles are preventing him from closing Guantanamo. Obama has the authority to make significant progress. He is the Commander in Chief, yet officials within the Department of Defense openly defy his policy objectives and derail closure efforts. He could order the Department of Justice not to fight the habeas petitions of cleared men like 74-lb Tariq Ba Odah, but he hasn’t. There are more than 40 men, cleared for release, who could go home today, yet they continue to languish as the prison enters its 15th year. The president has real choices in front of him. Now is the time for him to take meaningful action. The clock is ticking.” ~ Aliya Hussain, Center for Constitutional Rights

“In November 2015, a CODEPINK delegation traveled to Guantanamo Bay and met with members of the Cuban government and civil society who are calling for the base to be closed immediately and the land given back to the Cubans. The Cubans are horrified that the United States government has committed torture on their land and continues to indefinitely detain prisoners who have never been charged with any crime. The prison facility within the naval base is a stain on US foreign policy, and we urge President Obama to issue an executive order to close the prison — and the base — immediately.” ~ Nancy Mancias, organizer, CODEPINK

“One day let alone 14 years is too long for the U.S. to imprison one hundred men at Guantanamo without charge or trial. For seven years the president has promised to close this prison – a blemish on our nation’s commitment to the rule of law – yet the situation has not improved. We are responsible for safeguarding the constitutional values which are meant to protect all Americans, persons who reside in the U.S., and those in our custody from the abuses of indefinite detention and lack of due process. We must shut down Guantanamo.” ~ Nihad Awad, national executive director, Council on American-Islamic Relations

“It must be stated clearly and boldly that the premise upon which Guantanamo Bay prison exists is illegal.  Moreover, the prison symbolizes the ways in which Muslims have been dehumanized, while at the same time, criminalizing the Muslim identity by virtue of housing a population of men adhering to Islam. While the number of prisoners has decreased from its height at 779 to 104, it is disturbing that the United States government continues to house men cleared for release while holding others hostage in protracted military commissions that seemingly have no resolution in sight. We call on President Obama to close the prison once and for all and end the destructive policies of the War on Terror that have so callously targeted Muslims.”  ~ Dr. Maha Hilal, executive director, National Coalition to Protect Civil Freedoms

“After fourteen years, our experience with an official policy of detaining suspected terrorists without trial has not brought us security, but only more fear, more terrorism and worst of all, a deep stain on our honor and debasement of our most basic values. It’s long past time for us to end this inhumane and profoundly ineffective experiment with lawlessness.” ~ Bruce Miller, president, No More Guantánamos

“As an organization that serves torture survivors from all over the world, TASSC is appalled by the fact that Guantanamo –synonymous with a U.S. torture chamber – is still open after 14 years.  During his last year in office, President Obama should honor his promise to finally close this facility and either release the detainees or transfer them to other locations where they have access to justice.” ~ Gizachew Emiru, Esq., executive director, Torture Abolition and Survivors Support Coalition (TASSC)

“As Guantánamo enters its fifteenth year of operation, there is a real risk it is becoming a permanent offshore prison for an endless global war. The longer Guantánamo stays open, the more likely it is to become a fixture of U.S. counterterrorism—and a permanent system of American injustice. President Obama has just one year left in office to make good on his commitment to close Guantánamo. His human rights legacy, and that of the nation, are on the line. It won’t be easy, but President Obama can and must come through.” ~ Naureen Shah, director of Amnesty International USA’s Security With Human Rights Program

“Guantanamo is a moral disaster zone where the U.S. tortured people and continues to hold people without charge or trial, some for more than a decade. It would be a grave sin and a national disgrace for President Obama to leave office without closing Guantanamo.” ~ Rev. Ron Stief, executive director, National Religious Campaign Against Torture

“Guantanamo is the bitter legacy of the vengeful over-reaction to 9-11. A politics of fear and Islamophobia still rage. The United States can never truly embrace human rights, the rule of law, and its own democratic values so long as Guantanamo remains open. Obama doesn’t get points for trying to close the prison. Either he gets it done this year, or adds to his disgrace on this issue. ~ Mason Otaibi, Witness Against Torture

“It’s now or never. Seven years after he promised to close Guantanamo within a year, President Obama now has just one year left to make sure that a failure to close the prison, as promised, is not part of his legacy. There must be no more excuses. Guantanamo is a legal, moral and ethical abomination, and every day it remains open poisons the U.S.’s claims to be a nation that respects the rule of law.” ~ Andy Worthington, CloseGuantanamo.org

 

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Daily Update – Day 7 of the Fast for Justice

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Our community in DC continues to grow as we prepare to mark January 11th, the beginning of Guantanamo’s 15th year. As you read through this update, please watch and share the videos linked – like this one filmed in Union Station — inspired by the words of Mohammed Al-Hamiri, held captive in Guantanamo for 14 years.

