June 26th is the International Day in Support of the Victims of Torture and Amnesty International has launched a powerful new online video – “Hooded” – to mark the occasion.
Hooding is a practice that gets to the heart of the relationship between the torturer and his – or her – victim. The hooded victim is dehumanized – hooding deprives the victim of a face, of an identity – and dehumanization is almost always a precursor of abuse.
The anthropologists Ashley Montagu and Floyd Matson famously labeled dehumanization “the fifth horseman of the apocalypse”, an essential precursor to war, rape, pillage and genocide.
Hooding is disorientating. It is designed to restrict the victim’s ability to defend himself – or herself – from harm. It is also calculated to instill fear, a dread of the unknown, of the dark.
As many victims attest, the anticipation of abuse can be as traumatizing in its own way as the abuse itself.
President Obama has not ended the use of torture by the United States – it is quite likely that he has only suspended it, which is why half-measures are simply not enough.
The anonymity to transgress societal norms and taboos is one reason why abuse so often becomes sexual in nature.
Hooding, then, is a ‘gateway’ practice that enables greater abuse, the top of the slippery slope that ends in unimaginable pain, which is why it is banned by the European Court of Human Rights as amounting to cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment.
The court ruled against hooding – as well as the use of stress positions, white noise, sleep deprivation and dietary manipulation – in the landmark case Ireland v. United Kingdom after the British employed these techniques against IRA suspects in Northern Ireland in the early 1970s.
Yet hooding is still considered a legitimate practice by US forces in the field to this day. As, within certain parameters, are sleep deprivation and environmental management.
And if Sen. Kelly Ayotte (R-NH) gets her way the full disturbing panoply of enhanced interrogations techniques – including waterboarding – may well make a comeback after the next election.
That is why accountability matters, and that is why the Obama administration has failed the torture test. The President’s executive order banning coercive interrogation techniques only retains its force as long as he remains in the White House.
President Obama has not ended the use of torture by the United States – it is quite likely that he has only suspended it, which is why half-measures are simply not enough.
When laws are broken there must be appropriate consequences or the law quickly loses its force. Yet the team behind CIA black sites, Guantanamo Bay and Abu Ghraib continue to publish memoirs by the bargain bucket-load with impunity.
Last week Amnesty International launched its Torture Around the World interactive map.
By clicking on any of the highlighted countries you can access material about the country in question’s complicity in torture drawn from Amnesty’s 2012 Annual Report on the state of the World’s Human Rights.
For anyone who loves this country, it is a tragedy to note that the United States is one of those highlighted countries. And it is going to remain so, as long as the abuses committed in our name continue to be brushed under the carpet.
We have not done enough over the past three years to change that. But World Torture Day is the perfect day to begin putting that right.
Take action to put pressure on the Senate Select Intelligence Committee to publish its report on the abuse of detainees in CIA custody.
And add your voice to those calling on President Obama to issue a public apology to Canadian national Maher Arar, an innocent man dispatched for torture in Syria by the Bush administration.
These are small steps but they are a start. This fight is not over. In fact, with the proponents of torture once more in the ascendant, it may just be beginning.
Thanks for this powerful video.
I in no wise condone 'INHUMANITY' on any level in no wise condone 'INHUMANITY' on any level, but I dare to ask; What alternatives are there in the course of redress, and consideration for the 'VICTIMS's victims? It is a UNIVERSAL reality, and must be treated with, because there is no cure for the vexing CRIMES against said HUMANITY. Ultimately, we treat with victims and perpetrators, in either respect, we are in empathy more so for JUSTICE to be served.
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June 26! Amnesty International!!!Gracias Partilhar Video!!! THANKS….ABRAÇO!
I say, "Thank you Amnesty International" for continuing to be the voice of "REASON" rather than the voice of "EVIL"!!! These acts of TORTURE undermine the character that our nation was founded upon!!! If we are to believe that our own citizens deserve a Bill of Rights, and are innocent until proven guilty, and are not allowed to be mishandled, and certainly NOT tortured, even when they are found guilty; then we should apply the same code of conduct for citizens from other countries (even if we view them as our enemy)! The United States was created as a place where words like human rights, honor and dignity have MEANING. Torture is wrong, and nothing will make it right!
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Thank you for your comment and support!
The wheels of justice turns slowly, and I do believe that changes have been occurring throughout progressive dispensations. The only setback is that they're all for the future,
so that, those laws that are fixed , have worked and will continue to work, 'How' they work , depends on how they are applied, the understanding of the users, and the 'Value System'
of shareholders.
President Obama has done pretty much nothing to end/reduce torture in the United States. This is really disappointing and he should be ashamed at his lack of progress and "change."