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Cell Phone Security

Has your Android or Apple phone been compromised by Israeli Pegasus spyware? Amnesty International has released counter tools to check for infection on GitHub. The procedure is difficult so you will need some technical knowledge to check. But it’s free!

https://github.com/mvt-project/mvt

 

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تذكر عبد

يوليو / تموز 2019 ، حظرت الرقابة على فيسبوك بيانًا صادرًا عن وزارة الصحة الفلسطينية حول الأحداث في كفر قدوم ، والتي تضمنت إطلاق النار على عبد الرحمن ياسر شتيوي البالغ من العمر 10 أعوام ، والذي خضع لعملية جراحية لإزالة 70 شظية رصاصة من رأسه.

إن الرقابة على ما يسمى بخطاب الكراهية أمر واحد. استخدام الرقابة للتستر على إطلاق النار على الأطفال من قبل قوات الاحتلال شيء آخر تماما!

استهدفت إسرائيل طفلة في محاولة لإنهاء احتجاج.

قبل عدة سنوات ، أغلقت إسرائيل الطريق الرئيسي المؤدي إلى قرية كفر قدوم الفلسطينية لإيواء مستوطنة جديدة أرادت استخدام جزء من الطريق في مكان آخر. ونتيجة لذلك ، نظم القرويون احتجاجًا كل يوم جمعة للمطالبة بإعادة فتح طريقهم. كجزء من القرويين المتظاهرين ، يحاولون سد طريق قريب يستخدمه جيش الدفاع الإسرائيلي ، من خلال وضع الحجارة والإطارات في الطريق. سبق للجيش الإسرائيلي أن رد على مظاهرة الجمعة برش الحشد بمياه الصرف الصحي. لكن هذا التكتيك فشل في إنهاء الاحتجاجات.

لذلك بدأ الجيش الإسرائيلي تكتيكًا جديدًا. وضع الجيش الإسرائيلي ملصقات في القرية تهدد أطفالهم إذا لم تنته الاحتجاجات. تقرأ الملصقات:

“نحن الجيش. كن حذرًا إذا رأيتك ، فسوف نلحق بك أو نأتي إلى منزلك “. تضمنت الملصقات صوراً لأطفال حصل عليها الجيش الإسرائيلي من بطاقات الهوية التي تقدموا للحصول عليها.

في يوم الجمعة ، تموز / يوليو 2019 ، نفذ الجيش الإسرائيلي التهديد وأطلق النار على رأس طفل يبلغ من العمر 10 سنوات!

بواسطة ستيوارت ووترهاوس

 

זכרו את עבדול

צנזורת פייסבוק ביולי 2019 חסמה את ההצהרה של משרד הבריאות הפלסטיני על אירועים בכפר קדום שכללו את הירי לעבר עבדול רחמן יאסר שטוי בן ה -10 שעבר ניתוח להסרת 70 שברי כדור מראשו.

זה דבר אחד לצנזר מה שנקרא נאום שנאה. זה לגמרי אחר להשתמש בצנזורה כדי לכסות ירי על ילדים על ידי כוחות הכיבוש!

ישראל מיקדה ילד בניסיון לסיים את המחאה.

לפני מספר שנים ישראל סגרה את הכביש הראשי לכפר הפלסטיני כופר קדום כדי להתאים ליישוב חדש שרצה להשתמש בחלק מהדרך במקום אחר. כתוצאה מכך תושבי הכפר קיימו מחאה בכל יום שישי בדרישה לפתוח את דרכם מחדש. במסגרת המחאה תושבי הכפר מנסים לחסום דרך קרובה ששימשה את צבא צה”ל באמצעות הצבת סלעים וצמיגים בכביש. צה”ל הגיב בעבר להפגנה ביום שישי על ידי ריסוס מים של צואת ביוב על הקהל. אך הטקטיקה לא הצליחה לסיים את המחאה.

