A Hanging In Pakistan

Mirza Tahir HussainOn June 1st of this year the life of a man who has spent half his life in prison will be extinguished in Pakistan. Mirza Tahir Hussain, a 36-year Pakistani-British dual citizen, will be hanged for the crime of murder. He will be hanged after an Islamic court in Pakistan found him guilty of murdering a taxi driver in 1988. He will be hanged after he was acquitted of all charges by the Pakistani High Court.

How can a man acquitted of murder by Pakistan’s High Court be hanged for murder by Pakistan’s Islamic court? Good question. The answer lies in Pakistan’s dueling judicial systems – one secular and one Islamic. If you are found innocent in one system, you can be tried in another. You get two for the price of one – Double Jeapardy knows no better home.

Amnesty International describes the facts of the case as follows:

Mirza Tahir Hussain was tried and convicted of murdering a taxi driver while travelling to the village of Bhubar from Rawalpindi, Punjab Province, on 17 December 1988. The taxi driver reportedly stopped the car and produced a gun, and Mirza Tahir Hussain, who was 18 years old at the time, was reportedly physically and sexually assaulted by the taxi driver. In the scuffle that followed, the gun went off, and the taxi driver was fatally injured.

Mirza Tahir Hussain was sentenced to death in 1989 at the Sessions Court in Islamabad. Following an appeal, this sentence was dismissed by the Lahore High Court, which noted discrepancies in the case. The case was returned to the Sessions Court where Mirza Tahir Hussain was sentenced to life imprisonment in 1994. Following a second appeal, the Lahore High Court then dismissed this sentence in 1996, and Mirza Tahir Hussain was acquitted of all charges against him.

A week later, Mirza Tahir Hussain’s case was referred to the Federal Shariat Court on charges from the original case, including robbery involving murder, which fall under Islamic offences against property law. The Federal Shariat Court’s duties include reviewing laws to ensure they conform with Islamic doctrine and dealing with appeals of cases tried under Islamic Law. The entire case against Mirza Tahir Hussain was reopened, and in 1998, he was sentenced to death by the Federal Shariat Court, despite their acknowledgment that no robbery had taken place due to the taxi being hired. The death penalty sentence by the Federal Shariat Court was based on a split two to one judgement, with the dissenting judge strongly recommending that Mirza Tahir Hussain be acquitted. Amnesty International believes that Mirza Tahir Hussain has not received a fair trial due to the contradictory statements of the different courts. Also, the Islamic provision under which he was tried requires that the death penalty should only be imposed if reliable eyewitness accounts or a confession to the court are submitted. In this case, neither was obtained.

The Washington Post also quotes the strong dissent by one of the judges in the Islamic court:

In August 1998, in a split 2-1 verdict, the Islamic court’s judges sentenced him to death again, although the legal provision he was tried under required a confession or witness to the crime. The prosecution had neither.

The dissenting judge, Abdul Waheed Siddiqui, gave a scathing assessment of the prosecution in a 59-page judgment. He described Hussain as "an innocent, raw youth not knowing the mischief and filth in which the police of this country is engrossed." He said police introduced false witnesses and "fabricated evidence in a shameless manner" against Hussein, who had no criminal record.

Mr. Hussain’s real crime was voluntarily surrendering to the police in the hopes of getting justice. The corrupt police in Pakistan and other developing countries make a mockery of the rule of law and terrorize their citizens. They are the real enemies in the War on Terror.

Mr. Hussain’s brother describes Tahir Hussain’s despair:

"Sometimes he just feels like getting this over and done with. He once told me don’t bother to try and help, because whatever God ordains is going to happen," Amjad Hussain said. "That scares me."

We cannot allow this miscarriage of justice to be carried out without raising our voices. We must demand clemency or a fair trial for this soul. Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf has the ability to intervene and has so far refused to do so. The United States, Pervez Musharraf’s real masters, has considerable sway over his actions. As in the case of Mukhtar Mai the light of the world’s attention can shame this act of cowardice from being carried out. Please take the time to contact your senators and congressmen to put pressure on the Government of Pakistan to stop this execution. Please contact the White House and the State Department and let them know that the United States has a duty to speak up in defense of Human Rights. Please contact the Pakistani Embassy in your country and tell them the world is watching. Please send a note to Pervez Musharraf and tell him the world will not forget.

I also ask Muslims in Pakistan and around the world to protest this imminent hanging. This miscarriage of justice is ostensibly being carried out in our name. This man’s death will shame us all. In the name of Allah, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful I ask all Muslims to show the quality of mercy in Islam and save this man’s life.

Time is short. Please act now.

Please contact the following:

Posted in Foreign Policy, Human Rights | 22 Comments

Bloggers Against Torture

Bloggers Against Torture

June is Torture Awareness Month. To spread awareness Elendil of Rummy’s Diaries has launched Bloggers Against Torture. If you are a blogger, please consider joining the alliance. If you are a reader, visit the alliance web site and help spread the word. Torture can only survive in the shadows – help shine a light on this scourge upon humanity.

