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Bush, Other Top Officials Should Face Torture Probes, Says Amnesty; Urges Arrests if Warranted
Oneworld ^ | 5/26/2004 | Abid Aslam

Posted on 05/27/2005 8:48:06 AM PDT by minus_273

WASHINGTON, D.C., May 26 (OneWorld) - Rights watchdog Amnesty International urged foreign governments Wednesday to investigate and prosecute President George W. Bush much as they once did former Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet.

''If the United States permits the architects of torture policy to get off scot-free, then other nations should step into the breach,'' William Schulz, executive director of Amnesty International USA, said in a statement launching Amnesty's annual report.

Bush is among a dozen former or current U.S. officials who should be probed by foreign governments because Washington has failed to conduct ''a genuinely independent and comprehensive investigation'' of torture allegations against U.S. troops, commanders, and their civilian overseers, Schulz said.

Others on the Amnesty list of potential targets for investigation and prosecution include Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, Attorney General Alberto Gonzales, and former Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) chief George Tenet.

''If the U.S. government continues to shirk its responsibility, Amnesty International calls on foreign governments to uphold their obligations under international law by investigating all senior U.S. officials involved in the torture scandal,'' Schulz said.

''If those investigations support prosecution, the governments should arrest any official who enters their territory and begin legal proceedings against them,'' he added. ''The apparent high-level architects of torture should think twice before planning their next vacation to places like Acapulco or the French Riviera because they may find themselves under arrest as Augusto Pinochet famously did in London in 1998.''

Torture and other grave breaches of the Geneva Conventions amount to crimes against humanity and therefore all states have a responsibility to investigate and prosecute people responsible for them, Amnesty said in its 308-page report.

The U.S. government had yet to respond to the Amnesty report Wednesday but Rumsfeld and others on the Amnesty list have strongly denied that they condoned torture or did anything wrong.

Military officials and administration spokespersons have repeatedly and strenuously denied any policy promoting or tolerating torture and have said that allegations of abuses have resulted in dozens of investigations and a number of prosecutions and disciplinary actions.

Some 125 such cases have been filed, Amnesty acknowledged, but it said they have involved only soldiers and their superiors in the field and have yet to trace lines of responsibility back to Washington. Characterizing this as a refusal to investigate, Schulz said it amounted, in effect, to ''tolerance'' for torture and mistreatment and warned that it would destroy U.S. credibility when Washington assails human rights violations by other governments, like those in Syria or Egypt.

''It is the height of hypocrisy for the U.S. government itself to use the very torture techniques that it routinely condemns in other countries,'' Schulz said. ''When the U.S. government then calls upon foreign leaders to bring to justice those who commit or authorize human rights violations in their own countries, why should those foreign leaders listen?''

Amnesty's demand dovetails with a lawsuit by Human Rights First and the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) alleging that Rumsfeld and others authorized torture-like interrogation techniques by U.S. troops at U.S bases in Afghanistan, Cuba, and Iraq.

It also buttresses a campaign by non-governmental organizations demanding a full-scale independent probe of the prisoner abuse scandals modeled on the 9/11 Commission. That effort has brought together rights advocates of a liberal as well as conservative stripe, former Republican lawmakers, and retired military officers.

The call for foreign governments to take action also coincided with the release by the ACLU Wednesday of documents that it said revealed that prisoners at the U.S. base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, complained that guards mistreated the Koran and in one incident, flushed a copy of the Muslim holy book down a toilet.

The ACLU said it obtained the documents under court order from the Federal Bureau of Investigation and that they also provided accounts of beatings, sexual assaults, and hunger strikes.

The revelations follow Newsweek's recent retraction of a report saying that government investigators had corroborated almost identical incidents involving the Koran. The magazine ultimately withdrew its story saying a confidential government source no longer could be confirmed.

While Schulz singled out the United States as what he called ''a leading purveyor and practitioner'' of torture, Amnesty's report surveyed 149 countries and found that for the most part, 2004 had been a bleak year for human rights everywhere.

Amnesty also highlighted:

-- Darfur, where it said the Sudanese government generated a human rights catastrophe and the international community did too little too late to address the crisis, betraying hundreds of thousands of people.

-- Haiti, where it said individuals responsible for serious human rights violations were allowed to regain positions of power.

-- The eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, where it bemoaned the lack of an effective response to the systematic rape of tens of thousands of women, children, and babies.

-- Afghanistan, which it said slipped into a downward spiral of lawlessness and instability despite the holding of elections.

-- Reports that Russian soldiers had tortured, raped, and sexually abused Chechen women with impunity.

-- Zimbabwe, where it said the government manipulated food shortages for political reasons.

