And this from the Center for Constitutional Rights:
Last Friday, CCR urged the U.S.
Supreme Court to review its case seeking compensation for former Guantánamo
prisoners who were tortured. Celikgogus
v. Rumsfeld was filed against former Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld
and other high-level government officials and Guantánamo personnel for
authorizing and condoning torture. All of the clients were released without
being charged with any crime, yet they were subjected to torture and other
abuses, including solitary confinement, sleep deprivation, being prevented from
praying, forcible shaving, and being medicated against their will. They
continue to suffer the effects of this treatment years after being released;
one is even immobilized. A district court dismissed the case in 2013, and the
appellate court in 2014 affirmed the dismissal, claiming that the torture and
religious humiliation these men endured were incidental to the “need to
maintain an orderly detention environment.” The court also noted that this
treatment appeared “standard for all” U.S. military detainees in Guantánamo,
Iraq, and Afghanistan—as if the mere prevalence of torture justifies it. The
Supreme Court has not heard a Guantánamo case since 2008, and to date none of
those tortured at Guantánamo have been compensated for what they endured. CCRs pursuit of this case all the way to the highest court in the nation is
emblematic of its longtime commitment to hold accountable, in whatever venue
possible, those who created, designed and implemented U.S. torture – from
Guantánamo to Abu
Ghraib, CIA black sites, extraordinary
renditions and elsewhere.
Thank you CCR.
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