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Amnesty Film Shows Agony of US Detention Techniques
Forced on to the balls of his feet, bent double with his hands handcuffed behind his back, the near-naked man shook violently. From beneath the hood, muted moans were audible. It seemed obscene to stare at this apparently frail, vulnerable man, caught in a stress position reminiscent of the images of Iraqi prisoners being interrogated by US soldiers at Baghdad's Abu Ghraib prison. Yet this was not torture. It was art.
In an attempt to draw attention to human rights abuses, Amnesty International has filmed a dancer in the positions captives have been forced to adopt by US troops. The resulting film makes shocking viewing. During a break in filming, Jiva Parthipan, a Sri Lankan performance artist, appeared relieved as he rubbed his limbs, which were aching after just a couple of minutes in a position that suspects in President George Bush's "war on terror" are expected to endure for hours.
The star of the Amnesty International film, which is being released online next month to highlight the agony of such interrogation techniques, said he found the experience painful, both physically and psychologically. In secret jails across the world, Amnesty insists, captives in the fight against terrorism are expected to maintain these poses. They are not considered torture, simply "enhanced interrogation techniques". Alfred McCoy, a professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, argued recently that the photographs from Abu Ghraib reflected standard CIA torture techniques of " stress positions, sensory deprivation, and sexual humiliation".
In August, President Bush issued an order decreeing that Article 3 of the Third Geneva Convention - which prohibits the humiliating or degrading treatment of prisoners of war - should apply to the CIA's detention and interrogation programme. But Amnesty believes the order does not go far enough in specifying what constitutes degrading treatment.
It is calling for an end to all secret detentions, as well as for detainees to be given access to lawyers, medical care and monitors. It wants all allegations of enforced disappearance, torture and ill treatment levelled at the CIA to be investigated independently.
Amnesty's film, entitled Waiting For The Guards, forms the backbone of a new campaign the charity hopes will draw attention to such interrogation techniques. The film, by Marc Hawker and Ishbel Whitaker, does not attempt to document the mental torture of being kept in a secret location with no contact with the outside world, simply the physical agony of such allegedly innocuous methods. The crew expected it to be an arduous task but were shocked and disturbed by how quickly Parthipan found it impossible to endure the stress position.
"He is somebody who is physically fit but suffered excruciating pain. It was shocking how real and visceral the process was," said Hawker, adding: "He was surprised himself just how quickly the position took over. He was in a lot of pain and felt a lot of emotion.
"He was in a safe environment but we said that, if you were just off a jet, did not know where you were or what your future held, how psychologically tortuous it would be."
Richard Lowdon, the actor who plays the interrogator, added: "It was quite unpleasant watching Jiva. There was something unbearable about it. It is degrading to the person who is doing it, as well as to the person to whom it is done. It is very dehumanising."
Amnesty hopes its campaign will prompt people to object to such practices. It recently named 38 men and a woman it claims were whisked away on secret CIA "rendition" flights and disappeared into prisons worldwide. The charity has spoken to former detainees, such as the British al-Qa'ida suspect Moazzam Begg, who was held in the US detention camp at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
"The suggestion is that they suffer a bit of discomfort, when in fact they endure quite severe pain," said Sara MacNeice, Amnesty's campaigns co-ordinator. "We are sending the message that this is ill treatment, but we should be calling it by its rightful name."
© 2007 The Independent
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24 Comments so far
Show AllThe United States of America, known worldwide under the Bush Regime as a nation that commits torture. How completely humiliating, shameful, and un-American.
We have become that which we used to stand against. We shall reap what we are sowing.
Nobody expects the Span... Bushist inquisition!!
ditto.
scum rules.
And they laughed. When the stories first came out. They laughed at our shock. Because it was just a few bad apples, and after all, this is war. They laughed. Commentators. Pundits. Politicians. Neocons and non-neocons alike. Laughed about torture. By OUR hands.
Like they laughed at me for worrying my 14 year old might get drafted someday. Now he's 18, and they aren't laughing anymore about that either.
Fools.
Is this another Mel Gibson morality play?
Welcome to the end of empire. As the resources run out, and the politicians turn on their own populations, expect darker and darker 'entertainments'. We now commonly see 'torture porn' and 'snuff porn' horror/slash films routinely marketed. 'Ultimate Fighting', which is just one step shy of the bloody gladatorial games of Rome are mainstream.
