Archive for September 12th, 2006

Physicians for Human Rights calls on Congress to reject bills that protect torture and abuse

In a new press release:

PHR CALLS ON CONGRESS TO REJECT WHITE HOUSE MILITARY COMMISSIONS BILL AND AMENDMENTS TO WAR CRIMES ACT; BUSH ADMINISTRATION SEEKING TO LEGALIZE TORTURE BY CIA AND GRANT IMMUNITY FOR ABUSIVE INTERROGATIONS

As the Bush Administration continues to pressure Congress to pass the President’s version of the Military Commissions Bill, Physicians for Human Rights (PHR) called today on the House and Senate to reject the legislation. PHR condemned the President’s proposal to allow evidence obtained through coercive tactics that amount to torture in detainee trials. PHR called on Congress, particularly Senate leadership, to pass a Military Commission Bill that reaffirms the United States’ adherence to the Geneva Conventions, the UN Convention Against Torture, and the McCain Amendment, which establishes an absolute ban on cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment of all detainees in US custody or control by any US personnel.

“When Congress passed the McCain Amendment over eight months ago,” said Leonard Rubenstein, Executive Director of PHR, “it did so over the strenuous objection of the White House, which first sought to defeat it and then sought to exempt the CIA from its reach. Now the Administration is trying out a new tactic to achieve the same ends and Congress must again reject White House efforts to undermine the US commitment against torture and abuse.”

Congressional leadership must affirm that testimony obtained through coercion, as is the case in the Uniform Code of Military Justice, is not admissible in military commissions, PHR said. The Senate also should accept no amendment to the War Crimes Act that provides retroactive immunity for military and intelligence personnel who have engaged in and authorized torture and cruel, inhuman, and degrading treatment, in violation of the Geneva Conventions, particularly Common Article 3.

“Not only does the President want Congressional approval to use tactics that are currently illegal; he wants to ensure that the officials who authorized the use of these tactics five years ago will not be held to account,” said Rubenstein. “The President’s proposal undercuts the Pentagon’s decision last week to hold its personnel to a standard of conduct that is in keeping with the best traditions of the US military.”

The White House’s proposal would actually encourage Central Intelligence Agency interrogators to use abusive methods that have long been prohibited by US law and are now explicitly banned from military interrogations by the new Army Field Manual governing the treatment of detainees, said PHR. On one hand, the President’s bill would give military judges broad discretion to hear evidence produced through torture or coercion, giving CIA interrogators, who are not bound by the Army Field Manual, an incentive to use harsh and otherwise illegal tactics. The White House bill deletes the term ‘degrading’ from the legal term ‘cruel, inhuman and degrading’ altogether.

“Speaking as a retired officer in the US Army, it is deeply dismaying to see the Commander in Chief seek authorization for a CIA interrogation regime that violates the oath our military service members take to uphold the Geneva Conventions and Uniform Code of Military Justice,” stated Brigadier General Stephen Xenakis, MD, an advisor to PHR. “But speaking as an American citizen, the fact that the President would also seek immunity for those who have committed abuses is an affront to his oath to defend the Constitution.”

“The President’s ‘no holds barred’ approach to detainee treatment makes our country less secure and would instantly reverse over half a century of essential military doctrine,” Xenakis added, “When releasing the Army Field Manual last week, Lt. General Kimmons, the Deputy Army Chief of Staff for Intelligence, has clearly stated that abusive interrogations do not yield results and undermine the professionalism of our armed forces. It is time for the President to do the same.”

While PHR remains concerned about certain tactics authorized by the Army Field Manual and is seeking further clarity on the permissibility of others, such as sleep deprivation, the use of isolation, and sensory overload, the group has praised the Pentagon’s revised Army Field Manual for its explicit adoption of the Geneva Conventions and the McCain Amendment.

Everyone concerned with preserving the shreds of civilization remaining in our country should join PHR in this call. Legalization of torture and abuse would constitute a major step along the road to barbarism. A society not based on human decency has to right to call itself civilized.

Add comment September 12th, 2006

More on crisis at CDC

Revere at Effect Measure uses a new Atlanta Journal Constitution article on the situation at CDC as an opportunity to remind us of the extent of the damage being imposed upon this critical agency.

We all rely upon the CDC to be competent in its essential mission of preventing and controlling disease outbreaks. It has lost so much of its best expertise that its ability to conduct its mission is put at risk. It appears that “an unprecedented letter to CDC Director Julie Gerberding [was sent last December] from five of the last six of her predecessors.”

“We have all gone through periods of change and recognize the difficulties attendant to change. However, we are concerned about the previous and impending losses of highly qualified and motivated staff,” wrote former CDC directors Dr. William Foege, Dr. James Mason, Dr. David Satcher, Dr. Jeffrey Koplan and Sencer.

As Revere expresses his conclusions:

We’ve worked with CDC scientific colleagues for decades and the people we worked with used to be some of the best in the business. The agency is now full of second and third raters and its competency in even simple programmatic matters, like designing a data collection system, is dreadful. They can’t even do paperwork right. And if you speak out about your concerns, the job security isn’t that good either. Like others, we watch in horror as the agency is being systematically destroyed just at the point in history when we need it most.

Add comment September 12th, 2006

Music: Son House

One of my great joys is the various forms of traditional and folk music. Thanks to YouTube, it is easy to embed selected videos. I intend to do this more often. As an introduction, here is the great bluesman Son House playing I Can’t Go Back No More.

Add comment September 12th, 2006

Keith Olbermann on Bush and 9/11

The Olbermann Special Comment On Bush isthe speech that no one running for office will ever make. Crooks & Liars has the video and a transcript.

Add comment September 12th, 2006


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