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Menschenrecht als Grundlage

Die Arbeit an diesem Blog bezieht sich auf menschenrechtliche Grundlagen.

-Art. 5 Abs. 1 S. 1 Grundgesetz (Meinungsfreiheit)
-Art. 5 Abs. 1 S. 2 Grundgesetz (Informationsfreiheit)
-Art. 5 Abs. 1 S. 3 Grundgesetz (Pressefreiheit)
-Art. 5 Abs. 1 S. 4 Grundgesetz (Zensurverbot)
-Art. 19 Allgem. Erkl. der Menschenrechte sowie Art. 19 Uno-Zivilpakt (Meinungs- und Informationsfreiheit auch Staatsgrenzen überschreitend)
-Art. 1 von Uno-Resolution 53/144 (schützt das Recht, sich für die Menschenrechte zu engagieren)

Trotzdem sehe ich mich dazu gezwungen, gewisse Kommentare zu überprüfen, und gegebenenfalls nicht zu veröffentlichen. Es sind dies jene, die sich in rassistischer Weise gegen andere Menschen richten - gewalttätige Inhalte enthalten - Beschimpfungen, etc. Derlei Inhalte kann ich nicht damit vereinbaren, dass sich dieses blog für Menschenrechte einsetzt - und zwar ausnahmslos für alle Menschen.

Mein Blog ist ab 18 Jahren, denn ab da kann man voraussetzen, dass der Mensch denkt...

...und ausserdem nicht mehr mit den Umtrieben der Ministerin von der Leyen gegen Websiten in Schwierigkeiten kommt, wenn er einen blog lesen will.

Im Übrigen gilt Folgendes für die verlinkten Seiten:

Hinweis:
Mit Urteil vom 12. Mai 1998 hat das Landgericht Hamburg entschieden, dass durch die Ausbringung eines Links die Inhalte der gelinkten Seite gegebenenfalls mit zu verantworten sind. Dieses kann – laut Landgerichtsurteil – nur dadurch verhindert werden, dass man sich ausdrücklich von diesen Inhalten distanziert.

So bleibt hier vorsorglich festzustellen, dass wir weder Einfluss auf die Gestaltung noch auf den Inhalt dieser gelinkten Seiten haben und uns auch nicht dafür verantwortlich zeichnen. Dies gilt für ALLE auf dieser Seite vorhandenen Links.



Samstag, 8. Mai 2010

Du sollst nicht wissen - you may not know...

..wenn einer, der als Kind verhaftet und wegen Kriegsverbrechen jahrelang im Gefängnis gefoltert wurde, nun verurteilt werden soll.

Vor allem sollst Du nicht wissen, wer die Monster waren, die in den Gefängnissen folterten und es noch tun. Du sollst vergessen, was dort geschieht, und jene vergessen, die es betrifft.

Dafür ist jedes Mittel recht, wie es scheint.


http://www.uruknet.info/?p=m65754&hd=&size=1&l=e


The Monster of Bagram


By Jennifer Turner, Human Rights Reseacher, ACLU Human Rights Program






Daily Kos, May 7, 2010

On Wednesday pretrial hearings continued in the case of Canadian Omar Khadr. Captured at age 15 in Afghanistan and now held for fully a third of his life in U.S. detention, Khadr is currently scheduled for trial by military commission in July. Unless a plea bargain is reached, Khadr's case will be the first prosecution in U.S. history of a person for war crimes allegedly committed as a child. 



