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Rights and Liberties

I Was Illegally Detained by the U.S. Government and Held in CIA-Run "Black Sites"

By Mohamed Farag Bashmilah, Huffington Post. Posted February 20, 2009.


The American public needs to face what has happened to those of us who were disappeared and mistreated in the name of their national security.
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From October 2003 until May 2005, I was illegally detained by the U.S. government and held in CIA-run "black sites" with no contact with the outside world. On May 5, 2005, without explanation, my American captors removed me from my cell and cuffed, hooded, and bundled me onto a plane that delivered me to Sana'a, Yemen. I was transferred into the custody of my own government, which held me -- apparently at the behest of the United States -- until March 27, 2006, when I was finally released, never once having faced any terrorism-related charges. Since my release, the U.S. government has never explained why I was detained and has blocked all attempts to find out more about my detention.

What I do know is that the Jordanian government -- after torturing me for several days -- handed me over to a U.S. "rendition team" in Amman, which then abducted me, forced me onto a plane, and flew me to Afghanistan. During this, and several other transfers between CIA prisons, I was subjected to a brutal and deeply humiliating "preparation" ritual. I was stripped naked, dressed in a diaper, shackled, blindfolded and hooded, and then boarded onto a waiting plane. I was forced into painful positions, often reeling from the blows and kicks of the men who had "prepared" me for flight.

During my detention, I agonized constantly about my family back in Yemen, knowing they had no idea where I was. They never once received information about who had taken me, why I was taken, or even whether I was alive. They were never contacted by the U.S. government or the International Committee of the Red Cross. My mother and wife were in such anguish that they had to be hospitalized for illness, stress, and anxiety. My father passed away while I was disappeared and I am still distraught thinking that he died without knowing whether I was dead or alive. I continue to suffer from bouts of illness that medical doctors attribute to the treatment I experienced in the "black sites." My physical symptoms are made worse by the anxiety caused by never knowing where I was held, and not having any form of acknowledgment that I was disappeared and tortured by the U.S. government.

I believe that acknowledgment is the first step toward accounting for a wrongdoing. The American public needs to face what has happened to those of us who were disappeared and mistreated in the name of their national security, demand accountability for those who committed torture and other crimes, and acknowledge the suffering of those who became victims. Today, a group of concerned Americans called on President Obama to take the first steps to do just that, by demanding that he establish an independent commission of inquiry into the treatment of detainees in the "War on Terror."

President Obama himself recently said that "democracy requires accountability and accountability requires transparency." If he establishes this commission, it would break the silence about what has happened and signal a real commitment not only to changing the practices of the past but also to ensuring that they do not happen again. Both the American public and the victims of these past policies need to understand what the CIA did in the name of U.S. national security. We need to find out where we were all held and who is still missing. And we need justice for the crimes that were committed in violation of our most basic human rights -- rights the United States has always claimed to uphold and defend. President Obama's recent order to the CIA to shut down its secret prisons was a significant step in the right direction, but it did not resolve the unfinished business of establishing accountability and restoring transparency.

The American public deserves to know what was done to people like me -- and I deserve to know why I lost nineteen months of my life -- all in the name of protecting their security. It gives me faith to see that Americans are standing up for my rights and calling for the truth to be exposed. It is my hope that the President will not only establish this commission, but that he will also direct the relevant authorities to investigate and prosecute those who broke American laws in ordering the torture and disappearance of people like me. Truth and justice are not in opposition; both are necessary, and both are the right of all Americans and the victims harmed in their name.


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See more stories tagged with: cia, torture, human rights, rendition

Mohamed Farag Ahmad Bashmilah, a citizen of Yemen, is a client of the International Human Rights Clinic at NYU School of Law, which represents him in his quest for truth and justice.

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The further reggression of AmeriKa.
Posted by: sasquuatch55 on Feb 20, 2009 4:41 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
nt

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Useless story. Of course these things will happen as long as you refuse to ABOLISH THE CIA.
Posted by: maxpayne on Feb 20, 2009 5:30 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The CIA is not designed to protect you from terrorism but to safe-guard terrorists while at the same time wrecking the lives of the innocent here in America and in other countries. Until the CIA is ABOLISHED, stop complaining !

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Obama is already betraying us and the principles of the Constitution....
Posted by: AngryWhiteFemale on Feb 20, 2009 6:04 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
....by following the Bush administration's protocol of secrecy.

From McClatchy:

This week, Justice Department lawyers announced that they'd continue to assert the state secrets argument made by the Bush administration in a lawsuit alleging that five men were tortured abroad in U.S.-run prisons.

In a separate case, the Obama Justice Department has agreed with the Bush administration — at least initially — that the news media shouldn't have immediate access to court records in the ongoing Guantanamo detainee litigation.

In another example, the administration on Wednesday told the American Civil Liberties Union that it needed more time to decide whether to release undisclosed Bush Justice Department memos that justified harsh interrogation practices. A federal judge already had given government lawyers more time in the matter, which has been pending for five years.

"It looks like the new administration is stalling for time," said Jameel Jaffer, the director of the ACLU's National Security Project. "They've offered a very public commitment to transparency, but so far that has not translated into action."

Justice Department officials say they intend to be more open than the last administration was, but that they need more time to find the right balance between openness and security.


Stories like the one above make me sick. I am calling the White House today. We need a Truth and Reconciliation Commission. Not this "Let's look forward, not backward." bullshit.

