/*-- Meta Information --*/

11.17.2004

US Making Torture Legal?

Apparently the House has slipped in a little thing called "extraordinary rendition" into their version of a bill that supposedly implements the 9/11 commission reports. Here's what the American Bar Association had to say about it:

The American Bar Association objects strongly to the inclusion of provisions authorizing "extraordinary rendition" in the House leadership's bill that purports to implement the 9/11 Commission recommendations. These provisions would permit secretly transferring terrorist suspects to foreign countries known to use torture in interrogating prisoners. Extraordinary rendition not only violates all basic humanitarian and human rights standards, but violates U.S. treaty obligations which make clear that the U.S. government cannot avoid its obligations under international law by having other nations conduct unlawful interrogations in its stead. This practice not only violates our own cherished principles as a nation but also works to undermine our moral leadership in the eyes of the rest of the world.
read the full release


For more background on this, visit the obsidianwings blog.

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home