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Released Guantánamo inmate speaks out
Mamdouh Habib indicts Australian government
By Richard Phillips
18 February 2005
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Australian citizen Mamdouh Habibs first media appearance
since his release without charge from Guantánamo Bay on
January 28 has opened up a can of worms for the Howard government.
Habibs testimony, his first opportunity to challenge a protracted
campaign of malicious allegations and lies, provides further damning
evidence that the Howard government, in alliance with the Bush
administration, is guilty of war crimes.
In interviews last Sunday with the New York Times and
the Nine Networks Sixty Minutes, Habib described
how he was subjected to three-and-a-half years of torture and
sadistic physical and psychological abuse while illegally incarcerated
under Washingtons direction in Pakistan, Egypt and Guantánamo
Bay.
While Habib has promised to reveal more in forthcoming legal
action against the government, he made clear that Australian officials
had witnessed his torture in Pakistan and were present during
his subsequent illegal transfer or extraordinary rendition
by US authorities to Egypt. Rendition is the term used to describe
the export of US intelligence services prisoners to other
countries for torture.
Habib told Sixty Minutes that after being arrested
in Pakistan in October 2001, he was hooded, beaten and subjected
to electric torture over several weeks. During these interrogations,
which were witnessed on two occasions by an Australian official,
he was accused of blowing up the Egyptian consulate in Pakistan.
He also explained to the New York Times that one American
female interrogator told him it was his last chance
to confess and that an Australian official said, Im
sorry for you, Mr Habib, youre never going to see your kids
anymore.
Habib was taken to a room and hung by his wrists, which were
handcuffed to hooks on the wall. The only way he could lift himself
up was by standing on a barrel lying sideways on the floor, but
the barrel was electrified. He eventually lost consciousness.
When he came to, a man jump-kicked him in the face and stomach.
Habib told Sixty Minutes that he was later beaten
by about 15 American and four Pakistani men at a military airport,
stripped naked, administered with an unknown suppository drug
and tied up before being flownhooded, gagged and boundto
an Egyptian prison. He said he was photographed and that the same
Australian official saw him being beaten. A report in the Sydney
Morning Herald on Saturday named the official as Alistair
Adams.
Held incommunicado in Egypt, Habib said he was tortured every
day. This included electric shocks, water torture, beatings, drugs
and being burnt with cigarettes. At one point he was stripped
and told that a specially trained dog would rape him. Under these
conditions, he said he agreed to everything his interrogators
demanded, including telling them that he had trained the terrorists
who attacked the World Trade Center, transported chemicals in
Afghanistan, and been involved in combat in Chechnya.
Habib told Sixty Minutes that he categorically
rejected these so-called confessions, explaining that
he had been so terrified that he was prepared to admit anything.
He also said he saw an Australian official in Egypt speaking about
him to an American. After six months, Habib was transported to
Afghanistan and then Guantánamo Bay. Egyptian interrogators,
however, told him before he left that he was returning to Australia.
In Guantánamo, Habib said the US interrogators did everything
possible to make me crazy. Kept in isolation for lengthy
periods, he was sexually humiliated by a prostitute, told that
his family were dead and shown images of his wifes head
superimposed on photographs of naked women next to Osama bin Laden.
At one point, Habib made a desperate pact with David Hicks,
the other Australian citizen in Guantánamo. If Hicks returned
to Australia and could not locate Habib, he should tell Habibs
family that he had been killed.
Commenting on the psychological abuse, Habib said: No-one
should be treated in [the] way people are treated in Cuba. [T]he
American [military] ... how they are treating people, they are
terrorists, not the people like us. They have no humanity.
Habib denied unsubstantiated allegations now being circulated
by the Howard government that he had attended two Al Qaeda training
camps in Afghanistan and had advance knowledge of, and supported,
the September 11 terrorist attacks on the US. He also rejected
claims that he had called his wife to warn her about 9/11. Habib
said his telephone had been bugged for two years before his seizure
in Pakistan, and that even if he had known about the attack, would
never have spoken about it on the phone.
