Sunday, November 30, 2008

Guantánamo News




The second military tribunal held at Guantánamo Bay ended with a conviction on charges of conspiracy, soliciting murder and providing material support for terrorism and a sentence of life in prison for 39 year old Yemeni citizen Ali Hamza Al-Bahlul. Bahlul boycotted the trial and refused to take part in it in protest at the unfairness of the process and lack of adequate representation afforded to detainees. Accused of being an associate of Osama Bin Laden, this rather harsh sentence came just one day before the US presidential elections.

The first habeas corpus hearing – in which the reasons for which detainees are being held must be disclosed – was opened in the case of 6 Algerian-Bosnians who have been held at Guantánamo Bay since 2002. They were arrested in Bosnia in 2001 following a request by the American authorities to the Bosnian authorities claiming that imminent attacks were being planned by the men on US interests in the country. They were later released by the Bosnian authorities when no evidence of wrongdoing emerged, however they were seized by American agents and rendered to Guantánamo Bay. The hearing was held in Washington DC and the detainees were allowed to listen in via a telephone link. On 20 November, the court ordered the immediate release of five of the men as there was no credible evidence to back the claims against them; it felt that there was sufficient evidence for the claims against a sixth man, Belkacem Bensayah. The US government has asked the judge, Richard Leon, to reconsider his judgment and is refusing to enforce it. More details on this story: www.andyworthington.co.uk/2008/11/25/after-7-years-judge-orders-release-of-guantanamo-kidnap-victims/

Salim Hamdan who was convicted at a military tribunal in August this year was returned to Yemen last week to serve out the rest of his sentence of five and a half years, which is due to end on 27 December this year.

New US President Barack Obama has pledged to shut down Guantánamo Bay early in his presidency. It has been claimed that his advisors are currently looking into ways of bringing detainees to the mainland USA to be tried in terrorism trials there. This plan could result in a new legal system being created to handle sensitive information and secret evidence. Human rights groups have called on the Obama administration to take action to investigate wrongdoing at Guantánamo Bay by the US authorities. Although president-elect Obama has pledged to close down Guantánamo Bay, it is up to activists to hold him to this pledge, to close all other illegal detention facilities and end the use of torture, arbitrary detention and kidnap in the "war on terror".

British residents:

In early November, the High Court in London called on the media to assert their right to know in the public interest in the case of Binyam Mohamed by filing submissions to the court concerning the documents the government is keeping secret. The documents allegedly contain information about Binyam Mohamed's torture and rendition; the government has filed a Public Interest Immunity certificate to maintain the secrecy of the information contained within them.

Source: www.guantanamo.org.uk

Saturday, November 29, 2008

Deepak Chopra Blames Washington For Mumbai Terrorist Attacks



Transcript

Chopra: What we have seen in Mumbai has been brewing for a long time, and the war on terrorism and the attack on Iraq compounded the situation. What we call "collateral damage" and going after the wrong people actually turns moderates into extremists, and that inflammation then gets organized and appears as this disaster in Bombay. Now the worst thing that could happen is there's a backlash on the Muslims from the fundamental Hindus in India, which then will perpetuate the problem. Inflammation will create more inflammation.

CNN: Let me jump in on that because you're presuming something very important, which is that it's Muslims who have carried out these attacks and, in some cases, with Washington in their sights.

Chopra: Ultimately the message is always toward Washington because it's also the perception that Washington, in their way, directly or indirectly funds both sides of the war on terror. They fund our side, then our petrol dollars going to Saudi Arabia through Pakistan and ultimately these terrorist groups, which are very organized. You know Jonathan, it takes a lot of money to do this. It takes a lot of organization to do this. Where's the money coming from, you know? The money is coming from the vested interests. I'm not talking about conspiracy theories, but what happens is, our policies, our foreign policies, actually perpetuate this problem. Because, you know, 25% of the world's population is Muslim and they're the fastest growing segment of the population of the world. The more we alienate the Muslim population, the more the moderates are likely to become extremists.


View the video here: www.informationclearinghouse.info/article21341.htm

Source: www.informationclearinghouse.info/article21341.htm

Friday, November 28, 2008

UPDATE: Interpal Bank Account Closure



Following the campaign launched in response to the threatened closure of Interpal’s Bank account by pressure from Lloyds TSB, Interpal has issued the following statement:

“Due to the overwhelming support that Interpal has recently received, it has come to our attention that Lloyds TSB has been attempting to confuse our supporters by using ambiguous language in order to deny that any formal notice was served on the Islamic Bank of Britain (IBB) by Lloyd TSB to cease all dealings with Interpal. Interpal therefore feels compelled to publicise the original correspondence from Lloyds TSB to IBB dated 8 October 2008, in order make clear the severity of this situation and reassure our loyal supporters.

The letter clearly states in no uncertain terms that “we do not wish you to transfer, receive, process or in any way deal with any funds, or in any way whatsoever¦ be involved with any type of banking arrangements for Interpal which either uses or involves any products or services provided by us.”

Subsequently, IBB wrote to Interpal that “Lloyds TSB have formally served notice on us to cease all dealings with Interpal. This notice comes into effect on 8 December 2008. After this time, all transactions into or out of Interpal accounts will be blocked and IBB will be further at risk of all its customer payments being suspended”

Interpal is very encouraged by the support it has received and hopes that the publication of this letter from Lloyds TSB to IBB may destroy any lingering doubts about the grave nature of this situation.

ACTION
We urge all supporters to continue writing to Lloyds TSB and protest against its decision and the misleading responses it has issued to those who have complained.

Please address and send written complaints to:
MR Eric Daniels
CEO
Lloyds TSB Bank Plc
25 Gresham Street
London
EC2V 7HN

Thursday, November 27, 2008

Starbucks Demo



This Saturday at 12 midday until 2pm there will be a bigger than usual demo outside Starbucks in St James Street to mark our first six months of regular weekly protests. The press should be there and it would be good to get a few SaveOmar people along in Orange boiler suits to highlight the fact that there is a Starbucks outlet in Guantanamo Bay.

Source: Save Omar

Wednesday, November 26, 2008

Court Ruling Sees IDF Targeted Assassinations As Last Resort



In the High Court of Justice decision on targeted assassinations, the issue of the need for proportionality stands out. This legal requirement means that if the same effect can be achieved, or at least its primary goal, by a less drastic act then the extreme step may not be taken.

In this light, the court ruled that if it is possible to arrest a terrorist who is taking a direct part in an illegal act, and question him and put him on trial, then this should be done instead of a targeted assassination. Former Supreme Court president Aharon Barak, in his 2006 ruling stated: "The arrest, investigation and trial are not always the means to be used. Sometimes this possibility does not exist at all. Sometimes it is dependent on such a great risk to the lives of the soldiers that there is no requirement to do so," wrote Barak.

Nevertheless, Barak noted it was always required to consider the less damaging steps. As to the possibility of injuring civilians, the court ruled: "Proven information is required before a civilian can be classified as someone in the category that justifies harming him. In principle, innocent civilians should not be harmed. Proven information must exist as to the identity and activities of the civilian, who according to the claims has taken part in terrorist activities."

The High Court emphasized that the burden of proof in such cases was on the army and was "weighty." In case of doubt, a meticulous investigation was required before such an attack, ruled the court.

The High Court also stated that even after such an attack on a suspect in terrorism, a thorough investigation must be carried out afterwards as to the accuracy of the identification and the reasons for the attack. Barak also made it clear that such an investigation must be independent and not conducted by members of the defense establishment or any other public authority.

Every case of targeted assassination must be examined for its special considerations, ruled the court, so that such an action is not always banned, and not always permissible. The use of such a drastic step must be proportional and must express a reasonable balance between the military-security benefit and the damage it would cause.

Source: http://haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1041318.html

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Give President Obama The Support He Needs To Close Guantanamo & End Torture



The enormity of this moment in our nation’s history cannot be overstated.

Do not be silent. Do not sit on the sidelines. Give President-Elect Obama the support he needs to close Guantanamo and end torture. Sign our 100 days petition.

Let me be clear. America’s renewal cannot begin without a renewed commitment to human rights.

Freedom, truth, justice. Who would have thought 8 years ago these deeply-held American values would be in jeopardy. But then came Abu Ghraib, Guantanamo bay, illegal detentions, extraordinary rendition, and unbelievably even torture.

Thankfully, President-Elect Obama has forcefully come out against these disastrous policies. Less than 10 days ago on 60 minutes, he stated his strong intention to finally close the detention camps at Guantanamo Bay. How he closes it however is crucial. That’s why he needs to hear from you, and everyone who cares about human rights.

Give President-Elect Obama the overwhelming support he needs to close Guantanamo and close it right. Sign the petition: http://takeaction.amnestyusa.org/site/c.jhKPIXPCIoE/b.4742025/apps/ka/ct/contactus.asp?c=jhKPIXPCIoE&b=4742025&en=7gJDJONrG6KMKYMuH5JJIVNFJiLQI2NxHeKSI5PMIuE&tr=y&auid=4262949

Monday, November 24, 2008

How US Plotted to Get UK's Most Wanted Terrorist

Heads of American and Pakistani security colluded in plot to kill Rashid Rauf

A secret meeting on board an American aircraft carrier between the US General David Petraeus and the head of the Pakistani military laid the foundation for the killing of Britain's most wanted terrorist.


The Independent learnt that talks held on board the USS Abraham Lincoln in the Persian Gulf three months ago led to General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani pledging to provide information on "high-value" targets such as Rashid Rauf, who died in a missile strike inside Pakistan on Saturday.

Senior UK security sources insisted that the lethal attack in North Waziristan on the 27-year-old Birmingham-born Rauf – accused of being involved in the plot to plant liquid bombs aboard transatlantic airliners – was "a unilateral American action" without any British involvement.

