[lbo-talk] it's ok to kill an unmarried couple walking together

Yoshie Furuhashi critical.montages at gmail.com
Fri Apr 20 08:05:05 PDT 2007


On 4/19/07, Bill Bartlett <billbartlett at aapt.net.au> wrote:
> At 1:51 PM -0400 19/4/07, Yoshie Furuhashi wrote:
>
> >Generally speaking, excepting the best allies of the USA, coverage of
> >any non-Western country is poor at best and hideous at worst.
>
> All true, but the Iranian regime doesn't have to make it so easy for
> the western media to attack them and impossible for anyone to defend
> them. Stop wasting your time. As long as the Iranian state is
> dominated by hideous barbarians who publicly execute child rape
> victims, for the crime of being rape victims, while allowing the
> child rapists to walk free, you can only make things worse.
>
> These are not people who can be publicly defended. If western
> coverage of them is hideous, its in large part because the Iranian
> regime provides excellent raw material for hideous coverage.

It's far easier to defend the government of Iran than those of the USA, the UK, Japan, etc. that have destroyed Iraq and other countries.

If you can live with the latter, surely you can live with the former.

It won't be you, Doug, and other leftists in the North, _no matter how much we say we care* about the wellbeing of the Iranians_, who will provide them with what they need to survive, just as we won't be the ones who will rebuild anything that the governments of our countries have destroyed and will continue to destroy in Iraq and other countries. The Iranians, excepting those who think like Ahmed Chalabi, understand that -- all they need to do is to look at countries to their left and right and they can see how useful leftists in the West are to them. In the future, if they feel like it, they will change their government on their own -- they are better at revolution than leftists in the North.

* Keep in mind that our caring is quite transient. Once the West is done with Iran, and it fades out of sight, leftists in the North will stop caring about the Iranians, and move on to the next country that is at the center of the corporate media's attention to express our maximum outrage at its government. Repeat this cycle as long as the empire lives.

Coming back to the question of the media, do you remember seeing this AP story below on the front page of the New York Times or any other Western newspaper? If Iran were a client state of Washington and Egypt were in Iran's place, no doubt this would have been the front page material and the New York Times story that Doug posted here would have been buried deep inside the paper or perhaps available only on the Web, attracting few Westerners' attention or greeted with a shrug by those who do happen on it.

<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/01/21/AR2007012100468.html> Video Shows Egypt Prisoner's Humiliation

By MAGGIE MICHAEL The Associated Press Sunday, January 21, 2007; 10:17 PM

CAIRO, Egypt -- The footage is shocking: A man lies screaming on the floor of a police station as officers sodomize him with a wooden pole.

Compounding the shock, it turns out that it was the police who made the film, and that they then transmitted it to the cell phones of the victim's friends in order to humiliate him.

For Egypt, the ordeal of 21-year-old Emad el-Kabir has been something of a Rodney King moment _ a sudden, stark glimpse of a reality which authorities routinely deny, but which human rights groups say is part of a pattern of police brutality.

But unlike the tape of the Los Angeles police beating up King in 1991, which was aired almost immediately, the attack on el-Kabir happened a year ago, and has only became public months later after an Egyptian blogger posted it on his site and it reached YouTube.

A newspaper, al-Fagr, then published a story about it, and appealed to el-Kabir to come forward. He did, giving a TV interview and filing a complaint against the police officers with the state prosecutor.

That's where the Rodney King analogy ends. Few people in this nation of 74 million have Internet access, and no TV station has shown anything of the offending footage. There have been no demonstrations or riots or high-profile lawsuits. The only person so far to be sentenced is the victim himself, who police say injured an officer with a broken bottle. On Jan. 9, he was jailed for three months.

Human rights activists say police brutality is deeply entrenched in Egyptian life.

"Torture in Egypt is just routine, exerted on everybody whether in political or criminal cases, and the police don't really feel any shame in practicing it," said Mohammed Zarie, head of the Human Rights Center for the Assistance of Prisoners.