אז צבא ישראל התחיל טקטיקה חדשה. צה”ל הציב בכפר כרזות המאיימות על ילדיהם אם המחאה לא תסתיים. בכרזות נכתב:

“אנחנו הצבא. היזהר אם נראה אותך, אנחנו נתפוס אותך או נגיע לביתך. ” הכרזות כללו תמונות של ילדים שצה”ל השיג מתעודות זהות אליהם הגיש בקשה.

ביום שישי ביולי 2019 צה”ל ביצע את האיום וירה בראשו של ילד בן 10!

מאת סטיוארט ווטרהאוס

 

 

 

 

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Torture

#TORTURE #CIA #FBI, Third Party Torture.

Arrested at Karachi Airport, Benyam Mohammed was renditioned on a CIA plane to a black opp site. The interrogator manipulated his penis to make it hard, a razor blade was then used to mutilate his penis. Was the technique effective? We don’t know because Obama classified the report. However, we may assume results were less then desirable, because the program code named Copper Green, soon changed tactics to use 3rd Party Torture, including that of children in front of their parents to extract information.

At Abu Ghraib mothers with their children were forced to watch their young boys sodomized with chemical glow sticks rammed up their little rectums. Cameras were used to record the screams as the mothers pled with their captors to kill them instead. The videos was then shown to the fathers to compel them to become informants.

DOJ attorney John Yoo who wrote the legal opinion for Pres Bush policy on torture, stated that it was legal for the President to authorize the crushing of a child’s testicles [with pliers] in front of his father in order to extract information. The news at the time scoffed at the oddity of the statement, supposing it to be hypothetical. But it was a Freudian slip of the awful reality!

Tony Blair stood in the desert and talked with Gaddafi. He promised to hand over Libyan dissidents in exchange for oil. Soon after a CIA plane landed in China and a man and his family including his 12 year old daughter were kidnapped and loaded in the CIA plane for rendition. The man was tied to his seat a hood over his head and IV drugs stuck in his arm while his daughter looked on in terror. The CIA knew why they needed the girl. They knew her fate that awaited on the other end of the flight. The CIA knew she would be paraded in front of her father to extract information from him. The CIA knew what this little girls intended fate would be. We know the story because after Gaddafi’s fall, rebels over ran the CIA station cheif’s office and found her file with her name. We don’t know if the father talked, because it is classified. The girl seemed to have been spared, so maybe he did, or maybe Gaddafi was not as evil as the CIA that handed her over to him. Even in 12 years we won’t know because Obama took his black marker and redacted it from the CIA report before sending the files to the Presidential archives. Obama may think he can hide her name. But I’ll reveal it. Her name is Khadija al-Saadi.

Obama claims he ended U.S. torture. But that is a lie. He classified it putting it back in the dark. To end it would require transparency.

I was subjected to 3rd party torture under Clinton. Maybe that is why it was an immigrant kid the FBI tortured in my presence. I can still hear his pleading, “please have a heart” while his tormentors laughed. I remember his blood on the floor. This was done to punish me for reporting to the Red Cross FBI abuse of a pastor they had arrested.

You have a duty to prevent this. A duty to stand up against torture. A duty to your fellow man. A duty before God, before whom you will one day stand.

By Stewart Waterhouse

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Phycological Torture

The following Article was reprinted from: https://www.justsecurity.org/77115/the-mendez-principles-beware-crossing-the-line-to-psychological-torture/

