British-US torture scandal in Iraq, Afghanistan


This video about Iraq war torture is the trailer of the film Ghosts of Abu Ghraib.

By Paddy McGuffin in Britain:

Diplomat tells court US links not a bar to hearing torture case

Friday 26th September 2014

CLAIMS by the British government that a case brought by a Pakistani national alleging Britain’s involvement in his rendition and torture would damage US relations have been called into question.

Lawyers for the government had argued that a case brought by Yunus Rahmatullah, who was detained and mistreated by British personnel in Iraq before being handed over to the US for “rendition” to Afghanistan, should not be heard for fear of damaging British-US relations.

But in a statement yesterday presented to the High Court in London a former senior US ambassador and State Department official described the claims as “highly unlikely.”

The statement provided to the court by Thomas R Pickering, a former US under-secretary of state who served for four decades as a diplomat, said that the British government’s claims “misunderstand the value the United States places on the rule of law.”

Mr Pickering stressed that “I firmly believe that adjudicating Mr Rahmatullah’s case in UK courts is highly unlikely to cause damage to the relations or national security cooperation between the US and UK.”

After his 2004 capture Mr Rahmatullah maintains he was subjected to simulated drowning and beatings which rendered him unconscious.

He was later transferred to US custody in Bagdhad’s notorious Abu Ghraib prison, after which he was extra judicially transferred to Bagram in Afghanistan where he was held for more than years before being released without charge last June.

Mr Rahmatullah is now challenging the British government’s refusal to investigate his allegations of torture and rendition, and is also asking the court to determine that the government’s actions were unlawful.

Reprieve legal director Kat Craig, who is representing Mr Rahmatullah in conjunction with Leigh Day solicitors, said: “The British government knows that it is in the wrong, yet instead of coming clean on its part in Mr Rahmatullah’s rendition and torture, it is doing everything it can to make sure this case never sees the light of day.

“Now a former senior US ambassador with decades of experience at the highest levels of American diplomacy has blown the British government’s case out of the water. It is time they dropped this shameful attempt to deny justice to a victim of brutal torture and years of mistreatment.”

The case is expected to continue today.

British torture in Iraq: here.

Man allegedly tortured by US and UK troops wins right to sue for damages. High court dismisses UK government claim that relations with US will be damaged if Yunus Rahmatullah is allowed to sue: here.

New Afghan puppet regime accepts deal to keep 10,000 US troops: here.

CIA-Backed Warlord Behind 2001 Taliban POW Massacre Sworn-In Vice President of Afghanistan: here.

31 thoughts on “British-US torture scandal in Iraq, Afghanistan

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  20. Thursday 10th December 2015

    posted by Morning Star in Britain

    IRAQIS seeking justice for the abuse and illegal detention they suffered at the hands of British troops after the 2003 invasion suffered a setback yesterday in the Court of Appeal.

    Following a Ministry of Defence (MoD) appeal, a panel of three judges overturned a High Court decision giving Iraqis more time to lodge cases in response to limitations in their own country.

    Hundreds of people have already won compensation in the High Court for abuses suffered following the illegal US-British invasion of Iraq in 2003.

    An MoD spokeswoman said: “The department welcomes the decision of the Court of Appeal as it serves to safeguard taxpayer interests in the face of hundreds of compensation claims which have appeared many years after the alleged incidents to which they refer.”

    Martyn Day, of law firm Leigh Day, said: “This judgement puts up an additional technical hurdle for the remaining Iraqis who are looking to get justice.”

    http://morningstaronline.co.uk/a-32a2-Abused-Iraqi-detainees-denied-their-day-in-court#.VmnkUb_TcdU

    Like

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