Campaign to Repeal the Torture Law, AKA the Military Commissions Act

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Torture Abolition and Survivors Support Coalition Internation wants to repeal the Military Commissions Act


 

 
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Stay up to date on what is happening with TASSC International, the Military Commissions Act, our Campaign to repeal it. If you are with the media, please visit the press room.


Six Years of Imprisonment without Trial

 

The Press Release from our partner in struggle, Witness Against Torture:

OVER 80 ARRESTED AT U.S. SUPREME COURT

DIRECT ACTION TODAY DEMANDED SHUT-DOWN OF GUANTANAMO AND AN END TO TORTURE AND INDEFINITE DETENTION

WASHINGTON, DC – Early this afternoon, at least 80 activists organized by Witness Against Torture delivered a message to the U.S. Supreme Court demanding the shut-down of the U.S. prison at Guantánamo and justice for those detained. About 40 activists were arrested inside the Court building and another 35 on the steps. The arrests, for demonstrating without a permit, followed a solemn march from the National Mall of 400 persons that included a procession of activists dressed like the Guantánamo prisoners in orange jumpsuits and black hoods. They were part of an International Day of Action that was endorsed by a broad and unprecedented coalition of over 100 groups and that included 83 events around the world.

The International Day of Action launches a concerted campaign to Shut Down Guantánamo. For more information, please visit www.witnesstorture.org.

Inside, a member of Witness Against Torture delivered a letter to the nine Supreme Court justices regarding Al Odah v. United States and Boumediene v. Bush, the two cases brought by Guantánamo detainees that the Court is now considering. They also delivered a writ of habeas corpus for each of the 275 current detainees. Other activists attempted to unfurl a banner inside the Court building but were prevented from doing so by police, who began arresting them and shut the front doors to the building. Another group then started reading the names of the Guantánamo prisoners, but were prevented. They then sat down and started chanting, “Shut it down!” prior to being arrested.

At approximately the same time, about 25 activists dressed in orange jumpsuits and black hoods representing the men imprisoned at Guantánamo knelt on the steps of the Court building with hands before them and bowed heads, the position detainees in Guantánamo are often required to assume; others unfurled a banner on the steps. They were arrested as well. Each arrestee had entered the building without ID, and was taken into custody under the name of one of the Guantánamo prisoners.

“This group brought the names of the victims of Guantánamo right to the Supreme Court,” said Elizabeth McAlister, a member of the Jonah House community in Baltimore and the mother of one of the persons arrested inside the Court. “The Court has listened and listened to the views of the imprisoned, but has not heard them.”

Outside the Court, advocates read testimonies and names of prisoners, performed street theater, and handed out information. One performance was a simulation of waterboarding, one of the most controversial torture tactics used at Guantánamo and other U.S. detention centers.

January 11, 2008 marks six years of detention without hope of release for nearly 300 men at Guantánamo. “Lawyers are working hard to bring the cases of the prisoners into the courts,” said Susan Crane of Witness Against Torture, who was arrested in today’s action. “But lawyers can only do so much. These prisoners, who have been illegally detained, tortured, abused, and kept from their families for years, are not even able to communicate openly with their lawyers. That’s why we were here today to appeal to the Supreme Court justices to stand up now and end this abuse.”

Witness Against Torture is calling on the U.S. government to:
* Repeal the Military Commissions Act and restore Habeas Corpus;
* Charge and try or release all detainees;
* Clearly and unequivocally forbid torture and all other forms of cruel, inhuman, and degrading treatment, by the military, the CIA, prison guards, civilian contractors, or anyone else;
* Pay reparations to current and former detainees and their families for violations of their human rights; and
* Shut down Guantánamo, Abu Ghraib, Bagram, and all secret CIA detention facilities.

About Witness Against Torture
Tomorrow's action is the latest by Witness Against Torture, which came into being in December 2005 when a group of 24 friends walked to Guantánamo to visit the prisoners – an action following the nonviolent tradition of Dorothy Day and the Catholic Worker. Upon returning to the U.S., they continued the work with public education and community outreach, networking and resource sharing, and acts of nonviolent civil resistance to draw attention to the plight of prisoners in Guantánamo and victims of the war on terrorism everywhere.

*** PROFESSIONAL, HIGH RESOLUTION PHOTOS AVAILABLE AT RESISTANCEMEDIA.ORG, OR BY CALLING (202) 270-6665 ***

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Subjects: Campaign | Grassroots | Guantanamo | Supreme Court

by TASSC International January 12, 2008, 1:03 pm

Congress: We Will Remember

 

Photo: Survivors of torture and family members of the disappeared gather to remember

As the Congress of the United States embraces and institutionalizes the practice of torture by passing laws like the Military Commissions Act of 2006 and appointing torture apologists to run the Department of Justice, it is important to remember who voted for torture and who stood up for human rights.

We have recently finished building a database of Congress, which will track how each member voted. We are now entering each congressperson's voting record and selected quotes from each member on torture.

Soon, people will be able to visit TortureLaw.org and see if their representative has supported or opposed torture and indefinite detention. Each member of congress will be issued a torture report card for their votes. Tragically, we predict a lot of failing grades.