by  and 

Beware Crossing the Line to Psychological Torture

Every year on the June 26 commemoration of the United Nations International Day in Support of Victims of Torture, we are painfully reminded of the countless contexts in which torture and ill-treatment continue to be practiced with impunity worldwide. Psychological torture is a particularly perfidious form. It is important to guard against the many slippery slopes that are conducive to this type of abuse.
During the Cold War era, many governments carried out “mind control” experiments on thousands of prisoners, psychiatric patients, and volunteers who were unaware of the serious health risks or of their true nature and purpose (see e.g., here, here, here and here). These scientific trials were part of large classified projects that followed in the steps of those conducted under the Nazi regime in the Dachau concentration camp with the aim of developing more effective methods than physical torture to break the most resistant prisoners. Today these abhorrent techniques have proliferated as interrogation methods, not because they are effective at producing reliable information (quite the contrary, as discussed previously in this series, scientific studies demonstrate that, among other things, the agony of torture diminishes the cerebral capacity required to recall true information). Rather, these abuses achieve the true purpose of all torture – the complete subjugation of the victim – without leaving readily identifiable physical traces.
These practices, which avoid using the body as a conduit of the inflicted pain and suffering, are best classified as “psychological torture.” Their characteristics were fleshed out under human rights law in a March 2020 report by the United Nations Special Rapporteur on torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment (co-author Nils Melzer). A recent documentary film that inspired this work, Scottish director Stephen Bennett’s Eminent Monsters: A Manual For Modern Torture, is a tour de force that leaves audiences both shaken and educated. The film documents and follows the collusion between doctors and the governments of the United States, the U.K., and Canada, in now notorious cases ranging from the U.S. naval detention center at Guantánamo Bay, to a mind-control laboratory in Montreal and the “hooded men” in Belfast interrogation centers, and beyond. The experiments using sensory deprivation, forced comas, and LSD injections have been used to construct various forms of modern psychological torture.
In regards to the “war on terror,” Georgetown Law Professor David Luban and Military Commissions Defense Organization Resource Counsel and former U.S. Air Force officer Katherine Newell have argued that the “family of interrogational abuses” employed against high-value detainees “unequivocally” meet the legal definition of mental torture under U.S. law. Their claim is documented with research into tens of thousands of pages of declassified government sources, and turns on the fact that the U.S. torture statute includes a clause that Congress inserted in its definition of mental torture: “procedures calculated to disrupt profoundly the personality.” This important work reveals that personality disruption was exactly the goal through psychological debilitation. In the words of the KUBARK interrogation manual from the CIA that served as part of the research grounds for the recent torture program, “As the interrogatee slips back from maturity toward a more infantile state, his learned or structured personality traits fall away.”
Legal groundwork can help in understanding the recent evolution of torture and why it is essential to properly categorize this deeply damaging practice. Moreover, a full appreciation of the fault lines between non-coercive interviewing and psychological torture at the “lower intensity” end of the spectrum is paramount. That is, States are likely to look for ways to skirt the limitations of non-coercive interviewing through methods of psychological torture that aim to erode the victim’s personality, identity, and willpower without being interpreted as coercive. Whether such misconceptions are motivated by conscious malice, or by unconscious patterns of self-deception and denial of reality, which have been identified as a primary obstacle for the universal eradication of torture, it is surely wise to have our eyes open to the ever-shifting excuses and creation of loopholes to inflict cruelty in the effort to implement the new Principles on Effective Interviewing for Investigations and Information Gathering.
Too Often Brushed Away
The mandate of the Special Rapporteur has long recognized the conceptual distinction between physical and mental or “psychological” torture, and particular attention has been placed on the worrisome fact that the latter form of ill-treatment has often been “brushed away as mere allegations,” since it leaves no obvious physical scars. Even if States have generally been open to acknowledging the problem of psychological torture, national practice has tended to trivialize any treatment that does not include corporal pain or suffering. At the same time, various disciplines (e.g. medicine, psychology, ethics, philosophy, sociology) have found it useful to distinguish this type of conduct for diverse purposes, thus giving rise to differing interpretations.
Despite all of this, it should not be overlooked that torture is a unified legal concept. That is, drawing a distinction between physical and psychological torture by no means changes the universal prohibition or the legal obligations derived from it. There is no hierarchy of severity as the “two types are interrelated and ultimately, both have physical and psychological effects.” Torture is never an exclusively corporal ordeal, but always purposefully targets the mind and emotions of the victims themselves or of third persons forced to witness the act. Torturers always intend to subjugate through a demonstration of absolute power over complete helplessness. The only difference between physical and psychological torture is that the latter achieves this effect without using the body as a vehicle. In other words, psychological torture is a sub-category to the generic concept of torture.
Yet, “psychological torture” has not been a technical term of international law. In view of ameliorating this lacuna, the Special  Rapporteur’s 2020 report accordingly puts forward the view that under human rights law,

