Getting Away with Torture? No.4.24.2005-49.

The American Library Association is on record as opposed to torture. Resolution Against the Use of Torture as a Violation of Our Basic Values as Librarians

The new Human Rights Watch report, Getting Away with Torture? Command Responsibility for the U.S. Abuse of Detainees will be an important items for libraries to acquire.

It has now been one year since the appearance of the first pictures of U.S. soldiers humiliating and torturing detainees at Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq. Shortly after the photos came out, President George W. Bush vowed that the “wrongdoers will be brought to justice.”

In the intervening months, it has become clear that torture and abuse have taken place not solely at Abu Ghraib but rather in dozens of U.S. detention facilities worldwide, that in many cases the abuse resulted in death or severe trauma, and that a good number of the victims were civilians with no connection to al-Qaeda or terrorism. There is also evidence of abuse at U.S.-controlled “secret locations” abroad and of U.S. authorities sending suspects to third-country dungeons around the world where torture was likely to occur.

To date, however, the only wrongdoers being brought to justice are those at the bottom of the chain-of-command. The evidence demands more. Yet a wall of impunity surrounds the architects of the policies responsible for the larger pattern of abuses.

See Recommendation to the U.S. Attorney General.

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