The disclaimer came after two senior MPs called on the British government to say whether or not it had been made aware in advance of the attack plan. Andrew Dismore, Labour chairman of the Parliamentary Committee on Human Rights, said: "We can investigate whether British security services had involvement in providing intelligence concerning British nationals in Pakistan." The former shadow security minister Patrick Mercer, the Tory MP for Newark, said: "This raises the question of how much co-operation the British intelligence agencies provided in ... the execution of a British subject."

However, American officials stated that the intelligence on the whereabouts of Rauf and a Saudi Islamist, Abu Zubair al-Masri, was provided by Pakistani authorities. The agreement on sharing intelligence came during the meeting on the aircraft carrier in the Arabian Sea in the last week of August, US sources said.

General Kayani, who had taken over from General Pervez Musharraf as the head of the Pakistani military, was brought to the ship by American helicopters. He was told about grave American disquiet over the help being given to the Taliban by elements of the Pakistani military and intelligence service, the ISI. According to US officials an agreement was reached at the conclusion of the "heated" meeting with General Kayani, in which the Pakistanis promised to supply high-quality intelligence.

Rauf was initially wanted for questioning by police in England over the murder of his uncle in Birmingham. He fled to Pakistan but was arrested in August 2006 by the Pakistani police for his alleged involvement in the airliner plot. But in December 2007 he escaped.

Rauf's parents, who live in the Ward End area of Birmingham, have not received confirmation of his death, a friend of the family confirmed. The man, a shopkeeper who asked not to be named, said: "They don't know anything about this ... They have got no information and it's obviously not nice for them." A man who later emerged from the Rauf home, in a blue tracksuit and full beard, told reporters: "I am angry. For your own safety, all I can say to you is goodbye."

The Foreign Office could not confirm Rauf's killing. But Sherry Rehman, the Pakistani information minister, stated: "Sources have confirmed that Rashid Rauf and Masri were targets and have been killed."

Other Pakistani officials said that the bodies of the two men, along with five others killed, would be collected for DNA tests. However, Rauf's Pakistani lawyer, Hashmat Ali Habib, said that Taliban fighters appeared to have removed the bodies. "We are still not sure, it's all suspicious."

Source: www.independent.co.uk/news/world/asia/how-us-plotted-to-get-uks-most-wanted-terrorist-1032202.html

Sunday, November 23, 2008

Secret Dossiers Kept on Muslims?




Former Marine outlines secret dossiers - Muslims, Arabs not targeted, FBI says

Two years after his arrest, a former Marine gunnery sergeant is talking about the FBI, CIA and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement files he stole from Camp Pendleton for a civilian agency.

In interviews with The San Diego Union-Tribune, Gary Maziarz, 39, said “dozens of files” he gave the Los Angeles Terrorism Early Warning Group while serving as an intelligence specialist at the base were dossiers on Muslims and Arabs living in Southern California.

This marks the first time Maziarz has spoken to the media about the files since pleading guilty in July 2007 to mishandling classified material and stealing government property.

He agreed to the interviews despite signing a plea agreement with the government limiting his comments on the security breach, which might involve a decade's worth of intelligence culled from domestic and foreign sources. The deal also requires him to testify if called on.

“Most of the (monitored) people were from Los Angeles. The ties they had to San Diego were, like, maybe they had a house down here or a relative or came down to visit or went on vacation here,” said Maziarz, who splits his time between North County and Arizona as he looks for work and tries to move on with his life.

Many of the stolen files centered on the meeting spots of “people of interest,” including places of worship, businesses and travel plans, he said.

Maziarz's case could have repercussions well beyond Camp Pendleton.

The existence of CIA, FBI and Immigration and Customs Enforcement documents profiling specific minority and religious groups in the United States could undermine contentions by the FBI, the primary federal agency for domestic security, that no programs target upstanding Muslims and Arabs.

“The FBI does not monitor the lawful activities of individuals in the United States, nor does the FBI have a surveillance program to monitor constitutionally protected activities of houses of worship,” FBI spokesman Darrell Foxworth said in an e-mail.

Maziarz's arrest in October 2006 sparked multiple investigations, including those by the FBI and the Naval Criminal Investigative Service. Federal agents testifying at his trial said the files found in his possession could not be shared legally with civilian law enforcement. Essentially, Maziarz said, he used computer networks at Camp Pendleton to tap into classified information that he then passed along to a higher-ranking Marine or one of that person's subordinates. Maziarz and federal investigative documents have identified that individual as reserve Col. Larry Richards, the base's former intelligence chief and co-founder of the Los Angeles Terrorism Early Warning Group.

Maziarz said he and others broke national-security protocols out of concern that FBI officials were not sharing anti-terrorism intelligence with local law enforcement or were doing it slowly because of bureaucracy. There was a feeling that lack of cooperation prevented aggressive efforts to prevent future terrorist attacks.

The Los Angeles Terrorism Early Warning Group is composed of two dozen local, state and federal agencies, including the Los Angeles Police Department, the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department, the Secret Service and the FBI.

The Union-Tribune first reported on the Maziarz case in October 2007, after it obtained unclassified records from his court-martial. Maziarz originally was charged with stealing Iraq war souvenirs from a base armory. That investigation evolved into the document-theft case. He received a 26-month jail sentence. He was released in July after serving less than two years in Camp Pendleton's brig.

In accepting Maziarz's guilty plea, Marine judge Lt. Col. Jeffrey Meeks avoided revealing specific contents of the stolen files. Two federal agents attended the plea-agreement sessions to make sure classified details stayed secret.

While sitting recently at a café in Carlsbad, Maziarz explained how officials from the Los Angeles counter-terrorism group used him for years to steal highly sensitive FBI, CIA and immigration files to track and foil terrorist operations.

He was more tight-lipped about classified files known as TIGER documents. TIGER, or the Topologically Integrated Geographic Encoding and Referencing system, is a database developed at the U.S. Census Bureau. It can be customized to identify special demographic centers, such as areas where certain ethnic groups live.

The Union-Tribune asked FBI officials whether any of the files Maziarz stole were were related to this system. They did not respond.

Days after the newspaper made its TIGER inquiry to the bureau, Maziarz said, federal investigators gave him a lie-detector test to see whether he had talked to the media.

Maziarz's claims about profiling have raised concerns among some Islamic, Arab-American and civil-liberty groups. The organizations' leaders said his statements underscore their longtime contention that government agencies are violating Americans' privacy rights with little to no congressional oversight.

The Maziarz case could be “hugely important,” said David Blair-Loy, legal director for the American Civil Liberties Union of San Diego & Imperial Counties.

In July, the ACLU filed Freedom of Information Act requests with the Defense Department, the FBI, the Naval Criminal Investigative Service, the National Security Agency and the U.S. Northern Command to flesh out its understanding of the government's domestic surveillance activities.

“What was in these documents (that Maziarz took) is precisely the question we have been asking. What has the government been doing and who authorized it?” Blair-Loy said.

On the criminal-justice front, the document-theft case involving Maziarz has moved slowly and unexpectedly.

On July 18, the Marine Corps brought charges against Gunnery Sgt. Eric Froboese and Master Sgt. Reinaldo Pagan in connection with it. Pagan is accused of dereliction of duty and violation of orders. Froboese is facing charges of dereliction of duty, orders violations, conspiracy and wrongful transmission of classified information.

Before they were charged, neither of the enlisted Marines had been mentioned in court records related to the Maziarz trial. Maziarz said he is angry that no Marine officer has faced the same legal scrutiny. “I don't think the government is interested in really finding out the truth . . . because the implications are too vast and involve too many senior people for them to really pursue it,” he said.

More than 30 interviews with FBI and naval investigators, spanning hundreds of hours over the past two years, have convinced Maziarz that prosecutors plan to pin the national-security breach on those considered least culpable and most vulnerable: the enlisted men.

“If Pagan is getting charged with dereliction of duty, then why not General Conway?” Maziarz said. He was referring to Gen. James Conway, the commandant of the Marine Corps. Conway served as commanding general of the Camp Pendleton-based 1st Marine Expeditionary Force when Maziarz worked in the intelligence unit and Richards ran it.

A statement from Conway's office said in part: “Generally speaking, a subordinate who is accused of violating a commander's orders . . . and has done so without the knowledge or consent of that commander is not really in a position to place any portion of the blame for their own actions upon the commander.”

Federal agents have warned Maziarz that he could be put back behind bars if he violates his plea agreement. While he is cautious, Maziarz said his intention is to set the record straight.

“I have a pretty good memory,” Maziarz said, “and that's what bothers a lot of people.”

Source: www.informationclearinghouse.info/article21295.htm

Saturday, November 22, 2008

Withdraw The Troops From Afghanistan





Seven years after the supposed liberation of Afghanistan, there is now conclusive evidence that the Nato occupation is a disaster (The errors of Iraq are being repeated - and magnified, November 19). The civilian death toll is mounting. The level of violence is higher than at any time since the invasion in 2001. The UN reports that, under occupation, life expectancy has fallen to 43 years and one in five children die before they reach their fifth birthday. Afghanistan is now fourth from bottom of the UN's league table of development. The mounting violence has caused a refugee crisis and, according to Acbar, the umbrella group of Afghan NGOs, it is making the delivery of aid to the majority of the country impossible. The NGOs warn that there is a very real danger that thousands of Afghans will starve this winter.

The end of the Bush era should be a moment to reassess our foreign policy: 68% of the British public now believe the troops should leave Afghanistan within a year; and 125 British soldiers have already lost their lives in a war that even the UK ambassador to Afghanistan, Sherard Cowper-Coles, has said is unwinnable. We urge Gordon Brown to recognise the facts, respect public opinion and order the withdrawal of British troops.

