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June is Torture Awareness: Minneapolis's columnist: On torture, U.S. must clean house.

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annm4peace Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun May-30-10 09:24 PM
Original message
June is Torture Awareness: Minneapolis's columnist: On torture, U.S. must clean house.
Edited on Sun May-30-10 09:38 PM by annm4peace
http://www.startribune.com/opinion/commentary/95153399.html?elr=KArksc8P:Pc:U0ckkD:aEyKUiD3aPc:_Yyc:aULPQL7PQLanchO7DiUr


Nation won't regain moral leadership without fully renouncing the practice.

By NICK COLEMAN, Star Tribune

Last update: May 29, 2010 - 5:06 PM

As the summer barbecue season hits full swing, let me remind you that Tuesday will mark the coming of June, which is Torture Awareness Month.

Bummer, huh?

If you were not aware of Torture Awareness Month, you are among the vast majority of Americans. After years of debate during the Bush-Cheney administration when America used torture techniques like a banana republic, torture has almost disappeared from the public agenda.

This is natural: Countries that use torture have an inclination to forget as soon as possible.

"You don't want to admit to problems you don't want to deal with," says Dr. Steven Miles, a University of Minnesota bioethicist and influential critic of the official use of torture and the complicity of physicians and psychologists in torture.

"'American Idol' seems to have soaked up the attention of all the serious journalists."

Public and media attention have waned, but torture has not gone away. President Obama has renounced the use of torture to interrogate terrorist suspects, but the United States remains noncompliant with important international standards governing the treatment of prisoners and inspection of prison conditions by human rights organizations. The bottom line is that our practices have improved but our reputation -- and moral leadership in the world -- continue to suffer.

The United States continues to hold terror suspects in secret prisons, and Miles alleges that some prison deaths in Iraq and Afghanistan have not been reported. Under these circumstances, it is hard for America to lecture China, North Korea, Iran and other torturing countries to try to do better. We won't regain the moral high ground until Americans take an unflinching look at what was done in our name in the years between 2001 and 2008 and demand to know who was responsible.

A day of reckoning may be coming in Great Britain, where our allies in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan are debating how to establish a "truth commission" to investigate torture.

Miles says this kind of accounting, while painful, is necessary. Polls show Americans divided on the need for an investigation, and divided on the use of torture. But few treat the topic lightly anymore. Most of the snickering ended after conservative author Christopher Hitchens and a few right-wing radio jocks volunteered to undergo water-boarding and came up screaming, sputtering and calling it torture.

That was one small truth telling that might help bring about a larger truth finding. Who were the lawyers, the physicians, the politicians and the spies who decided that the United States could abandon its principles, its treaties and its morals to torture prisoners? What damage has the use of torture done to American values and prestige? How do we recover from a shameful episode in our history and return to our traditions?

June 26 has been set by the United Nations as an International Day in Support of Victims of Torture. One of the largest efforts to make Torture Awareness Month meaningful is being led by the National Religious Campaign Against Torture (www.nrcat.org).

The group wants a nonpartisan commission to investigate the past use of torture, and is asking people of faith to support legislation formally granting the International Red Cross access to all detainees in U.S. custody. A letter to Congress supporting Red Cross access was signed last week by dozens of religious leaders, including Peg Chemberlin, executive director of the Minnesota Council of Churches, and Mark Hanson, presiding bishop of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America.

"Torture needs to be part of our national conversation," says Douglas A. Johnson, executive director of the Center for Victims of Torture, a Minnesota organization that has helped 18,000 victims recover from torture.

"Although our government has stepped away from torture, the risk of reviving it is great. We must regain a national consensus that recognizes that the best chance of becoming the ally of more people around the world -- the people who can join us in the fight against terrorism -- is by rejecting misguided calls to use torture."

Local observances of Torture Awareness Month will include daily vigils at noon in front of the federal courthouse in Minneapolis, a June 26 showing of the film "Torturing Democracy," and a June 27 forum on torture at Plymouth Congregational Church. (For more information, see www.worldwidewamm.org.)

"We're not over it," says Miles, the University bioethicist, says, speaking of the moral rot that accompanies the use of torture. "... It may take 15 or 20 years, but we are in a large civil rights movement to abolish torture. We can't have a civil society until we end torture."



Nick Coleman is a senior fellow at the Eugene J. McCarthy Center for Public Policy & Civic Engagement at the College of St. Benedict/St. John's University. He can be reached at nickcolemanmn@gmail.com.

**************************************************************************************

ARE YOU AWARE that the statute of limitations applicable to the Federal Torture Statute is eight years? We began what Major General Antonio Taguba called our "systematic regime of torture" eight years ago.
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annm4peace Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun May-30-10 09:29 PM
Response to Original message
1. Actions in Minneapolis/St Paul in June
Edited on Sun May-30-10 09:32 PM by annm4peace
Daily Vigil Against Torture

Daily, Noon to 1:00 p.m.
300 4th Street South (Federal Courthouse Plaza), Minneapolis

Join others at a vigil against torture. We remind Federal Prosecutors they are fulfilling their obligation.
*********************


This Tuesday, June 1, we will be viewing the film, Torturing Democracy, written and
produced by Sherry Jones and Carey Murphy.

The movie tells the inside story of how the U.S. Government adopted torture as official
policy in the aftermath of 9/11.

“The documentary ’Torturing Democracy’ tells the story of how the United States government circumvented tradition and law to adopt torture as official policy. The film, produced by award-winning filmmaker Sherry Jones, draws on interviews, archival footage, and recently declassified documents to piece together the development and dissemination of torture tactics from Bagram in Afghanistan to Guantanamo Bay and Abu Ghraib—and the document trail leads right to the top of the chain of command.”


Bill Moyers says, "This will go into the record books
for historians and teachers and others who look
back to ask: ' " What did we do?' "

Pax Salons ( http://justcomm.org/pax-salon )
are held (unless otherwise noted in advance):

Tuesdays, 6:30 to 8:30 pm.
Mad Hatter's Tea House,
943 W 7th, St Paul, MN

Salons are free but donations encouraged for program and treats.


********************


Tuesday, June 15
Pax Conversational Salon: Tackling Torture at the Top (T3) Forum

6:30 to 8:30 p.m.
Mad Hatter's Tea House, 943 West 7th, St. Paul

The WAMM Tackling Torture at the Top (T3) Committee will be holding a forum for Torture Awareness Month. T3 will discuss what they have been working on recently: the laws against torture, Professor Delahunty at the University of St. Thomas Law School and what president Obama is doing regarding the issue.
********************

Tuesday, June 22
Pax Conversational Salon: “Poems of Guantanamo”

6:30 to 8:30 p.m.
Mad Hatter's Tea House, 943 West 7th, St. Paul

Join others at a reading of poetry by some of the detainees at Guantanamo.

Endorsed by: WAMM.

******************

Sunday, June 27
Save the Date: Educational Forum on Torture

Time and Location TBD

Attend an educational forum around the question, "Do the Geneva Conventions on cruelty still apply?" and others.

Tentative participants include: Chaplain James Yee, former Muslim Army chaplain at Guantanamo, arrested, then exonerated on spy charges; Marjorie Cohn, internationally known expert on human rights and U.S. foreign policy, immediate past president of the National Lawyers Guild.

Sponsored by: the WAMM Tackling Torture at the Top (T3) Committee.







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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun May-30-10 09:41 PM
Response to Original message
2. Recommended. It didn't register. Oddly, there's a torture lover running loose around here!
Thank you for your post.
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