Witnessing Against Torture: Why We Must Act
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By Kathy Kelly
ZCommunications
Saturday, Jun 26, 2010
Congress
shall make no law… abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or
the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the
Government for a redress of grievances.
- U.S. Constitution Amendment I
An
old cliché says that anyone who has herself for a lawyer has a fool for a
client. Nevertheless, going to trial in Washington, D.C., this past
June 14, I and twenty-three other defendants prepared a pro se defense.
Acting as our own lawyers in court, we aimed to defend a population
that finds little voice in our society at all, and to bring a sort of
prosecution against their persecutors.
Months earlier, on January 21st, we had held a memorial vigil for three
innocent Guantanamo prisoners, recently revealed to have been in all
probability tortured to death by our government with what would turn out
to be utter impunity – and because we had wished the culpable parties
to take notice, we’d staged a vigil where they worked, specifically on
the Capitol Steps and in the Rotunda of the U.S. Capitol Building. We
had been charged with causing a “breach of the peace,” a technical legal
term for a situation that might risk inciting people to violence. In
abetting Administration use of torture, Congress had been inciting
others to horrendous violence, and we’d been protesting perhaps one of
the gravest imaginable breaches of the peace. Now we were making our
small attempt to take these crimes to court, in the course of defending
ourselves against what we felt to be a misdirected charge.
At the time of our arrest, we were on the final day of a 12-day fast
organized by Witness Against Torture, aiming to help end the U.S.
practice of torturing prisoners. Calling for the long-promised and
long-delayed closure of Guantanamo, release of all detainees held
without charge there, and an actual end to U.S. usage of torture, we had
considered it our duty under international law, and our right under the
Constitution, to assemble peaceably at the seat of government for
redress of extremely serious grievances.
“And what were those grievances,” Ed Kinane asked me, as we teamed up
for a “dress rehearsal” in preparation for our trial. Ed, my fellow pro
se defendant, planned to question me, as a witness, about our actions.
I recited our reasons for taking action on January 21st:
We harbored a grievance against the U.S. government for
violating the rights of detainees held in Guantanamo, some of whom have
been detained for over eight years without charge; still others are
being held even though there has been a U.S. court order for their
release. On October 7, 2008, a U.S. federal judge ordered the release
of 17 prisoners held in Guantanamo. They still have not been freed.
We harbored a grievance on behalf of three men whom U.S.
military officials claimed committed suicide in an exercise of
“asymmetrical warfare,” but who may well have been murdered in custody.
In light of credible evidence that has yet to be analyzed in a court of
law, they may have been tortured to death.
Ed had designed his questions so that I could deliver as much
information as possible regarding our motives for being in the Capitol.
Each of us, when introducing ourselves to the court, would speak our own
name and then give the name of a particular Guantanamo detainee on
whose behalf we were speaking. Ed, (speaking for Fahmi Salem Said
Al-sani), asked me to tell the court something about the man whom I was
representing.
“Ahmed Mohamed is a 32 year old citizen of China,” I said. “He was
captured near the Pakistan-Afghanistan border in December 2001. As of
June 11, 2010, he has been held at Guantanamo for eight years and one
month. He is a detainee from the Uighur Muslim minority in western
China and is one of 17 Uighurs who were approved for release from
Guantanamo on October 7, 2008. However, a federal appeals court stayed
the order after the U.S. government appealed.”
We were also keenly aware of three men who supposedly had committed
suicide in Guantanamo. Two days before going to the Rotunda to protest
the Guantanamo nightmare, we had read, on the Harper’s Magazine website,
a January 18, 2010 article “The Guantanamo ‘Suicides’: A Camp Delta
Sergeant Blows the Whistle.”
In this article, investigative journalist Scott Horton reports on
interviews with Army Staff Sgt. Joe Hickman and Specialist Tony Davila,
both of whom had been deployed to Guantanamo, and establishes a strong
case that three men reported as having committed suicide, ---37-year-old
Salah Ahmed al-Salami, 30-year-old Mani Shaman al-Utaybe, and
22-year-old Yasser Talal al-Zahrani, ---were suffocated to death in the
interrogation chair. In 2006, these three prisoners had been brought,
dead, to the medical clinic at Guantanamo, and a Navy medical corpsman
had told Hickman that the men, one of them severely bruised, had died
from having had rags stuffed down their throats.
At our trial rehearsal, I told Ed that I’d believed I had a
responsibility and a duty to demand an accounting for what had happened
to these men. I believed that no U.S. citizen, whatever the
consequences, should choose the convenience of political silence in the
face of grievous crimes against humanity still being committed at
Guantanamo, Bagram and other U.S. detention sites.
