Posts filed under 'Film'

Amnesty to release film of US torture techniques simulated by an actor

An article I missed in the September 10 Independent reports on an Amnesty International film — Waiting For The Guards — to be released next month in which a dancer illustrates the positions American captives have been forced to adopt as “stress positions”:

Amnesty film shows agony of US detention techniques
By Terri Judd

Forced on to the balls of his feet, bent double with his hands handcuffed behind his back, the near-naked man shook violently. From beneath the hood, muted moans were audible. It seemed obscene to stare at this apparently frail, vulnerable man, caught in a stress position reminiscent of the images of Iraqi prisoners being interrogated by US soldiers at Baghdad’s Abu Ghraib prison. Yet this was not torture. It was art.

In an attempt to draw attention to human rights abuses, Amnesty International has filmed a dancer in the positions captives have been forced to adopt by US troops. The resulting film makes shocking viewing. During a break in filming, Jiva Parthipan, a Sri Lankan performance artist, appeared relieved as he rubbed his limbs, which were aching after just a couple of minutes in a position that suspects in President George Bush’s “war on terror” are expected to endure for hours.

The star of the Amnesty International film, which is being released online next month to highlight the agony of such interrogation techniques, said he found the experience painful, both physically and psychologically. In secret jails across the world, Amnesty insists, captives in the fight against terrorism are expected to maintain these poses. They are not considered torture, simply “enhanced interrogation techniques”. Alfred McCoy, a professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, argued recently that the photographs from Abu Ghraib reflected standard CIA torture techniques of ” stress positions, sensory deprivation, and sexual humiliation”.

In August, President Bush issued an order decreeing that Article 3 of the Third Geneva Convention – which prohibits the humiliating or degrading treatment of prisoners of war – should apply to the CIA’s detention and interrogation programme. But Amnesty believes the order does not go far enough in specifying what constitutes degrading treatment.

It is calling for an end to all secret detentions, as well as for detainees to be given access to lawyers, medical care and monitors. It wants all allegations of enforced disappearance, torture and ill treatment levelled at the CIA to be investigated independently.

Amnesty’s film, entitled Waiting For The Guards, forms the backbone of a new campaign the charity hopes will draw attention to such interrogation techniques. The film, by Marc Hawker and Ishbel Whitaker, does not attempt to document the mental torture of being kept in a secret location with no contact with the outside world, simply the physical agony of such allegedly innocuous methods. The crew expected it to be an arduous task but were shocked and disturbed by how quickly Parthipan found it impossible to endure the stress position.

“He is somebody who is physically fit but suffered excruciating pain. It was shocking how real and visceral the process was,” said Hawker, adding: “He was surprised himself just how quickly the position took over. He was in a lot of pain and felt a lot of emotion.

“He was in a safe environment but we said that, if you were just off a jet, did not know where you were or what your future held, how psychologically tortuous it would be.”

Richard Lowdon, the actor who plays the interrogator, added: “It was quite unpleasant watching Jiva. There was something unbearable about it. It is degrading to the person who is doing it, as well as to the person to whom it is done. It is very dehumanising.”

Amnesty hopes its campaign will prompt people to object to such practices. It recently named 38 men and a woman it claims were whisked away on secret CIA “rendition” flights and disappeared into prisons worldwide. The charity has spoken to former detainees, such as the British al-Qa’ida suspect Moazzam Begg, who was held in the US detention camp at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

“The suggestion is that they suffer a bit of discomfort, when in fact they endure quite severe pain,” said Sara MacNeice, Amnesty’s campaigns co-ordinator. “We are sending the message that this is ill treatment, but we should be calling it by its rightful name.”

[h/t to LeftLink]

Add comment September 26th, 2007

Olbermann on the Democratic sellout

4 comments May 24th, 2007

Milgram’s Obedience

Obedience, the classic film on the Milgram experiments on obedience to authority has just become available online on Google video. Watch it here:

Or else go to Google video.

1 comment May 19th, 2007

The tale of Jo Wilding

One of the people I most admire is Jo Wilding. Realizing the Iraq Iraq invasion was drawing near, she went to Iraq to relay the voices of ordinary people swept up in the delusions of world leaders, only to be expelled during the war by the Iraqi government. After the war she decided to do something concrete to help Iraqis: she created and brought a circus to entertain poor Iraqi children trying, somehow, to survive the difficult times.

At one point, when I still had a fantasy of helping Iraqis deal with their mental health needs, I was put in touch with Jo. She offered to conduct some surveys on the mental health needs there. But, alas, events interfered.

When the four American mercenaries were brutally lynched in Fallujah in March 2004, the United States decided to lay siege to the city. Jo, and several other Westerners decided to make sorely needed medical supplies into the besieged city and take Fallujans to makeshift medical facilities. In the process they were fired upon by US troops and captured by guerrillas. I remember seeing, upon my morning scan of the night’s news from Iraq, an account in a local British paper of Jo’s phone call to her mother upon her release. If my memory serves me, in the article her mother was quoted as saying Jo described her captors as “lovely” or something similar.

When Jo returned to the UK she said to a reporter:

“They were really good to us, they fed us and told us to not to worry…. One of my colleagues was sick and lying on the floor when one of them tucked a pillow under her head and put a blanket over her.”

The story of Jo’s time in Iraq was told in the marvelous film, Letter to the Prime Minister. Like all Jo’s work, the film tries to humanize Iraqis for a Western audience. I loved the film and was disappointed that, after a viewing, my local peace group did not want to put on a public viewing, saying it was too hard to understand. Jo has also written of her experiences in Iraq on her blog and in her book, Don’t Shoot the Clowns: Taking a circus to the children of Iraq.

