Showing posts with label Torture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Torture. Show all posts

Wednesday, 1 February 2012

THE BRITISH EMPIRE - MODEL FOR THE US EMPIRE

Child in a British concentration camp in South Africa.



The British Empire is like the American Empire.



The British Empire was involved in:



The drugs trade (Dope inc),



Slavery,



Concentration camps,



False flag terror,



Torture,



And institutionalised racism.



The Jubilee Plot 1887 was the classic false flag operation. British government ministers, led by Prime Minister Lord Salisbury, decided: (1) to use a double-agent Francis Millen to organise a 'plot' to blow up Westminster Abbey, thus killing Queen Victoria and half the British cabinet. (2) to have the plot discovered and revealed during Queen Victoria's golden jubilee. The Jubilee plot employed two Irish-American patsies, Thomas Callan and Michael Harkins.



1. The British Empire was not just the countries painted red on the map.



Professor Linda Colley, of Princeton University (The British Empire ) points out that Argentina, for example, "was substantially run by the British during the 19th century."



And "the US remained economically and culturally dependent on the empire for much of the 19th century."



In Argentina, the British set up railroads and made them "serve British commercial interests" and the British "dominated the banks and investment structure".



In Europe, "naval bases such as Menorca, Gibraltar, Cyprus and Malta allowed the Royal Navy to control the Mediterranean for a very long time."



2. The British Empire was not just 'English'.



Professor John MacKenzie, of Lancaster University, points out that the Irish, Welsh and Scots were important. (The British Empire )



The Irish contributed priests, nuns, doctors and generals to the Empire.



"An obvious Irish contribution was Roman Catholicism and... the Irish... were disproportionately powerful within the British army."



Within the Empire, "many of the universities were founded by Scots on the Scottish model.



"In addition, Scotland was an overproducer of graduates so you had very many Scottish doctors, engineers, foresters, botanists and teachers... There were Scots everywhere.



"Whenever you had mines established around the empire, it was often Welsh or Cornish who inhabited them."



Slaves



3. Britain's empire was a commercial empire, involving slavery.



Dr Sheryllynne Haggerty, of the University of Nottingham, points out that "some merchants were involved in the slave trade, which was integral to the growing of sugar and tobacco in the colonies." (The British Empire )



Various Hubbert Peaks Illustrate Human Nature



4. The American revolution had an impact on the British empire. (The British Empire )



Professor Maya Jasanoff, of Harvard University, points out that when the USA ceased to be part of the empire, "it remained incredibly closely tied to Britain right up to the Civil War, and in some ways even beyond that.



"Economically both countries were dependent on the other and the United States was the main trading partner for Britain.



"It was also the chief destination for British emigrants.



"So when we think of the British empire as a global entity bound together by trade, emigration, and cultural ties, we should remember the ways in which the USA remained involved."



In 1919, at Amritsar in India, Britain's General Edward Dyer ordered his troops to kill unarmed men, women and children. Hundreds were killed. More than 1000 were wounded.



5. India was of prime importance to the British economy. (The British Empire )



Professor Denis Judd, of New York University in London, points out that "Britain was the world’s first superpower because of her flying start in the industrial revolution, her financial and manufacturing domination, her enormous wealth, her stable political institutions, the global supremacy of the Royal Navy and her huge worldwide empire."



"Britain’s trade with India by the start of the 20th century responsible for a fifth of the nation’s overseas commerce."



"There was a large annual balance in Britain's favour.



"British loans to India secured a handsome return in interest, and Indian taxes and revenue paid for the salaries and pensions of the British administration there."



India's railways provided "a good minimum percentage return for British investors."



India's soldiers were "a readily available source of manpower for the exercise of British foreign policy, and at no cost to the British taxpayer."



India provided opium.



In the 1850s, opium revenues accounted for more than 20 per cent of British government revenues in India.





David Sassoon, whose grandson Edward Albert Sassoon, married Aline Caroline de Rothschild, the grand-daughter of Jacob (James) Mayer Rothschild. David Sassoon (1792 - 1864) was the treasurer of Baghdad between 1817 and 1829 and the leader of the Jewish community in Bombay (now Mumbai). The British government gave Sassoon "monopoly rights" to the manufacture of Opium.Sassoon expanded his opium trade into China and Japan. (Hong Kong, the Land Built on Opium )



6. Opium helped bankroll the British empire. (The British Empire )



Dr Julia Lovell, of Birkbeck University of London, points out that the opium trade was "crucial to the running of the British empire."



Opium was grown in India.



The British forced the Chinese to buy the opium.