How soon before we return to public executions of 'enemies of the state'? Or burning 'heretics' at the stake?
And most sad... the average American will simply watch, nod, drink another beer, and go to Wal-Mart to buy the DVD.
As Galen hints, there is something very seductive about having absolute power over another being, in particular a human being, even if, or perhaps especially if we "only" are seeing it as spectator -- and there has long been a drift in this direction in the modern bread and circus we call "entertainment".
But our humanity is then drowned in Diana's tears.
My heart is wouned and much pain for the GOODNESS that my country used to stand for. When EVIL LEADS EVIL FOLLOWS.
Shame, Americans used to spred goodwill could be trusted to fight for the underdog now we do what the Germens did in 1939-1945.whats happened to my beloved country? The country my grandfather,my father,cousins and I went to war for? Somebody please give America back it's soul.
The US has made a 'Shaitan's bargain'...that is, they have sold their souls for wealth and power. And now the bill is due...
Since we can't seem to save ourselves from our own corrupt government, is there anyone else in the world that can? How do we, as Americans, plead with the UN, the Hague, and other countries to act in our behalf?
These horrific acts, done in our names, MUST be stopped!!
Here is a petition to the UN just now starting for you to take a look at:
http://www.petitiononline.com/unsan01/petition.html
Any other ideas?
Rebel Farmer September 10th, 2007 5:33 pm
"Here is a petition to the UN just now starting for you to take a look at:"
Thank you Rebel Farmer. There are tears in my eyes at this moment. I'm not kidding.
This should not be a surprise. The US government has long researched and taught torture, in partnership with assorted right-wing military and civil dictatorships around the world.
These regimes tortured and killed thousands in order to support US political and business interests worldwide.
In Latin America alone, let's not forget Guatemala (around two hundred thousand killed), Argentina (at least ten thousand killed, in a conservative estimate), Chile, Brazil, El Salvador, Uruguay, Paraguay, Bolivia, etc...
There is also Indonesia, the Philippines, Greece, Spain, Portugal, and, of course, Saudi Arabia and other oil-producing countries, hardly good democracies... US civil and military advisors lectured the torturers and armed the military in these countries.
So, friends, sorry to remind you that the US are not - and have never been - a defender of democracy which happened to lose its soul under George Bush. Bush only does in the open what other US presidents did behind the scene, by way of foreign thugs.
May I suggest that you go to the excellent National Security Archive at The George Washington University (http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/). Please, do some research.
Or google "Kubark". That's a 1963 CIA interrogation manual on "coercive questioning" - the same as "enhanced interrogation techniques", an euphemism for torture.
I wish you success in trying to stop Bush and the barbarians. But this is not new. The US is an empire, and empires rule by fear. There is no such thing as a benign hegemon. History hurts.
but remember...they hate us for our FREEDOM!!!
Not the millions we have murdered and tortured in the last 50 years, nor the millions genocided in the years prior to WW2
A very similar torture was employed by the North Vietnamese on our captured airmen. Guess we learned the crime from them, for crime it is. The water boarding is far worse, but of course that is also acceptable according to Herr Cheney.
It boggles my mind to even think 'humans' would do such a thing to another human being, or any animal. Then add in cold concrete cells, blaring rock music, strong lighting 24/7, poor food and no friends to talk to for months at a time.
God will not forget nor forgive this. ___ If there is no God for some,__ I sure won't forget it. How could we? This is supposed to be America.
Meanwhile,in all the slaughterhouses of the world,cows/bulls are being ruthlessly tortured and killed,for the pleasure of the tongue.the karma for this is :torture,as cows are sacred animals,having the same rights as humans.The sage does not lament on the destiny of those whose diet is violence as it's all divine justice!
pledge to be veg!
GOVINDAS, Read "The Day They Killed The Pigs", ___ by Bridgewater.
I've been in a slaughterhouse, never saw any cattle being waterboarded or made to sit in awkward positions all day. I personally don't place humans in the same catagory as a pig, cow or a rodent. If cows are sacred animaals, why wouldn't hogs and rats be also? __ Just askin.
KEM PATRICK, I don't intend to challenge or critisise your statement: "A very similar torture was employed by the North Vietnamese on our captured airmen. Guess we learned the crime from them, for crime it is."
