Posts Tagged ‘Britain’

The Truth Will Come Out

Friday, February 26th, 2010

After all, the British courts won’t be intimidated by the efforts of the British government and security services to explain away and/or cover up their involvement in torture.

It’s a victory for the rule of law, as the article makes clear:

In a remarkable sequence of events, appeal court judges considering the case of Mohamed, who claims he was tortured, reinstated their findings about the security services, stating that some officials “appear to have a dubious record when it comes to human rights and coercive techniques”.

When will we see such clarity with respect to our own government’s involvement in torture, rather than the free passes and outright cover ups perpetrated by two successive Administrations?

Gorilla answers: “When the waterboard freezes over!”

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Torture Watered Down

Wednesday, February 10th, 2010

The British government managed to get a slightly watered down ruling in the case of Binyam Mohamed, a British citizen who was tortured by MI5.

But the gist of the ruling, ordering the government to detail the torture, remains:

The government launched a successful last-minute bid to persuade the court of appeal to erase the most damning details of MI5′s complicity in torture from its decision in the Binyam Mohamed case – but has been unable to suppress a letter that details some of the contents of the original draft ruling.

On Monday, Jonathan Sumption QC wrote to the court warning that the paragraph in question was “likely to receive more public attention than any other parts of the judgments”.

This, Sumption pointed out, was because the paragraph would state that MI5 did not operate in a culture that respected human rights or renounced “coercive interrogation techniques”.

The letter also reveals that the judgment, before being rewritten, said this was particularly true of the MI5 officer known as Witness B who gave evidence in the case – and that this man’s conduct was characteristic of MI5 as a whole.

Furthermore, the letter shows, the judges originally ruled that MI5 officers had “deliberately misled” the Intelligence and Security Committee, the body of MPs and peers supposed to oversee its work, on the question of coercive interrogations, and that this “culture of suppression” reflected its dealings with the committee, the foreign secretary and the court.

Finally, the letter makes clear that the court ruled MI5′s culture of suppression “penetrates the service to such a degree” that it undermines any government assurance based upon information that comes from MI5 itself.

Gorilla says: “We’re still waiting here for the same or better justice!”

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Beginning Of The End

Monday, July 27th, 2009

The British Foreign Secretary has called, again, for the Afghan government to begin negotiating with “moderate” Taliban elements.

This comes after a month in which the British have lost nine troops in Afghanistan and demonstrated that their lack of equipment was a serious obstacle to engagement in serious war fighting.

The “first phase” offensive against the Taliban, now over, has apparently secured land occupied by 100,000 people while chasing the Taliban across the border. How this land is to be secured permanently with a force of 4,000 US marines has yet to be explained.

Gorilla says, “We’re at the beginning of the end in Afghanistan. There aren’t enough troops. Once the elections are over, declaring victory and getting out will not be far behind”.

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More Contraction Action

Friday, July 24th, 2009

Those “out of recession by Christmas” forecasts look a little bleaker in Blighty this morning.

Here in America, the guesses are if anything even more rosy.

Obama is willing to put off the health care vote, and unwilling to consider a second fiscal stimulus, because he is counting on a measurable recovery in the first half of 2010.

How this will square politically a year from now with an unemployment rate at or above 10% is not something he wishes to contemplate.

Gorilla says, “Cautiously optimistic and optimistically cautious are as nothing when expectations must adjust downwards”.

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From Highly Likely To Strongly Possible

Monday, July 20th, 2009

The chance of an al-Qaeda attack on Britain, which means we all can now exhale carefully.

Meanwhile, a bipartisan, top-level review of the color wheel is underway on this side of the pond.

Gorilla is confused by the terminology: “Are the shoots now strongly possible verging on highly likely, or will they even remain green?”

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