The 1860 Beijing treaty, after two Opium Wars, forced China to make opium legal.



The profits of the opium were used to buy tea.



The tea was sold in Britain.



The government got its customs duties.



"These duties paid for a large part of the Royal Navy, so opium helped keep the British empire afloat."



Opium also helped fund the British government in India.



The Opium Wars looked like a conspiracy to undermine China.



Sir Stamford Raffles, of the East India Company, brought death and destruction to Java in Indonesia. He sacked and looted cities. He supported slavery. He promoted the trade in Opium.



7. Empires exploit people. (The British Empire )



Professor Huw Bowen, of Swansea University, writes that "one would assume that Britain grew richer and the rest of empire got poorer because the whole point of empires is that they are exploitative."



"To assume that everything the British did was damaging is incorrect.



"British enterprise stimulated a large export trade which might otherwise never have come into existence."



"However, there is no doubt that in the long run specific sectors of the Indian economy did suffer under the yoke of imperialism – the cotton industry was profoundly damaged by cheap imports from Lancashire and Scotland from the 1830s onwards."



William Jardine, together with James Matheson, went into the opium business in China.



8. To some extent the people of Britain and the empire saw themselves as being part of a single British people (The British Empire )



According to Professor Peter Marshall, of King's College London, "a sense of a common British identity was very strong in the later 19th century, particularly among people of British origin in Australia, Canada, New Zealand and English-speaking South Africa."



These countries contributed soldiers in two world wars.



"People in the Caribbean as well as mixed-race people in southern Africa or the elites in India, Pakistan and Sri Lanka could have a strong sense of British values."



Andrea Levy’s novel Small Island refers to Jamaicans who thought of themselves as British.



These Jamaicans "were dismayed by what they regarded as the un-British standards that they encountered in Britain."



In Britain, "attitudes of condescension towards all imperial peoples and downright racism towards non-Europeans were very common."



9. How the end of empire affected Britain.



Dr Sarah Stockwell, of King's College London, points out that "continued attachment to empire through the 1940s and 50s may have had an adverse effect on the British economy.



"It contributed to Britain's initial decision not to join the European Economic Community at its foundation in 1957, while some British businesses also remained focused on traditional markets that were increasingly less important to the country than those in Europe."



Mark Curtis says that in 1971 an official British investigation found that the British army's torture techniques "played an important part in counter-insurgency operations in Palestine, Malaya, Kenya, Cyprus and the British Cameroons (1960-1), Brunei (1963), British Guiana (1964), Aden (1964-7), Borneo/Malaysia (1965-6), the Persian Gulf (1970-1) and in Northern Ireland (1971)".





Leo Amery, former UK Secretary of State for India, could see a similarity between Churchill's attitude to Indians and Hitler's attitude to Jews. (Churchill's Secret War.)



In 1943, millions of people were dying of starvation in Bengal, in India.



The UK prime minister Winston Churchill could easily have stopped the famine by arranging a few shipments of food.



But, but he refused.



He also prevented others from helping.



Winston Churchill described the Indians as "a beastly people with a beastly religion." (Churchill's Secret War.)



He said they "bred like rabbits."



Famine in India - Website for this image



In KENYA, the British used beatings, sexual humiliation, hooding, sleep deprivation, and bombarding with white noise.



32 Whites were killed by the Mau Mau during the five-year state of emergency. More whites died in traffic accidents in the capital city, Nairobi.



Kenyans were forced into concentration camps and routinely tortured. Some 150,000 Africans died as a direct result of the British policy.



There was a "constant stream of reports of brutalities by police, military and home guards", wrote Canon Bewes, a British missionary. "Some of the people had been using castration instruments and two men had died under castration."



Other brutalities included slicing off ears, boring holes in eardrums, flogging people to death, pouring paraffin over suspects and setting them alight and burning eardrums with cigarettes.



A British district officer admitted, "There was outright abuse of power and some of the crimes committed were horrific. One day six Mau Mau suspects were brought into a police station in the neighbouring district to mine. The British police inspector in charge lined them up against a wall and shot them."



A mobile gallows travelled the country. Over 1,000 were hanged, their bodies displayed at crossroads and market places.



British concentration camp in Kenya.



MALAYSIA



The British used terror in Malaya.



This involved aerial bombing, massacres of villagers, dictatorial police measures and the "resettlement" of hundreds of thousands of people.



CYPRUS



During the state of emergency, from 1952 to 1957, the British army used torture.