''The betrayal of human rights by governments was accompanied by increasingly horrific acts of terrorism as armed groups stooped to new levels of brutality,'' Amnesty added.


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: ai; amnesty; bush; dupe; eu; gitmo; icc; search; yesterday
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and you ask why we dont join the international criminal court.
1 posted on 05/27/2005 8:48:07 AM PDT by minus_273
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To: minus_273

How many divisions does Amnesty International have?


2 posted on 05/27/2005 8:49:56 AM PDT by glock rocks (1-800-marrow2)
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To: Thud

ping


3 posted on 05/27/2005 8:50:09 AM PDT by Dark Wing
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To: minus_273

Yeah, and I've got a probe for Amnesty International right here.


4 posted on 05/27/2005 8:50:49 AM PDT by VRWCmember
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To: glock rocks
How many divisions does Amnesty International have?

They better have a lot if they try to take our President.

5 posted on 05/27/2005 8:52:03 AM PDT by KittyKares
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To: minus_273

Can anyone look to see if they ever asked for an investigation into Saddam's torture and rape roms?


6 posted on 05/27/2005 8:52:28 AM PDT by Mr. K (some days even my lucky rocketship underpants don't help)
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To: minus_273

This is why the people in the U.S. don't give a DAMN about what Amnesty International or any other such organizations say. They are not important and their reports mean nothing. The only ones who care are people who hate this country and the Leftists!


7 posted on 05/27/2005 8:52:54 AM PDT by areafiftyone (Politicians Are Like Diapers, Both Need To Be Changed Often And For The Same Reason!)
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To: minus_273
While Schulz singled out the United States as what he called ''a leading purveyor and practitioner'' of torture, Amnesty's report surveyed 149 countries and found that for the most part, 2004 had been a bleak year for human rights everywhere.

Do you think that Mr. Schulz ever wonders why GWB doesn't have him arrested & held without trial for making these unsubtantiated claims? I mean, if Bush is truly as bad as this guy claims, how is it the Mr. Schulz is allowed to run free like a sane person?

8 posted on 05/27/2005 8:53:14 AM PDT by Tallguy
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To: minus_273

Did somebody fail to mention that the exec. director of AI is a "moooooslim" (woman, no less) ???


9 posted on 05/27/2005 8:53:19 AM PDT by xcamel (Deep Red, stuck in a "bleu" state.)
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To: minus_273

Methinks "Amnesty International" has finally "jumped the shark".


10 posted on 05/27/2005 8:54:34 AM PDT by Wonder Warthog (The Hog of Steel)
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To: minus_273

11 posted on 05/27/2005 8:54:37 AM PDT by al baby
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To: minus_273

AI, the terrorist group, speaks up!


12 posted on 05/27/2005 8:55:19 AM PDT by TheDon (Euthanasia is an atrocity.)
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We should picket Amnesty because they support the idea of using "torture probes"...what a barbaric thing to say.


13 posted on 05/27/2005 8:56:01 AM PDT by Crimson Elephant
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To: minus_273
What a Surprise.
14 posted on 05/27/2005 8:56:38 AM PDT by Maceman (The Qur'an is Qur'ap.)
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To: minus_273

The expression "You and what army?" springs to mind.


15 posted on 05/27/2005 8:57:49 AM PDT by Restorer
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To: VRWCmember
"Yeah, and I've got a probe for Amnesty International right here."

And I have a happy helpful suggestion where AI can stick that probe!

16 posted on 05/27/2005 9:00:03 AM PDT by Enterprise (Coming soon from Newsweek: "Fallujah - we had to destroy it in order to save it.")
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To: minus_273

Dubya and the others accused ought to fight back hard against Amnesty. Sheesh, what do we have the IRS for?


17 posted on 05/27/2005 9:00:04 AM PDT by Graymatter
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To: minus_273

I'm still waiting for clintoon to face a torture probe.


18 posted on 05/27/2005 9:00:07 AM PDT by lilylangtree (Veni, Vidi, Vici)
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To: minus_273

This is it! This has legs! Bush is toast! /DU mode.
Some of the Lib sites said something big was coming . I bet this was it. YAWN.


19 posted on 05/27/2005 9:06:31 AM PDT by techcor (DUmmy screed: "To insanity, and beyond!")
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To: minus_273

"Gulag"????

And when and where have did Amnesty ever have a major public news conference regarding the real gulags in North Korea and China? Never and no where.

We need a President who would have, yesterday, had such a news conference and demanded such an answer from Amnesty and exposed them in front of the press for the sham organization that they are - using "human rights" as a foil for a Marxist political agenda against the United States.


20 posted on 05/27/2005 9:09:02 AM PDT by Wuli (The democratic basis of the constitution is "we the people" not "we the court".)
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