by Andy Worthington
On September 11, the seventh anniversary levitra costs of the 9/11 attacks, I had the pleasure of being interviewed once again by Linda Olson-Osterlund for the Silagra “News and Public Affairs Special” show on KBOO FM in Portland, Oregon. The interview, available here, was part of a 9/11 Special, and Linda and I had the opportunity to follow up on previous interviews (levitra cost href=”http://kboo.fm/node/7498″ target=”_self”>here and Buy motilium online Buy cheap Propecia Online href=”http://kboo.fm/node/8898″ target=”_self”>here) to look at the current situation in Guantánamo: the plight of the 50-plus prisoners who have been cleared for release, but who cannot be repatriated because of international treaties preventing the return of foreign nationals to countries where they face the risk of order were to buy viagra levitra torture; and those put forward for trial by Military Commission, buy cialis pills online with a particular focus, at Linda’s request, on Omar Khadr and Mohamed Jawad, the two prisoners, of the 24 charged to date, who were juveniles when they were seized.
This discussion focused on whether it was legitimate to apply “war crimes” charges to alleged combatants in war (it is not, of course, as it leads to an insane situation whereby US combatants are soldiers, while anyone who opposes them is a terrorist), and on the US obligation to rehabilitate juveniles, rather then Buy Viagra, Buy Cialis, Buy Levitra Without Prescription subjecting them to years of abuse and then putting them buy amoxicillin no prescription forward for “war crimes” trials.
The last few weeks have been busy, as requests have come my way to comment on various issues, either as a spokesman for online amoxil href=”http://www.reprieve.org.uk/” target=”_self”>Reprieve, the legal action charity whose lawyers represent 31 of the remaining 263 prisoners in Guantánamo, or as the author of The buy brand viagra Guantánamo Files: The Stories of the 774 Detainees in America’s Illegal Prison.
On August 30, following the UK High Court’s ruling that the British government had an obligation to reveal potentially exculpatory online cheap viagra information in its possession order online levitra to the lawyers of British resident Binyam buy viagra order viagra Mohamed, in advance of his proposed trial by Military Commission at Guantánamo, I was invited to talk to George Galloway on his TalkSPORT show about the sub-text of the case — the torture to which Binyam was subjected in Moroccan custody (on behalf of the CIA, who rendered him there for that very purpose) and in the CIA’s “Dark Cialis online buy Prison” near Kabul. George was a gracious host, very attuned to the absolute horror of torture, and I would be happy to speak to him again.
On September 8, I was talking about Binyam again, after a showing of the film cheap Ampicillin Without Prescription online buy buy flagyl online target=”_self”>Outlawed at the buy real viagra without prescription | buy cialis fast shipping | low price levitra href=”http://www.portobellofilmfestival.com/” buy generic viagra generic female viagra online target=”_self”>Portobello Film Festival, which was arranged by the campaigning group Filmmakers Against War. Made in 2006, the half-hour film tells Binyam’s story and that of amoxil buy Khaled El-Masri, a German citizen, mistaken for an alleged al-Qaeda accomplice, who was kidnapped as he attempted to enter Macedonia for a holiday and spent months in the “Salt Pit,” another CIA torture prison near Kabul, until the CIA discovered its mistake, and flew him to Albania, dropping him off and leaving him to make his own way home. In a lively Q & A Cialis Professional session after the film, I was able to update the buy generic amoxil stories of these buy cheap acomplia men, and to discuss, in particular, Reprieve’s long struggle for justice for Binyam.
On September 12, I was one of several speakers — including Lord buy cialis pill Ahmed, Victoria Brittain, Asim Qureshi and Moazzam Begg — invited to speak at a buyviagra buy viagra href=”http://www.cageprisoners.com/” target=”_self”>Cageprisoners protest outside the US embassy, to demand justice for Aafia Siddiqui, a Pakistani neuroscientist, abducted with her children in 2003, whose whereabouts were unaccounted for until this summer, when she reportedly surfaced in Afghanistan, diflucan buy was wounded in a gunfight and was spirited way to the United States to be charged in connection with terrorism. I can’t even begin here to discuss the horror of Aafia’s case, her long detention (denied by all parties), and the bizarre story about her capture in Afghanistan, and I recommend readers to visit cytotec Buy Nexium Online Pharmacy No Prescription Needed 200mcg target=”_self”>this page on the Cageprisoners’ website to discover more and to read levaquin href=”http://writ.news.findlaw.com/mariner/20080908.html” Ampicillin buy cheap Professional”>Levitra Professional target=”_self”>this article by Joanne Mariner of Human Rights Watch (and then to see rimonabant target=”_self”>here for the trail of tortured intelligence that leads from Khalid Sheikh Mohammed to Majid Khan to Aafia).
I’m pleased to report, however, that the event was a success, as several hundred buy cialis tablets people turned up, some from far-flung locations around the country, and many who had not, to date, attended any other protests against Buy Erectile Dysfunction medications the excesses of the “ buy real viagra without prescription War on Terror.” I was happy to provide those attending with some background to the stories of Buy Buy Viagra online Viagra online “extraordinary rendition” that underpin the “War on Terror,” and to talk about the US prison in Bagram (in many ways, Guantánamo’s less accountable mirror prison). I can only hope that more people are drawn to the cause (which seems to be one of the most disturbing cases in the whole of the United buy Ampicillin cheap Drugstore online States’ flight from the law over the last seven years), and that Moazzam’s heartfelt plea for more engagement from Online Cialis patent expiration date Viagra buy the British Pakistani community bears fruit.
And finally, on September 15, I was interviewed by Jeff Monaghan for CKCU, a community radio station in Ottawa, Canada. Jeff contacted me after he read an article I had written about online buy propecia amoxil target=”_self”>Mohammed Saad Iqbal Madni, a victim of rendition and torture who was recently released from Guantánamo (and whose story has not gained anywhere near enough press interest). In an interesting half-hour interview, we discussed Madni’s case, looked at “extraordinary rendition” in closer detail, and also spoke about the case of Omar Khadr — in particular, I must admit, I focused on the hypocrisy of the Canadian government, which advocates for the rights of levitra pharmacologic class “child soldiers” from other countries, but is unwilling to act for one of its own, and is content to let Omar, a 15-year Brand Viagra old at the online levitra buy shop cialis pharmacy propecia Levitra buy time of his capture, be brutalized for the perceived sins of his family.
My thanks to everyone mentioned above for keeping alive the struggle against the injustices of Guantánamo and the “War on Terror.” Tadalis SX America’s return to the rule of law is more pressing than ever, as the election approaches, and I can only hope that every gesture by concerned individuals will help to deliver a new administration committed Buy Cialis to engaging the United States with buy generic viagra professional the wider world, and overturning the executive power grab engineered, over the last eight years, by Vice President Dick Cheney and his close advisers, including his Chief of Staff, David Addington.
SOURCE: www.andyworthington.co.uk nolvadex cheap
[...] (required) Website. Notify me of follow-up comments via email. Notify me of new posts via email. …The Guant¡namo Files: 9/11 Interview, Aafia Siddiqui Protest …The Guant¡namo Files: 9/11 Interview, Aafia Siddiqui Protest and Other Events … I had the [...]