Cypriot Nicos Koshies:



"They took me to the Special Branch and they started beating me. They took off all my clothes, they tied my hands and feet. They asked somebody to come in. He was taking a stick to put up my bottom, he was putting cloths in water and putting them on my face so I could not breathe, he threw me down and danced on my stomach when he was wearing boots. After 12 days I could not recognise myself."



James Callaghan in the House of Commons:



"On 29 June 1957 an inquest was held into the death of Nicos Georghiou. Dr Clearkin said in evidence that bruises in the head were sufficiently severe to have caused the injuries to the brain, perhaps bumping the head against a hard object."



British concentration camp in South Africa



ADEN/SOUTH YEMEN



In Aden, later known as South Yemen, SAS squads used terror against local villages.



An official investigation found that from 1964 to 1967 detainees at a British interrogation centre were routinely tortured. Their eardrums were burst.



Others were forced to lean against walls with their fingertips for day and subjected to white noise for hours.



British concentration camp in South Africa



BAHRAIN



Former detainees in Bahrain have described being beaten, electrocuted, whipped, tied in excruciating positions for days on end, kept awake, starved and having their toenails torn out.



NORTHERN IRELAND



The Compton official inquiry acknowledged that the army hooded suspects, fed them on just bread and water and blasted them with noise.



An Amnesty International report said, "It is because we regard the deliberate destruction of a man's ability to control his own mind with revulsion that we reserve a special place in our catalogue of moral crimes for techniques of thought control and brainwashing. Any interrogation procedure which has the purpose or effect of causing a malfunction or breakdown of a man's mental processes constitutes as grave an assault on the inherent dignity of the human person as more traditional techniques of physical torture."



A European human rights report found that British army techniques amounted to "inhuman and degrading treatment" causing "at least intense physical and mental suffering".



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aangirfan: FEW AMERICANS DIED IN WORLD WAR II



aangirfan: US PLAN TO ATTACK UK

Monday, 4 April 2011

CASTRATION

Grandmother

Barack Obama's grandfather, Hussein Onyango Obama, was one of those detained in the 1950s uprising against British colonial rule in Kenya. (High Court case)

On 6 April 2011, in Britain's High Court, five Kenyans will accuse the British government of torture, including castration.

( Kenyans suing UK over torture to give evidence )

The three men and two women say that, in the 1950s, they suffered castration, sexual abuse and severe beatings in detention camps run by the UK government.

Britain's Times newspaper has said that 300 boxes of documents showing efforts by Britain to put down insurgency were discovered when the High Court ordered the government to produce all relevant evidence.

Historians estimate as many as 150,000 suspected members of the Mau Mau resistance movement were detained without trial between 1952 and 1960.

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The British and American military - rape, torture and murder.

UK soldiers were ordered by senior officers to torture ...

CHILD SEXUAL ABUSE; THE UK MILITARY IN IRAQ

THE BRITISH ARMY - LONG HISTORY OF USING TORTURE

British torture camp where innocent prisoners were murdered

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Thursday, 9 July 2009

Manchester police sub-contracted torture to Pakistan Intelligence; the death of Michael Todd, chief constable of Greater Manchester police.

Ahmed, a Manchester taxi driver, was convicted in 2008.

In the UK, David Davis, a top Conservative member of Parliament, has revealed how the UK police, and MI5, sub-contracted the torture of Rangzieb Ahmed to the Pakistani intelligence agency, ISI.

Greater Manchester police were the police force involved.

Revealed: evidence MI5 tried to hide

Greater Manchester Police's Chief Constable Michael Todd died in mysterious circumstances in 2008.

Davis, speaking of Rangzieb Ahmed, told the UK parliament:

"A more obvious case of outsourcing of torture, a more obvious case of passive rendition, I cannot imagine.

"He should have been arrested by the UK in 2006.

"He was not.

"The authorities knew he intended to travel to Pakistan, so they should have prevented that.

"Instead, they suggested the ISI arrest him.

"They knew he would be tortured, and they organised to construct a list of questions and provide it to the ISI."

Ahmed was eventually deported back to the UK and jailed or life after being found guilty of membership of al-Qaida (al CIAda)

The jury at Manchester crown court was not told he had been tortured.

Ahmed says he was recently visited by a police officer who said he could arrange for his sentence to be reduced, or for him to be paid money, if he withdrew his complaints about torture.

Ahmed has links to so called terrorists.

Rangzieb Ahmed received money from Ahmed Omar Saeed Sheikh.

(Rangzieb Ahmed - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia)

Former Pakistani President, Pervez Musharraf, in his book In the Line of Fire stated that Sheikh was recruited by British intelligence agency, MI6, while studying at the London School of Economics.