“psychological torture” should be interpreted to include all methods, techniques and circumstances which are intended or designed to purposefully inflict severe mental pain or suffering without using the conduit or effect of severe physical pain or suffering. Conversely, “physical torture” should be interpreted to include all methods, techniques and environments which are intended or designed to purposefully inflict severe physical pain or suffering, regardless of the parallel infliction of mental pain or suffering.

Despite significant overlaps, psychological torture should not be simply conflated with “no marks” and “no touch” torture. Reed College Professor Darius Rejali’s magisterial work has shed light on the fact that democracies have shifted to using this kind of “clean” or “stealth” torture in the presence of a free press and the rise of public-monitoring mechanisms. While such “no marks” torture aims to avoid visible traces, it may still rely on the physical body as a conduit of pain or suffering, such as through stress positions, suffocation, or sleep deprivation.
By contrast, psychological torture avoids the physical body and attacks the mind directly. It aims not only to avoid producing the evidence for the crime but, even more radically, to escape the definition of the crime altogether. Intimidation, humiliation, isolation, and arbitrariness can go a long way before being perceived as torture, far longer than any victim’s resilience could possibly last. Such abuse may be called “deep interrogation,” “preventive segregation,” “administrative detention,” or similar, but is rarely seen for what it really is: plain and simple torture. This is the deceptive power of psychological torture, which allows not only the involved officials, but also judges, the media, and the general public to maintain a convenient illusion of due process and the rule of law while practicing nothing less than willful ignorance.
Predominant Methods
The 2020 report duly applies the constitutive elements of mental suffering, which has both subjective and objective aspects, and the need for case-by-case assessment of severity, along with an elaboration on the rudiments of powerlessness, intentionality, and purposefulness. Furthermore, it clarifies that the exception of “lawful sanctions” does not provide a “carte blanche” to national legislation, but excludes only those legal measures from the definition of torture that are consistent with the Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners, known as the Nelson Mandela Rules.
The report provides an easily accessible description of the predominant methods of psychological torture in seven sub-categories, each of which targets a particular, well-documented psychosocial need:
1. Security (inducing fear, phobia, and anxiety)
Perhaps one of the most elementary forms of torture that impacts this need is the purposeful infliction of fear. There are a limitless variety of techniques that can include everything from threats and withholding or distorting information to provoking personal or cultural phobias.
2. Self-determination (domination and subjugation)
Applied in nearly all circumstances of torture is the deprivation of control over one’s schedule, from bodily functions of eating, sleeping, and bladder and bowel movements to imposing impossible choices that force the victim to participate in their own torture. This is analogous to what has been described as part of the “learned helplessness” used in the recent CIA torture program.
3. Dignity and identity (humiliation, breach of privacy, and sexual integrity)
This is closely related to removal of personal control but is even more transgressive in that it means to target the victim’s sense of identity and self-worth. It can be carried out through constant surveillance, public shaming, forced nudity and masturbation, or a breach of cultural and sexual taboos.
4. Environmental orientation (sensory manipulation)
As sensory stimuli and environmental control are a basic human need, their deprivation and manipulation can cause severe suffering. This can be achieved through constant light or dark, the removal of all sound in one’s cell, or the use of hooding, blindfolding, gloves, and earmuffs. This is found at the very interface of psychological and physical torture.
5. Social and emotional rapport (isolation, exclusion, betrayal)
Another frequent target of attack is a person’s need for social and environmental connection. This can be realized through incommunicado detention or solitary confinement (particularly traumatic if prolonged and indefinite), or by fostering and then betraying a detainee’s trust, or forcing them to participate in the abuse of others.
6. Communal trust (institutional arbitrariness and persecution)
Since every human being needs to maintain a certain communal trust, this can be broken by arbitrary sanction or punishment. The most notable forms of this can occur through enforced disappearance, instrumentalizing prolonged detention, or imposing grossly disproportionate penalties in comparison to the offense.
7. Torturous environments (accumulation of stressors)
In practice, victims are almost always subjected to more than one method of torture. It is often the combination of psychological and/or physical techniques, sometimes used over prolonged periods of time, that push a treatment beyond the “severity” threshold. Hence, due consideration of context must always be given for a legal analysis.
Defining and discussing psychological torture as distinct from physical torture is neither a purely theoretical exercise, nor does it suggest any difference in terms of cruelty, impermissibility, or legal consequences. Rather, the point of this discussion is to demonstrate how broad the substantive scope of the prohibition really is. It also offers political leaders, judges, and other officials an analytical framework facilitating the recognition, prevention, and prosecution of techniques, methods, or circumstances that amount to torture despite the absence of directly inflicted physical pain or suffering. Last but not least, it also empowers civil society, the media, and dedicated oversight mechanisms to keep a more vigilant eye on State practices that aim to erode the fault lines between legitimate non-coercive interviewing and prohibited methods of psychological manipulation that can only be described as torture.