Nazir Ahmed House of Lords, Julie Bowman Military Families Against the War, Louise Christian human rights lawyer, Jeremy Corbyn MP, George Galloway MP, Lindsey German Convener, Stop the War Coalition, Elfyn Llwyd MP Plaid Cymru UK parliamentary group leader, Rachael Massey Military Families Against the War, Andrew Murray Chair, Stop the War Coalition, Michael Rosen poet & broadcaster, Nitin Sawhney musician, Walter Wolfgang Labour CND

Source: www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2008/nov/21/military-afghanistan

Friday, November 21, 2008

Reprieve Applauds US Court Order That Five Guantánamo Bay Prisoners Be Set Free



Reprieve, the British legal action charity whose lawyers represent 33 Guantánamo Bay prisoners, applauds today's ruling by a civilian court in the United States that five Guantánamo Bay prisoners must be set free. In a shocking blow to the Bush Administration's failing efforts to maintain some credibility for the Guantánamo experiment, District Court Judge Richard Leon held in Washington that there was no legal basis to keep five Algerian nationals in prison, and ordered the US Government to release them.

"The decision by Judge Leon lays bare the flimsy basis on which Guantánamo has been founded – at best, slim evidence of dubious quality, at worst, nothing. This is a tough, no-nonsense judge. If he found there wasn't evidence to justify holding the men, you can be sure it wasn't there," Zachary Katznelson, Legal Director of Reprieve stated.

These are the first verdicts in the more than 200 habeas corpus petitions moving forward in the US civilian courts, many of which have been brought by Reprieve. The petitions challenge the US government to prove that there is evidence justifying keeping the men in Guantánamo Bay.

"The Bosnian courts found these five men innocent, and ordered their release. It is an illustration of the catastrophic policies of the Bush Administration – ignoring the legitimate ruling of the court of an ally, rendering these men away from their homes and families, and holding them without legal recourse in Guantánamo Bay for six years," said Clive Stafford Smith, Director of Reprieve. "But there are plenty more cases of injustice ahead of us, including the plight of the British residents who remain in this terrible place."

The hearings involved six Algerian nationals, five of whom are also Bosnian citizens. The men were originally accused of plotting to blow up the American Embassy in Bosnia. However, those charges were dropped on the eve of these hearings when the US military apparently conceded that no such charge could be proven. This is hardly surprising, since they were acquitted on these charges in Bosnia in the first place, only to be seized by the US and rendered to Guantánamo Bay the moment they were set free by the Bosnian authorities. The five men to be released were therefore only alleged to have wanted to go to Afghanistan in 2001 and 2002.

The ruling by District Court Judge Richard Leon is the first decision since the United States Supreme Court ruled in June 2008 that every prisoner in Guantánamo has the right to contest his imprisonment in the civilian courts. Judge Leon, who is considered a firm conservative among jurists, found that there was no basis to hold them.

For further information, please contact Clive Stafford Smith (07940 347125; clivess@mac.com); or Reprieve's Press Office on 020 7427 1099.

Note for Editors:

Reprieve, a legal action charity, uses the law to enforce the human rights of prisoners, from death row to Guantánamo Bay. Reprieve investigates, litigates and educates, working on the frontline, to provide legal support to prisoners unable to pay for it themselves. Reprieve promotes the rule of law around the world, securing each person's right to a fair trial and saving lives. Clive Stafford Smith is the founder of Reprieve and has spent 25 years working on behalf of people facing the death penalty in the USA.

Reprieve's current casework involves representing 33 prisoners in the US prison at Guantanamo Bay, working on behalf of prisoners facing the death penalty, and conducting ongoing investigations into the rendition and the secret detention of 'ghost prisoners' in the so-called 'war on terror.'

Reprieve, PO Box 52742, London EC4P 4WS / Tel: 020 7353 4640 / Fax: 020 7353 4641 / Email: info@reprieve.org.uk
/ Website: http://www.reprieve.org.uk/

Thursday, November 20, 2008

UK Troops To Withdraw From Iraq in New Year




Planning is far advanced for the withdrawal of the 4,000 soldiers from the Basra area under a move called Operation Drayton, The Daily Telegraph has learnt.

The operation will accelerate if the security situation remains stable following the key provincial elections on Jan 31.

Asked if the countdown had begun towards what Gordon Brown called "fundamental mission change" – the code for withdrawal – Major Gen Andy Salmon, the British divisional commander, said that the "clock is ticking nicely".

If the Iraqi 14th Division, which control Basra, manage the elections well, "we will be in a position after that to say that we are pretty much there," he said.

"If we adapt to Iraqi needs then we will avoid outstaying our welcome. Then we will arrive at a mutually agreed position as to when we have met our conditions.

"If the election goes well then our job is heading towards being done. We would have completed our tasks – that is a considerable part of the security issue down here resolved, sorted and completed."

Plans have been drawn up for the British force to be ready to move at 30 days notice when the signal comes from London. The signal date is likely to be beneficial to the Government.

The first battalions could leave Iraq by as early as March, military sources have disclosed.

The United States hopes that a reduction in British troop numbers in Iraq will allow the Ministry of Defence to send more forces to Afghanistan, Geoff Morrell, a Pentagon spokesman, said.

"Clearly we would welcome more British troops but we are not singling out the Brits more than anyone else. We are sending thousands and thousands more troops and we are always looking to see who can contribute more to the mission in Afghanistan," he said.

The British withdrawal from Iraq will come almost exactly six years after the first troops crossed over the Kuwait border in the 2003 invasion.

Since then 176 servicemen have lost their lives and up to £10 billion has been spent on the operation and new equipment.

Soldiers fought in the toughest street battles since the Second World War as forces, which averaged 8,000 men post-invasion, struggled to hold the line against a Shia insurgency heavily armed by Iran.

They provided a vital breathing space and were able to train the Iraqi army that helped defeat the insurgents in March following a power vacuum after the British withdrew from Basra to the airport five miles away.

Out of an estimated 2,500 insurgents only 250 remain active. The rest have either been killed, fled to Iran or given up the struggle.

The murder rate in Basra, a city of 2.4 million, has dropped to about 20 a month and there has not been an attack on British forces for 48 days – the longest period since the invasion. British soldiers still operate in small groups in the city providing mentors for the Iraqi army.

Major Gen Salmon said the British forces would "be able stand with our heads held high and say we have done a bloody good job in difficult circumstances".

"We have gone through some tough times and lost good people. Our soldiers have made amazing sacrifices. They won't have been in vain."

A huge logistic operation will begin to withdraw the equipment and men after an agreement has been negotiated with the Iraqi prime minister Nouri al-Maliki.

Basra air station, which in the last year has seen millions of pounds spent on strengthening its defences, will be filled with a force of at least 2,000 Americans some of whom will train the Iraqi police from locations in Basra.

Major Gen Salmon said the withdrawal of 4,000 troops would "take the pressure off" the military and "ensure that we can make the commitment in Afghanistan".

Source: www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/middleeast/iraq/3491014/UK-troops-to-withdraw-from-Iraq-in-New-Year.html

Wednesday, November 19, 2008

An Afternoon With Moazzam Begg




Date: Wednesday 19th November 2008
Time: 2.00 pm - 4.00 pm
Venue: 109-117 Cherry Orchard Road, Croydon, Surrey, CR0 6BE


Moazzam Begg, ex-Guantanamo detainee and author of Enemy Combatant, will be sharing his experiences whilst at Guantanamo Bay. This event has been specifically been organised for students of Al-Khair School but we would like all members of the community to benefit from the event and have therefore opened it up to all. There will be also be a book signing.

The event will be followed by an Open Day for Al-Khair School. This will be an opportunity for you to see the school and meet staff, as well as some of the pupils, and find out how Al-Khair can benefit your child. The nearest station is East Croydon. Admission is free. Early booking of places is recommended.

For further details e-mail: admin@alkhair.org.uk / afsha@alkhair.org

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

Israel To Free 250 Palestinian Prisoners



Prime Minister Olmert meets with Palestinian President Abbas in Jerusalem, informs him Jewish state will release Fatah inmates as goodwill gesture in honor of Muslim holiday of Eid al-Adha. All prisoners freed will be forced to sign commitment not to return to terror

Another goodwill gesture to the Palestinian Authority: Israel will release 250 Fatah prisoners in honor of the Muslim holiday of Eid al-Adha which will take place at the beginning of December, Prime Minister Ehud Olmert announced Monday during a meeting with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas in Jerusalem.

Israeli officials clarified that the gesture will include the release of prisoners who were involved in terror but belong to the moderate camp, and are not members of Hamas or the Islamic Jihad.

The release is part of Israel's effort to encourage the moderate forces and prove that such gestures can only be reached by taking the road of peace.

All the prisoners slated to be freed will be forced to sign a commitment that they would not return to terrorism.

Israeli officials have began preparing the list of names of prisoners designated for release, which will then be handed over to the Ministerial Committee on the Release of Palestinian Prisoners.

Sources at the Prime Minister's Office said that Israel releases Palestinian prisoners every year ahead of the Muslim holiday.

Source: www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3624350,00.html

Monday, November 17, 2008

Obama 'Will Close Guantanamo Bay'




In his first major interview since polling day, President-elect Barack Obama said last night that upon taking office he would close Guantanamo Bay and ban torture by the American military. He also said it would be "a disaster" if the US car industry were to collapse in the midst of today's economic crisis.

Mr Obama provided America with a glimpse of both the problems his administration will face and the bipartisan tone he intends to adopt once he takes office. The President-elect, joined by his wife, Michelle, discussed his priorities and the impact of the election on his family.

