It's the usual story: a detainee is released from Guantanamo and alleges torture, while the government strenuously denies it. In this case, the detainee is Australian Mamdouh Habib, who claims that he was beaten, electrocuted, drugged, sexually assaulted, and on one occasion, "smeared with the menstrual blood of a prostitute". And the government is Habib's own, who rather than being concerned about the treatment one of their citizens were subjected to, are denying that any torture took place, or that if it did, then it was conducted by heathen Egyptians (which was precisely why Habib was turned over to them). But what's interesting about all of this is that there is solid documentary evidence for at least one of Habib's claims: the draft of an upcoming book by a translator who worked at the camp recounts how US interrogators used sexual tactics to "break" prisoners, including this rather interesting bit:
According to Sergeant Saar, a Muslim linguist then told the woman interrogator that she could break the prisoner’s faith by making him believe that she had smeared menstrual blood on him and cutting the water off to his cell so that he could not wash. The translator’s manuscript gives explicit details of the way in which the suspect was interrogated.Some devout Muslim men will not touch women other than their wives, particularly if they are menstruating. The theme has come up repeatedly in the US media since September 11. It was widely reported that Mohammed Atta, the lead hijacker, left written instructions no woman should attend his funeral or visit his grave.
According to the draft, the idea was to make the detainee feel unclean and "unable to go before his God in prayer and gain strength".
You really have to wonder how stupid the Australian government thinks people are, denying something when the very people that did it are admitting it in a book...
AL: Just because I support Habib's right not to be tortured, it doesn't mean I support Habib.
ReplyDeleteTo use Ahmed Zaoui as an example, here's a brief paragraph I wrote on Left and Lefter:
"I haven't met Ahmed Zaoui, I haven't heard him speak, I haven't had the opportunity to properly judge his personality for myself. If he does indeed advocate sharia law (as has been suggested), I vehemently disagree with his politican persuasion. That does not mean, however, that he should be refused refugee status.
If he does indeed pose a security risk, then that risk should be detailed to the courts. If the court then so decides, deportation can occur. If he does not pose a significant security threat, then his merits should be judged. His merits as a refugee that is, not as a person."
Essentially, it is using the theory of "I might not like what you say, but I'll defend your right to say it"
Thank-you, antarctic lemur.
ReplyDeleteHere is a quote from a Dowd column:
After the prisoner spat in her face, she left the room to ask a Muslim linguist how she could break the prisoner's reliance on God. The linguist suggested she tell the prisoner that she was menstruating, touch him, and then shut off the water in his cell so he couldn't wash.
"The concept was to make the detainee feel that after talking to her he was unclean and was unable to go before his God in prayer and gain strength."
There have been serious accounts of real torture from Guantanamo prisoners and no one should be tortured, whoever he is, whatever he does or whatever he thinks. But it is really hard to feel any sympathy for people who feel they are unclean and unable to speak to God because a woman has touched them.
Mmm.. the unmistakely scent of rabid feminism..
ReplyDeleteQuit haggling over semantics - who cares where the academic line is between abuse and torture? You presumably wouldn't want either to happen to your mother, so why justify it happening to anyone?
Every society has its good and bad points.. the muslim ones may not be big on women's rights, but they haven't sanctimoniously napalmed many other countries either.
And if you think Abu Graib was an isolated incident, you've been living under a rock.
antarctic lemur:
ReplyDeleteIt's not a matter of male chauvanism, it's a matter of religious practice.
Islam has ritual purity laws, like Hinduism and most religions. Certain substances are taboo, menstrual blood is one of them, so is pork and semen for that matter. It's not a way to oppress women, it's a way to mark the difference between the sacred and the mundane.
By using a taboo substance, the interogator is using psychological torture. You might not like ritual purity, you might think it stupid and sexist. But your personal opinion on another person's religious practices are irrelevant.
Habib has the right to be whatever religion he so chooses, and he has the human right to not be tortured based on his religious understanding.
Another form of religious/sexual torture was (and probably is still occuring) by the Chinese, where they forced Buddhist monks and nuns to have sex, thus destroying their celibate status.
antarctic lemur:
ReplyDeleteIt's not a matter of male chauvanism, it's a matter of religious practice.
Islam has ritual purity laws, like Hinduism and most religions. Certain substances are taboo, menstrual blood is one of them, so is pork and semen for that matter. It's not a way to oppress women, it's a way to mark the difference between the sacred and the mundane.
By using a taboo substance, the interogator is using psychological torture. You might not like ritual purity, you might think it stupid and sexist. But your personal opinion on another person's religious practices are irrelevant.
Habib has the right to be whatever religion he so chooses, and he has the human right to not be tortured based on his religious understanding.
Another form of religious/sexual torture was (and probably is still occuring) by the Chinese, where they forced Buddhist monks and nuns to have sex, thus destroying their celibate status.
To pop back in on this: I don't think that being made to think that menstrual blood is being smeared on your face is on quite the same scale as being beaten or electrocuted. However, it is interesting to note that what would normally be considered the most outrageous and unlikely of Habib's claims has effectively been confirmed.
ReplyDeleteAt the same time, there's also no question that Habib's treatment - and that of Muslim prisoners at Abu Ghraib who were forced to eat pork and consume alcohol - violates the Geneva Conventions and simple human decency. There is something fundamentally disrespectful and invasive about using people's most central beliefs as a weapon against them in this manner. There's also something fundamentally disrespectful about using something as basic as cleanliness as a weapon - what next, are they going to starve people till they talk?
There's also a consistency argument here. I imagine that none of us would like to be immersed in excrement (or something we were "made to believe" was excrement), or have it wiped on us. And I expect the US military would react with outrage if such happened to any captured US soldier. Therefore, in order to be consistent we should be similarly outraged at this happening to others - not laugh at it and treat it as a joke.
The reaction of some parts of the blogosphere to the "sexual torture" story when it originally broke simply confirmed how many bloggers are stuck in the mindset of adolescent males.
Idiot Savant: On one topic I see you are all for New Swedenland.
ReplyDeleteIt would likely require the government to grow and control more facets of life and business.
It seemed to me you trust the government to do the right thing.
On this, you point out the evil of Howard and the current Aus government.
How is this balanced?