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Suryu's video: Torture tribunals and the death penalty

@Torture, tribunals and the death penalty
Well, it seems utterly opportunistic to me. Mohammed al-Khatani, our client, has been in Guantanamo six years. This could have happened before. They had commissions set up before. And it looks to me like in a broad way that the Republicans want to make the Democrats appear weak on issues of national security and themselves to appear strong. So they come out and say, "Look it, we've captured the 9/11 guys. We're going to put them on trial." And you have the Democrats saying, "Well, we don't think these trials are fair." And so the public perception, at least the ones the Republicans hope for, is that the Democrats are seen as weak on an issue of national security, which is always one of the Democrats' alleged worries in taking on the Republicans. That's certainly one of the major reasons I think we're seeing these charges now, particularly as it's unlikely those trials will go forward before the elections. The second, of course, could be that this is the last year of the Bush administration. How does he go out of office without at least saying, "Hey, guys, I at least captured the people and put them on trial who were involved in 9/11"? 'Cause he certainly hasn't done that with Osama bin Laden. They've been saying they want to close Gitmo for years. The president said he wanted to close it. But words don't mean anything. There's still over 250 people at Guantanamo. The question is: what's going to happen to those? The administration claims they're going to charge 60 or 80 people, but I think you and I will be talking next year before we actually get one of these trials full end to completion, because there are so many ways in which they are off the page of human liberty and off the page of law that I question that even our moderate to conservative courts in the United States will uphold trials based on evidence from torture. So I think we're talking about a very long time to both closing Guantanamo as well as to having any trials go forward. The broader issue, which has been happening for a number of years now, post-9/11, is first the issue of the legitimization of torture and the use of evidence from torture in the trials of alleged terrorists, and trying to make that an exception to the fact that we can't allow or don't allow evidence of torture or coercion in any of our regular criminal trials. And one question is: will that be just an exception, bad as it is? Or will that, as it often happens, seep into our regular justice system? The second is setting up a special set of courts to try alleged terrorists. That's what's done or what was done in Peru under Fujimori; that was done in Nigeria; that was done in Turkey. And the question is: does the fact that the major country in the world, one that is supposedly proud of its human rights, is engaging in torture and special tribunals and the death penalty, will that really set a template not only for the future of justice in the United States but for the future of justice in the world? http://therealnews.com/web/index.php?thisdataswitch=0&thisid=962&thisview=item

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This video was published on 2008-02-17 01:32:44 GMT by @Suryu on Youtube. Suryu has total 10.4K subscribers on Youtube and has a total of 157 video.This video has received 10 Likes which are lower than the average likes that Suryu gets . @Suryu receives an average views of 26.4K per video on Youtube.This video has received 4 comments which are lower than the average comments that Suryu gets . Overall the views for this video was lower than the average for the profile.

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