Damage control
In October 2001, the Howard government reacted to Habibs
arrest in Pakistan by giving Washington the go-ahead to do what
they liked. When he was eventually transferred to Guantánamo
Bay, via Afghanistans Bagram prison, senior government ministers
endorsed this illegal action, denouncing Habib as a terrorist
and a dangerous fugitive. Canberra responded to the mounting evidence
that Habib and numerous other detainees were tortured in Afghanistan
and Guantánamo with a series of evasions and outright lies.
These are now starting to unravel.
Unable to repudiate Habibs testimony last Sunday, the
government has responded with a smear campaign against the 50-year-old
former cleaner. Senior government ministers, Australian intelligence
officers and the corporate media have repeated ad nauseum that
Habib is a danger to society, a liar,
untrustworthy and worse. However, they have been unable
to offer any explanation as to why he was released without charge
by the US.
On Monday, Attorney General Ruddock told parliament he had
not asked Washington why Habib had been repatriated, and he had
no plans to do so. He ruled out any investigation into Habibs
allegations and said this was an issue for the US alone. Any attempt
to go further would violate American sovereignty.
Ruddock, who still maintains that he has no knowledge
about whether Habib was rendered to Egypt, told the ABCs
7.30 Report that Australian Security Intelligence
Organisation (ASIO) and Australian Federal Police (AFP) officers
had questioned Habib in Pakistan. But no Australian official,
he claimed, had ever witnessed or been involved in the interrogation
or torture of prisoners.
Ruddocks flimsy denials were shattered later that night
when Rod Barton, a former high-level Australian weapons inspector,
who worked with Hans Blix, UNSCOM, the CIA and British intelligence
in Iraq, told the ABCs Four Corners program
that he and other Australian officials had been involved in the
interrogation of Iraq detainees. The next day, Defence Minister
Robert Hill desperately tried to dismiss Bartons evidence
by claiming that the weapons inspector had not been involved in
interrogations but only interviews.
(Hills evasions follows revelations last year that senior
government ministers were warned about the Abu Ghraib torture
scandal in late 2003 and that Australian Army officers had visited
the notorious prison and even given lectures on interrogation
techniques to some of those involved. One Australian officer worked
with American military authorities to help write a legal justification
for violations of the Geneva Convention and deflect concerns raised
by the Red Cross. [See: Australian
government lies exposed on Abu Ghraib torture])
As more questions began to be raised about Habibs torture,
AFP commissioner Mick Keelty and ASIO chief Denis Richardson used
a Senate Estimates Committee hearing on Tuesday to denounce the
former detainee. While their testimony was aimed at deflecting
attention from the governments culpability, it provided
even more evidence of the criminal violation of Habibs rights.
Keelty claimed that Habib had received weapons training in
Pakistan and visited Afghanistan as a mercenary for
Osama bin Laden. Richardson claimed that the Australian citizen
had been in Afghanistan with people who had a history of
murdering innocent civilians. These accusations, which Habib
had emphatically denied in the Sixty Minutes interview,
were not sourced or substantiated.
Richardson and Keelty were both forced to admit that Habib
had not committed any crime under Australian law at the time.
And in their most damaging admissions, they revealed that their
officers had willfully ignored Habibs protests when they
interrogated him in Pakistan and Guantánamo Bay.
Keelty said ASIO and AFP personnel rejected Habibs allegations
in Pakistan that he had been tortured, claiming that he was attempting
to sidetrack accusations that he had been in Afghanistan. Richardson
said: We didnt consider they [the torture allegations]
needed to considered, nor investigated. We considered they were
humbug and we believe theyre humbug today.
In other words, ASIO and AFP became the self-appointed judge
and jury of an illegally detained Australian citizen, who had
not been charged and who was denied any access to a lawyer or
his family. The two organisations either turned a blind eye or
directly collaborated in his rendition to Egypt.
In line with the Howard governments current story, Richardson
maintained that ASIO had not been told whether Habib had been
sent to Egypt, but only discovered this in February
2002. Keelty also disclosed that the AFP did not conduct any investigation
into whether Habib had been rendered to Egypt, despite his protests
to AFP officers who interrogated him in Guantánamo Bay
on May 15, 2002.
