Dispatches from the Dark Side. Gareth Peirce

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by the people and were conferred on them not by Parliament, but by God; no justification by the state could therefore ever justify their violation. For the preservation of these and the limitation of parliamentary power, the Levellers formulated a written constitution; never adopted in England, in the new world it became a political reality. In both countries, due process—the legal concept that gives effect to the idea of fairness—was born from these ideas.

      Once evidence of any country’s willingness to resort to torture is exposed, reactions of decency and humanity can be invoked without the necessity of legal explanation. Less likely is any instinctive reaction to evidence of the destruction of concepts of procedural fairness. Yet, in the imprecision and breadth of accusations, leading in turn to the banning of books and the criminalisation of ideas and religious thought, and in the wrong committed by secret courts hearing secret evidence, the lessons of John Lilburne and Star Chamber have been in the last ten years deliberately abandoned and sustained battles have still to be fought to reclaim the majority.

      The shocking, reckless and ruthless disregard of all of these concepts seen in recent years is neither new nor unique to this country or to the US. The history of regions other than our own shows how fragile are the laws and their applications that we assume protect us when faced with a government determined to follow a contrary path. Repeatedly, historically, even nations which have recently emerged from the fires of hell remember the experience as it relates to themselves, but yet consign others to the same fate. Fewer than ten years after the end of World War Two, and only eight years from the UN Declaration of Human Rights, the first reports of the use of torture by the French against Algerians fighting their war of independence began to emerge, with justifications that today appear very familiar. (The first official reports in 1955 admitted some violence had been done to prisoners suspected of being connected to the FLN, but that this was ‘not quite torture’; ‘The water and the electricity methods, provided they are properly used, are said to produce a shock which is more psychological than physical and therefore do not constitute excessive cruelty.’) Sartre articulated the shock of realizing that torture had reappeared and was being justified so soon after it had been categorised as an aberration found only among psychotic and degenerate governments willing to violate all universally understood and recognized principles of justice:

      In 1943 in the Rue Lauriston, Frenchmen were screaming in agony and pain; all France could hear them. In those days the outcome of the war was uncertain and we did not want to think about the future. Only one thing seemed impossible in any circumstances: that one day men should be made to scream by those acting in our name.

      The illustration on the cover is of Shafiq Rasul, a young Englishman from Tipton in the West Midlands, who within hours of returning from unlawful captivity in Guantánamo Bay understood the need to put on record the reality of imprisonment there. For the next month, with Asif Iqbal and Ruhal Ahmed, he struggled to prepare a report, illustrated by sketches in the absence of any photographs, of what had been done to them. Soon thereafter, the legal challenge his family had initiated when he was first reported to be in Guantánamo (Rasul v. Bush) was decided by the US Supreme Court in favour of Shafiq Rasul. What argument was won? That the prisoners in Guantánamo Bay should have access to legal remedies and to lawyers who could, most importantly of all, for the first time go in and, bit by bit, bring out reports, not just of the physical and mental horrors inflicted by or on behalf of Americans, but of the complicity of this country (at every level) in their unlawful captivity. We were never meant to know any of this. The still unanswered question of burning relevance, however, remains: once we know, what do we then do?

       December 2011

       Gareth Peirce

      1

       ‘Make sure you say that you were treated properly’

      Eight years ago now, in January 2002, came the first shocking images of human beings in rows in aircraft, hooded and shackled for transportation across the Atlantic, much as other human beings had been carried in slave ships four hundred years earlier. The captor’s humiliation of these anonymous beings—unloaded at Guantánamo Bay, crouched in open cages in orange jumpsuits—was deliberately displayed. For the watching world no knowledge of international humanitarian conventions was needed to understand that what it was seeing was unlawful, since what is in fact the law precisely mirrors instinctive moral revulsion. The definitions of crimes against humanity, and war crimes, are not complex: ‘Grave breaches of the Geneva Conventions of 12 August 1949’, including ‘torture or inhuman treatment’; ‘wilfully causing great suffering, or serious injury to body or health’; ‘wilfully depriving a prisoner of war or other protected person of the rights of fair and regular trial; unlawful deportation or transfer or unlawful confinement.’ What the world could instantly see for itself in those images was that this was the trafficking of human beings. It was not a manifestation of the Geneva Conventions at work; it was neither deportation nor extradition: far worse, it was transportation from a world and to a world outside the reach of the law, and intended to remain so. In those two worlds, crimes against humanity were to be perpetrated, but they, unlike the images of transportation, were intended to remain for ever secret. That they have not has come about largely through chance.

      Moments of major moral and political importance are often triggered accidentally, and how they are resolved depends entirely on whether public attention can be sustained. We are presented with such a moment now. The possibility has come about in large part through the case of Binyam Mohamed, where in the High Court a battle continued for more than two years to discover even part of the true relationship between British intelligence and the Americans and Moroccans, who for eighteen months slashed the most intimate parts of his body with razors, burned him with boiling liquids, stretched his limbs causing unimaginable agony, and bombarded him with ferocious sound. At the same time, dedicated journalists have accumulated evidence—too much to be swept aside—of men tortured just as horrifically by officials in Pakistan, who exchanged information with their British counterparts. Combined, these two sets of so far partial revelations have provided Britain with a moment of acute discomfort, sufficient to provoke the prime minister to announce the need for new guidelines for interrogations conducted by the intelligence services. This moment of official embarrassment should, however, make us in Britain feel the greatest disquiet. Weinhabit the most secretive of democracies, which has developed the most comprehensive of structures for hiding its misdeeds, shielding them always from view behind the curtain of ‘national security’. From here on in we should be aware of the game of hide and seek in which the government hopes to ensure that we should never have a complete understanding of its true culpability.

      The opportunity for concealing the extent of our country’s collusion with those who have carried out the actual torture is increased by three factors: first, the nature of most of the techniques used (‘stealth methods’, so called); second, the choking powers of secrecy available to our government; and third, the haphazard way in which acutely inadequate information about these matters emerges, when it emerges at all, hampering our ability to ask the most basic of questions.

      We are now in the endgame of a cycle that started in late 2001. In the US the Obama administration, pushed by Freedom of Information Act inquiries, has released much of the most obscene evidence of what the previous administration consciously and specifically permitted. Storm clouds of retribution may be gathering around those who have perpetrated crimes against humanity. But what needs to concern us in Britain is this: while those first images put out by the US military in January 2002 gave a glimpse of what the US was doing, and prompted in that country a seven-year public debate about the Bush/Cheney/Rumsfeld redefinition of torture and abusive practices, here we remain almost completely in the dark about the part played by our intelligence services, and in turn by our Foreign Office and our Home Office and our ministers. There are no dramatic images to jolt us into comprehension and there is no release whatsoever of the information that US citizens claim it as their right to know. Yet we were there at those sites of unlawful confinement; in many cases it was we

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