Belmarsh, control orders and deportations

Repatriation as Russian Roulette: Will the Two Algerians Freed from Guantánamo Be Treated Fairly?

7.7.08

It doesn’t take much investigation to discover that Algeria has a bleak human rights record, which is one of the reasons that, until last week, when 49-year old Mustafa Hamlili and 28-year old Abdul Raham Houari were freed from Guantánamo, no Algerian prisoners had been repatriated. This was in spite of the fact that at [...]

Captivated: The Art of the Interned

1.6.08

On Monday June 16, the human rights organization Cageprisoners and Together, a charity that supports people with mental health needs, are launching an exhibition devoted to works of art created by prisoners in the UK who are imprisoned without charge or trial as part of Britain’s shameful contribution to the post-9/11 flight from domestic and [...]

UK government deports 60 Iraqi Kurds; no one notices

30.3.08

Blinded by the apparent allure of a tall, thin woman from France, Britain’s press completely ignored the forcible deportation, on Thursday, of 60 Iraqi Kurds, who were transported back to a decidedly uncertain future on a German plane from a UK airport. Each of the 60 “failed asylum seekers,” as they are officially known, was [...]

Britain’s Guantánamo: control orders renewed, as one suspect is freed

23.2.08

It’s always a sure sign that something has gone horribly wrong when Tory politicians can only be persuaded with extreme reluctance to support anti-terror measures pursued by the Labour government. But this is exactly what happened on Thursday, when Conservative MPs joined with the government’s own MPs to extend until March 2009 the legislation authorizing [...]

Guantánamo as house arrest: Britain’s law lords capitulate on control orders

2.11.07

Imagine being picked up by the police, taken to a maximum security prison, and held for years –- indefinitely, for all you know –- without being told what it is that you’re supposed to have done. Sounds familiar? If you substitute “soldiers” for “the police,” it sounds like Guantánamo, or Bagram, or Abu Ghraib. But [...]

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Andy Worthington

Author & Journalist
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