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Home / Articles / Editorial / Commentary /  Broken promises, broken laws and broken lives
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Monday, June 21,2010

Broken promises, broken laws and broken lives

 
Federal authorities are investigating whether oicials of the government south of the border participated in a citizens kidnapping and torture Canadian authorities, that is, investigating the possible role of U.S. oicials in the extraordinary rendition of Canadian citizen Maher Arar.

Federal authorities are investigating whether oicials of the government south of the border participated in a citizen’s kidnapping and torture — Canadian authorities, that is, investigating the possible role of U.S. oicials in the “extraordinary rendition” of Canadian citizen Maher Arar. “Extraordinary rendition” is White Housespeak for arresting someone and secretly sending him to another country, where he is likely to be tortured. Arar revealed that, for the past four years, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) has been investigating possible roles of U.S. and Syrian oicials in his rendition and torture. his announcement follows the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision that it will not consider Arar’s case, ending his pursuit of justice through U.S. courts.

Arar is the Canadian citizen seized by U.S. oicials while changing planes in New York, heading home from a family vacation in September 2002. He was secretly sent to Syria by the Bush administration, where he was held for almost a year in a gravelike cell. He was repeatedly tortured, then returned home to Canada, without charge, a broken man. In 2004, the Center for Constitutional Rights iled suit in U.S. federal court on Arar’s behalf as he recovered in Canada. While his legal case came to an end this week, his ight against impunity continues.

Ontario Justice Dennis O’Connor headed the Canadian government’s inquiry into Arar’s arrest, removal to Syria and subsequent torture. From 2004 to 2006, O’Connor interviewed scores of people and reviewed thousands of documents. he inquiry completely exonerated Arar. he conservative Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper apologized, and Arar was awarded $11.5 million in reparations and legal fees. Now, we learn, the RCMP, the Canadian equivalent of the FBI, is conducting an investigation that could lead to criminal charges. Arar told me: “hey’ve been collecting evidence. hey’ve been interviewing people both in Canada and internationally... heir focus is on the Syrian torturers, as well as those American oicials who were complicit in my torture.”

If the RCMP charges U.S. oicials with complicity in the abduction and torture of Arar, it would put the strong extradition treaty between the U.S. and Canada to the test. In the meantime, the Center for Constitutional Rights is encouraging people to contact the White House and their representatives in Congress to demand redress for Arar, including an apology, his removal from the terrorist watch list, inancial damages, an investigation and assurances that no one else will sufer a similar fate.

U.S. Sen. Patrick Leahy of Vermont, who chairs the powerful Judiciary Committee, expressed his disappointment with this week’s Supreme Court decision, saying the Arar case “remains a stain on this nation’s legacy as a human-rights leader around the world... he United States has continued to deny culpability in this case.” Back in a January 2007 hearing, Leahy fumed at then-Attorney General Alberto Gonzales: “We knew damn well if he went to Canada, he wouldn’t be tortured. He’d be held. He’d be investigated. We also knew damn well if he went to Syria, he’d be tortured.”

he Obama administration continues controversial Bush-era policies, with detention without charge at Guantanamo and the Bagram air base, and with, as Leahy has noted, reliance on “state secrets” privilege to dodge legal actions to expose and punish torture. On the same day as last week’s Supreme Court announcement, another court in Washington, D.C., acquitted 24 anti-torture activists who were arrested at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 21, 2010, the day by which President Barack Obama originally pledged Guantanamo would be closed.

Their banner read, “Broken Promises, Broken Laws, Broken Lives.” Several were arrested inside the Capitol Rotunda while conducting a funeral service for three Guantanamo prisoners who may have been tortured to death.

The U.S. government claims they committed suicide.

Maher Arar has completed his Ph.D. in Canada and founded an online news magazine, prism-magazine.com. He has been focusing on the case of Canadian citizen Omar Khadr, who was arrested in Afghanistan as a child and has grown to adulthood in the Guantanamo prison. Arar, married with two children, told me, “he struggle for justice and struggle against oppression has become a way of life for me, and I can never go back to just a simple nine-to-ive engineer anymore.” (c) 2010 Amy Goodman. Distributed by King Features Syndicate

Amy Goodman is the host of “Democracy Now!,” a daily international TV/radio news hour airing on more than 800 stations in North America. She is the author of “Breaking the Sound Barrier,” recently released in paperback and now a New York Times best-seller.

 

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REPLY TO THIS COMMENT
b
I'm sorry that there's not a facility to suit your need, but still believe that NCR was/ is [b]not[/b] the solution. Still, never answered were questions about wages and benefits, as well as who the center would attract, not everyone, only the well-to-do retirees. Why was it not viable for a non-profit unless the lease would only be $1/year? These are real questions that NCR didn't publicly respond to that I'm aware of. Let's not forget the [i]whole real[/i] story.

 

REPLY TO THIS COMMENT
Since one of these "retirement centers" has apparently never existed here in the 213 years of Athens history, we can't go to one locally to find out what it is these unhappy retirees are being deprived of. It sounds like some sort of luxury apartment complex with a lot of servants to help them get through the day. Now that servants cost over $15,000 a year for just one, it's easy to see how the cost of these places can get pretty pricey. Perhaps a not-for-profit Visiting Servants Organization could fill these retirees needs at a reasonable cost. And then they could stay in Athens.

 

 

 
 
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