"The most potent weapon in the hands of the oppressor is the mind of the oppressed." – Stephen Biko (1946-1977)

Posted in Human Rights, Torture | 7 Comments

George W. Bush’s Tortured Defense Of Torture

Torture American Style

"For the purposes of this Convention, the term "torture" means any act by which severe pain or suffering, whether physical or mental, is intentionally inflicted on a person for such purposes as obtaining from him or a third person information or a confession, punishing him for an act he or a third person has committed or is suspected of having committed, or intimidating or coercing him or a third person, or for any reason based on discrimination of any kind, when such pain or suffering is inflicted by or at the instigation of or with the consent or acquiescence of a public official or other person acting in an official capacity. It does not include pain or suffering arising only from, inherent in or incidental to lawful sanctions. " – Article I, paragraph 1 of the Convention Against Torture ratified by the United States on April 18, 1988.

The United Nations Committee Against Torture released its State Report for the United States on May 18, 2006. In an 11-page indictment of the United States the Committee laid bare America’s loss of moral authority in the world. The report was a product of the 36th session of the Committee Against Torture. Of the 7 countries reviewed during the session only the United States provided a written defense of its torture policies to the Committee. More so than the Committee report the written response of the United States demonstrates that the United States has been engaged in a systematic campaign of torture since the attacks of September 11, 2001. The report and the American response shed light on a shameful chapter in American history.

 The American defense of torture is based on four pillars of argument:

  1. The United States defines torture differently than the United Nations Convention Against Torture.
  2. The Convention Against Torture does not apply during times of armed conflict.
  3. The Convention Against Torture only applies to the United States when it commits torture on the territory of the United States.
  4. Kidnapping and disappearance perpetrated by the United States do not constitute torture.

 The Committee report indicts the United States on the following grounds:

  • The United States should ensure that psychological torture be defined according to the Convention and not according to the U.S. contention that only "prolonged mental harm" constitutes torture. The definition of torture in the Convention clearly states that torture is defined as "any act by which severe pain or suffering, whether physical or mental, is intentionally inflicted on a person for such purposes as obtaining from him or a third person information or a confession."
  • The Committee cites articles 1 and 16 of the Convention that states that the Convention Against Torture applies at all times and not only during peacetime as the United States has contended. The United States had made the absurd assertion that only the "law of armed conflict" should apply during wars and that applying the Convention Against Torture would "result in an overlap of the different treaties which would undermine the objective of eradicating torture".
  • The Committee clarified to the United States that the Convention applies to all territories (including Guantanamo Bay) under the control of the United States, and not only on acts of torture committed by the United States within the borders of the United States. The United States has used this absurd geographical limitation as a basis for perpetrating torture on detainees at Guantanamo Bay and elsewhere around the world.
  • The Committee chastised the United States for not registering some prisoners and hiding them from international observers. This tactic effectively removes all safeguards against torture.
  • The Committee noted that secret detention facilities run by the United States without any international oversight violate the Convention Against Torture. The United States response to the Committee’s inquiry was a "no comment" and is a tacit admission of guilt by the United States.
  • The Committee pointed out the obvious fact lost upon the United States that enforced disappearances of persons by the United States is a violation of the Convention Against Torture.
  • The Committee informed the United States that extraordinary rendition of persons to countries known to commit torture puts the United States in violation of the Convention Against Torture. This clever sleight of hand by the United States does not absolve it of its responsibilities under the Convention.
  • The Committee noted that the indefinite detention of persons at Guantanamo Bay and elsewhere is a violation of the Convention Against Torture. The Committee recommended that the Guantanamo Bay detention facility be closed to bring the United States into compliance with the Convention.
  • The Committee pointed out that techniques such as "waterboarding", use of dogs and "short shackling" that have led to deaths are a violation of the Convention Against Torture. The United States had argued rather bizarrely that cruel and inhuman punishment is not necessarily torture.

The United States has come a long way from the Clinton days when our biggest moral dilemma was whether or not fallatio constituted sex. The fact that the United States finds itself in the untenable position of arguing that it does not torture on tortured definitions of the word "torture" and geographical jurisdiction of the Convention should give all citizens pause. Our Government is essentially arguing that torturing someone on foreign soil is not torture. Our Government is arguing that the word "torture" can be defined so that most torture (like beating a man until he dies) can be construed as not being "torture". Our Government is arguing that kidnapping someone so that they disappear from the face of this planet is not torture because the person is now a non-person and no one can hear his or her screams. Our Government is arguing that if a bear shits in the woods and no one is there to see it, the bear did not in fact shit in the woods. Our Government is arguing that we can only torture someone if we are at peace with him or her. If we declare war on someone we are free to stick baseball bats up their asses to our hearts’ content and be safe in the delusion that we are not torturing them.

Our Government has lost its collective mind when it comes to torture. Is it any wonder that we are losing hearts and minds in the War on Terror? By our condoning of torture, by our tortured defense of torture, by our complete lack of humanity we are now viewed in the world as a rogue state. This must end.