(Ahmed Omar Saeed Sheikh - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia)


Manchester police chief Michael Todd died in mysterious circumstances.

The official story was that Todd got drunk and killed himself.

But, Todd did not have a "huge" amount of alcohol in his blood when he died on Snowdon, the coroner said.

The coroner asked: "So, not a huge amount of alcohol then?"

Dr Caslin answered: "No, sir." - BBC NEWS - Todd inquest hears of drink level

The highly observant Postman Patel told readers that Michael Todd's murder refuses to be cleared up.

At present there is an inquest into the mysterious death of police chief Michael Todd (ACPO head of terrorism) who was found dead on 10 March 2008.

Todd is reported to have sent text messages to friends.

According to Postman Patel:

The inquest contained many curious features ;

1. Recipients of the text messages sent by Todd were not identified other than by a coded alphabetical letter.

2. The time and location of the sending of those texts - especially on the fatal Monday have not been made public. This is important as press reports state that the initital searches were a wild goose chase based on wrong (?) information about the location of Todd's phone.

3. The finders of the body off the well worn track in atrocious weather (the worst storm in 10 years) were not identified nor it appears gave evidence.

4. The route (and crucially the timing) of Todd's police vehicle which will have had a tracker device - which could be confirmed by the NW Wales network of Number Plate Recognition cameras remains unpublished.The inquest was also told that Todd had visited suicide websites and drove to Cumbria on March 9 but had “bottled out” and gone home.

5. The role / activities / liason with the Police , of the Llanberis Mountain rescue team, and the various helicopters - "men in dark suits" remains still a mystery.






1. "His coat had also come off and some of his clothes were discovered nearby.

"The Mail report a source saying, 'There are no obvious injuries compatible with a fall from height.'

"The BBC News BBC 4 PM at 5.00 pm GMT made the odd announcement that Michael Todd sent texts on Monday aftrenoon which gave rise to concern that suggested danger to his life and that of others." - Michael Todd - A death has been reported - Curiouser and curiouser

2. "Sources at Greater Manchester Police said that among the items found with him were personal letters written to his loved ones, the BBC's Nick Ravenscroft said.

"No news yet of the heroic walkers, or their pictures, or their names, or why they were out there in that dreadful weather, or why the personal items were 200yds away, or why they hadn't blown away, or why they looked." - One of our policemen was missing - now we know he is dead. Did he fall ? ..... Or was he pushed ?

3. Top UK policeman Mike Todd could have been saved on Snowdon, says Mountain rescue boss Peter Walker.

Walker claims that a mysterious group of dark-suited men, believed to be from the security services, were seen at the bottom of Mount Snowdon after Mr Todd's body was found.

A mystery Chinook helicopter appeared above the body - but could not land. - 'Suicide' police chief: Why didn't they call us earlier say rescue services?

4. "Mr Todd had been leading a probe into claims that CIA 'extraordinary rendition' flights had been landing in the UK." - Shock as Manchester Chief Constable Michael Todd found dead

Assassination? "Let's not forget that one person has already been murdered who was reluctantly involved in approving a CIA kidnapping / rendition in Denmark ...

"Of course the Bromma airport incident in Sweden on December 18th 2001, is the most interesting of cases where approval was given because the lady (Swedish Foreign Minister Anna Lindh) who gave the approval for the kidnapping was murdered in public nearly two years later." - Michael Todd - Dead Men tell no Tales - The living are silent as well ... what happened to cop who investigated UK collusion in CIA Renditions ?


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Tuesday, 23 June 2009

SPOT THE FASCISTS



We should not forget that most terrorism is the work of the security services. (OPERATION NORTHWOODS: US PLANNED FAKE TERROR ATTACKS ON CITIZENS .)

So, the 'terrorists' held in American prisons are usually innocents.

In 2005, The New York Times obtained a 2,000-page United States Army report concerning the murders of two unarmed civilian Afghan prisoners by U.S. armed forces in 2002 at the Bagram prison, in Afghanistan.

The prisoners, Habibullah and Dilawar, were chained to the ceiling and beaten, which caused their deaths. Military coroners ruled that both the prisoners' deaths were homicides.

Autopsies revealed severe trauma to both prisoners' legs, describing the trauma as comparable to being run over by a bus. (Bagram torture and prisoner abuse - Wikipedia)

New allegations of torture at the USA's Bagram prison in Afghanistan have been uncovered by the BBC.

Inmates claim they have been hung from the ceiling and beaten.

None of the inmates has been charged with any offence or put on trial.

Some of the inmates, including Britons, have been forcibly taken there from abroad.