His first priority, he said, was appointing a new national security team to ensure a smooth transition to power. But the wide-ranging interview focused largely on the threats to the US economy. "It's my belief that we need to provide assistance to the auto industry," Mr Obama told CBS's 60 minutes, adding "But I think that it can't be a blank check."

The Senate, which he resigned from yesterday, is expected to vote this week on emergency loans to the beleaguered car industry, despite stiff opposition from Republicans.

Mr Obama meets his defeated rival, John McCain, today for the first time since crossing swords in the debates that punctuated their occasionally ill-tempered election battle. The meeting in Chicago is billed as an attempt to usher in a new era of bipartisanship, a frequent refrain of Mr Obama's on the campaign trail.

Unlike Mr Obama's other former rival, Hillary Clinton, who is among the top contenders for Secretary of State, Senator McCain is not being considered for a formal role in the administration. Advisers say he will be asked for help on issues where they share common ground, including climate change, ethics reform, immigration and torture.

That bipartisan mood between the former rivals may be tested if Mr McCain opposes a taxpayer bailout of Detroit. The new bill would allow some of the $700bn (£350bn) fund to bail out the financial services industry to be used to rescue the car industry.

Mr Obama said he wants the aid to ensure there is a sustainable car industry, "so that we are creating a bridge loan to somewhere as opposed to a bridge loan to nowhere. And that's, I think, what you haven't yet seen."

On the broader economy he said "the challenges that we're confronting are enormous, and they're multiple. And so there are times during the course of a given a day where you think, 'Where do I start in terms of moving – moving things forward?'

"And part of this next two months is to really get a clear set of priorities, understanding we're not going be able to do everything at once, making sure the team is in place, and moving forward in a very deliberate way and sending a clear signal to the American people that we're going to be thinking about them and what they're going through."

Mr Obama published a farewell letter to newspapers in Illinois to accompany his formal resignation of his Senate seat. He compared himself with Abraham Lincoln, "another son of Illinois" who had left for Washington, "a greater man who spoke to a nation far more divided".

Source: www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/obama-will-close-guantanamo-bay-1021731.html

Sunday, November 16, 2008

George W Bush Could Pardon Spies involved In Torture



Senior intelligence officers are lobbying the outgoing president to look after the men and women who could face charges for following his orders in the war on terrorism.

Many fear that Barack Obama, who has pledged to close the Guantanamo Bay detention camp and put an end to the policy of extraordinary rendition, could launch a legal witch hunt against those who oversaw the policies after he is sworn in on Jan 20.

Most vulnerable are US intelligence officers who took part in intensive interrogations against terrorist suspects, using techniques including water boarding, which many believe crossed the line into torture.

A former CIA officer familiar with the backstage lobbying for pardons, said: "These are the people President Bush asked to fight the war on terror for him. He gave them the green light to fight tough. The view of many in the intelligence community is that he should not leave them vulnerable to legal censure when he leaves.

"An effort is under way to get pre-emptive pardons. The White House has indicated that the matter is under consideration."

In addition to frontline CIA and military officers, others at risk could include David Addington, Dick Cheney's former counsel, and William Haynes, the former Pentagon general counsel who helped draw up the regulations governing enhanced interrogations.

Many in the Democratic party and human rights groups are calling on President-Elect Obama to tear up Mr Bush's executive orders licensing intensive interrogations on his first day in the Oval Office. They also want an immediate end to rendition, whereby suspects are flown to countries that practise torture.

But some in the intelligence community fear that an overhaul of the justice department could embolden those who would like a full-blown investigation of what went on at Guantanamo Bay, with charges to follow for those involved.

Presidents can issue pardons at their discretion and those granted the immunity of a pardon do not need to have been previously charged with a crime.

Granting pardons to spies who allegedly used torture would complicate the politics surrounding Mr Obama's moves to end aspects of the war on terror that are blamed for tarnishing America's international reputation.

In meetings over the last two weeks, Mr Obama has been briefed by US intelligence chiefs on the extreme danger posed by some terrorist suspects in the Guantanamo Bay camp. His advisers last week floated the idea that, while some will be released and some put on trial in normal courts, a third category of legal status may have to be created for the most dangerous - a move that met with howls of protest from civil liberties groups.

There are just 255 prisoners still held at the base on the island of Cuba, but they include the so-called "Dirty 30", bodyguards to Osama bin Laden captured during the early stages of the war in Afghanistan.

The ex-CIA official said: "The Bush people are trying to be helpful but this is the one thing that they are pushing hard on. They're saying, 'Don't rush into anything.' It's easy to say close the place, but what do you do with the detainees? There are some serious head cases in there."

Some conservatives argue that if Mr Bush were to issue pardons to protect those who took part in his administration's security regime, it would make it easier for the incoming administration to find out exactly what went on, the goal of many who want to prevent repetition of what they view as abuses.

The ex-CIA official said: "If you want people to tell the truth, the best way would be to give them legal guarantees. A pardon is not the only way you can do that, but if Bush does it, it will save Obama the political problem he would have if he offered people immunity later."

But critics say such a move would be a disgrace. James Ross, legal and policy director for Human Rights Watch, said: "It would be the first pre-emptive pardon in US history for war crimes. Such a pardon might seek to protect low-level government officials who relied on legally dubious Justice Department memos on interrogations.

"But it would also provide blanket immunity to senior administration officials who bear criminal responsibility for their role in drafting, orchestrating and implementing a US government torture programme."

Mr Bush has received around 3,000 requests for pardons and conservatives would like him to help Lewis "Scooter" Libby, Vice-President Dick Cheney's former chief of staff. He was found guilty of obstruction of justice for his role in leaking the name of a CIA officer, Valerie Plame. Mr Bush has already commuted Mr Libby's sentence.

Presidential pardons are always controversial, though Mr Bush has granted fewer than 200 so far, less than half of those handed out by Ronald Reagan. Bill Clinton issued 140 pardons on his last day in office alone. When Gerald Ford took over from Richard Nixon, he pardoned his predecessor, forgiving all federal crimes he may have committed during the Watergate scandal.

Andrew Johnson pardoned the soldiers of the Confederacy and Jimmy Carter did the same for Vietnam War draft dodgers.

Source: www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/northamerica/usa/barackobama/3464442/George-W-Bush-could-pardon-spies-involved-in-torture.html

Saturday, November 15, 2008

I Have A Dream




I have a dream that
The day I walk on this land
Is the day I will walk free
All my troubles will flow away
My heart will come clean
With the blow of the wind
The eyes will clear and the tear will disappear
We will laugh, Speaking freely with joy
Enjoying the freedom when we will not be sad
No colours or no race will matter for we'll all be one
Love and unity, united in bowing to our One Lord. Ameen

- HAMID

Source: www.cageprisoners.com/articles.php?id=26783

Friday, November 14, 2008

Former Guantanamo Prisoners Still Struggling



Former Guantanamo prisoners released after years of detention without charge went home to find themselves stigmatized and shunned, viewed either as terrorists or U.S. spies, according to a report released on Wednesday. Skip related content

The report by human rights advocates urged U.S. President-elect Barack Obama to form an independent, nonpartisan commission with subpoena powers to investigate the treatment of U.S. detainees in Afghanistan, Iraq and the Guantanamo Bay U.S. Navy base in Cuba.

"We cannot sweep this dark chapter in our nation's history under the rug by simply closing the Guantanamo prison camp," said study co-author Eric Stover, director of the University of California at Berkeley's Human Rights Centre.

"The new administration must investigate what went wrong and who should be held accountable."

The authors at the centre and at the Centre for Constitutional Rights interviewed 50 U.S. government officials, military experts and former guards and interrogators, as well as 62 former Guantanamo prisoners in nine nations.

Two-thirds of the former captives said they had psychological and emotional problems, which the authors called consistent with being held in extreme isolation for extended periods.

Only six had regular jobs, with many saying employers would not hire anyone who had been held at Guantanamo.

"It doesn't matter that they cleared my name by releasing me. We still have this big hat on our heads that we were terrorists," said a Chinese Muslim former prisoner, one of eight who were settled in Albania in 2006.

That group was still struggling to learn Albanian and had abandoned hope of ever being reunited with their families, said the report titled "Guantanamo and Its Aftermath."

NO MISTAKES

The United States has released 520 men from Guantanamo since it opened the detention camp for suspected al Qaeda and Taliban captives after the September 11 attacks. Currently about 250 are being held.

It has not publicly acknowledged that any were there by mistake, although intelligence reports and a former camp commander had said as early as September 2002 that one-third to one-half of the 600 captives there at the time had no connection to terrorism, the report noted.

The most notorious prisoners who are accused of plotting the September 11 attacks, the Bali nightclub bombings and attacks on U.S. embassies in Africa were not taken to Guantanamo until 2006, when they were transferred from secret CIA prisons.

Many of the former prisoners said they had lost their homes and businesses or that their families had piled up debts in their absence because there was no one to support them.

One returned to find his wife had divorced him and remarried, another to learn his father had been murdered and his estranged wife had taken their children and moved away.

"Two Afghan respondents said that rumours of sexual abuse at Guantanamo had stigmatized them and made it difficult to find a marriage partner. One of these was also accused of being an American spy and as a result was fearful of becoming a Taliban target," the report said.

'I AM NOT A BEAST'

Others said they had received death threats.

Those who fared best seemed to be Afghans from tightly knit villages, where several said they were greeted when they came home with celebrations that even some local police attended.

"When I'm walking on the streets and I meet some people, they usually say to me, 'We're sorry for you...' Everyone knows that I'm innocent, that I'm not involved in any political activities," the report quoted an Afghan shepherd as saying.

