'Stalking from home
to home, a United States Army sergeant methodically killed at least 16
civilians, 9 of them children, in a rural stretch of southern Afghanistan early
on Sunday, igniting fears of a new wave of anti-American hostility, Afghan and
American officials said,' the New York Times reported Sunday.
In one of the most
gruesome human rights abuses in recent times, a US soldier is reported to have
walkedover a mile (1.6 km) from his
base in the Panjwai district of Kandahar Province trying door after door before
breaking into three houses and killing 16
sleeping civilians, nine
of whom were children. Reports quote villagers as saying that he had collected
11 of the bodies and set fire to them.
Sadly, this is only
the latest in a string of violations of international humanitarian law by US
forces stretching back several years.
Earlier this month,
five American servicemen and an Afghan translator were reported to have burned
copies of the Quran which
were among religious materials seized from a detainee facility at Bagram
Airfield last week, prompting a wave of outrage.Abu Ghraib prison from where many abuses were reported was one of the greatest embarrassments for the US government. Among the allegations of abuses was the sexual harassment of prisoners and the frightening of prisoners with dogs and even having them bite some prisoners. Many other instances of appalling abuses are believed to have been suppressed and kept secret even from the Congress.
However, the most
infamous and controversial is perhaps the Guantanamo Bay detention camp. A
senior USgovernment official who
investigated practices at the camp admitted that adetainee had
been tortured. In
July 2010 the Washington Times reported that, 'Like its 2004 Hamdi v. Rumsfeld
decision, the Supreme Court's Hamdan ruling affirms that the United States is
engaged in a legally cognizable armed conflict to which the laws of war apply.
It may hold captured al Qaeda and Taliban operatives throughout that conflict,
without granting them a criminal trial, and is also entitled to try them in the
military justice system - including by military commission.'
The ruling did not
deter US forces from killing an unarmed Osama Bin Laden following an
unauthorised foray into Abbottabad in Pakistan earning the outrage of the
Pakistani government and others who value international humanitarian law. International
law expert Kai Ambos writing in Der Spiegel says, "A targeted killing of
a terrorist does not, contrary to what US President Barack Obama has suggested,
do a service to justice; rather, it runs contrary to it. A state governed by
the rule of law, treats even its enemies humanely."
The operation which
also killed bin Laden's son also injured or killed his youngest wife who was
trying to shield him from the US attack force. The entire
operation violating international humanitarian law was watched by President
Obama and his senior advisers 'in real time'.
The US however,
maintains high moral ground at all times. The US State Department on its
website states: Promoting freedom and democracy and protecting human rights
around the world are central to U.S. foreign policy. The values captured in theUniversal
Declaration of Human Rights and in other global and regional
commitments are consistent with the values upon which the United States was
founded centuries ago. On
the same page, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is quoted saying, "In
democracies, respecting rights isn't a choice leaders make day-by-day, it is
the reason they govern."
The US has
increasingly come in for severe criticism for violating its international
obligations and continued human rights abuses. Last year, China said, "The United States is beset
by violence, racism and torture and has no authority to condemn other
governments' human rights problems." The Chinese Foreign Ministry
statement followed US criticism of China's human rights record. A Reuters
report quoted
a report published by China's official news agency Xinhua saying, "Stop
the domineering behaviour of exploiting human rights to interfere in the
internal affairs of other countries."
The long drawn out row between
China and the United States on each other's' human rights record intensified in
1998 when China first published what has since become an annual publication
titled, Human Rights
Record of the United States.
The UN Human Rights
Council's 19th Session in Geneva heard pious pronouncements from H.E. Ms. Maria
Otero, Under Secretary of State for Civilian Security, Democracy, and Human
Rights of the United States of America. "When the United States joined the
UN Human Rights Council two years ago, we set forth four values that would
guide our work in this body: universality, dialogue, principle, and truth. We
knew then, as we know now, that the honest dialogue and dedicated effort of
this Council will help all of our nations on the path to international peace
and security."
Making a plea for a
second term on the Council she said, "In the two years since, we have
stayed true to those values. But our global challenges remain-among them,
threats to freedoms of assembly, association, expression and religion and to
vulnerable populations. As we seek a second term on the Council, the United
States stands ready to build on the Council's successes to pursue solutions to
these pressing challenges."
How true has the US been to those
values? Not very I'm afraid.
Human rights abuses
by the US have been consistent with the regular use of force against various
countries.
The arming of rebels
and the aggression committed by NATO forces covered by a see-thru UN resolution
in Libya ensured the unseating of the oil-rich country's long-time ruler
Muammar Gadhafi. Videos showing him captured alive and dead thereafter with
wounds on his body were compounded by the sadistic display of the body in a
vegetable display refrigerator without giving a speedy burial according to
Islamic custom.
The US is in the
forefront of criticism of the Assad regime in Syria. The lack of any criticism
of the rebel forces shows up US foreign policy inn Syria for what it really is.
The bottom line is
that rebels sponsored by various governments in the name of democracy remain
free to violate human rights with impunity.
Earlier this year,
IHR Law reported how family members of Iraqi civilians killed by Blackwater had
agreed to a settlement. Seventeen Iraqis died in the incident when Blackwater
security guards escorting an American envoy in Baghdad fired on civilians on a busy street. Iraqi victims later spoke about
the horrors of that day.
The U.S. killed
American citizen Anwar Awlaki last year and followed up by killing his
son too. Americans
have been angered by the lack of due process and the killing of a child but
mostly by Attorney
General Holder's defence of the actions.
The United States
also has been using its seat in the UNHRC to pressure smaller countries like
Sri Lanka to achieve their agenda. The current pressure on this small Indian
Ocean Island to implement an internal government report is such an instance.
The Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission (LLRC) is an indigenous mechanism
initiated by the government of Sri Lanka as part of its overall reconciliation
and normalisation effort following the end of the conflict in 2009. It was not
initiated following international pressure. To call upon the Sri Lankan
government to implement same is much like asking the USA to investigate and
prosecute the soldier who killed 16 civilians in Afghanistan.
The United States
would need moral authority to police the world. They would need also to ensure
that justice is not only done but must also seem to be done. It is a pity that
the United States uses double standards with regard to human rights. The world
needs to know whether the US remains true to its commitments to the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights or whether the soldiers who
urinated on dead bodies is a reflection of US policy on
human rights.
Courtesy : Daily news
By Ranjit J Perera
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