To Mohamed Farag Bashmilah, I will keep you in my prayers. As well as all the American servicemen and women who are now exposed to the same brutal treatment thanks to the past f%#k-up of an administration.

Here is the link to the McClatchy article:

Obama Seeks Delay on Deciding Rove Subpeona

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» gimmie shelter Posted by: gimmie shelter
» RE: gimmie shelter Posted by: AngryWhiteFemale
» RE: gimmie shelter Posted by: winchelenator
» RE: gimmie shelter Posted by: peacefullaim1
the real issue
Posted by: mwildfire on Feb 20, 2009 6:48 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's understandable that Obama would not want to set up his administration to get into a huge fight with Republicans by demanding justice for victims like the author of this piece, or the other side of justice: punishment of the guilty. He DOES have a huge plate of responsibility for steering the US through Great Depression II, while averting the worst of climate change and coping with the end of cheap oil. To say this will be hard enough without engaging in a culture war is an understatement.
But if there is no accountability it will be forever written in stone that high officials in the US are above the law. And the last shreds of pretense that the US is a democracy protected by the rule of law will dissipate.
So far, Obama's actions have been pretty mixed; it seems too early to tell what he intends. It's clear that he's plenty smart enough, and has had sufficiently varied experiences, that he knows very well what the right thing to do is (in this he represents the opposite extreme from his predecessor). But he likely lacks either the courage or the integrity, or both. If he were to respond to this with the full force it deserves, including a public apology, reparations, an investigation not only of the CIA and other US abuses but also of the lead-up to the Iraq war AND 9-11, and appropriate punishment of the guilty after proper trials...well, this would imply that the US was turning over a new leaf and was going to stop engaging in this sort of immoral behavior henceforth. I would love to see that day--but it isn't likely, and the sad truth is, it might not even be supported by a majority of Americans, who have absorbed the lessons of "24" and countless dramas featuring Muslim terrorists, and countless songs and stories featuring a triumphal, superior, properly dominant America. Public education in this country is in terrible shape; an ignorant public is easily manipulated.

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» Ignorant, or Aquiescent? Posted by: Cathyc
» Until we take to the streets. Posted by: thekidde
I beg to differ
Posted by: Battle4Seattle on Feb 20, 2009 1:34 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
hundreds of thousands, or preferably a million plus Americans on the streets demanding justice, I'm quite certain would have an effect.

Although I love the Internet, it has had the effect of further silencing real dissent.

The government invented the I-net, hmmm, makes you wonder.

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As an American Citizen & Vet I agree with
Posted by: madmax427 on Feb 20, 2009 2:12 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Your point that We ALL need the U.S. Government to address these gross errors that go completely against what Americans were taught that We stand for, However, I highly recommend You do NOT hold Your breathe waiting for that to happen!

I cannot even get a response as to why I am being targeted by the NSA for harassment over My Website (http://ww.whatsyourlifeworth2.info). Look at the last entry, read it & compare it to the others: This is the ONLY entry I have been allowed to make since the Tenth of February, 2009!

While I am NOT trying to say My treatment is as bad as the treatment You endured, I will state that the root cause for all of this is much deeper & troublesome than anyone has talked about so far. I also believe it will not be that long until the treatment You received will be directed towards Citizens of the United States, too! That is assuming, of course, it has not already been done.

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I've Just Got To Have That Recipe...
Posted by: Revolutionary (Direct) Democracy on Feb 20, 2009 4:50 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I was brainwashed for more than half a century, stepfordized into an obedient drone who would produce, cringe, twitch and buy on command.

FREE AMERICA

REVOLUTIONARY (DIRECT) DEMOCRACY

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Silly Boy
Posted by: edgar1 on Feb 20, 2009 6:50 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If you think you won't be shoved into the trunk of a car one night and disappear into the intelli-ether under the benevolence of The Cool One(may his name be Blessed), you are a fool.

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» RE: Silly Boy Posted by: peacefullaim1
Why Would Congress Vote to Become Extinct?
Posted by: jbpazz on Feb 21, 2009 6:38 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Congress voted for and funded abduction, torture and death. They are in it up to their eyeballs.
If we don't find a way to disband and to incarcerate them, they will seek us until we are in the FEMA concentration camps.

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Those who are Responsible
Posted by: Noah_Scape on Feb 21, 2009 3:48 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It is essential to judge those who are responsible for crimes against humanity, or it will just get worse.

Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld, Condoleaser Rice, etc. are probably more important targets than the Congress, but hey, sure.

If we let them get away with it, then future leaders, maybe present leaders, will actually HAVE THE RIGHT, on precidence, to do the same evil acts.

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» RE: Those who are Responsible Posted by: peacefullaim1
Look to the Geneva Conventions...
Posted by: bgentry on Feb 25, 2009 2:35 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The behavior described in this story amounts to war crimes, no matter who perpetrated it. The criminals should be brought before an international tribunal and prosecuted. Reparations are in order for those who suffered these violations of international law and the U.S. Constitution.

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fbi/cia global terrorists...pretend they don't exist!
Posted by: gsosbee on Feb 26, 2009 11:47 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
For every one who survives fbi/cia captivity, hundreds remain imprisoned, tortured, suicided,or murdered by the fbi/cia assassins and their associates.

Neither sleep with the enemy of mankind (USA) , nor pretend to respect her!



http://www.sosbeevfbi.com/part4-worldinabo.html



QUESTIONS ! (956)371-5210
geral sosbee

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