The USA is still a country of "advanced, relatively stable capitalism
with high employment coterminous with steady urbanisation," but its
government has broken with liberalism all the same, changing its own
regime from liberal plutocracy to illiberal plutocracy.  Here's a call
to action, in the FWIW department, for it won't have any traction
unless there's an intervention by the Messiah or the Twelfth Imam or
something.  :-0  -- Yoshie

<http://www.witnesstorture.org/>
JAN 11: INTERNATIONAL DAY TO SHUT DOWN GUANTÁNAMO

Thursday, January 11, 2007: The 5 year anniversary of the first
prisoners being brought to Guantánamo. March, Press Conference and
Nonviolent Direct Action in Washington, DC (DETAILS). Endorsed by
Center for Constitional Rights, CodePink, Network of Spiritual
Progressives, Pax Christi USA, School of Americas Watch, United for
Peace and Justice and other groups.

<http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2006/12/28/asia/AS_GEN_Pakistan_Guantanamo_Author.php>
AP Enterprise: Former Guantanamo Bay detainee held again, perhaps over
prison memoir

The Associated Press
Wednesday, December 27, 2006

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan

In his chronicle of life as an inmate at Guantanamo Bay, Afghan writer
Abdul Rahim Muslim Dost describes his three years of humiliating
detention for alleged ties to al-Qaida.

Now, he has lost his liberty again — this time believed jailed by the
Pakistani intelligence service for the book's fierce criticism of the
agency's role in the U.S.-led war on terrorist groups.

Just weeks after the Sept. 3 release of "The Broken Shackles of
Guantanamo," co-written with his brother and fellow Guantanamo
detainee Badruz Zaman Badar, Dost was taken away as he left a mosque
after prayers in the northwest Pakistan city of Peshawar, where the
family has lived for nearly 30 years.

Badar, 36, hasn't seen Dost since and thinks he was detained by
Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence. In the book, the brothers
condemn the agency as a "black institution" and accuse it of selling
them into American custody.

There is no official word on Dost's whereabouts, although the rights
group Amnesty International also thinks he is held by the government.
Pakistan's military and ISI officials did not respond to requests for
comment on Dost's case or the brothers' comments on the agency's
conduct.

The brothers are both journalists and run a gemstone business. Dost
has written more than 30 books, including poetry, and has edited
magazines sympathetic to militant Islam, dating back to support for
the Muslim guerrillas who fought Soviet troops occupying Afghanistan
in the 1980s.

The brothers were both arrested in Peshawar in November 2001 and
transferred to the U.S. military in Afghanistan before being taken to
Guantanamo.

According to the book and details from "enemy combatant" review
hearings at Guantanamo, the brothers were suspected of having links
with Islamic extremists. Dost was accused of running a liaison office
for al-Qaida in Herat, Afghanistan. He denied that, and the brothers
were eventually freed a few months apart in 2005.

During detention, they were repeatedly questioned about Osama bin
Laden and Taliban chief Mullah Omar but insist they never met the two
leaders.

"We are not fighters. We are men of letters," Badar told The
Associated Press in an interview. "We have criticized the American
government for their overseas policies but we do not hate the American
public, for they are innocent like us."

The 450-page book alleges guards at Guantanamo committed sexual
improprieties, physical abuse and mistreatment of the Quran —
reiterating charges made by other freed detainees and denied by the
U.S. military.

But with a poetic flourish, the book also offers a look at daily life
inside the prison at the U.S. Navy base, where hundreds of suspected
Taliban and al-Qaida members have been held since the Sept. 11 terror
attacks on America.

Dost grumbles about the prison food and says inmates were not fed
chicken joints with big bones in case they could be used as weapons
against guards.

He recounts giving lessons on Islam to other inmates using a secret
communication system, passing words from cell to cell. He writes that
captivity deepened prisoners' Muslim faith and some learned the Quran
by heart, which he says helped them endure the indignity of detention.

"Life in Guantanamo jail is close to life in a grave," the book says.
"That is because the prisoners in Cuba are neither dead nor alive.
They are not dead because they have souls ... (but) they have been
deprived of all the rights of living people."

Yet the brothers' bitterest criticism is reserved for the
Inter-Services Intelligence agency.

Dost and Badar call its agents "criminals," accusing the ISI of
selling the brothers into American custody and of confiscating tens of
thousands of dollars worth of jewelry, cash and other goods from their
business.

"We have such a strong views against ISI because they are our
neighbors, they speak our languages and they claim to share the same
religion as we do," Badar told AP.

Pakistani intelligence has been instrumental in arresting hundreds of
al-Qaida suspects since 2001, including Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the
alleged mastermind of the Sept. 11 attack, but human rights
campaigners often accuse it of acting above the law.

Dost says ISI agents twice visited the brothers' home in Peshawar
trying to prevent them from publishing "The Broken Shackles of
Guantanamo." The brothers refused, and it was published on Sept. 3 in
Pakistan in their native Pashto language.

On Sept. 29, unidentified men took Dost away from the mosque, bundling
him into a jeep and driving off as one of Dost's sons looked on. Dost,
who has nine children, hasn't been heard from, and his family fear for
his safety.

In a recent report, Amnesty International said Pakistani authorities
have violated "custodial safeguards" by not producing Dost in court or
allowing him access to a lawyer or his family.

Badar, who has three children, now keeps a low profile running the
family business. But he is keen the book is more widely read. He wants
to issue translations in English, Arabic, Persian, French and Urdu.

"We want the world to know the facts and so that others don't suffer
like us," he said.

___

Associated Press writers Matthew Pennington in Islamabad and Riaz Khan
in Peshawar contributed to this report.

--
Yoshie
<http://montages.blogspot.com/>
<http://mrzine.org>
<http://monthlyreview.org/>

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