Even if one were to accept the claims by AFP, ASIO and the
Howard governmentWashingtons closest allies in the
so-called war on terrorthat they were not told
that Habib was being sent to Egypt, they soon learnt and knew
exactly what it meant. But instead of protesting this crime, they
responded with another blatant cover-up.
As last Sundays New York Times reported, in November
2001 Australias Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade
sent Habibs wife, Maha, a fax. It cynically declared: We
remain confident that your husband is detained in Egypt... the
government has received credible advice that he is well and being
treated well.
What a damning exposure of the Howard government! So endemic
are the legalistic evasions, double-talk and outright falsifications
in the governments daily operations that the liars cant
keep track of their lies. Ruddock still claims to not know
whether Habib was imprisoned in Egypt, the official position of
the government since October 2001; ASIO admits that it discovered
he had been sent to Egypt in February 2002; and the Department
of Foreign Affairs told Habibs wife in November 2001 that
he was in Egypt and being treated well.
Witch-hunt
As the governments abuse of Habibs basic democratic
rights has become more and more apparent, the media, led by the
Murdoch press, has ratcheted up its campaign against him.
Habib, who is attempting to recover from serious physical and
psychological abuse, has been subjected to a vicious campaign
in Murdochs Daily Telegraph, which has published
editorials, comments and offensive cartoons designed to condition
the population to accepting Habibs treatment. This week
the newspaper called for any payments made to Habib for the Sixty
Minutes interview to be confiscated and demanded that he
repay all previous disability pension allowances.
A key figure in this witch-hunt is New South Wales Labor Party
state premier Bob Carr. On Tuesday Carr, who has pledged to maintain
ongoing police surveillance of Habib, published a provocative
comment in the Telegraph entitled, Its right
to have real concerns.
Carr carefully avoided any mention of the torture, abuse and
other violations of Habibs basic rights, and regurgitated
the usual slurs. Habib had been under surveillance by ASIO before
his arrest in Pakistan, he had been a radical Muslim, there were
well-founded suspicions, etc., etc. As is now commonplace,
the Labor leader provided no evidence and, like the federal government,
did not explain why the US had been forced to release Habib without
charge.
Likewise, the federal Labor Party has rejected an investigation
into Habibs treatment. Leader Kim Beazley has opposed calls
for Habib to be compensated over his illegal detention and denounced
him for accepting a paid interview with Sixty Minutes.
Most importantly, neither the Labor Party nor any of the official
opposition parties have called for the prime minister, attorney
general or any other senior minister in the Howard government
to be indicted for war crimes. As Habibs initial testimony
makes clear, the Australian government and its security personnel
have collaborated in the illegal detention, abuse and torture
of an Australian citizencrimes under the Geneva Convention
and the Australian Criminal Code.
Since Habibs return to Australia, his family home has
been broken into twice. According to the familys lawyer,
Stephen Hopper, NSW police illegally revealed Habibs address
to the media after the first break-in. The second housebreak occurred
a few hours after the Sixty Minutes interview was
broadcast.
Last Thursday, Habib demanded his right to appear in parliament
to refute the lies and slander against him. But Robert McClelland,
Labors federal defence spokesman, quickly rejected his appeal.
The Senate shouldnt be used as a court of law,
McClelland declared. I would feel uncomfortable with that.
Beazley echoed this today. Im not in the business
of making this bloke a hero, he told ABC Radio National.
He shouldnt have opportunity to give evidence to a
Senate committee and we shouldnt waste a minute on him.
As far as the Labor leadership is concerned, Howard government
ministers and senior ASIO and AFP chiefs can use the Senate Estimates
committee and other parliamentary forums to hurl innuendo, half-truths
and outright lies against Habib, but he has no right to confront
and challenge his accusers.
See Also:
Australian government persecutes released
Guantánamo prisoner
[7 February 2005]
US judge rejects claim that Guantánamo
detainees have no rights
[11 February 2005]
US and Australian governments
delay release of Guantánamo detainee
[24 January 2005]
US releases Mamdouh Habib
and four British prisoners from Guantánamo Bay
[14 January 2005]
Australian government
lies exposed on Abu Ghraib torture
[2 June 2004]
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