Human Rights

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
September 2, 2008
12:01 PM

CONTACT: Center for Constitutional Rights
press@ccrjustice.org

Government Conclusions on Guantanamo Deaths Do Not Absolve Government of Responsibility

Release of Findings Long Overdue, Two of the Three Men Who Died Were Facing Imminent Release

NEW YORK - September 2 - Late last week, the Naval Criminal Investigative Service (NCIS) released more than 3,000 pages of documents concerning its investigation into the deaths of three detainees at Guantanamo Bay on June 10, 2006. The NCIS report concludes that the detainees - Saudis Yasser al-Zahrani and Mani al-Utaybi, and Yemeni Ali Abdullah Ahmed Naser al-Sulami - died as the result of suicide. The Center for Constitutional Rights (CCR) just obtained a full copy of the report and will be working in the coming days to present an analysis of the government's findings.

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Posted in Human Rights, Torture

Locked in Burma

It is hard to imagine what life must be like for Aung San Suu Kyi, locked up inside her Rangoon home, separated from her children, denied visitors, her phone line cut, her mail intercepted. Burma's opposition leader, whose 1990 election victory was annulled by the military, is now in her 13th year of detention. She has been held continually since 2003. In June she spent her 63rd birthday alone.

Indians’ Water Rights Give Hope for Better Health

Ed Mendoza, co-founder of a garden cooperative, uses traditional irrigation for organic crops in the Gila River Indian Community in Arizona. High rates of diabetes and obesity are a problem. (Monica Almeida/The New York Times)

GILA RIVER INDIAN COMMUNITY, Ariz. - More than a hundred years ago, the Gila River, siphoned off by farmers upstream, all but dried up here in the parched flats south of Phoenix, plunging an Indian community that had depended on it for centuries of farming into starvation and poverty.

An Open Letter to God, From Michael Moore

Sunday, August 31st, 2008

Dear God,

The other night, the Rev. James Dobson's ministry asked all believers to pray for a storm on Thursday night so that the Obama acceptance speech outdoors in Denver would have to be cancelled.

I see that You have answered Rev. Dobson's prayers -- except the storm You have sent to earth is not over Denver, but on its way to New Orleans! In fact, You have scheduled it to hit Louisiana at exactly the moment that George W. Bush is to deliver his speech at the Republican National Convention.

US Military Keeping Secrets About Female Soldiers’ ‘Suicides’?

Since I posted on April 28 the article "Is There an Army Cover Up of the Rape and Murder of Women Soldiers," the deaths of two more U.S. Army women in Iraq and Afghanistan have been listed as suicides-the Sept. 28, 2007, death of 30-year-old Spc. Ciara Durkin and the Feb. 22, 2008, death of 25-year-old Spc. Keisha Morgan. Both "suicides" are disputed by the families of the women.

Waiting for the Bus in New Orleans

August 30, 2008 - 4 pm -

In the blazing midday sun, hot and thirsty little children walk around bags of diapers and soft suitcases piled outside a locked community center in the Lower Ninth Ward. Military police in camouflage and local police in dark blue uniforms and sunglasses sit a few feet away in their cars. Moms and grandmas sit with the children and wait quietly. Everyone is waiting for a special city bus which will start them on their latest journey away from home.

Treaty Languishes on State Terror

Demonstrators hold up posters of relatives who disappeared during the dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet, during a rally to mark the International Day of the Disappeared in Valparaiso City, about 120km (75 miles) northwest of Santiago, August 30, 2008. More than 3,000 people died or disappeared during the political violence of Pinochet's rule from 1973 to 1990. The words on the posters read \"Where are they?\". (Reuters/Eliseo Fernandez/Chile)

UNITED NATIONS - They have vanished, but are not forgotten. Whether they have been killed or are being kept in secret, dark, and unknown prisons, their relatives, family members and human rights activists want to know.

In marking the 25th International Day of the Disappeared on Aug. 30, rights activists in a number of countries across the world are holding rallies and sit-ins to press their governments for immediate ratification of the U.N. Convention against Enforced Disappearance.

Extraordinary Rendition, Extraordinary Mistake

Mamdouh Habib, an Australian citizen, was living in Sydney with his wife and four children when he took a trip alone to Pakistan to find a home for his family. When Habib boarded a bus for the Islamabad airport to return home, Pakistani police seized him and took him to a police station, where he was subjected to various crude torture techniques, including electric shocks and beating. At one point, he was forced to hang by the arms above a drum-like mechanism that administered an electric shock when touched.

The Parasite That Reveals Good News From Africa

And now for the great news - from Africa. Yes, I know that seems like a perverse opener, with Robert Mugabe perpetuating his oozing Alzheimocracy, a looming famine in Ethiopia, and international peacekeepers failing to prevent genocidal massacres in Darfur. The cynics who jeer that Africa is a black hole for help feel they have the wind of no change at their back. But some time next year - or soon after - a beautiful moment in the history of humanity will come to pass on the Western shores of Africa.

Global Poverty Figures Revised Upward

Anna, a five-year old Zambian girl, works at the family stone-smashing business on the outskirts of Lusaka. A \"toxic combination\" of poverty and social injustice is killing people on a grand scale, a World Health Organisation report has warned, urging states to fund healthcare to cut inequalities.
(AFP/File/Alexander Joe)

NEW YORK - A new study released by the World Bank this week has raised concerns among humanitarian workers worldwide as more people are now believed to be living in impoverished conditions than previously thought.

Despite significant levels of economic achievements made in the past 25 years, well over 1 billion people in the developing world remain as poor as ever, according to the study entitled: "The developing world is poorer than we thought but no less successful in the fight against poverty."

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