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Amnesty says US leads in human rights violations following
September 11
By Mike Ingram
8 June 2002
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The Amnesty International (AI) Report 2002 covers the period
from January to December 2001, with a particular focus on the
world situation following the September 11 terrorist attacks in
the United States.
The foreword to the report, written by Irene Khan, secretary
general of Amnesty, together with most of the introduction, addresses
the attitude of governments towards human rights since the launching
of the so-called war against terrorism by US President Bush.
Under the heading Countering the backlash, Kahn
notes that human rights activists now face an uphill battle: As
the war against terrorism dominated world news, governments
increasingly portrayed human rights as an obstacle to security,
and human rights activists as romantic idealists at best, defenders
of terrorists at worst.
Leading into this passage she quotes a revealing comment by
an unnamed government official: Your role collapsed
with the collapse of the Twin Towers in New York. This blunt
statement to AI delegates by a senior government official captured
the challenge faced by the human rights movement following the
events of 11 September 2001. Amnesty was unable to source
the above quotation as Kahn is presently away, but promised to
do so as soon as possible. There is no reason to doubt its veracity,
however, given that one attack after another on democratic rights
has been mounted in the name of combating terrorism.
US human rights violations
Kahn explains, the readiness of governments to trade
human rights in the interest of security is nothing new,
but the difference today is that this is not done by autocratic
regimes but established democracies in the name of public security.
Heading the list of culprits is the US itself, with Britain also
earning dishonourable mention.
The summary introducing the section on the US paints a picture
far removed from that presented by Bush in his recent State of
the Union address, when he insisted, America will always
stand firm for the non-negotiable demands of human dignity
and that these include the rule of law and equal
justice.
AI writes that more than 1,200 people, mainly foreign nationals
were detained during investigations into the September 11 attacks.
Though public information on these detentions remains scant, it
is clear that some were held incommunicado. The report speaks
of Muslim detainees suffering physical or verbal abuse from
guards or other inmates while held in local jails and of cruel
conditions of confinement, including prolonged solitary confinement,
inadequate exercise and the wearing of shackles during non-contact
visits.
In late November last year, the Attorney General revealed that
104 people had been charged with various criminal offences, many
of them minor and one directly related to 11 September, of whom
half remain in custody. Another 548 unidentified individuals were
held on immigration charges, the AI report states.
Alongside anti-terrorist legislation that severely curtails
human rights and civil liberties, AI has called for inquiries
into several incidents involving the killing of civilians by US
and allied forces during military action in Afghanistan and into
the killing of hundreds of prisoners in Qala-i-Jhangi fort following
an uprising.
The report continues, An as yet unknown number of Afghan
civilians were killed or injured or had their homes or property
destroyed during the US-led coalition bombing which began on 7
October and continued for the rest of the year. AI raised concerns
with the US authorities about specific attacks in which civilians
were killed and civilian objects were destroyed, urged that investigations
be conducted into possible violation of international humanitarian
law and called for a moratorium on the use of cluster-weapons.
In November, AI called on the USA, the United Islamic Front for
the Salvation of Afghanistan (United Front) and the United Kingdom
to conduct an inquiry into the deaths of hundreds of Taleban prisoners
and others at Qala-i-Jhangi fort, after an uprising by some Taleban
captives was put down by bombing by US warplanes and United front
artillery.
Both the US and British governments denied AIs request
for an investigation into what happened at the Qala-i-Jhangi fort.
Britain also singled out for criticism
The stance of the Bush administration finds its reflection
throughout the globe. Indeed the AI report makes clear that the
launch of the US war on terrorism has had a major destabilising
effect on world politics. It is broken down into regional sections
including the Americas, Asia, the Middle East and North Africa,
Europe, and Africa. Whatever the region, the assessment notes
increased militarism and the systematic abuse of human rights.
Khan says in the foreword, A number of governments jumped
on the anti-terrorist bandwagon to stifle political
dissent.