"They poured cold water on you in winter and hot water in summer. They used dogs against us. They put a pistol or a gun to your head and threatened you with death," said one inmate.

The 'fascist' Obama regime is not going to close Bagram.

An extra detention centre is currently under construction at the camp.

Torture apparently continues.

Ex-detainees allege Bagram abuse / Ex-Bagram inmates complain of abuse



The forces of law and order are losing respect.

A damning UK government survey has found police forces and other public services are said to neither listen to what people say about crime and rowdiness nor do anything to stop it.

"The poll of more than half a million adults also suggested that councils are out of touch, unpopular, and take too much of residents' money.

"The inquiry, conducted in more than 300 council areas, found only a quarter of respondents thought police were willing to listen when they complained." - Police have let us down, say three in four Britons.

Sunday, 25 January 2009

Obama will use foreigners to carry out torture.


Image from honolulu.craigslist.org/l

The distinguished author Allan Nairn , on 25 January 2009, explained about The torture ban that doesn’t ban torture

Among the points made:

1. When Obama declared that 'the United States will not torture', he was not telling the full story.

2. Obama’s Executive Order only bans some, not all, US officials from torturing.

3. The US government can continue to arrange for people to be tortured overseas.

4. The US has been in the habit of using foreigners to carry out most of its acts of torture.

These foreigners, from Israel, Egypt, Iraq, Afghanistan, Saudi Arabia, Ethiopia, Pakistan, Jordan, Indonesia, Thailand, Uzbekistan, Colombia, Nigeria, the Philippines etc., work with US intelligence agencies.



El Salvador 1981 www.tomgrossmedia.com/NewYorkTimes.htm


5. Obama's Executive Order merely relates to treatment of "an individual in the custody or under the effective control of an officer, employee, or other agent of the United States Government, or detained within a facility owned, operated, or controlled by a department or agency of the United States, in any armed conflict…"

This means that it does not prohibit direct torture by Americans outside environments of "armed conflict," which is where much torture happens anyway since many repressive regimes aren’t in armed conflict.

6. The USA can still pay, train, equip and guide foreign torturers, and see to it that they, and their US patrons, don’t face local or international justice.

7. This is a return to the torture regime of Ford through Clinton, which, year by year, often produced more torture than was produced during the Bush/Cheney years.

8. In Guatemala under Bush Sr. and Clinton, the US backed the army’s G-2 death squad which kept comprehensive files on dissidents and then electroshocked them or cut off their hands.

9. It was a similar story in Bush Sr. and Clinton’s Haiti where the DIA (Defense Intelligence Agency) helped launch the terrorist group FRAPH, the CIA paid its leader, and FRAPH itsef laid the machetes on Haitian civilians, torturing and killing as US proxies.

10. In today’s Thailand, special police and militaries get US gear and training for things like “target selection” and then go out and torture Thai Malay Muslims in the rebel deep south, and also sometimes (mainly Buddhist) Burmese refugees and exploited northern and west coast workers.

News and Comment (http://www.allannairn.com/)

Allan Nairn page

Allan Nairn - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Friday, 23 January 2009

Obama's orders leave torture, indefinite detention intact

Picture: republicancriminals.blogspot.

The USA continues to be a Nazi state, under its new president.

Torture and imprisonment without trial will continue.

Obama's orders leave torture, indefinite detention intact

Tom Eley, at WSWS, 23 January 2009, points out:

Extract:

"The orders signed by Obama do not undo the Bush administration’s attacks on constitutional and international law.

1. "They do not challenge the supposed right of the president to unilaterally imprison any individual, without trial and without charges, by declaring him to be an 'enemy combatant.'"

2. "Nor do they end the procedure known as 'extraordinary rendition,' by which the United States during the Bush years kidnapped alleged terrorists and shipped them to foreign countries or secret CIA prisons outside the US, where they were subjected to torture.




3. "They do not affect the hundreds of prisoners - 600 at the Bagram prison camp in Afghanistan alone — incarcerated beyond the barbed wire of Guantanamo.

"If and when Guantanamo is closed, the US government will simply ship alleged terrorists caught up its international dragnet to other American-run prison camps."

4. "On the question of so-called 'harsh interrogation techniques,' i.e., torture, Obama’s orders leave room for their continuation.





"White House Counsel Gregory Craig told reporters the administration was prepared to take into account demands from the CIA that such methods be allowed.

"Obama announced the creation of a task force that will consider new interrogation methods beyond those sanctioned by the Army Field Manual, which now accepts 19 forms of interrogation, as well as the practice of extraordinary rendition..."



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