Still, Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, a key U.S. ally, is under mounting pressure for democratic freedoms and human rights, and the el-Kabir video, along with other less widely publicized videos of recent months, appear to have embarrassed authorities into action.

The same judge who jailed el-Kabir ordered two officers suspected of torturing him to remain in custody until they go on trial March 3. Meanwhile, the Interior Ministry has ordered a nationwide search to identify a woman seen tortured in a different video and to determine who abused her. She is seen hanging by her legs from a pole balanced between two chairs, screaming in pain and confessing to a murder.

El-Kabir, a minibus driver, says he got into trouble at a Cairo parking lot in January 2006 when he intervened in an argument between police and his cousin, the driver of truck carrying cooking gas canisters. He says an officer hit him in the back of the head with the butt of his gun. Then he was taken to a nearby police station, released on bail, and that evening the police came to his home and took him back to their station.

There, he said, they beat him with fists and sticks and ordered him to shout obscenities. The video took the story from there, showing el-Kabir on his back on the floor, naked from the waist down, his legs held up in the air.

"Oh pasha (sir), I beg your mercy. Pasha, forgive me," el-Kabir cries on the video. The black boots of policemen are seen around him, kicking down his bound hands to prevent him from protecting his naked buttocks.

Then the black pole is wielded and el-Kabir screams.

"Everybody in the parking lot will see this tomorrow," an officer is heard saying.

"I felt so humiliated," el-Kabir said in an interview with The Associated Press. "They were so brutal, as if they were slaughtering an animal and peeling off his skin."

In his complaint to the public prosecutor, he identified the voice on the video as that of Capt. Islam Nabih, and said he led the attack. His lawyer, Nasser Amin, said he also alleged that Nabih and higher-ranking officers threatened him lest he speak out.

On Dec. 26, Nabih and one of his aides, Reda Fathi, were detained, and on Tuesday a judge refused their requests to be released pending their trial. The same judge also sentenced el-Kabir to prison. His lawyer says he is holding the Interior Ministry responsible for his client's safety behind bars.

In court, police said he had a broken bottle and threatened to kill himself if his cousin was arrested, then attacked and injured a policeman in the hand and cheek. Al-Kabir pleaded not guilty and denied wielding a broken bottle or harming a policeman, according to a court official who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss the case with the media.

For el-Kabir to come forward at all meant breaking through barriers of fear and humiliation, given the stigma of sodomy in Egypt's masculine culture.

But some break the silence. In another well-publicized case, Mohammed el-Sharqawi, a pro-democracy activist arrested during a demonstration in Cairo over the summer, said he was raped by police while in custody, a claim his lawyer said was backed by a medical examination which hasn't been made public.

In the interview before his jailing, El-Kabir said his family and fellow drivers are supportive, and "From now on, we will not shut our mouths when we face injustice or torture."

But activists say it will take much more than a few videos to change a security apparatus that has wide powers of arrest and infiltrate every corner of Egyptian life _ schools, political parties, newspapers and the civil service.

Egyptian opposition media have claimed that in the police academy, recruits are trained to use torture to extract confessions.

Egyptian officials say they have introduced a human rights training program for police and a commission to investigate torture allegations. They also say cases of torture have fallen since 1999, but give no numbers. The Egyptian Organization for Human Rights says it documented 120 deaths from torture from 1993 to 2004, 15 of them in the last year it counted.

Hafez Abu Saada, secretary general of the Egyptian Organization for Human Rights, said his group reports some 400 cases of alleged police abuse a year. He said 20 percent result in prosecutions, and convictions are much rarer.

In 2002, eight police officers were convicted of torturing detainees to death and sentenced to between one and 10 years in prison. Two years later, three senior police officers were tried for torturing a prisoner to confess that he killed his daughter, who turned out to be alive. Their sentences ranged from one to three years, but they were acquitted in a retrial.

<http://amnesty.org/resources/Egypt1/index.html> Egypt – Systematic abuses in the name of security -- Yoshie



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