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The
Horrors of Extraordinary Rendition

Picture added by Gnostic
Liberation Front
From Counterpunch
Weekend Edition
October 27 / 29, 2006
My Own
Private Nightmare
The Horrors
of Extraordinary Rendition
By MAHER ARAR
Canadian citizen Maher
Arar, who is barred from entering the United States, delivered his acceptance
speech for the
http://www.ips-dc.org/lm-awards/2006/
Letelier-Moffitt International Human Rights
Award in a pre-recorded videotape. This is a transcript of his speech, which was
viewed at the award ceremony hosted by the Institute for Policy Studies on Oct.
18, 2006 in Washington, DC.
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Hello my name is Maher Arar. Sorry I
could not join you for today's ceremony.
All Center for Constitutional Rights
Staff and I are humbled to have been chosen this year's recipient for the
Letelier-Moffitt International Human Rights Award. This award means a tremendous
amount to us. It means that there are still Americans out there who value our
struggle for justice.
It means that there are Americans out
there who are truly concerned about the future of America. We now know that my
story is not a unique one. Over the past two years we have heard from many other
people who were, who have been kidnapped, unlawfully detained, tortured and
eventually released without being charged with any crime in any country.
JFK Stopover
My nightmare began on September 26,
2002. I was transiting through New York airport, JFK Airport, when they asked me
to wait in a waiting area. I found that to be strange. Shortly after, some FBI
officials came to see me and they asked me whether, I was willing to be
interviewed.
My first immediate reaction was to ask
for a lawyer and I was surprised when they told me that I had no right to a
lawyer because I was not an American citizen.
Then I asked for a phone call, I wanted
to call my family to let them know what was going on. And they just ignored my
request.
Then they told me, we only have couple
of questions for you and we'll let you go. So I agreed. I had nothing to hide.
And the interrogation started. Soon after, you know, they asked me about people
I knew. It was deeper, until the interrogation was going deeper and deeper and
deeper.
During this time, they played mind games
with me. They would sometimes insult me; say to me something like you're smart.
Other times they would accuse me of being dumb.
And, I repeatedly ask for a lawyer, to
make a phone call. They always ignored my question.
The interrogation that day lasted about
four hours with the FBI officials and another four hours with immigration. At
the end of that day, instead of sending me back to Canada, they shackled and
chained me and sent me to another, another terminal in the airport where I
stayed overnight and in that place, in that room they kept me in, the lights
were, were always on. There was no bed in that room and I could not sleep that
night.
The next day another set of
interrogations started. This time it was about, they asked me about political
opinions--I answered openly, I didn't try to hide my political opinions. The
asked me about Iraq. They asked me about Palestine and so many other issues. And
they also, if I remember correctly, asked me about my emails and some other
questions.
Going to Syria
And they told me that day we are about
to decide about your fate. At the end of that day, surprisingly, one of the
immigration officers came and asked me to volunteer to go to Syria. I said to
them: why do you want me to go to Syria, I've never been there for 17 years. And
they say, "You are special interest." Of course, back then I did not know what
this expression meant. But it was clear that the Americans, the officer did not
want me to go to Canada.
When he insisted, I said, let me go back
to Switzerland. That was my point of departure before I arrived at JFK and he
refused. Eventually they took me into the Metropolitan Detention Center, a
federal prison, where they kept me for about 12 days. During this time I was
interviewed for six hours by INS. It was a very exhaustive interview from 9PM to
like around 3AM in the morning. When I asked them to, during this interview to
go, to allow me to go back to my cell to perform my prayer, they refused,
completely refused.
Also during my stay at the Metropolitan
Detention Center I could clearly see that I was being treated differently from
other prisoners. For example, they didn't give me toothpaste they would allow me
to go for recreation for about a week. They always ignored my demand for making
a phone call. Eventually they allowed me to make a phone call. Up until that
time, which was a week after I was arrested, no one in my family knew where I
was. My wife thought I was disappeared, I was killed. No one knew exactly what
happened, until I informed my mother-in-law that I was arrested.
Eventually on October 8th, against my
will, they took me out of my cell. They basically read the pieces of document to
me saying, that we will be sending you Syria. And when I complained, I said to
them, I did explain to you if I'm sent back I will be tortured and they, I
remember, the INS person flipped a couple of pages in this document, to the end
of this document and read to me a paragraph that I still remember until today,
an extremely shocking statement she made to me.
She said something like: The INS is not
the body or the agency that signed the Geneva Convention, convention against
torture. For me what that really meant is we will send you to torture and we
don't care.
So they put me on a private jet, which I
found extremely strange. I was the only passenger on that, on that plane. Its a
luxurious plane, with leather seats in it. My only preoccupation during this
trip is how I could avoid torture. By then, I realized that they were exactly
sending me to Syria for torture. And that became very clear to me. Then the
plane flew to Washington from Washington it flew to Maine then to Rome, then
from Rome to Jordan.
Shackled and Chained
And I remember on the plane I was most
of the time I was shackled and chained except the last two hours when they
offered me a shish-kabob dinner. Up until this day I do not, I cannot explain
why they did that. If I was a dangerous person like they claimed in the
beginning, why they would remove my chains and shackles the last two hours of
the trip?