Among the 55 freed captives who discussed their interrogations, 31 said they were abusive and 24 said they had no problems. The majority held "distinctly negative views of the United States" but many said that was directed at the U.S. government, not the American people.

One-third said they ended up in U.S. custody after being sold for bounties. Many viewed their time at Guantanamo as a test of their Muslim faith.

Others said they only wanted the American public to recognise that they were innocent.

"I just want to tell them that I am not this savage beast, what they were told I am," one said.

Source: http://uk.news.yahoo.com/22/20081112/tpl-uk-usa-guantanamo-81f3b62.html

Thursday, November 13, 2008

Message & Request From INTERPAL Who May Be Forced To Cease Operations





Dear Friends,

Assalamu Alaikum - Peace be upon you.

I am writing to you because we are faced by a totally unexpected crisis which has the potential to force us to cease operations early next month.

We received notification the day before yesterday from our bank, the Islamic Bank of Britain (IBB), that Lloyds TSB (their clearing bank) have served notice on IBB to cease all dealings with Interpal. The notice comes into effect on 8 December 2008 (a nice Eid prsent!). After this time “all transactions into or out of Interpal accounts will be blocked and IBB will be at further risk of all its customer payments being suspended.” IBB has offered us its total support but is apparently powerless in this situation, throwing into question the autonomy of Britain's burgeoning Islamic finance sector.

As you can imagine, this has the potential not only to damage Interpal but also to affect community relations (and cohesion) in Britain. No reason at all is given for this draconian and punitive measure, taken withoutany consideration of the thousands of contributors who have placed their faithin us to assist the needy of Palestine – and who want to continue to do so.

Needless to say, it will be an administrative nightmare to transfer the thousands of standing orders that we have, etc. By acting in this way, Lloyds TSB has treated IBB with contempt. Their action sends a signal to other Muslim charities – as well as the bank’s 50,000 Muslim account holders – that their accounts can be closed down without warning or explanation at any time.

It is, at very least, an example of the utter lack of respect faced by theMuslim community from some hostile quarters in this country.

Perhaps it should be pointed out to Lloyds TSB that Muslims are among the British taxpayers who have bailed out the bank after years of wasteful mismanagement!

Be that as it may – we are less than a month away from a potentially very difficult and testing situation. We are currently mobilisng all the support we can to try to persuade the banks to rescind this decision – and hope and pray that we can look to you for guidance, advice and practical support at this critical time.

We are calling upon our friends and supporters, and all who stand for justice in the face of oppression to contact Lloyds-TSB and the Islamic Bank of Britain to ask them to rescind this outrageous, unfair and arbitrary decision. Your support in this will be much appreciated.

Islamic Bank of Britain plc
Edgbaston House
3 Duchess Place
Hagley Road
Birmingham
B16 8NH
Tel: 0121 452 7330 / 0845 6060786

Bulat Betalgiry
Lloyds TSB Bank plc
1st Floor, 25 Gresham Street
London, EC2V 7HN
Tel: 020 7661 4778
bulat.betalgiry@lloydstsb.co.uk

Many thanks.

Ibrahim Hewitt, Chairman of the Board of Trustees, Interpal

Helping Palestinians in Need
(UK Registered Charity 1040094)
PO BOX 53389 London NW10 6WT
T 020 8961 9993 F 020 8965 6065
info@interpal.org / www.interpal.org

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Guantanamo - Talk By James Yusuf Yee



Date: Fri Nov 14
Time: 6:00pm-8:00pm
Venue: LCT 1, Appleton Tower, George Square Edinburgh


After serving as the Muslim Chaplain at Guantanamo Bay for ten months and receiving numerous awards for his service there, Chaplain Yee was falsely accused of spying, espionage, and aiding alleged Taliban and Al-Qaeda prisoners. He was arrested, locked in a navy prison for 76 days in solitary confinement, subject to much of the same treatment that had been imposed on Guantanamo detainees.

Now cleared and exonerated of all criminal charges, he has publicly exposed the abuse of detainees at Guantanamo Bay and the failures of US military justice. He resigned from the Army in 2005 with honorable discharge. Since his resignation from the US army in 2005, he has exposed what really goes on at Guantanamo, and tells the world about how he struggled to prove his innocence. He authored "For God and Country: Faith and Patriotism Under Fire" in 2005

Organised by the Islamic Society of Edinburgh University

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

European Governments Should Resettle Guantanamo Detainees



European governments should provide humanitarian protection to those Guantanamo detainees who will not be charged with a crime but cannot be returned to their countries of origin for fear of torture or other serious human rights violations, five leading human rights organizations said today. European governments should agree to accept them into their countries and ensure they are provided with adequate support.

Amnesty International, the Center for Constitutional Rights, Human Rights Watch, Reprieve, and the International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH) urged governments to work with the new US administration to take this important step in order to facilitate the closure of the detention facility at Guantanamo. The human rights groups made their call after a two-day closed strategic workshop in Berlin, convened by the organizations with other international actors active on the issue of humanitarian protection.

“We must find a solution to the 50 men imprisoned at Guantanamo simply because they have nowhere to go,” said Emi MacLean, staff attorney at the Center for Constitutional Rights. “The US government has twice previously tried to send our client, Abdul Ra’ouf Al Qassim, to Libya even though it is undisputed that he would likely be tortured, or disappeared into Libyan jails, if returned. His survival depends on the simple humanitarian gesture of another country opening their doors to him.”

It is the primary responsibility of the United States to find solutions for all those held at Guantanamo, since it brought them to the detention facility and is holding them there unlawfully. If the United States is not planning to charge and try them in ordinary US courts, and cannot release them to their own countries safely, it should immediately offer them an opportunity to be released into the United States.

It is also clear, however, that governments in Europe and elsewhere can and should play a vital role in providing such individuals with humanitarian protection in the form of a safe place to get on with their lives after years of suffering. The involvement of European governments will be instrumental in reaching a solution to this problem – a solution that is critical to the international aim of closing Guantanamo.

“Everyone appears to rightly agree that Guantanamo must be closed, and President-elect Obama has said that he will close it,” said Daniel Gorevan, Counter Terror with Justice campaign manager at Amnesty International. “Clearly, other governments can help make this happen by offering protection to individuals who cannot be released to their own countries. This would have a double effect: helping to end the ordeal of an individual unlawfully held in violation of his human rights, and helping end the international human rights scandal that is Guantanamo.”

Around 50 of the detainees currently held in Guantanamo cannot lawfully be sent back to their countries of origin because they would face a real risk of human rights violations such as torture or other ill-treatment. They come from countries including China, Libya, Russia, Tunisia, and Uzbekistan.

“This is a key opportunity for both sides of the Atlantic to move beyond the misguided acts of the ‘war on terror’: rendition, secret detention, and torture,” said Cori Crider, staff attorney at Reprieve. “President-elect Obama says he will close Guantanamo – the question is when and how. One of Reprieve’s clients was sent back to Tunisia, drugged, hit, and threatened with the rape of his wife and daughter. Another is fighting, even now, to stay in Guantanamo because Tunisia threatened him with ‘water torture in the barrel.’ The US still asserts total authority to send him back. Europe can send a powerful message by reaching out to Obama and providing a safe alternative for these few people.”

“President-elect Obama has committed to closing Guantanamo, but he is going to need Europe’s help,” said Joanne Mariner, Terrorism and Counterterrorism Program director at Human Rights Watch. “European governments could provide much-needed assistance by agreeing to take in some of the detainees who cannot be sent back home.”

“FIDH and CCR mobilised 77 members of the European Parliament who issued a joint call to EU member States to offer relocation for Guantanamo detainees,” said Souhayr Belhassen, president of FIDH. “As an important strategic partner of the US, the EU should help the Administration relocate these men.”

Statements of Support from International Actors

“The efforts must be renewed now with European governments and the U.S. government working to close Guantanamo and offer protection to those unable to be returned safely to their own countries. The efforts of human rights NGOs are coming at the best moment, in order to use the next months in the most positive way.” – Anne-Marie Lizin, Special Representative on Guantanamo for the Parliamentary Assembly of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), and Vice-President of the Parliamentary Assembly of the OSCE.

“I urge European governments to open their doors to a small number of men who fear persecution or torture if transferred to their home countries. Such assistance is both the right thing to do, and of critical importance in our attempts to push for the immediate closure of Guantanamo Bay.” – Thomas Hammerberg, Human Rights Commissioner of the Council of Europe

“We are at a critical juncture. It is now possible to anticipate the closing of Guantanamo, the end to the US practice of executive detention, and the re-affirmation of fundamental human rights principles, including the prohibition of torture in all circumstances. But European engagement and support will be essential to get there. One step that European governments should take is to accept into their borders the small number of men at Guantanamo who cannot be repatriated safely. Guantanamo cannot be closed until these men have a country which will accept them, and where their lives and liberty are not in jeopardy.” – Manfred Nowak, UN Special Rapporteur on Torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment

Monday, November 10, 2008

Under Siege - Islam, War & The Media



Date: Saturday 15th November 2008
Time: 2.00 pm - 6.30 pm
Venue: London School of Economics and Political Science, Houghton St, Aldwych, London, WC2A 2AE


Guests include Sean Smith (Guardian), Peter Oborne (Daily Mail), Inayat Bunglawala (Muslim Council of Britain), Lauren Booth (Mail on Sunday), Nick Davies (Investigative Journalist), Moazzam Begg (Former Guantanamo Inmate), Jeremy Dear (NUJ) Eamonn McCann (Irish Journalist), and Explo Nani-Kofi (Editor of Pan-African Journal).

All welcome to attend.

