US treats world as 'giant battlefield'                  Wednesday, 23 
May 2007        Amnesty International launched a scathing attack on the United 
States today, accusing it of trampling on human rights, and using the world as 
“a giant battlefield” in its War on Terror. 
   
  The criticism came in Amnesty's 2007 worldwide report, in which the human 
rights watchdog complained of a return to the geopolitical polarisation of the 
Cold War era and said that the global agenda was being largely driven by fear. 
"Like the Cold War times, the agenda is being driven by fear - instigated, 
encouraged and sustained by unpincipled leaders." Amnesty International 
launched a scathing attack on the United States today, accusing it of trampling 
on human rights, and using the world as “a giant battlefield” in its War on 
Terror.


  "Human rights - those global values, universal principles and common 
standards that are meant to unite us - are being bartered away in the name of 
security," wrote Irene Khan, Amnesty's secretary-general, in a foreword to the 
report.

"Like the Cold War times, the agenda is being driven by fear - instigated, 
encouraged and sustained by unpincipled leaders."

Amnesty said that President Bush had invoked the fear of terrorism to bolster 
his executive power after the attacks of September 11, 2001, "without 
Congressional oversight or judicial scrutiny".

But he was not alone - John Howard, the Australian Prime Minister, was accused 
of portraying asylum-seekers as a threat to national security to help secure 
his re-election. The Sudanese President, Omar al-Bashir, "whipped up fear among 
his supporters and in the Arab world that the deployment of UN peacekeepers in 
Darfur would be a pretext for an Iraq-style, US-led invasion".

"Meanwhile," it added, "his armed forces and militia allies continued to kill 
rape and plunder with impunity."

The report, focusing on the events of 2006, was highly critical of China, for 
its repression of dissent and religious freedom and for its widespread use of 
the death penalty. Russia was criticised for its crackdown on journalists, its 
failure to tackle racism and discrimination and for grave violations in 
Chechnya, where "impunity remained the norm for those who committed human 
rights abuses".

But it was Amnesty's criticisms of the United States - far stronger than those 
levelled against any other major Western democracy - which will grab most 
attention.

"Unfettered discretionary executive power is being purused relentlessly by the 
US administration, which treats the world as one big battlefield for its 'war 
on terror': kidnapping, arresting, detaining or torturing suspects either 
directly or with the help of countries as far apart as Pakistan and Gambia, 
Afghanistan and Jordan," Ms Khan said.

"In September 2006, President Bush finally admitted what Amnesty International 
has long known - that the CIA had been running secret detention centres in 
circumstances that amount to international crimes," she added.

Amnesty said that international investigations had shown that hundreds of 
people had been unlawfully transferred by the US and its allies to countries 
such as Syria, Jordan and Egypt - out of the reach of legal protection.

"The US administration's double-speak has been breathtakingly shameless. It has 
condemned Syria as part of the 'axis of evil', yet it has transferred a Canadia 
national, Maher Arar, to the Syrian security forces to be interrogated, knowing 
full well that he risked being tortured."

Yet Washington remains deaf to international pleas to shut down its remote 
military prison in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, where many of those subjected to 
'extraordinary rendition' have ended up, held without charge or trial, 
virtually incommunicado.

Ms Khan also lambasted the "misguided military adventure in Iraq", where human 
rights standards had fallen by the wayside.

“The Iraqi police forces, heavily infiltrated by sectarian militia, are feeding 
violations rather than restraining them," she wrote. “The Iraqi justice system 
is woefully inadequate, as former president Saddam Hussein’s flawed trial and 
grotesque execution confirmed." 
   
  http://www.aimislam.com/news/news/us-treats-world-as-giant-battlefield

       
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