I now live in Vietnam, and yes, many barbarities were committed. Having spoken with some of the older Vietnamese about the "American War" - as they call it, what the US soldiers would do is hand over any captive Viet Cong to the South Vietnamese, who would then procede to do the same things the North Vietnamese were doing at the time.
But let's not forget the Japanese, who were by far the cruelest of all the armed forces during this period.
HYBRIDOMA, I agree with you on that one. I was there and we had no right to be there. I only meant it was one of the tortures our airmen suffered, the Japenese were perhaps worse than the Nazis. Torture by any is in-human behavior and should not be allowed by any nation. Ever. But, it will be, humanity has had cruel leaders since the first recorded history. I never thought America would have them. __ Silly me.
"armandonm September 10th, 2007 6:16 pm
This should not be a surprise.
Or google "Kubark". That's a 1963 CIA interrogation manual on "coercive questioning" - the same as "enhanced interrogation techniques", an euphemism for torture."
I *have* read the official documentation myself and people wonder why I don't like horror movies anymore.. read the manuals yourself. They're scarier than anything Hollywood could ever come up with.
The USA is the undisputed king of HORROR. It is everywhere thanks to the USA. Inhumane U.S. gov't officials create real horror with economic hitmen and demand for cheap goods from sweatshops. They also create horror by supporting pro-corporate/anti-democracy military regimes, by kidnapping, torturing, invading, occupying, colonizing, and terrorizing real people, while unreal dullards in Hollywood and elsewhere create fictional horror for movies and tv.
Our gov't officials terrorize millions, destroy democracy and crush human rights movements, while cloaking those efforts by stating that they are supporting what they are crushing.
If the USA and the world is not at the bottom of its potential by now, then we must be very close to it. Once we get there, then the only direction is upwards.
Peace on Earth
Goodwill to All
Maxhemust - I must disagree with your assesment of the depths that America will sink to. Driven by greed and fundamentalist religon, America will become a nation of ghouls, feasting on the dead, rotting and ridden with corruption and disease... and the whole time proclaiming their self-righteousness and faith with the passion that only a fanatic can produce.
At this moment movies that glorify, celebrate and eroticise torture and horrific murder are being produced and marketed to an increasingly jaded public as 'entertainment'. The most popular TV fare revels in graphic depictions of torture, rape, and murder. Daytime talk shows luridly detail lust and treachery as normal. And your radio talk show host exort their listeners to commit acts of hatred on innocent human beings.
So, no, once you have reached the bottom... you are in the grave. History will correctly judge the US as a country of blood-thirsty barbarians who raped and murdered on a scale that has never been witnessed in the entirety of humanity.
I think that one of the things that sets hunmans apart from other species is that we are prone to violence. We need no provocation, well some of our specie don't, we follow the leader instead of choose for ourselves first--at least Americans have come to this.
All the torture and horror films play well into the corporatocracy by familiarizing the populace with these images, making them less offensive by this means and then by presenting these themes as sexually arousing.
Sex, now there's a universal theme. Cars are sexy, so are power tools, and the ARMY etc..
It doesn't take much suggestion for many. Look at the most female-repressing religions and societies, including the Christians, who insist that women should cover themselves because they might arouse a male who may not be able to control his desires and force himself on the female. Hell, in New England, if you don't lock all the doors and windows and confine yourself in airtight quarters at night and someone enters and rapes you, it's your fault.
It's never been all that different for some in this country, maybe some of you just finally noticed.
I would offer that it is an inherent part of human nature that isn't so pretty. We don't like to watch predators catch, kill and eat their prey 'cause it isn't pretty but it happens all the time, even if you hadn't noticed before. So does torture, everywhere. Governments do it, thugs do it, parents do it to their children in abusive homes, children do it to each other, people do it to their spouses and others who aren't like them...
Perhaps it has to do with opening Pandora's Box, or having tasted some forbidden fruit, or maybe we're aliens from outer space who came here to destroy the planet and self destruct simlutaneously, but it's a human thing... no question about it.
Some of us are just nicer and play well with others.
the film is part of Amnesty International's new campaign for people who can neither subscribe to terror or to the 'war on terror' - and the human rights abuses that have accompanied it. Unsubscribe http://www.unsubscribe-me.org/