For more information please contact: E-mail: info@mwaw.net / Website: http://tinyurl.com/3tavez

Sunday, November 09, 2008

British High Court invites Media to the Case of Binyam Mohamed




British High Court invites Media to assert the public right to know in the case of Guantánamo prisoner Binyam Mohamed

Reprieve (the legal action charity) and Leigh Day, who represent British resident Binyam Mohamed, note that the High Court has today written to the Press Association alerting the media to their right to challenge the Government's desire to keep matters secret in Mr. Mohamed's legal challenge to British complicity in his rendition and torture. (Original letter attached)

On November 7, the High Court wrote to the Press Association inviting all members of the media to make submissions to the Court concerning the material that is currently sealed as secret, at the request of the Government in Mr. Mohamed's case.

The Government has filed a 'Public Interest Immunity' certificate, and argued vigorously to keep materials secret that would apparently demonstrate how Mr. Mohamed was tortured in Pakistan, and then rendered by the US to Morocco for 18 months of horrific abuses. This is because exposing our ally's criminal misconduct would be extremely embarrassing to the US, and would therefore apparently harm UK-US relations.

"Our task is to represent Mr. Mohamed. It is the media's job to represent the interests of the public at large," said Reprieve director, Clive Stafford Smith. "But it is beyond my comprehension quite how the government thinks that it is 'in the public interest' to keep secret evidence that the Bush Administration committed a war crime against Mr. Mohamed by rendering him to torture."

"The High Court is taking a very proper course, allowing those concerned to articulate the case for wider disclosure in the public interest," said Richard Stein of Leigh Day. "In our work, all we have ever asked is that the evidence which exonerates Mr Mohamed and supports his case that he was kidnapped and tortured be provided to his US lawyers."

"It is bizarre that the government believes it could ever be appropriate to cover up crimes," said Stafford Smith. "This case is even more extraordinary than the BAE case, where Tony Blair intervened to stop the prosecution. Here, the government does not even want the facts to become known, and the crime – torture – is so much worse even than bribery and corruption. One might think that a law abiding nation such as the United States would want the UK to make evidence of crimes known, rather than hiding it."

Reprieve has long maintained that the entire case against Mr. Mohamed should be dropped by the US Government, and that he should be returned to the UK, as requested by the British Government in August 2007. Mr. Mohamed is a victim of "extraordinary rendition" and torture. He was initially held illegally in Pakistan for three months, which is where a British intelligence agent took questioned him; he was tsent to Morocco by the CIA on July 21, 2002, where he was tortured for 18 months; he was then rendered to the secret "Dark Prison" in Afghanistan, where his torture continued. Since September 2004, he has been held in Guantánamo Bay where, last week, the Pentagon dropped charges against him, albeit promising to refile them after the election. All the supposed 'evidence' against him is the fruit of torture, and would be inadmissible in any court other than a US Military Commissions.

For further information, please contact Richard Stein (020 7650 1240); Clive Stafford Smith (07940 347125; clivess@mac.com); Reprieve's Press Office on 020 7427 1099; or Sharon Steward (Press Office, Leigh Day, 020 7650 1319/272; ssteward@leighday.co.uk)

Note for Editors:

Reprieve, a legal action charity, uses the law to enforce the human rights of prisoners, from death row to Guantánamo Bay. Reprieve investigates, litigates and educates, working on the frontline, to provide legal support to prisoners unable to pay for it themselves. Reprieve promotes the rule of law around the world, securing each person's right to a fair trial and saving lives. Clive Stafford Smith is the founder of Reprieve and has spent 25 years working on behalf of people facing the death penalty in the USA.

Reprieve's current casework involves representing 33 prisoners in the US prison at Guantanamo Bay, working on behalf of prisoners facing the death penalty, and conducting ongoing investigations into the rendition and the secret detention of 'ghost prisoners' in the so-called 'war on terror.'

Saturday, November 08, 2008

Coalition Raids Kill 10 Afghan Civilians




Separate coalition operations have claimed ten civilian casualties in Afghanistan, a day after an air strike killed 40 in the south.

Afghan and US forces called for backup after pro-Taliban militates ambushed their convoy in Ghormach district of northwest Badghis province late on Wednesday.

The raid left at least seven civilians and 15 insurgents killed said District Chief Abdullah said.

Witnesses said that civilian casualties exceeded 30 in number, said Qari Dawlat, the head of the provincial council.

Elsewhere, three civilians including a child were killed on Wednesday when a rocket hit their house on the outskirts of the Afghan capital of Kabul, A French army statement said.

Since January, US-led operations, which rely heavily on airstrikes, have left hundreds of civilians dead, sparking resentment and impatience among Afghans over the presence of foreign troops.

Afghan President Hamid Karzai on Wednesday strongly urged US President-elect Barack Obama against irresponsible operations in the war-torn country to end the surge in deaths of innocent civilians, already bearing the burden of rampant insurgency.

Official figures suggest at least 4,000 people, more than a third of them civilians, have been killed in fighting with pro-Taliban militants this year.

The number of insurgent attacks has topped record level in 2008, since a US-led invasion ousted the Taliban regime seven years ago.

Source: www.presstv.com/detail.aspx?id=74486§ionid=351020403

Friday, November 07, 2008

Algerians In Guantanamo Challenge





Six Algerian inmates of Guantanamo Bay have begun a legal bid to be released from their detention, in the first such challenge in a US civilian court.

A federal judge in Washington is hearing arguments from both sides and will make a decision later this month.

This is the first such case since the US Supreme Court granted Guantanamo Bay detainees the right to challenge their detention in civilian courts in July.

Some 270 men are held at the naval base on suspicion of links to terrorism.

The six Algerians were arrested in Bosnia in the weeks following the 11 September 2001 attacks on New York and Washington and have been held without charge ever since.

They deny government claims that they were planning to travel to Afghanistan to fight with al-Qaeda and the Taleban against US troops.

Source: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/7714790.stm

Thursday, November 06, 2008

Obama Makes History, Now It's Time For Change




Waking up this morning was like waking up to a new era. That’s because many of us remember a time when activities were segregated by race, whether going to the movies or riding a bus.

And then yesterday, the biggest racial barrier in American politics was annihilated. By record margins, America elected Barack Obama the first African-American president of the United States.

Hope overcame fear. Ordinary citizens mobilized to change the future. This is the heart of Amnesty International. Since 1961, we’ve held out hope for those enduring injustice, when all hope was lost. And through the power of your collective actions, hundreds of thousands now enjoy greater freedom and a safer, more just world.

A record 131 million people cast their vote and exercised one of the most fundamental of human rights. But as Barack Obama said last night,

"This victory alone is not the change we seek--it is only the chance for us to make that change. And that cannot happen if we go back to the way things were. It cannot happen without you."

We have a great opportunity. The world faces overwhelming human rights crises. But with your help, we can turn this country’s policies on human rights back in the direction of alleviating, and not contributing, to these crises.

President-elect Obama has promised to restore the rule of law, to repair America’s damaged perception in the world, to close Guantánamo, and to renounce torture.

These promises bring hope. In the coming days, we will need you to help make those promises a reality.

Source: www.amnestyusa.org

Wednesday, November 05, 2008

Not the Way Forward
The UK's Dangerous Reliance on Diplomatic Assurances



Summary

In recent years the British government has been trying to deport a number of terrorism and national security suspects to countries in which they face a real risk of torture and other ill-treatment. Because the international ban on torture is absolute and the transfer of any person to a risk of such abuse is therefore illegal, the British government has secured diplomatic assurances from the states to which it is trying to deport the persons that they will not be subjected to mistreatment once they are returned. These assurances, the government claims, are sufficient to reduce or even eliminate the risk of abuse.

Not only does the government of the United Kingdom promote the use of such assurances at home, it has also expended a great deal of time and energy at the regional and international levels attempting to legitimize the use of diplomatic assurances against torture. In recent years, British officials have engaged in vigorous lobbying at the European Union, the Council of Europe, and the United Nations to promote acceptance of diplomatic assurances as a counterterrorism tool.

But the fact is that these assurances do not work. In countries where torture is a serious problem, mere diplomatic promises are insufficient to prevent torture. No matter how detailed such agreements are, they cannot eliminate the very real risk faced by people returned to countries that practice such clandestine, brutal abuse.

Because diplomatic assurances are unenforceable promises, a country that breaches them is unlikely to experience any serious consequences if the assurances are violated. In many instances, moreover, it is practically impossible to ascertain whether a breach has occurred. Because torture is carried out in secret, and victims often do not complain for fear of reprisals against them or their families, the practice is hard to investigate, and easy to deny. Notably, neither the sending state nor the receiving state has any incentive to carry out such investigations seriously. To do so might not only reveal human rights violations, but might complicate efforts to rely on assurances in the future.

These issues are central to two important appeals facing the House of Lords this month. In RB and U v. Secretary of State for the Home Department and Secretary of State for the Home Department v. OO (Othman) —cases that will be heard on October 22 and October 28, respectively—the House of Lords will be examining the value of diplomatic assurances against torture in assessing whether terrorism suspects should be deported to their home states. The British government concedes that, but for the assurances, the deportees would be at risk of torture; it is thus the effectiveness of the assurances that lies at the heart of the appeals.

The potential deportees in the RB and U case are Algerian, and the diplomatic assurances at issue in the case were negotiated individually, for each person. Omar Othman (a.k.a. Abu Qatada), the respondent in the Othman case, is a Jordanian national and radical Muslim cleric accused of ties to al-Qaeda. The assurances in his case come in the form of a broad "memorandum of understanding" between the United Kingdom and Jordan that purports to cover any Jordanian national deported back to that country.

Notably, both cases involve countries in which the torture and other abuse of national security suspects have been well-documented.

