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Robbien Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jan-07-07 11:44 PM
Original message
British Guantanamo Bay prisoner `losing his sanity'
THE OBSERVER, LONDON
Monday, Jan 08, 2007, Page 7

Bisher al-Rawi, a British resident held in Guantanamo Bay for four years, is rapidly losing his sanity, according to three lawyers who have visited him during the past month.

Al-Rawi, 35, who was arrested by the CIA and local security forces during a business trip to Gambia in 2002, is showing clear signs of secure housing unit psychosis, a clinical condition that afflicts high-security prisoners, said Clive Stafford Smith, one of the lawyers.

<snip>

This week marks the fifth anniversary of the arrival of the first detainees at Guantanamo, which still has 385 prisoners, despite recent releases. Those who remain were deprived of virtually all legal rights by the US Congress in last year's Military Commissions Act.

Al-Rawi is an Iraqi who fled late Iraqi president Saddam Hussein's dictatorship as a child and settled in Britain. Alone of his family, he retained citizenship of Iraq in the hope that one day he would be able to claim the family's abandoned property. He was arrested with his brothers -- one of whom is also in Guantanamo -- and two other men during a trip to set up a peanut processing business. He has never been charged.

Brent Mickum, a US lawyer who also represents him, said al-Rawi was "slowly but surely slipping into madness. Bisher's treatment is designed to achieve a single objective -- to make him lose his mind," he said.

http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/world/archives/2007/01/08/2003343898
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FedUpWithIt All Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jan-07-07 11:48 PM
Response to Original message
1. ...
:grr: :nuke: :banghead: :banghead: :banghead:

I just cannot stand this. Will this madness ever end?
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oldtime dfl_er Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-08-07 12:06 AM
Response to Original message
2. Secure housing unit psychosis?
"Secure housing unit psychosis"? Is this more Orwellian language, some kind of euphemism for isolation-and-deprivation-of-rights-induced insanity? I can find no reference to such a syndrome on google except in relation to this story.
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tavalon Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-08-07 03:14 AM
Response to Reply #2
4. Yeah, look up isolation insanity n/t
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crickets Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-08-07 02:13 AM
Response to Original message
3. This is so wrong. It's got to be stopped. nt
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ninkasi Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-08-07 03:20 AM
Response to Original message
5. My mind tells me this is happening
My heart and soul, though, still can't come to grips with living in Bush's America. It's counter to everything I was raised to respect, and believe in. I still can't understand why impeachment is "off the table". Are we going to just hold back, letting one atrocity add to another atrocity, until we can't be distinguished from all of the countries we have fought over the last 300 years or so?

If the ones we kill are Muslims, is that so much more enlightened than killing Jews, or gypsies? All of the slaughter is wrong, and should be stopped ASAP. If our country, under Bush, can imprison, indefinitely, people he considers to be "enemy combatants", where will the line be drawn between legal aliens and natural born citizens? My family came to Virginia from England and Ireland in the 1600s. I fear that the length of time my family has been in this country would not count, should the chimp decide to lock me up.

Being arrested, held without charges, or access to a lawyer, is something I still can't accept. This is not the America I was born in almost 64 years ago, nor the America I grew up in. This America is a darkened, fearful image of my America the Beautiful. This is Nazi America, under Bush and his cabal. Only those of us who truly love the old America can take it back, and convince our Congressional leaders to lead the way.
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Peace Patriot Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-08-07 11:30 AM
Response to Reply #5
6. Well said, Ninkasi! It appears to me that Pelosi and Reid are moving fast to
confront Bush on Iraq, and to deny funding for an escalation. I think they need to build strength--and prepare cases--before impeachment can occur. But one of the ways that it can occur is through a Constitutional crisis over the "balance of powers," which I think is going to occur sooner rather than later. We need to give strong support to these legislators, who have an overwhelming mandate to stop the war and corruption, evident throughout the country in many different ways, not just the '06 elections, but who don't have the full strength in numbers in Congress that they should have, due to an estimated 5% to 10% "thumb on the scales" in our election system favoring Bushites and warmongers. (All vote "counting" is now run on TRADE SECRET, PROPRIETARY programming code, owned and controlled by rightwing Bushite corporations, with virtually no audit/recount controls).

