Democracy Now! on Oct 30, 2015
Democracynow.org – British resident Shaker Aamer has been freed from Guantánamo after more than 13 years behind bars. Aamer had been cleared for release since 2007, but the Pentagon kept him locked up without charge. During his time in captivity, Aamer claims he was subjected to abuses including torture, beatings and sleep deprivation. At one point, he lost half his body weight while on a hunger strike. Aamer is en route to London where he’ll rejoin his wife and four children. “If you think about how much our world has changed, it is like they’re dropping them into a completely different place with very little support, and there’s no right to a remedy for the allegations of torture—which are absolutely credible—for the prolonged arbitrary detention and for any other violations that happened,” says our guest Widney Brown, director of programs at Physicians for Human Rights.
AMY GOODMAN: I wanted to go to Shaker Aamer, this latest news we have that he is flying right now, as we broadcast. He has been released from Guantánamo after more than 13 years behind bars, on his way to London, home. Shaker Aamer had been cleared for release since 2007, but the Pentagon refused to set him free. During his time in captivity, he claims he was subjected to torture, beatings, sleep deprivation, at one point lost half his body weight while on a hunger strike. He’s never been charged with a crime. For all the more than 13 years he’s been held by the Americans, he has never been charged with a crime. As recently as last week, British MP Tania Mathias had called for his release.
TANIA MATHIAS: It’s very scary, because, remember, he’s cleared for release 2007 and, subsequently, 2009. So it’s a form of torture to say to somebody, “You’re released,” and then keep them again for years.
AMY GOODMAN: Can you respond to this, Widney Brown?
WIDNEY BROWN: Yeah, first to say, Shaker Aamer’s experiences just are an endless story of human rights violations, from his detention, arbitrary detention, prolonged detention, no due process for trial protections. He’s cleared for release in 2007 and held for an additional eight years. And the key issue was that, unlike the other British detainees who were released, he was a British resident, not a British citizen. And the U.S. used that as the pretext for refusing to release him even though he was cleared.
There’s also the issue of any of these men who are now being released. It’s like time travel. They have been held for, many of them, over a decade, with no access to the outside world. If you think about how much our world has changed, it’s like they’re dropping them in there with—into a completely different place with very little support, and there’s no right to a remedy for the allegations of torture—which are absolutely credible—for the prolonged arbitrary detention and for any of the other violations that happened. And one of the things that helps victims of torture heal is to be able to claim an effective remedy against the state that tortured you.
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with Andy Worthington
Finally at large: Shaker Aamer freed from Guantanamo, coming home
RT on Oct 30, 2015
Shaker Aamer, the last British resident held at Guantanamo Bay, has been released after spending 13-years locked up without charge or trial.
He volunteered for a charity in Afghanistan back in 2001, where he was seized by bounty hunters and handed over to U.S. forces.Two months later, he was transferred to Guantanamo Bay prison, and claims he was tortured while there.
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“Shaker’s resisted in Gitmo so he’s been subjected to violence”
RT UK Oct 30, 2015
Andy Worthington says that Shaker has been outspoken in Guantanamo so the guards are treating him with violence so as not to let him influence other prisoners
see also:
from the archives:
Watch the Shocking New Animated Film About the Guantánamo Hunger Strike by Andy Worthington
Detainee 239 by Felicity Arbuthnot
Shaker Aamer: UK Government Drops Opposition To Release Of Torture Evidence by Andy Worthington
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Whatever the alleged crimes of any individual held to be a “threat” to US security, they have the right to due process.
The United States government is actually a rogue entity, operating with contemptuous disregard for international protocols. Nothing must terrify these assassins of civilization more, than the ghastly prospect of their being held to account by any duly recognized, bona fide and representative, judicial body.
Their outrageous bluff of exceptionalist special pleading and arbitrary exemption needs to be called, and very soon!