Did Newsweek really err? 
  
By Linda S. Heard, Special to Gulf News 
 
The entire Muslim world is up in arms over a May 9
Newsweek story claiming US interrogators at America's
main gulag had placed the Quran on toilets. 
  
There are violent street demonstrations in
Afghanistan, Egypt and Yemen, while Muslim leaders,
including Afghan President Hamid Karzai and Malaysian
Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi have demanded
that the alleged perpetrators be held to account.

Saudi Arabia was the first Arab country to register
its indignation with the White House soon followed by
Pakistan, Yemen and the 22-nation Arab League.

United States Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice had
promised to seriously investigate the matter when, lo
and behold, Newsweek's editor has popped his head
above the parapet to suggest his magazine may have got
it wrong. 

Apparently, a Pentagon spokesman told the publication
that the military has found no evidence that such
desecration ever took place. So that's all right then.
Everybody can go home and forget about it.

  
  
  

But before Rice goes back to her piano practice
between photo-ops in Iraq, her boss to his golf and
tree-sawing, and Dick Cheney to his dilemma over who
next to invade, there is just one minor problem. 

There have been several previous reports on similar
lines, mostly ignored by the mainstream media.

Tarek Dergoul, one of the British detainees released
from Guantanamo, told Amnesty International: "One of
the interrogators brought a cup holder for four cups
with two coffees in the cup holder. He then
deliberately placed the Quran on top of the coffee. 

"He put his folder on the desk and then grabbed the
Quran with his feet upon the table and read it like he
was reading a magazine. He made jokes about the
Quran�"

A Human Rights Watch report states: "Detainees also
complained about interference with their ability to
pray and the lack of respect given to their religion.
For example, the British detainees complained that
when the Qurans were provided, the guards 'would kick
the Quran, throw it into the toilet and generally
disrespect it'."

A Newsmax report on prisoners released from Camp Delta
quotes Mohammad Al Musawi as complaining of being
humiliated by guards. 

"They forced me to take all my clothes off, and female
prison guards were whispering and laughing at me," he
said, adding "late at night, drunken female soldiers
used to come and trample on the Quran�"

A January 19, 2005 Associated Press story written by
Sam Hananel quotes lawyers as describing Kuwaiti
detainees as emaciated and abused. 

One of the men's lawyers Kristine Huskey said a Muslim
detainee had been made to watch a guard throw a Quran
in the toilet.

The Daily Mirror recounted the story of another
released British detainee Jamal Al Harith in an
article titled: "My hell in Camp X-Ray" dated March
12, 2004 thus: "One unit used force-feeding to end a
hunger strike by 70 per cent of the 600 inmates. The
strike started after a guard deliberately kicked a
copy of the Quran."

So whereas Newsweek may be flagellating itself and
publishing a litany of mea culpas, what about Human
Rights Watch, Amnesty International, Newsmax, the
Associated Press and the Daily Mirror? Are their
accounts wrong too?

Indeed, Newsweek's U-turn is nothing less than an
insult to our intelligence. I would go as far as to
say it has probably been leant on by the powers that
be in an attempt to avert a global religious and
political divide. If so, that isn't a bad thing you
might conclude. 

There has been enough hatred, enough bitterness and
enough deaths. But coming out with transparent
cop-outs isn't the right way of repairing wrongs.

Put simply, the United States must begin to hold its
soldiers, intelligent agents and mercenaries (sorry,
contractors) publicly accountable, not to mention the
Pentagon suit mob and its attorney-general embroiled
in a torture memo controversy.

Horrendous abuse

The world reeled at the horrendous abuse meted out to
detainees at Abu Ghraib but what happened? A few
ignorant, sadistic lowlifes were made to take the fall
leaving their superiors unblemished.

An unarmed wounded Iraqi insurgent is shot in cold
blood in a Fallujah mosque, captured on film by an
embedded cameraman, but the perpetrator gets away with
it. He followed rules of engagement, they said.

An Italian intelligence officer, Nicola Calipari, is
shot dead at a checkpoint by US soldiers, his precious
cargo, journalist Giuliana Sgrena, wounded, yet,
according to the Pentagon, their guys did nothing
wrong.

According to Phil Shiner of Public Interest Lawyers,
acting for more than 40 victims of torture and
unlawful killings by British forces in Iraq, the
British government is being similarly evasive. 

Shiner claims that in both Britain and the United
States "a state of collective national denial and
therefore relative silence persists. Those responsible
have not been charged for war crimes murder, torture
and outrages upon personal dignity or otherwise held
accountable".

If the United States is serious about its Muslim World
Outreach programme it must take a long, hard look at
those who believe they are doing its bidding and hold
them accountable. 

A war on terror cannot be fought with terror. If
America wants respect and cooperation from the Muslim
world then it must extend the same courtesies.

Insulting Islam and defacing the Quran will merely
serve to inflame the fires of Islamic fundamentalism
and anti-Americanism on streets from Casablanca to
Kabul. 

And rather than deny such incidents have occurred, the
Bush administration would do well to investigate,
severely punish the offenders and offer its sincere
apologies to the world's 1.5 billion Muslims.

There was recently a televised debate in Qatar as to
whether the "war on terror" was a euphemism for a war
on Islam. An audience vote showed an almost down the
middle split with the no's having the slight edge. 

"I don't think it is but if the bigoted and
irreligious within the United States army's ranks are
allowed to get away with using the Quran as a tool for
psychological torture, then the day will inevitably
come when there will be a seismic shift in the
perceptions of moderate Muslims.

It is up to the Bush administration to ensure that day
never comes. For if it does, the prediction of Arab
League chief Amr Mousa that the gates of hell will
open may loom ever larger. 

Politically, the Muslim world is currently divided but
those who attack Islam and its holy book will
inadvertently create a united force with which to be
reckoned.

Linda S. Heard is a specialist writer on Middle East
affairs. She can be contacted at [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 


Bacalah artikel tentang Islam di:
http://www.nizami.org


                
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