Morning Reflection

We began our day with reflections and discussions about what we’ve been doing here in DC and where we want our work to go. The sense of sense of community and focus remained strong as we entered our final full day of fasting.

Frida Berrigan led the morning reflection, giving a personal and close telling of both the first WAT trip to Guantanamo in 2005 and the most recent trip this past November. Frida focused on the importance and centrality of creating rituals and nurturing community – and spoke of the creation of ritual serving to recognize and hold both beauty & horror. The reflection ended with the community in DC speaking a litany of resistance that was used a few months ago by the community in Cuba.

Action Planning & January 11th

We had some time to debrief our time yesterday with Comfort Oludipe, Darlene Cain, and Marion Gray-Hopkins – mothers from the DC and Baltimore areas whose sons had been killed by police officers. (You can WATCH & SHARE a video of a poem Frank shared at the vigil and LISTEN and HEAR the voice of Comfort Oludipe)

Our discussion focused on improving our connections to the Black Lives Matter community in the Baltimore/DC area. There was a general concern that we, who are mostly white, need to hone in on our own consciousness related to white supremacy and to take responsibility for working with other white people – a crucially important conversation for our community to be engaging.

In the afternoon we continued planning and preparing for January 11th, when we will join among a coalition of human rights activists, torture survivors, Guantánamo attorneys, and members of diverse faith communities to mark the beginning of the 15th year of Guantanamo.

The coalition is calling on the Obama administration in its last, crucial year in office, to close Guantánamo and end indefinite detention. There are demonstrations planned in many cities, including a London gathering outside the US Embassy led by 7 former British men who had been in Guantanamo, and including Shaker Aamer who was freed in October 2015 after being incarcerated for 14 years and ex prisoner Jihad Dhiab (aka Abu Wa’el Dhiab) will demonstrate outside the U.S. Embassy in Uruguay.

Evening Panel – Visions of Home: Close Guantanamo!

This evening, we all walked over to the Impact Hub for a report back about recent Cuba delegations by WAT and Code Pink, an update on Guantanamo from Andy Worthington and Aliya from CCR, and a performance by the Peace Poets.

The evening included this powerful piece – written by Enmanuel Candelario when we were outside the perimeter of the base in November.

Our evening closed with a new song – written by Luke Nephew specifically for our action on January 11 at the White House.

We hear a beautiful sound
It is the breaking of chains
We see a path of hope
We have found the way

Let them go home
Let them go home
Let them go home
Let them go today

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Daily Update – Days 5 & 6 of the Fast for Justice

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Good news as reported in the Miami Herald:

A Kuwaiti jet early Friday departed from the U.S. Navy base at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, with a freed captive…leaving 104 war-on terror prisoners in the remote detention center…

Fayez al Kandari, 38, was held at Guantánamo as Detainee 552 since May 2002.

Although a war court prosecutor at one point prepared a case against him, he was never formally charged with a crime.

Days 5 & 6 of the Fast for Justice

Our group is now about 70 people strong. As we fast and plan our actions, we are buoyed by our growing community and determination to raise our voices in public.

*if you are in DC, please join us Sunday Night for

Visions of Homecoming: Close Guantanamo!

Day 5 – @ the White House

We joined the Dorothy Day Catholic Worker at their weekly White House vigil, and took over the space in front of the White House with street theater & song.  Our presence was focused on the words of Mohammed Al-Hamiri.  One faster remarked how “it was striking, poetic and sad — very much so, as Mohammed’s words led us into his suffering, the injustice, the individual struggle for his very life, his spirit not to lose hope.”

Please WATCH & SHARE this short video of our time at the White House. 

Day 6 @ the CIA and Metropolitan Police Headquarters

At the CIA

This morning, we went to join the Pax Christi vigil at the CIA, walking single file down a busy road on a cold damp day to the gate of the compound, we were led in song, and when arrived at the gates, we lined up along the road in our orange prison suits and black hoods, holding signs: “Close Guantanamo,” “Force Feeding,” “Is This Who We Are?” Some of us walked onto the median to make our presence more visible to passing traffic.