Here is a good article on what the public needs to be prepared for, in a coming Constitutional crisis over subpoenas--an action plan, which can be translated to the more immediate purpose of supporting Pelosi/Reid, say, in their effort to bifurcate funding for Iraq (and deny escalation funds):

http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/010707C.shtml

If we get mobilized and succeed in the effort to curtail Bush in Iraq, we build momentum for addressing other crimes and outrages. We hearten the good guys in Congress, and embolden them.

---------------------------------

The forgotten prisoners.

The prisoners in Guantanamo Bay (and other Bush Junta prisons): These helpless, tortured people haunt me, too. What is happening to them is unforgivable, and the stain on our country is permanent. We didn't ask for this, but our inattention as citizens--especially to our election system--was the condition for it to happen. I lament my own blindness as a citizen, on this matter, until it was too late. Never again! We must restore our right to vote, our right to transparent vote counting, and our right to proper representation in Congress and the White House (and the Supreme Court!), in order to get our country back. It's not that our government has never done horrendous things before--God knows they have--but rarely have they done it with impunity. Always, it has come back to the voters, when, eventually, the voters learn what they've done. And laws are written, and mistakes are corrected. But not this time. This time, we must face that we have an illegitimate government, headed by people who feel they are immune to the will of 70% of the country, on the Iraq War, for instance--and immune to the will of the people 63% of whom oppose torture "under any circumstances" (May '04). And they do have reason to believe that they are immune. They don't owe their power to us, the voters. We cannot expect full correction of all the crimes these people have committed, until we have fully restored transparent elections. We can lobby Congress on Guantanamo Bay, and take other measures--support lawsuits, join protests, educate the public and legislators. But I don't know how far we will get with THIS Congress, which has so many huge and very grave issues to address, with artificially low numbers of progressives among their membership, and 2/3 of the Senate being holdovers from the Bush "pod people" Congress. I truly don't know. We most certainly should pressure them on it. I don't know if there is any remedy being proposed, which we could rally support around (none that I've heard of). They need to repeal a couple of things, for starters. And they need to deal with Bush's "signing statements." Torture is one of the chief impeachment issues. The Supreme Court and the previous Congress gave Bush some cover on it. And until it becomes a "knockdown dragout" Constitutional "balance of powers" issue, it is going to continue. Pelosi seems to be picking her battles carefully, but she is picking them well. This Iraq funding battle is right down the middle of the battlefield--it is the heart of the matter. And I cannot overstress the importance of how it comes out. What I'm saying is that to free these prisoners from isolation, torture and inhumane treatment--to get the power and momentum to do that--we have to win the "balance of powers" issue, and that IS "on the table," or will be very shortly.

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ninkasi Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-08-07 06:26 PM
Response to Reply #6
8. Thanks for the link, Peace Patriot
Yes, I agree that winning the "balance of powers" issue is critical. We can't afford to let up making our feelings known to our congresspeople, either. You also point out that transparent elections are essential, and it still makes no sense to me to have our votes counted by a process which has shown time after time that the votes can be rigged. The biggest fights are ahead of us, and will determine whether we will be able to restore our democracy.
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The Stranger Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-08-07 02:03 PM
Response to Original message
7. Keep the records of the names of the concentration camp guards, wardens, etc.
Don't let them destroy the records.
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Nihil Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jan-09-07 07:28 AM
Response to Reply #7
10. Damn right.
Every concentration camp guard, officer, adviser & torturer who has
served at that camp must be identified so that the records can be held
in the Hague (or Geneva?) pending their eventual prosecution.
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Matilda Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-08-07 07:34 PM
Response to Original message
9. The mental health of Australian David Hicks is also cause for conern.
He is now in his sixth year of imprisonment, and has been in solitary since March last year.

He refused to take his father's Christmas call in December, but the Americans will not agree to an
independent mental health check requested by his lawyer.

http://www.smh.com.au/news/world/us-vetoes-hicks-checkup/2006/12/18/1166290475291.html


Polling is now consistently showing an increasing majority of Australians think Hicks should be
released and sent back to Australia, but Howard and Downer continue to push the American line
that he will be given a fair trial in the US. Some day, somewhere.
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