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End Drone Killings

Letter to President Biden urging an end to Drone Assassinations:

June 30, 2021
President Joseph R. Biden, Jr.
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW
Washington, D.C. 20500
Dear President Biden,
We, the undersigned organizations, focus variously on human rights, civil rights and civil liberties, racial, social, and environmental justice, humanitarian approaches to foreign policy, faith based initiatives, peacebuilding, government accountability, veterans’ issues, and the protection of civilians. We write to demand an end to the unlawful program of lethal strikes outside any recognized battlefield, including through the use of drones. This program is a centerpiece of the United States’ forever wars and has exacted an appalling toll on Muslim, Brown, and Black communities in multiple parts of the
world. Your administration’s current review of this program, and the approaching 20th anniversary of
9/11, is an opportunity to abandon this war based approach and chart a new path forward that promotes and respects our collective human security. Successive presidents have now claimed the unilateral power to authorize secretive extrajudicial killing outside any recognized battlefield, with no meaningful accountability for wrongful deaths and civilian lives lost and injured. This lethal strikes program is a cornerstone of the broader U.S. war based approach, which has led to wars and other violent conflicts; hundreds of thousands dead, including
significant civilian casualties; massive human displacement; and indefinite military detention and
torture. It has caused lasting psychological trauma and deprived families of beloved members, as well
as means of survival. In the United States, this approach has contributed to further militarized and violent approaches to domestic policing; bias based racial, ethnic, and religious profiling in investigations, prosecutions, and watchlisting; warrantless surveillance; and epidemic rates of addiction and suicide among veterans, among other harms. It is past time to change course and start repairing
the damage done. We appreciate your stated commitments to ending “forever wars,” promoting racial justice, and centering human rights in U.S. foreign policy. Disavowing and ending the lethal strikes program is both
a human rights and racial justice imperative in meeting these commitments. Twenty years into a war based approach that has undermined and violated fundamental rights, we urge you to abandon it and embrace an approach that advances our collective human security. That approach should be rooted in promoting human rights, justice, equality, dignity, peacebuilding, diplomacy, and accountability, in action as well as words.
Sincerely,
U.S. Based Organizations
About Face: Veterans Against the War
Action Center on Race & the Economy
Alliance for Peacebuilding
Alliance of Baptists
American Arab AntiDiscrimination Committee (ADC)
American Civil Liberties Union
American Friends
Service Committee
American Muslim Bar Association (AMBA)
American Muslim Empowerment Network (AMEN)
Amnesty International USA
Beyond the Bomb
Center for Civilians in Conflict (CIVIC)
Center for Constitutional Rights
Center for Victims of Torture
CODEPINK
Columban Center for Advocacy and Outreach
Columbia Law School Human Rights Institute
Common Defense