For centuries the United States has been a beacon of hope for people fleeing torture and persecution. For centuries the wretched of the earth have pointed to the United States and said, "there, that is where there is hope; that is where there is justice." For centuries people have come to our shores with wounds emotional and physical and we have given them shelter and given them solace. We cannot be the great country we have been, the shining example to the World of human dignity and human achievement, if we allow our Government to torture and destroy all that this country has stood for.

This must end. This must end now. We, the people of the United States of America, must say in one voice to our Government that We do not torture. You will not torture, not in Our name. This must end now.

Posted in Human Rights, Personal, Torture | 20 Comments

Wide World of Blogs!

Wide World of Blogs

This post is so big that it needed its own banner! Just like ABC’s Wide World of Sports, I have been spanning the globe to bring you the constant variety of the web…the thrill of victory…and the agony of defeat…the human drama of athletic blogging…this is Mash’s Wide World of Blogs!

This is the first post of its kind…and it may be the last…or it may become a regular feature…

I wanted to highlight some fun and worthwhile blogs that I read on a fairly regular basis. Here’s what’s worth reading today…

Jon Swift

This is by far the funniest blog on the Internet. Unfortunately, however, today Jon is suffering from CFS and needs your help. His doctor says that he has something called the "inner Patton" and it needs to be surgically removed. Visit his site and offer him some moral support during his time of need.

Greetings From America’s Finest City

This is where Robbie offers news and views from just north of the border. Today he has a roundup of the nice things people are saying about all things foreign as the immigration debate heats up. By reading his post today I learned the alarming news that the Chinese are poised to invade from the South.

Polimom

Polimom is a Houston blogger whose posts always contain a large dose of common sense. Today’s post is an update on a day laborer center funded by the city of Houston. Day laborer centers all over the country have increasingly become targets of anti-immigration groups like the Minutemen. In my neck of the woods (in Herndon, Virginia) there was a major controversy over a day laborer center that made national news a few months ago.

 Pickled Politics

This blog offers an interesting window into race relations and immigrant issues in Great Britain. It offers a South Asian perspective on the issues of the day with a decidedly progressive twist. Today’s post discusses the extreme views of Ayaan Hirsi Ali who is either a champion of women against Islam or a hatemonger and an opportunist, depending on where you sit. Regardless of what you think of Ali, she is certainly part of the debate that is raging all over Europe about Islam and its place in the Western World.

Debbie Schlussel

No blog roundup of mine would ever be complete without a little taste of Debbie Schlussel. Debbie is single-handedly keeping the world safe from Islamo-fascists and Muslims in general. Through her vigilance she has kept Detroit from being overrun by the Muslim horde. Her latest act of defense of the Fatherland includes hounding an Islamo-fascist loving Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agent. Debbie is well on her way to purging our Government of its Muslim loving ways.

Enjoy the journey and feel free to add your own in the comments.

Posted in Blog Reviews | Comments Off on Wide World of Blogs!

A Sign Of The Times?

At The Mexican Border

I woke up this morning to the following headline: "Border reopens after shooting". There was a shooting on the American side of the San Ysidro border crossing with Mexico. The Associated Press article reports the details of the shooting as this:

U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents began following a black sport utility vehicle after somebody reported seeing it pick up suspected illegal immigrants near the U.S. side of the Otay Mesa border crossing, Lt. Kevin Rooney of San Diego Police Department said.

As traffic backed up near the border, the vehicle stopped on the shoulder. When agents approached, the suspect "began to drive off and he veered hard to the left, trying to get back in traffic," Rooney said. Two agents then opened fire, he said. [Emphasis added by me.]

I hope the Associated Press has the facts of the shooting wrong. Otherwise what we are hearing is that a man, who "somebody" reported picked up illegal aliens, was headed out of the United States and was killed for driving away from a traffic stop when officers approached. I am quite certain that standard operating procedure for most police officers in the United States is not to shoot and kill a driver when he/she flees a traffic stop. In the United States, my belief was, we do not shoot first and ask questions later.

I want to believe that this was a horrible accident and Customs and Border Protection will take swift action so these kinds of shootings do not take place again. I want to believe that the current political climate of "hate Mexicans first" did not contribute in any way to this shooting. My heart says to believe that the politics did not contribute to this killing but my eyes see President Bush at a photo opportunity at the Mexican Border yesterday in his new role as tough guy on border enforcement. My eyes watched as the United States Senate stoked the hatred by voting the make English the "national language".

Nearly five years after 9/11 the President and the Congress have suddenly discovered that our borders are not secure. They made this discovery just in time for the November elections and just as their approval in the polls is sinking like a stone. They are playing politics with a serious issue and feeding the racism and hatred of the far right. The politics being played by these shortsighted politicians will fade after the November elections but the hatred that has been given center stage is likely to eat away at our society for much longer. Thinking citizens need to step back and address the issues of border security and illegal immigration in an open and forthright manner, without the vitriol and blatant racism that is fueling the current debate. The nation of immigrants is in real danger of cannibalizing itself – the time to appeal to our judgment and our better angels is now.

Posted in Immigration, Politics | 11 Comments