During also the trip, whenever I wanted
to use the bathroom, one of the team members would go inside with me. Even
though I complained that this was against my religious belief.
The plane landed in Jordan on three in
the morning October 8th. And a couple of Jordanians were waiting, men, were
waiting for me. They took me, they blindfolded me, they put me in a car and
shortly after they started beating me on the back of my head. Whenever I
complained about the beating they would actually start beating me more. So I
just kept silent.
I stayed in Jordan for about 12 hours in
a detention center. I still don't know what that place is.
I was always blindfolded whenever they
took me from one cell to another or when they took me to see the doctor. But I
felt something strange in that prison. I felt, what, that I used an elevator,
which is quite strange for a Middle Eastern prison.
After 12 hours of detention, unlawful
detention in Jordan I was eventually driven to Syria. And I just didn't want to
believe that I was going to Syria. I always was hoping that someone, a miracle
would happen--the Canadian government would intervene. A miracle would happen
that would take me back to my country Canada.
I arrived in Syria that same day, at the
end of the day and I was able to confirm that I was in fact in Syria after my
blindfold was removed and I was able to see the pictures of the Syrian
President. My feeling then is I just wanted to kill myself because I knew what
was coming. I knew that the Americans, the American government send me there to
be tortured.
Sometime later the interrogators came
in. They started asking questions, routine questions at the beginning, but
whenever I hesitated to answer their questions or whenever they thought I was
lying one of them would threaten me with a chair, a metallic chair with no seats
in it, only the frames. And back then I did not understand or I did not know how
they would torture people with it. I later learned that from other prison
inmates.
But the message was clear: if you don't
speak quickly enough we will torture you. That day, the interrogation lasted
about four hours. There was no physical beating; there was only verbal threats.
Around midnight, they took me to the basement. In the basement, the guard opened
a door for me, a metallic door. I could not believe my eyes. I looked at him and
I said, what is that? He didn't answer. He just said to me: Enter.
The Grave
The cell was about three feet wide, six
feet deep and about seven feet high. It was dark. There was no source of light
in it. It was filthy. There were only two thin covers on the floor. I was naïve;
I thought they would keep me in this place for one, two, maybe three days to put
pressure on me. But this same place, the same cell that I later called the grave
was my home 10 months and 10 days. The only light that came into the cell was
from the ceiling, from the opening in the ceiling. There was a small spotlight
and that's it.
Life in the cell was impossible. At the
beginning--even though it was a filthy place, it was like a grave--I preferred
to stay in that cell rather than being beaten. Whenever I heard the guards
coming to open my door I would just think, you know, this is it for me that
would be my last day.
The beating started the following day.
Without no warning...(long pause as he fights tears) without no warning the
interrogator came in with a cable. He asked me to open my right hand. I did open
it. And he hit me strongly on my palm. It was so painful to the point that I
forgot every moment I enjoyed in my life.
Torture
This moment is still vivid in my mind
because it was the first I was ever beaten in my life. Then he asked me to open
my left hand. He hit me again. And that one missed and hit my wrist. The pain
from that hit lasted approximately six months. And then he would ask me
questions. And I would have to answer very quickly. And then he would repeat the
beating this time anywhere on my, on my body. Sometimes he would take me to a
room where I could, where I was alone, I could hear other prisoners being
tortured, severely tortured. I remember that I used to hear their screams. I
just couldn't believe it, that human beings would do this to other human beings.
And then they would take me back to the
interrogation room. Again another set of questions, and the beating starts again
and again. On the third day the beating was the worst. They beat me a lot with
the cable. And they wanted me to confess that I have been to Afghanistan. This
was a big surprise to me because even the Americans who interviewed me, the FBI
officials who interviewed me, did not ask me that question. I ended up falsely
confessing in order to stop the torture. The torture decreased in intensity.
From that moment on they rarely used the
cable. Mostly they slapped me on the face, they kicked me, they humiliated me
all the time.
The first 10 days of my stay in Syria
was extremely harsh and during that period I found my cell to be a refuge. I
didn't want to see their faces. But later on living in that cell was horrible.
And just to give you an idea about how painful it is to stay in that place--I
was ready after a couple of months, I was ready to sign any piece of document
for me, not to be released, just to go to another place where it is fit for
human being.
During this time I wasn't aware that my
wife launched a campaign with other human rights organizations like Amnesty
International and others. My wife lobbied the media, she lobbied politicians and
eventually I was released. The Syrians released me and they clearly stated
through the ambassador in Washington that they did not find any links to
terrorism. I was not charged in any country including Canada, United States,
Jordan and Syria.
Since my release I have been suffering
from anxiety, constant fear, and depression. My life will never be the same
again. But I promised myself one thing, that I will continue my quest for
justice as long as I have a breath. What keeps me going is my faith, Americans
like yourselves and the hope that one day our planet Earth will be free of
tyranny, torture and injustice.
Maher Arar, a Canadian citizen, was a
victim of the U.S. policy known as "extraordinary rendition." He was detained by
U.S. officials in 2002, accused of terrorist links, and handed over to Syrian
authorities, who tortured him. Arar is working with the Center for
Constitutional Rights to appeal a case against the U.S. government that was
dismissed on national security grounds.
[END]
Reproduced from Counterpunch:
http://counterpunch.org/
Picture added by GLF.
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