If the two Algerians are returned to Algeria, they will most likely be detained by the notorious Department for Information and Security (DRS), whose operatives have been accused of—but never held accountable for—abuses such as beatings, electric shock torture, suspending prisoners from the ceiling, and forcing them to ingest chemicals. If sent to Jordan, Othman would likely be handed over to the General Intelligence Department (GID), which has colluded with the US government in renditions to torture, obstructed access to prisons by the International Committee of the Red Cross, and been accused of committing serious abuses—such as brutal beatings and threats of rape—with virtual impunity.

These two pending appeals represent the first time that the House of Lords has grappled with the issue of diplomatic assurances. In the Court of Appeal, the lower court that previously heard the two cases, the record has been mixed. The Court of Appeal ruled in favor of allowing the Algerians to be deported, but it barred 3 Human Rights Watch October 2008 Othman's return, concluding that evidence extracted under torture from others in GID custody would likely be used in Othman's trial in Jordan. In a related ruling, involving two alleged members of the Libyan Islamic Fighting Group, the Court of Appeal held in April 2008 that the men would be at risk of torture and of being denied a fair trial if returned to Libya.

The British courts are the last domestic bulwark against the grave violations that are likely to occur if people are sent back to abusive countries in reliance on assurances.

At the regional level, the European Court of Human Rights has stood firm against assurances as sought by the UK and other governments: in a string of 2008 rulings concluding that diplomatic assurances are unreliable, the European Court dealt a hard blow to the UK government's persistent efforts to enshrine these agreements in law and practice. The Court ruled in key cases that the use of diplomatic assurances for returns to countries such as Tunisia, Uzbekistan, and Turkmenistan would signal a regression in rights protection.

While continuing to press its position in the courts, the UK government has also embarked on aggressive political lobbying efforts. The UK has asserted in various EU fora, for example, that diplomatic assurances, negotiated outside the multilateral human rights treaty framework, can provide an "effective way forward" for states seeking to expel persons who pose a threat to national security. And it has called any criticism of its diplomatic assurances policy "simply wrong," arguing that the policy is designed to comply with its human rights obligations, not to avoid them.

To date, the UK government’s efforts have been relatively unsuccessful. Its reliance on diplomatic assurances has been criticized by the United Nations, rebuffed at the Council of Europe, and denounced within the British parliament. Opposition by numerous international actors and major defeats in the courts indicate that a critical mass of experts and authorities view the assurances negotiated by the UK government as an ineffective safeguard against torture. There are broader moral, political, and national security reasons to be concerned about the UK’s promotion of diplomatic assurances against torture.

The British government promotes itself as a leader in the global effort to eradicate torture, through actions such as its early ratification of the Optional Protocol to the United Nations Convention against Torture and its advocacy that other governments do the same. But the government’s relentless campaign to see "deportation with assurances" accepted throughout Europe reflects a more ambivalent attitude toward torture. That ambivalence sends the wrong message at a time when torture protection has been under assault in many parts of the world.

The British government’s "deportation with assurances" policy is also counterproductive at home. Since the July 2005 attacks on London, preventing radicalization and recruitment has been at the heart of the UK's counterterrorism strategy. Whatever the alleged benefit of counterterrorism measures like diplomatic assurances, in violating human rights in principle and practice it is clear they undermine the UK’s moral legitimacy at home and abroad, damaging its ability to win the battle of ideas that is central to long-term success in combating terrorism.

Recommendations

To the Government of the United Kingdom:

- Reaffirm the absolute nature of the obligation under international law not to expel, return, extradite, or otherwise transfer any person to a country or place where there are substantial grounds for believing that he or she would be in danger of being subjected to torture or cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.

- Halt immediately all efforts to remove foreign terrorism and national security suspects at risk of torture and ill-treatment on return in reliance on "diplomatic assurances" from countries with established records of practicing such abuse, regardless of whether these unenforceable pledges are formalized in "memoranda of understanding."

- Drop immediately the efforts to have the Algerians and Jordanian whose cases are pending in the House of Lords deported to their home countries in reliance on assurances from their respective governments against torture and prohibited ill-treatment on return.

- Acknowledge publicly that counterterrorism measures that violate fundamental rights—such as measures that violate the ban on torture and returns to risk of torture—can alienate affected communities and hinder government efforts to stem radicalization and terrorist recruitment.

- Stop seeking to enshrine in international and regional law and practice the use of diplomatic assurances against torture and prohibited ill-treatment to facilitate the transfer of foreign terrorism suspects to places where they are at risk of such abuse.

- Withdraw the intervention in the European Court of Human Rights case Ramzy v. Netherlands and halt all efforts to weaken the absolute ban on returns to risk of torture and prohibited ill-treatment.

Source: www.sacc.org.uk/index.php?option=content&task=view&id=629&catid=46

Tuesday, November 04, 2008

Silence on War Crimes



Last week, Bill Kovach, former Washington Bureau Chief of the New York Times and the founding chairman of the Committee of Concerned Journalists, blasted the U.S. media for its failure to ask tough questions of both presidential candidates regarding their opinions of the Bush administration’s unprecedented adherence to the controversial “unitary executive theory” of government.

The theory, which became prominent in the Reagan administration, but has peppered U.S. history, contends that, when he wishes, the president is entitled to act unilaterally, without interference from Congress or the judiciary. This is in direct contravention of the separation of powers on which the United States was founded, and critics have long contended that it is nothing less than an attempt by the executive to seize the dictatorial powers that the Constitution was designed to prevent.

Under the cover of the wartime powers granted in the wake of the 9/11 attacks, and with encouragement from lawyers including, in particular, Vice President Dick Cheney’s chief of staff (and former legal counsel) David Addington, President Bush has pursued the theory relentlessly, issuing a record number of “signing statements” to laws passed by Congress, designed to prevent the nation’s politicians from interfering in the executive’s quest for unchecked power.

He has also approved a number of secret memos, which, in conjunction with various “signing statements,” have authorized what numerous critics of the administration regard as war crimes. These include detaining prisoners seized in the “war on terror” as “illegal enemy combatants” and holding them without charge or trial, dismissing the protections of the Geneva Conventions, redefining torture and approving its use by the U.S. military and the CIA, and authorizing “extraordinary rendition” and the use of secret prisons.

As if to prove what he was saying, Bill Kovach’s speech to a meeting of international journalists in Washington, D.C., went unreported in the U.S. media (and I located it only on the website of a Jamaican newspaper). And yet in many ways Kovach could have gone further, and could also have asked why the presidential candidates themselves have been silent about the current administration’s crimes.

The answer, sadly, is that the executive’s thirst for unfettered executive power is not a priority for voters, even when it spills out of foreign wars and offshore prisons and onto the U.S. mainland. Too many Americans, it seems, are unconcerned or unaware that the president can even hold U.S. citizens and legal residents as “enemy combatants” and can imprison them indefinitely on the U.S. mainland without charge or trial, as the cases of Jose Padilla and Ali al-Marri reveal in horrific detail.

As a result, gross abuses of power in the name of the “war on terror,” and the dictatorial theory that underpins them, have largely been ignored on the campaign trail.

Over the past two years, Senator Barack Obama repeatedly declared his support for habeas corpus, a cornerstone of American law, inherited from the English, which prohibits arbitrary imprisonment and grants all prisoners the right to know why they are being held. He defended habeas corpus while resisting the Military Commissions Act of 2006, a poisonous piece of legislation, which not only stripped the Guantánamo prisoners of their habeas rights, but also reinforced the president’s right to seize and detain indefinitely anyone he regarded as an “illegal enemy combatant,” and attempted to grant immunity to the president and his minions for any actions that might one day be regarded as war crimes.

Senator Obama has also stated that he will “reject torture without exception,” and last August delivered a speech in which, touching on all the administration’s law-shredding excesses, he declared,

As President, I will close Guantánamo, reject the Military Commissions Act, and adhere to the Geneva Conventions. Our Constitution and our Uniform Code of Military Justice provide a framework for dealing with the terrorists … The separation of powers works. Our Constitution works. We will again set an example to the world that the law is not subject to the whims of stubborn rulers, and that justice is not arbitrary.

In June this year, when the Supreme Court (which had granted the Guantánamo prisoners statutory habeas corpus rights in June 2004) rejected the habeas-stripping provisions of the Military Commissions Act and its predecessor, the Detainee Treatment Act of 2005, and ruled that the prisoners’ habeas corpus rights were constitutional, Senator Obama was swift to congratulate the justices, calling the ruling “an important step toward reestablishing our credibility as a nation committed to the rule of law, and rejecting a false choice between fighting terrorism and respecting habeas corpus.”

Since then, however, the Obama campaign has gone silent on executive power and the administration’s war crimes, and Senator Obama has only spoken out publicly on one occasion in September, in response to an assertion by Sarah Palin, at the Republican conference, that “Al-Qaeda terrorists still plot to inflict catastrophic harm on America and he's worried that someone won't read them their rights.”

Senator Obama responded by telling supporters in Michigan that habeas corpus was “the foundation of Anglo-American law,” which “says very simply: If the government grabs you, then you have the right to at least ask, ‘Why was I grabbed?’ And say, ‘Maybe you've got the wrong person.’” He explained that it was an essential safeguard, “because we don't always have the right person. We may think it's Mohammed the terrorist, but it might be Mohammed the cab driver. You might think it's Barack the bomb-thrower, but it might be Barack the guy running for president.” His conclusion drove the argument back to where it should have been, but it has sadly not been repeated since: “Don't mock the Constitution. Don't make fun of it. Don't suggest that it's not American to abide by what the founding fathers set up. It's worked pretty well for over 200 years.”

