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Interview with Raj Purohit, Senior Fellow, International
Law and Justice
Raj Purohit,
Senior Fellow at Citizens for Global Solutions, is a specialist in International
Law and Justice. Prior to joining our staff in 2005, he was Legislative Director
for Human Rights First, where he represented them in a range of coalitions,
including the Washington Working Group on the International Criminal Court, and
was a media spokesperson. He also has served as Legislative Director for the
National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers and as Director of Legal
Services at the Center on Conscience and War. Raj received his
Bachelor of Laws (LL.B.) from Sussex University (1995) and his Master of Laws (LL.M.)
in International Legal Studiesfrom American University, Washington College of
Law (1997), where he also teaches. He is our organization’s point person for the
www.endtorture.net initiative and can be
reached at
rpurohit@globalsolutions.org. Why do you think we need
an Independent Bipartisan Commission on Torture and U.S. Interrogation Policy?
Despite two sustained efforts by civil society, retired military leaders and a
few bipartisan legislators, the U.S. government has failed to seriously grapple
with the ramifications of torture and interrogation. In its second effort,
Congress passed the Military Commissions Act of 2006 and failed to address the
problem. In fact, this bill further erodes global trust in the U.S. by giving
the president sweeping discretion in the arena of interrogation technique
assessment. Unfortunately, it seems too much to ask that Congress, unassisted,
engage the White House and effectively tackle an issue that has stymied it twice
in recent years. At this juncture, it seems that the wisest
course of action is for the new Congress to create an Independent Bipartisan
Commission on Torture and U.S. Interrogation Policy; it is past time that the
U.S. comprehensively address the scandals of Abu Ghraib and beyond.
What would the Commission look like?
An Independent Bipartisan Commission on Torture and U.S. Interrogation Policy
would bring together a broad range of experts. Working together they would be
able to collectively comprehend the totality of the issue, its consequences and
necessary policy prescriptions. The experts would be drawn from the
intelligence, foreign policy, law enforcement, military, veterans, legal and
human rights community. Additional members could include representatives of the
faith community, theologians, cultural specialists and historians.
What would it do?
The mandate for the Commission would be, by necessity, broad. Since the issue of
torture and interrogation penetrated the public conscience in early 2004, when
the Abu Ghraib Iraqi prison scandal became global front page news, the story has
grown in complexity. We now know that the U.S. military initially started
investigating crimes committed by its personnel at Abu Ghraib in 2003. In Iraq,
horror stories about the use of
torture by U.S. military were prevalent over a year before the first Abu Ghraib
pictures were publicly seen. In addition to the appropriate,
and necessary, focus on U.S. prisons in Iraq, the Commission would also be
charged with investigating torture in Afghanistan, the CIA secret prison
network, the U.S. facilities at Guantanamo, the use of rendition as a
counter-terror tactic by the U.S., opportunistic use of torture by other
governments and the use of torture in the U.S. What do you
think will be the impact of recent developments on rendition practices across
the European Union and what will this mean more broadly for U.S. interrogation
policy?
I think that the CIA must be worried about using the EU as either a
stop-over or final destination for its future renditions because prosecutors are
onto them. Frankly, U.S. policymakers should be worried as we are
seeing hard-nosed prosecutors in Germany and Italy start the process of bringing
to trial CIA agents involved in the kidnappings.
Do you think we can change U.S. policy and end the use of
torture?
I believe that we can. More and more groups and individuals are starting to
speak out on the issue of torture. These groups include youth, veterans, members
of the faith community and human rights activists. One way to help is to sign
our petition at the www.endtorture.net
website urging Congress to set up a Commission. You can also ask your local
council or state legislature to pass a resolution supporting the formation of a
Commission. Get together with your community, use the tools we have on our main
website www.globalsolutions.org and
take action. The tide is moving in our direction and together we can create
change.
Updated March 16, 2007
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