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The Binyam Mohamed case and the threat of dictatorship
22 February 2010
Each day brings new revelations about the full extent of British involvement in the torture of those detained by the
On Friday, it emerged that the
Aamer has been imprisoned at Guantánamo without charge since February 2002. His lawyers claim that British security and intelligence officers were aware that he was previously tortured while held in
The British High Court recently ruled that documents pertaining to the torture of Aamer had to be released to US authorities. Foreign Secretary David Miliband had refused a request to release them.
The Equalities and Human Rights Commission has now called for an inquiry into claims that British intelligence agencies were complicit in the torture of more than 20 terror suspects.
These developments follow the British Court of Appeal judgment in the case of Binyam Mohamed resulting in the release of an earlier ruling confirming that MI5 colluded with US authorities in his torture. The court agreed, in the face of fierce government opposition, to release a redacted seven paragraph statement concluding that Mohamed was subjected to treatment that “could readily be contended to be at the very least cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment by the United States authorities.”
Binyam Mohamed, a British resident, was arrested in
The mounting evidence of the routine use of torture and abuse is of great political significance not only in
Definite methods of rule must flow from such policies, which are based on a complete break with previous democratic processes. These methods include assassination, torture, abduction, extraordinary rendition and the denial of due process.
In order to pursue its war aims, the Bush administration repudiated international law enshrined in the
However, the British Labour government, under Prime Minister Tony Blair and his successor, Gordon Brown, never felt able to issue such a brazen repudiation of international law. Instead, it has placed itself in the forefront of efforts to cover up the crimes perpetrated jointly with
The political establishments in the
The Obama administration is fully implicated in the cover-up. Since assuming office, Obama has moved to bar the prosecution of Bush officials who authorised torture. This, itself, is a violation of the
In the case of Binyam Mohamed, the Obama administration threatened to end security cooperation with
It also emerged that the British government’s lawyer engaged in secret communications with a judge to ensure that one of the paragraphs criticising MI5’s role in the torture of Mohamed was heavily redacted. In English courts of law, such secret communication is prohibited and has been for almost 400 years.
Following the Court of Appeal ruling, Bruce Anderson, a leading Conservative columnist in the Independent, wrote an op-ed piece entitled “We Not Only Have a Right to Use Torture, We Have a Duty.”
In such a situation, he asserted, “I have come to the conclusion that there is only one answer…. Torture the wife and children.”
Anderson then attacked the Court of Appeal, saying it “traduced an entire security service, showed no understanding of the courage which its officers routinely display—no understanding, indeed, of anything beyond courtroom niceties.”
Such comments reveal the extent to which broad layers within the ruling class have abandoned any commitment to the rule of law. What are the necessary consequences of the naked advocacy of torture and other abhorrent practises other than a general overturning of democratic norms? The resort to torture against “terror suspects” can only be a precursor to the widespread use of state violence by an elite that feels itself threatened by rising social and political discontent.
This political danger must not go unanswered. To accept that such crimes can be committed with impunity is to politically disarm the working class in the face of an ever more naked resort to repression.
The
In 2006, Benjamin Ferencz, a former chief prosecutor at the Nuremberg trials, said that “a prima facie case can be made that the United States is guilty of the supreme crime against humanity—that being an illegal war of aggression against a sovereign nation.”
A major component of the indictment against German officials at
The demand must be made for those guilty of war crimes to be brought to justice. These include former US President George W. Bush, former Vice President Dick Cheney, former US Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, former British Prime Minister Tony Blair, former MI5 Director General Eliza Manningham-Buller, and the former head of MI5 counter-intelligence, Jonathan Evans, who is now MI5 director general.
This demand is an essential part of the international mobilization of workers and young people against imperialist war and in defence of democratic rights.
Robert Stevens
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"The master class has always declared the wars; the subject class has always fought the battles. The master class has had all to gain and nothing to lose, while the subject class has had nothing to gain and everything to lose--especially their lives." Eugene Victor Debs
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