Another reason for disappointment is that, by refusing to raise these issues, Senator Obama has allowed John McCain to comfortably maintain the Republicans’ “traditional” role as protectors of national security, without having the basis of that assumption challenged, and has also failed to exploit Senator McCain’s shameful hypocrisy, as he has drifted to the right to appeal to the Republican base.

Even before the campaign became all-consuming, Senator McCain (an outspoken opponent of torture, as the result of his own experiences in Vietnam) had a spotty record on the abuse of executive power — and even on the prevention of torture by U.S. forces. Although he attempted to introduce a ban on torture by all U.S. personnel in the Detainee Treatment Act, he allowed himself to be bullied by Dick Cheney into excluding the CIA from the act’s provisions, and the following year he willingly endorsed the Military Commissions Act.

This year, however, Senator McCain’s flight from his own convictions has accelerated alarmingly. In February, he conveniently shelved his lifelong opposition to torture by voting against a bill banning the use of torture by the CIA, and after the Supreme Court’s habeas ruling in June, he declared that it was “one of the worst decisions in the history of this country,” even though, in 2005, he had told NBC’s Meet the Press that the problem with Guantánamo was that the prisoners continued to be held without “any adjudication of their cases.”

However, the main reasons for being disappointed that the crimes of a rogue administration have barely been mentioned as the election approaches are these: firstly, that I can only wonder, in spite of Senator Obama’s fine words, whether the Democrats in general, who famously ruled impeachment “off the table” when they gained a political majority two years ago, would in fact be unwilling to cede power if it was theirs to wield; and secondly (and most significantly), because it allows those responsible for the long list of egregious crimes that have soiled America’s name to leave office unchallenged. Donald Rumsfeld may be long gone, and George W. Bush nothing more than a shadow, but in the office of the vice president, Dick Cheney and David Addington, the architects of this unprecedented assault on the Constitution, the Bill of Rights, the UN Convention Against Torture, the War Crimes Act and the Geneva Conventions have been allowed to maintain their dangerous delusions, nurtured through decades of support for executive overreach in the administrations of Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan, and George H. W. Bush.

As law professor Scott Horton explained to the New Yorker’s Jane Mayer for an in-depth analysis of Addington in 2006, the mission of the vice president’s closest adviser “and a small group of administration lawyers who share his views” has been to “overturn two centuries of jurisprudence defining the limits of the executive branch. They’ve made war a matter of dictatorial power.”

In conclusion, then, I can only note that it’s a sad indictment of a country’s state of mind when the ruling administration has been devoted to dictatorial powers and war crimes, but an election campaign comes and goes as though it had never happened.

Source: www.informationclearinghouse.info/article21147.htm

Monday, November 03, 2008

A Vigil Outside the American Embassy on Election Day - Liberty & Justice for All...




On the day Americans vote for a new president, a vigil will be held outside the American embassy:

- To call on the new government to make illegal wars, torture, extraordinary rendition, and the flagrant and shameless abuse of human rights a thing of the past, and to commit to upholding human rights and peaceful, legitimate solutions to domestic and foreign issues.

- To call on the new government to act with urgency to free Binyam Mohamed, the London resident held at Guantánamo Bay. Binyam Mohamed has been held in US custody for six years without trial. The current administration has presided over a long, shameful series of cruel actions against him.

On the 20th of October, the US military dropped all charges against Binyam in his proposed trial by Military Commission at Guantánamo Bay. However, this has not signalled an end to his suffering.

As Clive Stafford Smith, Director of legal charity Reprieve, said, "Far from being a victory for Mr. Mohamed in his long-running struggle for justice, this is more of the same farce that is Guantánamo. The military has informed us that they plan to charge him again within a month, after the election."

We call on the new American government to bring this disgraceful episode in its nation's history to an end, by freeing Binyam Mohamed immediately.

- To call on the American people to hold their politicians to the commitments to close Guantanamo Bay down which were made during campaigning. Despite declarations from the current administration that it has wished to see the closure of this shameful prison, the seventh anniversary of it's opening is nearly upon us. We urge the American people to hold their new President to account over promises made to close the prison down if elected.

Vigil: 6pm to 8pm
Outside the US Embassy, Grosvenor Square, Mayfair, W1A 1AE
With speakers and a candlelight vigil


Organised by the London Guantánamo Campaign. Supported by CAMPACC, Peace Strike, Brighton Against Guantánamo, Peace and Justice in East London and Eastbourne for Peace and Justice

Notes to Editors

Binyam Mohamed was born in Ethiopia in 1978 and came to Britain in 1994, where he lived for seven years, sought political asylum, and was given leave to remain.
In 2002 he was kidnapped while in Pakistan, and handed over to the CIA who illegally "rendered" him to Morocco. After 18 months of interrogation under torture, he was "rendered" again to an underground prison in Kabul, before finally being taken to Guantánamo Bay in September 2004, where he has been held without trial ever since.

Guantánamo Bay opened on the 11th of January, 2001.

The London Guantánamo Campaign campaigns for justice for all prisoners at Guantánamo bay, for the closure of this and other secret prisons, and for an end to the practice of extraordinary rendition.

Contact:
london.gtmo@googlemail.com / www.guantanamo.org.uk / Christine – 07737 783159

Sunday, November 02, 2008

PCHR Welcomes Release Of 18 Political Prisoners In Gaza




The Palestinian Centre for Human Rights (PCHR) welcomes the decision taken by the Government in Gaza on Thursday, 30 October, to release eighteen political prisoners, including a number of personnel from the Fatah movement. PCHR calls upon the government in Ramallah to release all political prisoners detained by the Palestinian security services, and for an immediate end to all politically motivated arrests in the Occupied Palestinian Territory (OPT)

The two parties involved in this ongoing political conflict (Hamas and Fatah) have both carried out politically motivated arrests. The security services in the Gaza Strip have arrested a number of leaders of the Fatah movement, including district secretaries, as well as Municipal Governors. In the West Bank , Palestinian security services have arrested a number of Hamas leaders and activists.

PCHR reiterates its condemnation of all politically motivated arrests and:

1) Reminds both sides that that politically motivated arrests constitute a violation of human rights under relevant international human rights instruments, and are also prohibited under the Palestinian Basic Law.

2) Reminds both sides of the Palestinian High Court decision of 20 February 1999, stating that political arrests are illegal, and calls upon all executive parties to respect the High Court decision and refrain from conducting illegal political arrests.

3) Calls upon the two governments in Ramallah and Gaza to put an immediate end to political arrests, and abstain from any further arrests or detentions of this nature.

For more information please call PCHR office in Gaza , Gaza Strip, on +972 8 2824776 - 2825893

PCHR, 29 Omer El Mukhtar St., El Remal, PO Box 1328 Gaza, Gaza Strip. E-mail: pchr@pchrgaza.org
, Webpage http://www.pchrgaza.org/

Saturday, November 01, 2008

An Ethical Scottish Census In 2011





Eleven US soldiers have been convicted and five officers disciplined for abusing prisoners at Abu Ghraib. Around half of the interrogators and analysts working at Abu Ghraib were civilians employed by CACI. No private contractor or employee of a contractor has been convicted. No one has been charged with torture. Read more here: http://www.sacc.org.uk/census/#facts

Supporters include: John Pilger, Tony Benn, Bruce Kent, Iain Banks, Alasdair Gray and Tom Leonard.

Your support is welcome whether or not you live in Scotland

The petition:

To: The Scottish Government

We, the undersigned, are gravely concerned that CACI Ltd, a wholly-owned UK subsidiary of a company that has been involved in interrogating prisoners at Abu Ghraib Prison in Iraq, has been awarded a Scottish Census 2011 contract for census printing and data capture services (Sunday Herald, 27th July 2008).

We think that it is wrong to give millions of pounds of taxpayers' money to a subsidiary of a firm that helped run Abu Ghraib, where prisoners were systematically subjected to appalling abuse.

We also think that it is wrong to ask Scots to give personal information to a company whose parent company is closely linked to the US military and intelligence communities.

We think that the Scottish Government's decision to work with CACI is in conflict with its opposition to the war in Iraq and with its duty to uphold human rights. And we fear that the Scottish Government's relationship with CACI may in future prevent it speaking out about concerns over the activities of CACI and other private contractors in war zones around the world.

We the undersigned call on the Scottish Government to cancel the contract awarded to CACI Ltd and to take steps to ensure that the Scottish people can have confidence in the ethical probity of the 2011 Census.

Sign here: www.sacc.org.uk/census/petition_1.php
Donate An Eid Gift This Eid




Assalaamu Alaikum

Why not put a smile on the face of those children whose fathers are
imprisoned by donating a gift or gifts to HHUGS? Some children will even be spending Eid without their mothers. It doesnt take much effort. When you're out buying gifts for your own kids or loved ones, buy an extra gift and earn extra reward inshallah. And remember all the good deeds performed in the first 10 days of Dhul Hijjah will be multiplied.

"Who is he that will lend a goodly loan so that He may multiply it to him many times? And it is Allah that decreases or increases (your provisions), and unto Him you shall return." 2:245 Holy Quran.

If you can donate a gift then please contact HHUGS on volunteers@hhugs. org.uk or alternatively call the HHUGS line on: 07931833980. Deadline is Friday 12th December.

If you are unable to donate a gift then please donate money so HHUGS can buy these gifts for the children.

To donate online go to: www.hhugs.org.uk/index.php?state=10&cat=3

To donate at a bank:
Account Name: Hhugs
Bank: Lloyds TSB
Account Number: 00418137
Sort code: 30-94-77

May Allah reward you for all your efforts and multiply them tenfold.

As we spend Eid with our loved ones, please take time out to make a du'aa for these families to be united with their loved ones. It costs nothing but means so much.

Jazaak Allah Khair
Wassalaam