Subjects: Campaign | Congress | Immunity | TASSC International | TortureLaw.org

by TASSC International November 15, 2007, 1:05 pm

Campaign's First Ad Buy

TASSC International, and the Campaign to Repeal the Torture Law, would like to thank Cesar Maxit of RVLTN Design for designing this ad, which will run in SOA Watch's program for the vigil at Fort Benning:



Subjects: Campaign | Grassroots | TASSC International | TortureLaw.org

by TASSC International October 23, 2007, 8:44 pm

One Year Anniversary of Torture Law

One year ago today, President Bush signed the Military Commissions Act, the Torture Law.

As we did then, we gathered outside the White House for a symbolic funeral procession, mourning the death of our basic civil liberties. This year we were joined by our partner in struggle, Amnesty International.

Hopefully next year we will have repealed the Military Commissions Act, stepped out of the dark shadow of torture, and won't have to mourn at yet another symbolic funeral.

Photos From This Year





Photos From Last Year





Subjects: Campaign | Grassroots | President Bush | TASSC International

by TASSC International October 17, 2007, 3:28 pm

Campaign Launches TortureLaw.org

The Military Commissions Act, the Torture Law

The Military Commissions Act of 2006, what we survivors of torture have come to know as the 'Torture Law,' has frightened nearly everyone in the US who works to eradicate torture. Even groups who never before worked on the issue of torture have begun campaigning to reform the Military Commissions Act.

Numerous international organizations of human rights attorneys have made reforming the Military Commissions Act a top priority. Numerous politicians in the US Congress have made reforming the Military Commissions Act a top priority.

In all the clamor, the voices of torture survivors have not been heard. Our understanding of the debate surrounding torture and the Military Commissions Act reaches a deeper, more intimate level than all the arguments of lawyers and politicians—and one thing we know is that the Military Commissions Act must be repealed. Not reformed—repealed.

Why Repeal? Because the Framework, Not the Details, Is What Matters

As survivors of torture, many of us recall the most frightening words we ever heard—words that were more terrifying even than the rapes, the burns, the beatings, and the psychological torture that we would come to know too well. We all heard the same words—and still hear them sometimes, when we wake up in the middle of the night drenched in sweat:

"Scream as loud as you want—it won't matter. Nobody's listening."

It did not matter if we were tortured during the cold war, a civil war, or a brutal dictatorship. It did not matter if we were tortured in a clandestine prison in Ethiopia, Saudi Arabia, or Guatemala. We were all told the same thing.

The reason it sent chills through our bones is simple: you are helpless when your captors act with impunity.

As Paul Magno said, in an excellent article for Sojourner's magazine, "Why should we repeal the MCA? Because this law enables abusers, torturers even, to do whatever they like with impunity, even if it says otherwise."

The Creation of the Campaign

Most of The Torture Abolition and Survivors Support Coalition's (TASSC's) work is dedicated to helping other survivors in the painstaking lifelong process of healing and learning how to trust people again. Although we have been active in speaking out against torture, through our Truth Speaker's program, we had no experience in building a grass roots campaign to repeal a law.

We began with a petition. The original director of the Campaign, Paul Magno, organized the collection of thousands upon thousands of signatures demanding a complete repeal of the Military Commissions Act, the Torture Law. Every month a group of survivors hand-delivered the petitions to Nancy Pelosi's office and worked to set up a meeting with the recently elected leader of the House.

We worked to build coalitions with other organizations. TASSC humbly reached out to other organizations, our partners in our struggle to create a torture-free world, and asked them to endorse the campaign. Over a hundred organizations, some with tens of thousands of members, signed on.

We felt as if we were moving forward and gaining initiative.

But Too Many Were Willing to Compromise on Torture

The feelings of progress proved to be an illusion. Nancy Pelosi never met with us. Almost all of the large human rights organizations refused to sign on to the Campaign. Perhaps compromised by their relationships with members of congress, perhaps compromised by the role they played in crafting the Torture Law, they were not willing to demand the full and unconditional repeal.

The law, they pointed out, wasn't as bad as Bush wanted. The law didn't explicitly endorse torture. The law could be fixed, they claimed, but we would never get enough support to repeal it.

We were told that torture survivors didn't understand the law, and elite human rights attorneys and politicians did. We were told it is a complicated issue.

But it is a lot less complicated to survivors of torture. The Torture Law removes the survivor's hope of someday being able to prosecute torturers. The Torture Law hides torture. The Torture Law creates an air of impunity that always leads to torture. For us, there can be zero tolerance for torture.

The Website

We do not, and probably never will, have the resources of the large human rights organizations. But survivors of torture understand torture like nobody else, and we believe that survivors can be the most effective voices speaking out against torture. Our voice must be heard.

We have created a number of tools to help the public and the media understand why this Torture Law must be repealed.

  • A growing section of fact sheets, thanks in part to the National Security & Human Rights Clinic at the University of Texas School of Law.
  • Tools to allow people to sign the petition or contact congress online.
  • A Perspectives section, where we have begun to collect articles explaining why a complete and unconditional repeal is the only honorable response.
  • Information about a billboard design competition we are organizing to help the public, and Congress, realize that repeal is the only way to restore our honor and our system of justice.

Survivors need your help. With the website, and your help, we can bring the Torture Law to an end. We have built the tools. Please get involved today. Together we can create a torture-free world.


Subjects: Campaign | Survivor's Voices | TASSC International | TortureLaw.org

by TASSC International September 28, 2007, 8:30 am

     
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