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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsPrisoner's Self-Portraits of C.I.A. Torture Surface From Sealed Court Record
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/12/18/us/politics/guantanamo-prisoner-drawings-torture.htmlfree link: https://archive.ph/30tyW
Alone in his cell with only dark thoughts of desperate times, the prisoner put pencil to paper and drew detailed portraits of how American agents tortured him 20 years ago.
Some of it was self-administered therapy of sorts for the prisoner, a Malaysian man named Mohammed Farik Bin Amin. The United States held him for years in solitary confinement, starting in 2003 in a dungeonlike prison run by the C.I.A. in Afghanistan. The Guantánamo prison does not offer specific treatment for people who have been tortured.
Some of it was homework assigned by his lawyer, Christine Funk, who negotiated the plea deal that sent him home on Wednesday. Ms. Funk had asked Mr. Bin Amin to draw what happened to him, rather than find a way to discuss it.
(snip)
Other prisoners have drawn what they remember about being tortured in C.I.A. custody. But for the first time, a former C.I.A. prisoners version of what happened to him is now in the record of a trial at the post-9/11 war crimes court, which continues to grapple with the legacy of U.S. state-sponsored torture. And for the first time since they were shown in court, they are being published for the public to see them, here.
Some of it was self-administered therapy of sorts for the prisoner, a Malaysian man named Mohammed Farik Bin Amin. The United States held him for years in solitary confinement, starting in 2003 in a dungeonlike prison run by the C.I.A. in Afghanistan. The Guantánamo prison does not offer specific treatment for people who have been tortured.
Some of it was homework assigned by his lawyer, Christine Funk, who negotiated the plea deal that sent him home on Wednesday. Ms. Funk had asked Mr. Bin Amin to draw what happened to him, rather than find a way to discuss it.
(snip)
Other prisoners have drawn what they remember about being tortured in C.I.A. custody. But for the first time, a former C.I.A. prisoners version of what happened to him is now in the record of a trial at the post-9/11 war crimes court, which continues to grapple with the legacy of U.S. state-sponsored torture. And for the first time since they were shown in court, they are being published for the public to see them, here.



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Prisoner's Self-Portraits of C.I.A. Torture Surface From Sealed Court Record (Original Post)
WhiskeyGrinder
Dec 2024
OP
Ohh, those hurt me... I can feel the pipe behind my knees in that squat position...Powerful
hlthe2b
Dec 2024
#1
I don't have it in me to forgive my government for its state-sponsored torture.
Solly Mack
Dec 2024
#2
hlthe2b
(114,429 posts)1. Ohh, those hurt me... I can feel the pipe behind my knees in that squat position...Powerful
Solly Mack
(97,179 posts)2. I don't have it in me to forgive my government for its state-sponsored torture.
Not that my government cares what I think.
WhiskeyGrinder
(27,171 posts)3. Kick
Solly Mack
(97,179 posts)4. ...
UTUSN
(77,795 posts)5. K&R
canetoad
(20,933 posts)6. I apologise for cropping this graphic
It was very long and is available in this entirety here: https://www.sbs.com.au/news/article/202-people-died-in-the-2002-bali-bombings-this-is-who-they-were/ow30ib8sw
The first three countries that lost citizens were Australia, Indonesia and United Kingdom. US came fourth with only seven deaths compared to 149 for the first three. Torturing an accomplice who didn't participate in the bombing seems to be an exceptionally cruel and vicious torture. Unfortunately much of what passes for normal behaviour in the US is regarded as cruel and vicious by other nations.
