Since Congress recently handed Bush the power to
identify American citizens as "unlawful enemy
combatants" and detain them indefinitely without
charge, it's worth examining the administration's
record of prisoner abuse as well as the building of
stateside detention centers.
As Texas governor (from 1995-2000) Bush oversaw the
executions of 152 prisoners, and thus became the
most-killing governor in the history of the United
States. Ethnic minorities, many of whom did not have
access to proper legal representation, comprised a
large percentage of those Bush put to death, and in
one particularly egregious example, Bush executed an
immigrant who hadn't even seen a consular official
from his own country (as is required by the Vienna
Convention on Consular Relations, to which the US was
a signatory). Bush's explanation: "Texas did not
sign the Vienna Convention, so why should we be
subject to it?"
Governor Bush also flouted the United Nations
Convention on the Rights of the Child by choosing to
execute juvenile offenders, a practice shared at the
time only by Iran, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and Yemen.
Significantly, in 1998 a full 92% of the juvenile
offenders on Bush's death row were ethnic minorities.
Conditions inside Texan prisons during Bush's reign
were so notorious that federal Judge William Wayne
Justice wrote, "Many inmates credibly testified
to the existence of violence, rape and extortion in
the prison system and about their own suffering from
such abysmal conditions."
In September 1996, for example, a videotaped raid
on inmates at a county jail in Texas showed guards
using stun guns and an attack dog on prisoners, who
were later dragged face-down back to their cells.
Funding of mental health programs during Bush's
reign was so poor that Texan prisons had a sizeable
number of mentally-impaired inmates; defying
international human rights standards, these inmates
ended up on death row. For instance, a prisoner named
Emile Duhamel, with severe psychological disabilities
and an IQ of 56, died in his Texan death-row jail cell
in July 1998. Authorities blamed "natural
causes" but a lack of air conditioning in cells
that topped 100 degrees Fahrenheit in a summer heat
wave may have killed Duhamel instead. How
many other Texan prisoners died of such neglect during
Bush's governorship is unclear.
As president, Bush presides over a prison
population topping two million people, giving America
the dubious distinction of having a higher percentage
of its citizens behind bars than any other country.
When considering that (based on 2003 figures) the US
has three times more prisoners per capita than Iran
and seven times more than Germany, the nation looks
more like a Gulag than the Land of the Free.
The White House has also stifled investigation into
the roughly 760 aliens (mainly Muslim men) the US
government rounded up post-9/11, ostensibly for
immigration violations. Amnesty International reports
that 9/11 detainees have suffered "a pattern of
physical and verbal abuse by some corrections
officers" and a denial of "basic human
rights."
Then of course, there's Guantanamo, where the US is
holding hundreds of detainees in top secrecy and
without access to courts, legal counsel or family
visits. Add to that the thousands of Afghans and
Iraqis the US has imprisoned (including a large
percentage of innocent civilians) and countless US
secret prisons across the globe, and it looks as if
incarceration is the nation's best export.
While Abu Ghraib may have left administration
officials falling over themselves with protestations
of compassion, it's worth remembering that the Bush
White House has fought hard against the International
Convention Against Torture, especially a proposal to
establish voluntary inspections of prisons and
detention centers in signatory countries, such as the
United States.
Put it all together, and last week's passage of the
Military Commissions Act is ominous for those in the
US. As Bruce Ackerman noted recently in The Los
Angeles Times, the legislation "authorizes the
president to seize American citizens as enemy
combatants, even if they have never left the United
States. And once thrown into military prison, they
cannot expect a trial by their peers or any
protections of the Bill of Rights." The
vague criteria for being labeled an enemy combatant
(taking part in "hostilities against the United
States") don't help either. Would that include
anti-war protestors? People who criticize Bush?
Unclear.
In 2002, wacko former Attorney General John
Ashcroft called for the indefinite detainment of US
citizens he considered to be "enemy
combatants," and while widely criticized at the
time, Congress went ahead and fulfilled Ashcroft's
nefarious vision last week. Ashcroft had also called
for stateside internment camps, and accordingly, in
January 2006 the US government awarded a Halliburton
subsidiary $385 million to build detention centers to
be used for, "an unexpected influx of immigrants
or to house people after a natural disaster or for new
programs that require additional detention
space." New
programs that require additional detention space. Hmm.
The disgraceful Military Commissions Act and the
building of domestic internment camps are yet more
examples of blowback from the administration's
so-called war on terror, and we ignore these
increasing assaults on our civil liberties at our own
peril.
Action Ideas:
1. Read the Military Commissions Act of 2006 for
yourself here.
Find out how your
congressmembers voted on this legislation, and
raise the topic when they ask for your vote this
November.
2. For more information on US prisoner abuse, check
out BBC's report from 2005 entitled "Torture Inc.
Americas Brutal Prisons." Text and video versions
are archived here.
You can learn more about US prisoner's rights from the
American
Civil Liberties Union.
3. To take action regarding "the plight of the
prisoners at Guantanamo Bay and other detainees held
as part of the War on Terror," visit Cageprisoners.com.
Heather Wokusch is the author of The
Progressives' Handbook: Get the Facts and Make a
Difference Now (Volumes 1 and 2). Heather can be
reached at www.heatherwokusch.com.
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