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HOT NEWS
Post 9/11: The World is Not Any Safer

osamaThe repetitive narrative of the decade since 9/11 is that the War on Terror is a war without end and that any means is justifiable as long as it helps achieve its ends.This war started at Ground Zero in New York City on September 11, 2001, after Al Qaeda forever breached US’s false sense of security, and is still going on.

To avert questions about its legitimacy, Washington had the ingenuity to make its war on terror global by getting the Security Council to unanimously pass Resolution 1368 condemning the attacks on American soil and asserting the Universal Right to Self-Defence of victim states.

The terms of the Resolution explicitly state that those found to be supporting or harbouring perpetrators, organisers and sponsors of these acts will be held accountable. Its ambiguous language enabled it get passed Muslim countries such as Bangladesh and Tunisia. It also received the nod from the five members of the Security Countries and other countries which sympathised with the US.

Washington, it would seem, then decided that it had all the legitimacy it needs to take its so-called war on terror anywhere it wanted and, in a show of its insufferable arrogance, sought out countries with dodgy human rights where it could torture and abuse terrorism suspects.In a sense, President Barack Obama’s government is involved in two wars; “a war of choice” in which it picks its victims seemingly at random and “a war of necessity”, for example, its raid on the home of Al Qaeda chief and terror king pin Osama bin Laden in Abbottabad, in Pakistan.

It is the damage that the so-called “war of choice” is doing to legitimate and necessary attempts to rid the world of the terrorism menace that we are concerned about.

We, at generic for cialis, have cast our lot with the war on terror. As a region, we have suffered enough at the hands of brutal terrorists who brought their senseless war to our doorsteps in 1998, when they attacked the US embassies in Nairobi and Dar es Salaam, killing over 250 people and leaving more than 5,000 seriously injured. In 2002, Kenya was again attacked when a hotel in Kikambala, at the Coast, was targeted.

But we feel duty bound to protest when the much-needed “war on terror” is turned into a “war of choice” in which international crimes are committed against non-US, British or Israeli citizens.Rendition of suspects to third countries for purposes of torture and to extract information is a case in point. It is illegal and an  affront to civilisation, even when committed by washington.

Kenyans have been illegally renditioned to Ethiopia and Uganda; two governments with suspect human rights records. Indeed, there is growing evidence that Washington has established a secret “Guantánamo” camp in Kampala where terrorism suspects are held. This has raised questions about the integrity of the Obama administration.

Obama cannot in one breath state that his government is determined to close down the highly detested Guantanamo Bay and, in the other, clandestinely open up another one in Uganda where agents from the FBI and the British intelligence service, MI5, have a free rein to torture suspects. The British government too should be honest; it cannot promise to investigate past incidents of torture, yet remain complicit in abusive practices and, in some case, even outsource some of its worse practices to Africa.

If the UK’s treatment of the Kenyan and Ugandan suspects of the July 14, 2010 Kampala bombings is anything to go by, its condemnations of torture are hollow.

What will it take to get Washington and London to abide by their international legal obligations and condemn torture and abuse of victims any where in the world? If they can do that with a straight face, the obvious starting point would be their immediate cessation of renditions and torture. We will not accept anything less.

 

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