Explaining that governments, rushed through laws formulating
new crimes, banning organisations and freezing their assets, curbing
civil liberties and reducing the safeguards against human rights
violations, Kahn adds, Regrettably, a number of these
laws used definitions of terrorism which were dangerously
broad and vague.
It is indicative that Britain, Americas main ally in
the war on terrorism, is also singled out for particular criticism.
The section dealing with Britain includes Northern Ireland and
a substantial part of the report is given over to the record of
human rights violations there. As with America, however, the September
11 attacks have been seized upon to introduce sweeping new legislation
that severely curtails democratic rights and civil liberties.
British Prime Minister Tony Blair sought to strengthen Britains
ties with the US by providing crucial political support to Bushs
war drive. As with Bush, the climate of hysteria produced after
the terrorist attacks provided a useful cloak behind which to
make inroads into democratic rights and civil liberties within
Britain.
The report explains, In the United Kingdom (UK), the
government passed emergency legislation which provided
for detention of foreign nationals without charge or trial, thereby
creating a shadow criminal justice system without the essential
safeguards of the formal system. Legislation was passed in the
USA allowing for indefinite detention on national security grounds
of non-US nationals facing deportation, Kahn writes.
The Anti-terrorism, Crime and Security Act 2001 was passed
in December after less than a month of parliamentary and public
scrutiny. The UK derogated from Article 5(t) of the European Convention
on Human Rights and Article 9 of the ICCPR [International Covenant
on Civil and Political Rights] in order to allow for indefinite
administrative detention. Under the Act, the Secretary of State
may order such detention, without charge or trial and without
recourse to judicial review, of any non-UK national deemed a suspected
international terrorist and national security risk on the
basis of reasonable suspicion. The evidence would not be subject
to public scrutiny or effective challenge. Among other measures,
the Act also denies asylum-seekers labelled as terrorist
the right to have the merits of their claim individually assessed.
In December, eight people were detained under the new legislation.
the report says.
In a separate press briefing on anti-terrorism legislation
internationally, AI says of the European Union, The European
Commission prepared a proposal for a set of terrorism
offences that all member states should prohibit. In Amnesty Internationals
view, some of the proposed offences were excessively broad or
too vague and could criminalise peaceful activities. The Commission
also proposed an EU arrest warrant and surrender procedures between
member states. Aspects of this would infringe human rights guarantees,
e.g. not to be extradited to a jurisdiction where the person might
face an unfair trial. New measures might prevent people from seeking
asylum on the basis that they may be involved in acts of
terrorism without fully considering their claims in fair
and satisfactory procedures.
Kahn goes on to cite many other examples of countries that
have imposed repressive and undemocratic legislation, concluding,
the aftermath of 11 September saw a resurgence in the powers
of the military. More and more civilians were detained by the
military and tried by military courts. Military forces, as well
as unaccountable security and intelligence services, were increasingly
involved in public security functions and in intelligence operations
targeted at the civilian population.
The hypocrisy and selectivity of governments, while
not new, became even clearer in the drive to build an alliance
in the war against terrorism. Governments remained
silent on abuses committed by those they counted or sought as
allies. The same governments that denounced the human rights abuse
of women by the Taleban government of Afghanistan remained silent
about the plight of women in Saudi Arabia. Those who condemned
human rights violations in Iraq did not protest against human
rights violations by Russian troops in Chechnya, or by the authorities
in Uzbekistan against Muslims who peacefully practise their faith
outside state controls.
The AI report draws particular attention to the impact of the
war on terrorism upon immigrants and asylum seekers. Kahn states
that the tendency... to portray foreigners, particularly
refugees and asylum-seekers, as terrorists has
led to a refuelling of the fires of racism... People were
attacked in the USA, Canada, western Europe, parts of Asia and
Africa, not for what they did but for who they were, simply for
being a Muslim or Arab or Asian, or even for looking like a Muslim,
Arab or Asian.
See Also:
The CIAs international
dirty war
US oversees abduction, torture, execution of alleged terrorists
[20 March 2002]
The Geneva Convention
and the US massacre of POWs in Afghanistan
Statement of the WSWS Editorial Board
[7 December 2001]
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