America’s  international standing as a fair and just country does not match its  superpower status as the world's greatest democracy.
When it comes to basic human rights it is  there in the gutter alongside some of the world's most toxic, tinpot  dictatorships and authoritarian regimes.
So there's little surprise that Wikileaks  founder Julian Assange fears being extradited to the States where some  politicians and Pentagon officials have already called for his execution  and Attorney General Eric Holder admits his government may invoke the  US Espionage Act.
But it's not just the persecution and the  prosecution Assange should fear, either - the wheels of justice can be  agonizingly slow in a process which could take years. And in the case of  the Guantanamo detainees there is no end in sight - the majority of  them have not been charged but simply forgotten.
Having stepped inside US prisons – both  military and civilian – I can tell you there is nothing civilized about  the penal institutions in the United States.
Four days of filming inside Guantanamo and  half a day at one of California’s largest young offenders prisons  provided me with enough material to reach this conclusion, bearing in  mind as a journalist I was just shown “the good bits”!
Having also viewed CCTV footage of detainees  in US institutions being strip and cavity searched was equally traumatic  and for those who showed the slightest resistance a procedure would  follow which in my view is tantamount to gang rape.
Frankly, I was appalled by what I saw inside  American jails and the interviews and research which followed did not  make easy reading.
I wondered how the US could really describe itself as a civilized, mature democracy. And if you doubt my judgment here are a few  statistics to play with in a prison system where 70 per cent of the  inmates are non-whites.
* The US has a higher percentage of its citizenry in prison than any other country in history.
* 25 percent of the world’s prison population - around 2.3 million – are caged in America.
* More than a quarter of US inmates are black males between the ages of 20 and 39 and over the course of a lifetime, 28 percent of all black American men will have spent some time behind bars in what can only be described as a racist-driven judicial system.
As 2011 dawns the British Prime Minister David  Cameron is faced with some hard choices this year, none more difficult  than probably deciding whether or not to scrap our extradition treaty  with the US and refuse to hand over a group of British citizens to  Barack Obama’s America.
And make no mistake, if he wanted to, he could  tell the Obama Administration to “get stuffed”. His coalition  government is stronger than the previous Labor governments  … under both  Tony Blair and Gordon Brown human rights, civil liberties and freedoms  were diminished both at home and abroad
 It was Blair’s government that introduced the  one-sided 2003 Extradition Treaty to please and appease the Bush  Administration. Legislation drawn up in panic and haste is never a good  idea nor was it wise to allow America to extend its jurisdiction in to  the UK for that is exactly what has happened. And I wonder if the  legislation was really drawn up by UK lawyers since a close inspection  of the original documents reveal the liberal use of American English.
I would urge Cameron to resist all of the  existing US Extradition requests just as he would if the same demands  were being made by some banana republic.
This has nothing to do with innocence or  guilt, by the way, but everything to do with the just treatment of human  beings – justice should be meted out equally, without fear or favor but  in America the accused are often judged by the color of their skin,  religion and class.
The evidence is there for all to see –  America’s human rights record is appalling, the prison system is a  disgrace and the way it treats its own convicted citizens, let alone  foreigners, is primitive.
Gareth Peirce, an internationally acclaimed and respected solicitor based in London explains in her book Dispatches from the Dark Side:  “Guilty pleas resolve 97 per cent  of US trials, an extraordinary  statistic inevitably achieved by the defendant's apprehension of what  lies ahead - not just for the 'worst of the worst' - and a desire to  avoid, at any cost, the US law's most extreme application.”
A number of her clients including Syed Talha  Ahsan, Babar Ahmad, Adel Abdel Bary and Khalid al-Fawwaz have been held  in British prisons for a record amount of years fighting extradition to  the US.
All of these men protest their innocence and  would welcome their day in court – a British court. However the evidence  against them is either so flimsy or non existent that police in the UK  have no intention of wasting public money on trials which will end up  being laughed out of court.
Which takes us back to the 2003 US Extradition  agreement in which the Blair government tied the hands of the UK  judiciary beyond sound judgment. Now any slight allegation made by the  US should be regarded in British courts as solid proof.
By the way it’s not a two-way system. Should  the UK ever wish to extradite a US citizen the evidence supplied must be  well documented, concrete and factual and able to withstand the  scrutiny of a US judge.
Britain’s legal system became the basis for  most others in the world. It is based on presumed innocence and a trial  by a jury of one’s peers which emanates from our rights as set out in  the Magna Carta of 1215, a noble document which has stood the test of  time.
The 2003 extradition treaty is a complete  betrayal of those basic rights. A victim of the treaty faces being  locked up without evidence and has no right to a trial by jury and gone  is the presumption of innocence.  
We cannot allow anyone in UK custody or under  'house arrest' like Julian Assange to be extradited to the US. You just  have to look at the treatment of its own citizens to realise this.
Bradley Manning, the 22-year-old US Army  Private accused of leaking classified documents to WikiLeaks, has been  held in solitary confinement for the last seven months, despite not  having been convicted of any crime.
Manning has been kept alone in a cell for 23  hours a day, barred from exercising in that cell, deprived of sleep, and  denied even a pillow or sheets for his bed. Unsurprisingly he now  relies on anti-depressants to cope with the effects of isolation. No  date for a court hearing has been set.
Make no mistake, this sort of treatment is  torture and we, as a civilized nation can not send anyone in to the  hands of the US judicial system which openly tortures its own citizens  as well as others.
By the time his brains are completely  scrambled and he’s addicted to his medication I'm sure some sleazy,  government prosecutor will offer him a plea bargain which is another  disgraceful and routine feature of US justice. In exchange for dishing  the dirt, real or imagine, on Julian Assange, Manning will be  pressurized to cut a deal.
I would urge the British Prime Minister to  tear up the 2003 extradition treaty now, tell Obama to get stuffed and  instruct the Foreign Office to issue a travel warning advisory for any  UK citizens contemplating a trip to America.
British journalist Yvonne Ridley is also a patron of the London-based NGO Cageprisoners. She can be reached at yvonne@yvonneridley.org
Published in CounterPunch 5-1-2011 


No comments:
Post a Comment