Tutu says U.S. and UK policies like apartheid-era government Mon 10 Dec
2007, 14:40 GMT
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By Wendell Roelf

CAPE TOWN (Reuters) - Archbishop Desmond Tutu accused the United States and
Britain on Monday of pursuing policies like those of South Africa's
apartheid-era government by detaining terrorism suspects without trial.

At an event to commemorate the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights
(UNDR), the Nobel laureate said the detention of suspected al Qaeda and
Taliban members at the U.S. naval base in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, was a "huge
blot on a democracy".

"Whoever imagined that you would hear from the United States and from
Britain the same arguments for detention without trial that were used by the
apartheid government," Tutu told a news conference in Cape Town.

Tutu is chairman of the Elders, a group of prominent international statesmen
that includes former U.S. President Jimmy Carter, anti-apartheid icon Nelson
Mandela and his Mozambican-born wife Graca Machel.

The group is spearheading a campaign to get one billion people to sign a
pledge reaffirming the principles of the UNDR, passed by the United Nations
General Assembly on December 10, 1948.

Tutu, who helped lead the struggle to overthrow white minority rule in South
Africa, said he was surprised so many Americans had accepted the argument
that the Guantanamo detentions were necessary because of national security.

"It is exactly what the apartheid government used to say here," the Anglican
cleric said.

His remarks come amid a growing outcry over alleged abuses at Guantanamo,
which in the aftermath of the September 11, 2001, attacks on the United
States was used as a mass detention centre for suspected violent Islamic
radicals.

Critics have said that the United States has circumvented international law
by holding detainees without charge, often for years, and violated their
human rights with forced confessions and torture tactics.

President George W. Bush says the detentions are lawful, humane and
necessary as part of its fight against extremists in Iraq, Afghanistan and
elsewhere in the world.

The U.S. Supreme Court has agreed to hear a legal challenge by Guantanamo
inmates who are contesting their detention.

(Editing by Paul Simao and Elizabeth Piper)
 (c) Reuters 2007. All Rights Reserved.

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http://africa.reuters.com/world/news/usnL1097700.html

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G. Waleed Kavalec
-------------------------
We never apologize to anyone for depending upon our Creator. We can laugh at
those who think spirituality the way of weakness.
Paradoxically, it is the way of strength. The verdict of the ages is that
faith means courage.
 --  Alcoholics Anonymous,  Page 68

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