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Shhhh, Mr. Al-Ghizzawi's Torture is "Secret"

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leftchick Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Oct-20-07 11:46 AM
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Shhhh, Mr. Al-Ghizzawi's Torture is "Secret"


http://www.huffingtonpost.com/h-candace-gorman-/shhhh-mr-alghizzawis-_b_68863.html

During the week of September 24th I went to visit my client Mr. Al-Ghizzawi at Guantanamo again. It is clear to me that our visits are nearing the end... Mr. Al-Ghizzawi won't be with the living much longer. Mr. Al-Ghizzawi knows his days are limited, not only can he barely walk but he sat at our meeting doubled over in pain. For the first time in our two year attorney-client relationship Mr. Al-Ghizzawi shared with me pictures of his little girl... she is now almost six years old and he has not seen her since she was a few months old. She is a beautiful little girl with big green eyes and a mischievous grin. Mr. Al-Ghizzawi lamented the fact that he will never see his little girl again and that his little girl will not even have a picture of him to remember her father by.

Mr. Al-Ghizzawi wanted to share something else with me before he died. He wanted to share with me some of the torture that he has been subjected to over his now almost six years of captivity. He handed me a letter that he had been working on since July... it was a six page letter... he asked me to mark each page so that when I received it I would know if I was receiving the correct pages. I put my initials on the pages and I handed the letter over to my escort so that the military could send it to me... after "reviewing" it first for "secret information."

I have only had one letter held over these more than two years because it contained "secret" information. On that occasion I flew to DC, hired an interpreter with the "secret clearance" and went to the "secret place" to read the mysterious letter. As you might have suspected there was nothing mysterious in the letter... the interpreter first read the letter to me and after I expressed my dismay he typed out the translation... I resubmitted the letter in English and it was approved without so much as a mention of the previous "secret" designation... It was an expensive letter.

So now I have had a second letter withheld... well actually only half of a second letter...The government has designated three pages of Mr. Al-Ghizzawi's six page letter as "secret." It seems that the three pages that discuss recent issues that Mr. Al-Ghizzawi experienced while at Gitmo are ok .... It is the three pages that talk about what happened at the hands of the US while he was still in Afghanistan and his early days at Guantanamo that needs to be kept secret... and I don't blame them one bit for trying...it is ugly. ... really ugly. So there you have it, the ugliest facts are classified as "secret" to protect... I'm sorry, what is it again that we are protecting here?


http://gtmoblog.blogspot.com/.... for more information from Mr. Al-Ghizzawi's attorney's Guantanamo Blog.


And more lies from our government.....

Suicide and Spin Doctors

http://www.inthesetimes.com/article/3374/suicide_and_spin_doctors/

Al-Ghizzawi was visibly shaken when I entered the meeting room and he immediately told me of his despair over the May death of a fellow inmate, a young Saudi man named Abdel Rahman Al Amri. Al-Ghizzawi knew that Amri had been suffering from Hepatitis B and tuberculosis, the same two conditions from which he himself suffers. Like al-Ghizzawi, Amri had not been treated for his illnesses. Al-Ghizzawi, now so sick he can barely walk, told me that Amri, too, had been ill and then, suddenly, he was dead.

Al-Ghizzawi also mentioned that Amri had engaged in hunger strikes in the past but had stopped a long time ago because of his health. I knew about Amri’s death. I also know our military has called it an “apparent suicide.”

As I sat with al-Ghizzawi I found myself thinking about South African anti-apartheid activist Steven Biko. In his book I Write What I Like, Biko declares that “the most potent weapon in the hands of the oppressor is the mind of the oppressed.” There are many ways for the oppressor to force himself into the mind of the oppressed, but one surefire way is through indefinite detention. Never knowing when—or if—you will be released is a cruel form of psychological torture. It allows you to keep hope while simultaneously filling you with fear. South Africa’s apartheid government sharpened this tactic when it passed the Terrorism Act of 1967, which allowed the police to pick up Biko as a “suspect” involved in terrorism (“involvement” under that law was defined as “anything that might endanger the maintenance of law and order”) and detain him for an indefinite period without trial. Biko’s indefinite detention ended after only a month, when he suffered a brutal death at the hands of the South African police. The government claimed that Biko died as the result of a hunger strike. (In U.S. military parlance, that would be an “apparent suicide.”) Autopsy results later showed that Biko died of a head trauma and that his body was badly beaten. Our government officials, clever devils that they are, apparently learned from the “mistake” of South Africa and refuse to release Amri’s autopsy records.

Back in 2005, former Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld explained in a speech that Guantánamo is a great training ground for our interrogators because they learn what works and what doesn’t. The Pentagon’s little laboratory gathered speed last December when the military moved several hundred men into Camp 6. Included in the randomly selected group was al-Ghizzawi.

Camp 6 is worse than any of America’s supermax prisons because inmates are given little to occupy their minds as they sit in tiny cells with no natural light or air for at least 22 hours every day. The men are allowed one book per week, but it’s the same old books that have been around year after year. Guards also allow the men two hours of “recreation time” in four-foot-by-four-foot cages. As part of the experiment, the military plays with the “rec” times: Sometimes the guards show up at 3 a.m. for al-Ghizzawi’s recreation time. He is too polite to tell the guards what I would feel compelled to say. Instead he shows his dignity by refusing to stand in the dark. Other times, when the Cuban sun is at its hottest, al-Ghizzawi is offered the opportunity to stand in the metal cage under the blistering sun where there is no shade.

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acmavm Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Oct-20-07 11:50 AM
Response to Original message
1. Good-bye Land of the Free. So long Home of the Brave.
We've been replaced by the Country of Lawless Liars and Torturers. The Homeland of Genocidal Maniacs and Warmongers. The Citizenry of Corporate America.

It was nice while it lasted.
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