Today’s Guardian has an article — Send in the Clown — by Emine Saner relaying some of Jo’s story:

How to describe Wilding? She’s 32, a mother and a newly qualified barrister, who lives in Brighton with her partner. But she is also an activist, blogger, unembedded journalist, documentary star, human rights worker and a clown with a talent for making balloon animals. “Jo was the only one of us foreigners in Iraq who I was absolutely sure was doing something useful,” says Naomi Klein, the author of No Logo. The journalist and film-maker John Pilger is another fan. “Living with families and without a flak jacket, she all but shamed the embedded army of reporters in her description of the atrocious American attack on an Iraqi city,” he wrote last year. He said her dispatches from Iraq, posted on her blog, were “some of the most extraordinary I’ve read”. The writer, director and academic Jonathan Holmes has written a new play, Fallujah, which draws heavily on Wilding’s experiences, among others.

Even though my contact with Jo was fleeting, I can say that to interact with her is to experience a direct connection with that which is good in human beings.

Add comment May 17th, 2007

Must Watch: Torture -The Guantanamo Guidebook

British Channel 4 TV took seven volunteers and subjected them for 48 hours to the tactics authorized for use at Guantanamo. Quite chilling. It took only 10 hours for the first volunteer to be removed due to the severe trauma he underwent. Only four of the seven survived 48 hours of hell. Many of the the Guantanamo detainees have been there over four years: 35,040 hours, 730 times as long. If we do not help them, they may spend the rest of their lives there. Everyone, including all APA members, should watch this:

Add comment May 9th, 2007

“Taxi to the Dark Side” to be released

Andrew Sullivan informs us that the new movie — Taxi to the Dark Side — on America’s descent into the hell of legailzed torture is being released this weekend at the Tribeca Film Festival. Watch the trailer here, and make sure, when it is commercially released that it doesn’t die a quiet death.

Add comment April 26th, 2007

Ghosts of Abu Ghraib

The HBO movie Ghosts of Abu Ghraib has finally appeared online, in a series of eight YouTube videos. The film shows that this country has, indisputably, become a torturing nation, indeed, a murdering nation. All the top officials responsible for the torture — President Bush, Vice President Cheney, Secretary Rumsfeld, Generals Sanchez and Miller, now Attorney General Gonzalez, Attorney Yoo, and all so many others — were rewarded with promotions and honors. The military, CIA, and private contractor interrogators who directed the torture on a day-to-day basis were protected. A few soldiers who did what was wanted by the higher ups were court marshaled.

An important lesson of this film is that we only know about Abu Ghraib because of the pictures. There were numerous previous reports of abuses there, but they were not reported, not even dismissed, by the media, and the American public didn’t know. Americans, and the American Psychological Association, can only maintain the fiction that horrible abuse is not a routine everyday occurrence at Guantanamo and numerous other US detention facilities because there are no cameras.

One of Secretary Rumsfeld’s first actions upon learning of Abu Ghraib abuse, was to ban cameras in detention facilities. Any country truly committed to preventing torture should hand out free cameras to every guard.

The American people learned of Abu Ghraib in Spring 2004. They did not demand punishment for the responsible officials. They reelected the torturer-in-chief that fall. The American people decided to close their eyes to the horrors committed in their name. They thereby became accomplices to torture.

Watch the film here
PART 1

PART 2

PART 3

PART 4

PART 5

PART 6

PART 7

PART 8

3 comments March 6th, 2007

revere on the MPAA

revere at Effect Measure doesn’t think the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) are really that bad: MPAA: not as bad as Kissinger or Bush.

There are a lot of things, organizations and people worse than MPAA and RIAA. They aren’t war criminals or in charge of Bush administration foreign policy. But that’s about the best I can say about them.

Add comment February 21st, 2007

The Trial of Tony Blair

I have time for very little TV. But I’ve come across this British Channel 4 show which promises to be excellent. Thanks to YouTube, we can all see it, at least until and unless they pull it. I’ve only watched part 1 so far, but decided to post it immediately.

So get the popcorn and watch. After watching this part, go here to find the rest of the show. While watching when an American channel will air “The Trial of George Bush.”

Add comment February 1st, 2007

Guernica Iraq

The YouTube description:

“Guernica” was painted by Picasso in 1937. It depicts the senseless massacre by the Nazi Luftwaffe in the Basque city of Guernica, Spain. The attack was ordered at the behest of fascist Spanish General, Francisco Franco, during the Spanish Civil War. Guernica was a non-military target, the innocent people of the town were attacked in an attempt to psychologically break the will of those who opposed Franco’s fascistic nationalist pursuit.

Picasso captured an intense scene reflecting the deeply unjust suffering, agony and despair experienced by the people of Guernica. And in doing so he produced one of the most iconic, powerful and affecting pieces of anti-war artwork ever put to canvas. It is little surprise then that a reproduction of the painting, which hangs outside the entrance to the UN Security Council, was covered while Colin Powell was attempting to sell the Iraq War to the world.

The people of Iraq are suffering what amounts to the similar unjust brutality inflicted on the people of Guernica, except it’s practically on a daily basis. A more accurate comparison would be to imagine having the London Tube and Bus bombings everyday. And have them happen so often that they become a predictable daily occurrence and part of life.

2 comments January 30th, 2007

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