In the Rotunda, Jerica Arents, (speaking for Saaid Fahri), now one of
our co-defendants, had entered into the area where a recently deceased
President’s body is laid in state, an area marked by a white circle, and
silently placed a mourning cloth upon that spot, bearing the names of
Mr. Al-Salami, Mr. Al-Utaybe and Mr. Al-Zahrani. Our co-defendant,
Carmen Trotta, (speaking for Shaker Aamer), had explained the purpose of
our action to onlookers, after assuring the nearby Capitol guard that
we were raising important questions. Other members of our group, myself
included, had poured different colored rose petals over the banner
bearing these names.
We had knelt to express our remorse. We had recited brief biographies
of each of the three victims. Then we had sung the verses to a song that
had been sung by South African prisoners under Apartheid, when other
prisoners were being taken away for interrogation, torture or execution.
We had, however, adapted the song to embrace our brothers and sisters
in U.S. bondage:
“Courage, Muslim brothers, you do not walk alone. We will walk with
you, and sing your spirit home.”
Many people come to the capitol every day of the year. They are free to
ask questions and to make comments. But, if you raise questions and
comments of a political nature, police officials believe they must
enforce a law to restrict your enactment of this right, even though the
Constitution insists that Congress shall make no law to abridge the
right of people to assemble peaceably for redress of grievance. We
believed that expression of grief and remorse for the lost lives of
these three men should properly happen in a place where U.S. people
mourn the loss of a president’s life. While a U.S. president possesses
near-unimaginable power, the men whom we mourned suffered from
unimaginable powerlessness. Earnest mourning of these lost lives was
crucial for truthful recognition that the U.S. government has used
torture as a means of punishment, possibly even lethal punishment, in
violation of international law and basic human rights.
The prosecution claimed that those who had assembled in the center of
the Rotunda were “noisy and boisterous,” yelling prayers and hymns.
Officers who arrested other defendants, on the capitol steps, claimed
that a group of people were shouting in a way that tried to “imitate an
Arabic dialect.” In cross-examination, Clare Grady and Malachy Kilbride,
both co-defendants, helped clarify that these defendants were reading
the names of people imprisoned in Guantanamo and Bagram. By
mid-afternoon, the prosecution rested its case.
Judge Russell Canan had asked the prosecutors, several times, to help
him understand how our actions at the Capitol building would have been
likely to produce violence on the part of others. At one point, he
cautioned all present that he wouldn’t tolerate any noisy outbursts in
the courtroom. Ed and I exchanged surprised glances. “He’s going to
acquit us,” I murmured. About ten minutes later, Judge Canan granted
our motion for acquittal, and the trial was abruptly over.
Of course we are not, in good conscience, acquitted from our duty to
stop the Pentagon from engaging in further war crimes at Guantanamo,
Bagram and other places where the U.S. military is holding people
without charge, places where torture has been routinely practiced, - and
may still be. We still bear responsibility, every day, to fulfill our
duties under international law and expose the practices, at Guantanamo
and Bagram, which constitute a horrendous breach of the peace and are
likely to produce even more violence. Understanding the difference
between law and justice, we must try to narrow the gap between justice
and the enforcement of U.S. laws.
“If you act like there is no possibility of change,” Bill Quigley, one
of our attorney-resource people, told the court, “you guarantee there
will be none. These people have acted like there is a possibility for
change and they are trying to bring about that change.” Bill, who is
the Center for Constitutional Right’s Legal Director, said that those
who won’t adjust to injustice bring hope into the world. He quoted the
Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King’s “Beyond Viet Nam speech, delivered in
April, 1967, at the Riverside Church: “We must speak with all the
humility that is appropriate to our limited vision. For we are deeply
in need of a new way beyond the darkness that seems so close around
us."
Dr. King's Riverside church speech will guide us, as we plan our next
action.
We are called to speak for the weak, for the voiceless, for the
victims of our nation, for those it calls 'enemy.’ For no document from
human hands can make these humans any less our brothers. I think of
them, too, because it is clear to me that there will be no meaningful
solution until some attempt is made to know them and hear their broken
cries.
We still have a choice today: nonviolent coexistence, or violent
co-annihilation. We must move past indecision to action. If we do not
act, we shall surely be dragged down the long, dark, and shameful
corridors of time reserved for those who possess power without
compassion, might without morality, and strength without sight.
We hope Dr. King’s words can help convey our remorse and sorrow to the
families and friends of detainees imprisoned, tortured and in some cases
killed because we have not yet succeeded in ending U.S. practices of
torture and illegal detention. We long to acquit ourselves justly by
closing not only Guantanamo, but every military base that prolongs the
foolish agony of war in our world.
Kathy Kelly (Kathy@vcnv.org) is a co-coordinator of Voices for
Creative Nonviolence (www.vcnv.org) and a participant in the Witness
Against Torture campaign (www.witnesstorture.org)
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