Center for International Policy
Center for Nonviolent Solutions
Church of the Brethren, Office of Peacebuilding and Policy
CorpWatch
Council on American Islamic Relations (CAIR)
Council on American Islamic Relations (Washington Chapter)
Defending Rights & Dissent
Demand Progress Education Fund
Democracy for the Arab World Now (DAWN)
Dissenters
Empowering Pacific Islander Communities (EPIC)
Ensaaf Friends
Committee on National Legislation
Global Justice Clinic, NYU School of Law
Government Information Watch
Human Rights First
Human Rights Watch
ICNA Council for Social Justice
Institute for Policy Studies, New Internationalism Project
Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility
International Civil Society Action Network (ICAN)
Justice For Muslims Collective
Kairos Center for Religions, Rights and Social Justice
Maryknoll Office for Global Concerns
Military Families Speak Out
Muslim Justice League
National
Religious Campaign Against Torture
North Carolina Peace Action
Open Society Policy Center
Orange County Peace Coalition
Pax Christi USA
Peace Action
Peace Education Center
Poligon Education Fund
Presbyterian Church (USA) Office of Public Witness
Progressive Democrats of America
Project Blueprint
Queer Crescent
Rethinking Foreign Policy
RootsAction.org
Saferworld (Washington Office)
Samuel DeWitt Proctor Conference
September 11th Families for Peaceful Tomorrows
ShelterBox USA
South Asian Americans Leading Together (SAALT)
Sunrise Movement
United Church of Christ, Justice and Witness Ministries
United for Peace and Justice
University Network for Human Rights
US Campaign for Palestinian Rights
Veterans for American Ideals (VFAI)
Veterans For Peace
Western New
York Pax Christi
Win Without War
Women for Afghan Women
Women for Weapons Trade Transparency
Women Watch Afrika
Women’s Action for New Directions
Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom US
Internationally Based Organizations
AFARD
MALI (Mali)
Alf Ba Civilian and Coexistence Foundation (Yemen)
Allamin Foundation for Peace and Development (Nigeria)
BUCOFORE (Chad)
Building Blocks for Peace Foundation (Nigeria)
Campaña Colombiana Contra Minas (Colombia)
Centre for Democracy and Development (Nigeria)
Center for Policy Analysis of Horn of Africa (Somaliland)
Conciliation Resources (United Kingdom)
Defence for Human Rights (Yemen)
Digital Shelter (Somalia)
Drone Wars UK
European Center for Constitutional and Human Rights
Foundation for Fundamental Rights (Pakistan)
Heritage Institute for Somali Studies (Somalia)
Initiatives for International Dialogue (Philippines)
International Association for Political Science Students (IAPSS)
IRIAD (Italy)
Justice Project Pakistan
Lawyers for Justice in Libya (LFJL)
Mareb Girls Foundation (Yemen)
Mwatana for Human Rights (Yemen)
National Organization for Development Society (Yemen)
National Partnership of Children and Youth in Peacebuilding (Democratic Republic of the Congo)
PAX (Netherlands)
Peace Direct (United Kingdom)
Peace Initiative Network (Nigeria)
Peace Training and Research Organisation (PTRO) (Afghanistan)
Reprieve (United Kingdom)
Shadow World Investigations (United Kingdom)
Witness Somalia
Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF)
World BEYOND War
Yemeni Youth Forum for Peace
The Youth Cafe (Kenya)
Youth for Peace and Development (Zimbabwe)

 

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