Wednesday's hearing included dramatic testimony from a notorious interrogator who befriended Omar Khadr during Khadr's three months of detention at Bagram. The former Army interrogator, Damien Corsetti, was known to Bagram detainees as "The Monster," but was acquitted of charges of detainee abuse in a 2006 court-martial and honorably discharged from the army. Corsetti told the Toronto Star in January 2009 of his desire to testify as a witness for the defense about his knowledge of abuse at Bagram, "I firmly believe it was torture and unfortunately I took part in it," adding "I guess this is just me trying to make it a little bit right."
Corsetti told the court Wednesday that he wasn't Khadr's interrogator, but was present for an intelligence interview conducted two days after Khadr's capture, while the 15-year-old Khadr was gravely injured and flat on a stretcher in Bagram's Army field hospital.  Frightened, Khadr was hooked up to heart rate or respiration monitors that jumped during questioning, according to Corsetti.
Corsetti said that once Khadr was transferred from the Bagram hospital to the detention facility two weeks later, he felt compassion for Khadr and chatted with him about cars and video games. Corsetti explained:
He was a child. That's it. He was a 15-year-old child who had been blown up, shot, grenaded, and he was in probably one of the worst places on earth. How could you not have compassion for him? He was in the wrong place for a 15-year-old child to be.
He observed that Khadr "went from a smiling young kid to a look of defeat by the time he left" for transfer to Guantánamo.
During Corsetti's testimony, the government military prosecutor, U.S. Marine Maj. Jeff Groharing, made frequent, strenuous objections whenever the defense asked Corsetti about abuse practices at Bagram while Khadr was detained there. In the few instances when the judge overruled the government prosecutor's objections, Corsetti testified about the rampant abuse that was approved for use by interrogators. Corsetti described approved interrogation techniques at Bagram, which included screaming, breaking furniture, shackling detainees in stress positions for hours, and threatening to send detainees to interrogation in Israel or Egypt. He also said that during the period of Khadr's detention at Bagram in 2002, interrogators were under tremendous pressure from the Secretary of Defense's office and other commanders to extract information from detainees. He said, "There was a ton of pressure on us to get information to save lives and generate reports… If there came a time when we were stagnant and not generating 20, 30 reports a week, we would get a call asking what was going on."
Corsetti's was dramatic testimony, but the judge, Col. Patrick Parrish, frequently sustained the government prosecutor's objections, and shut down lines of inquiry about standard operating procedures for interrogators or abuse at Bagram that Corsetti didn't specifically see being used on Khadr.
The question of torture is at the center of these proceedings, but.even with the revelations of the past three days about Khadr's abuse at Bagram, there may have been a lot left unsaid by witnesses.  Throughout the hearings of the past week, with few exceptions, the judge refused to allow witnesses to testify about patterns and practices of abuse of other detainees at Bagram — even by Khadr's own interrogators. So although some witnesses who testified at the proceedings had participated in interrogations at Bagram while Khadr was imprisoned there and would have knowledge about abuse during interrogations at that time, defense lawyers generally couldn't ask about it.
This is extremely problematic, because Khadr's lawyers have faced obstacles to interviewing and compelling testimony from all of Khadr's interrogators at Bagram and Guantánamo. Khadr's lawyers argue that self-incriminating statements he made to interrogators at Bagram and Guantánamo are false confessions and should be excluded from trial because they are tainted by torture and other abuse. To prove this, they need evidence that corroborates their client's allegations of abuse.
But Khadr's lawyers say they still don't have the names and details of some of Khadr's interrogators six years after Khadr was first charged under the first military commission system. And only seven of the at least 31 interrogators who conducted over 100 hours of interrogation of Khadr at Bagram and Guantánamo will testify in these proceedings. Defense lawyers have argued the military judge should compel some of the remaining interrogators to testify, but the judge has extremely limited ability to punish nonmilitary witnesses for refusing to appear, so we may never hear from some of Khadr's interrogators. This makes it all the more important that Khadr's lawyers be given the opportunity to ask those interrogators who do testify about general interrogation patterns and practices at Bagram at the time.
It is chilling to watch government prosecutors argue that Khadr's coerced statements — and subsequent statements tainted by prior abuse — should be used against him at trial.  We believe this is why the military commissions were revived to prosecute cases like Khadr's. It is time for the Obama administration to recognize the folly of prosecuting an abused child soldier before the discredited military commissions.


:: Article nr. 65754 sent on 07-may-2010 21:56 ECT www.uruknet.info?p=65754



Und hier:

Obama Administration Demands Amnesia From Reporters Covering Gitmo

Jack Newfield, the legendary investigative reporter, once wrote that if government officials had their way, journalists would be "stenographers with amnesia." The "amnesia" part, at least, was generally considered a bit of an exaggeration. But now, the Pentagon has banned four reporters from covering the military commissions at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, because they refused to forget something that had already been reported to the world. The four reporters were covering military commission hearings at which defense attorneys for Canadian detainee Omar Khadr argued that confessions he made as a gravely wounded 15-year-old shouldn't be admissible in his upcoming trial because they were made under duress. And indeed, witnesses earlier this week described how Khadr's interrogation began when he was still sedated and lying wounded on a stretcher. A medic testified that he once found Khadr chained by his arms to the door of his cage-like cell, hooded and in tears But the defense's star witness, on Thursday, was the first U.S. Army interrogator to question Khadr. The interrogator admitted that in an attempt to get Khadr to talk, he told the boy a "fictitious" tale of an Afghan youth who was gang-raped in an American prison and died. Read more:   http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/05/07/obama-administration-dema_n_568208.html

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