For an hour or so, we stood vigil while speakers and singers highlighted the reasons we were there – the men in Guantanamo, of course, but also the U.S. aggressions in the Middle East that led to their imprisonment. The torture and the targeted drone assassinations.  There were a number of supportive car honks as the traffic whizzed by.

Afterwards, we were invited for refreshments to the local Langley Quaker Meeting house. There were some delicious looking goodies, but we fasters stuck to the hot apple cider, tea, and coffee. We were warmed by the generous and caring people providing us with the hospitality.

At Metropolitan Police Headquarters (MPD)

We came back from the CIA just in time for our vigil at to conduct another vigil at MPD, where the DC Central Cellblock is also located.  Our speakers were mothers from the DC and Baltimore areas whose sons had been killed by police officers: Comfort Oludipe, Darlene Cain, and Marion Gray-Hopkins.

The vigil closed with Chris Brandt’s (one of our WAT community) reading a poem he penned in the aftermath of WATs actions last year, and inspired by the mothers of those killed by state violence:

The Mothers

 Because they are mothers.
Because they carried life in their bellies and brought it into this bright world.
Because they lifted their infants and held them and suckled them and cleaned them and fed them.
Because they loved them and scolded them and petted them and raised them up.

Because their children died.
Because their children were killed.
Because their children were shot by police officers.
Because killed by a uniform is still murder.
Because nothing will ever make their children come back.
Because nothing is left of their children but their names and their mothers’ memories.
Because the emptiness that erupted when they heard “Ma’am, your child is deceased” – can never be filled by anything but more emptiness, not even by their screams and their tears.
Because the bullets and beatings that killed their children took away a part of their hearts also.
Because they have begun the long hard job of dying, too long after their children died in a hurry.

Because the ones who took their children’s lives are not even indicted.
Because they were all “tragic occurrences.”
Because they were “unfortunate accidents.”
Because “we are very sorry Ma’am, but we have to move on.”

They do not.
They do not move on.
They do not move at all.
They stand, pillars of salt grief.
They stand in Ferguson, Oakland, Staten Island, Atlanta, Cleveland, Chicago, Phoenix, Salt Lake City, Washington D.C.
They stand everywhere in these Disunited States.

They stand silent and look at us.
Their silence echoes in our skulls.
Their silent eyes ask why we are silent.

Let their names be known.
Wanda Johnson.
Sybrina Fulton.
Lesley McSpadden.
Kadiatou Diallo.
Susan Hunt.
Valerie Bell.
Samaria Rice.
Gwen Carr.
Comfort Oludipe.

Let their names be known.
Let their silence spread silence – amid the noise of t.v. sets, honking horns, yelling and cheering at football games, the crash and clatter of subway trains, the endless commands to buy, buy something, buy anything.
Silent they stand and look at us.
Let the silence spread until we can hear, until we can see, until we resolve that no other mothers must ever again have to bear such pain.

Their silence is the place where song might be born, the echoing cave give birth to melody.
Song of grief since that must be, song of the broken heart, call of trumpet and violin, song of loss, of the entrance to hell, that is their song.
But also songs of love and desire, blue songs and gay songs, another man done gone songs.
And the child’s song of joy, the cradle songs and nursery rhymes, the silly songs in school playgrounds, the angry songs, the lullabyes.
The dancing songs, the rocking hips, ecstatic mouths, the long embrace.

But song.
Always song,
let there be song.
Let their silence fill with song.

[Chris says anyone is free to use this any way you want].

As we walked in a procession back to the church where we staying, we sang the following refrain: “Comrade hold my hand/I know there’s a world worth fighting for/ I know there’s a world worth fighting for.”

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Sunday, January 10th: 5pm @ The Impact Hub (419 7th Street NW, 3rd Floor)

Visions of Homecoming: Close Guantanamo!

 

The Peace Poets will perform. Witness Against Torture and CODEPINK will discuss their most recent trip to Guantanamo bay, Cuba. The Center of Constitutional Rights share the stories of the men they represent in Guantanamo.

CLICK HERE FOR OUR FULL WASHINGTON, DC SCHEDULE OF EVENTS

Please “like” us on Facebook & follow us on Twitter.

 

You can find out photos and video of our time together on Flickr and YouTube, as well as Facebook

Watch & SHARE this video, & 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: https://www.razoo.com/story/Witness-Against-Torture

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