[Biofuel] How a Torture Protest Killed a Career

2009-10-28 Thread Kirk McLoren
http://www.thetruthseeker.co.uk/print.asp?ID=11539

How a Torture Protest Killed a Career
Craig Murray – Consortium News October 24, 2009


I’ve never, ever spoken in public about the pain of being a
whistleblower. Partly because of the British stiff-upper lip thing and
partly as well because if you wish to try eventually to get on and
reestablish yourself then it doesn’t do to show weakness. …




I was sitting in this place on my own and feeling rather lonely.
And there were a whole bunch of people in dark suits coming from
government offices, in many cases in groups, and there they were with
the men’s suits sleek and the ladies, the whole office, power-politics
thing going on, having after-dinner champagne in the posh bar.




And I was remembering how many times I’d been the center of such
groups and of how successful my life used to be. I was a British
ambassador at the age of 42. The average age for such a post is 57.




I was successful in worldly terms. And I think I almost never sat
alone at such a place. Normally if I had been alone in such a place, I
would have ended up probably in the company of a beautiful young lady
of some kind.




I tell you that partly because this whole question of personal
morality is a complicated one. I would never, ever, no one would have
ever pointed at me as someone likely to become or to be a person of
conscience. And yet eventually I found myself on the outside and
treated in a way that challenged my whole view of the world.





Mission to Tashkent

Let me start to tell you something about how that happened. I was a
British ambassador in Uzbekistan and I was told before I went that
Uzbekistan was an important ally in the war on terror, had given the
United States a very important airbase which was a forward mounting
post for Afghanistan, and was a bulwark against Islamic extremism in
Central Asia. 




When I got there I found it was a dreadful regime, absolutely
totalitarian. And there’s a difference between dictatorship of which
there are many and a totalitarian dictatorship which unless you’ve
actually been in one is hard to comprehend. 




There’s absolutely no free media whatsoever. News on every single
channel, the news programs start with 12 items about what the president
did today. And that’s it. That is the news. There are no other news
channels and international news channels are blocked. 




There are about 12,000 political prisoners. Any sign of religious
enthusiasm for any religion will get you put into jail. The majority of
people are predominantly Muslim. But if you are to carry out the
rituals of the Muslim religion, particularly if you were to pray five
times a day, you’d be in jail very quickly. Young men are put in jail
for growing beards. 




It’s not the only religion which is outlawed. The jails are actually
quite full of Baptists. Being Baptist is illegal in Uzbekistan. I’m
sure that Methodists and Quakers would be illegal, too, It’s just that
they haven’t got any so they haven’t gotten around to making them
illegal. 




And it’s really not a joke. If you are put into prison in Uzbekistan
the chances of coming out again alive are less than even. And most of
the prisons are still the old Soviet gulags in the most literal sense.
They are physically the same places. The biggest one being the Jaslyk
gulag in the deserts of the Kizyl Kum.




I had only been there for a week or two when I went to a show trial
of an al-Qaeda terrorist they had caught. It was a big event put on
partly for the benefit of the American embassy to demonstrate the
strength of the U.S.-Uzbek alliance against terrorism. 




When I got there, to call the trial unconvincing would be an
underestimate. There was one moment when this old man [who] had given
evidence that his nephew was a member of al-Qaeda and had personally
met Osama bin Laden. And like everybody else in that court he was
absolutely terrified. 




But suddenly as he was giving his evidence, he seemed from somewhere to
find an inner strength. He was a very old man but he stood taller and
said in a stronger voice, he said, “This is not true. This is not true.
They tortured my children in front of me until I signed this. I had
never heard of al-Qaeda or Osama bin Laden.” 




He was then hustled out of the court and we never did find out what had
happened to him. He was almost certainly killed. But as it happens I
was within touching distance of him when he said that and I can’t
explain it. It’s not entirely rational. But you could just feel it was
true. You could tell he was speaking the truth when he said that.




And that made me start to call into doubt the whole question of the
narrative about al-Qaeda in Uzbekistan and the alliance in the war on
terror.





Boiled to Death 

Something which took that doubt over the top happened about a week
later. The West -- because Uzbekistan was our great ally in the war on
terror – had shown no interest in the human rights situation at all. In
fact, the 

Re: [Biofuel] How a Torture Protest Killed a Career

2009-10-28 Thread Keith Addison
If anyone's wondering why it seems a bit disjointed and why (or 
whether) a Brit would use such a word as gotten, it's because it's 
missing the intro Consortium News gave it, which explains all:

Editor's Note: In this modern age - and especially since George W. 
Bush declared the war on terror eight years ago - the price for 
truth-telling has been high, especially for individuals whose 
consciences led them to protest the torture of alleged terrorists.

One of the most remarkable cases is that of Craig Murray, a 20-year 
veteran of the British Foreign Service whose career was destroyed 
after he was posted to Uzbekistan in August 2002 and began to 
complain about Western complicity in torture committed by the 
country's totalitarian regime, which was valued for its brutal 
interrogation methods and its vast supplies of natural gas.

Murray soon faced misconduct charges that were leaked to London's 
tabloid press before he was replaced as ambassador in October 2004, 
marking the end of what had been a promising career. Murray later 
spoke publicly about how the Bush administration and Prime Minister 
Tony Blair's government collaborated with Uzbek dictator Islam 
Karimov and his torturers. [See, for instance, Murray's statement to 
the Parliamentary Joint Committee on Torture. 
http://www.craigmurray.org.uk/archives/2009/03/trying_again_my.html]

But Murray kept quiet about his personal ordeal as the victim of the 
smear campaign that followed his impassioned protests to the Foreign 
Office about torture. Finally, on Oct. 22 at a small conference in 
Washington, Murray addressed the personal pain and his sense of 
betrayal over his treatment at the hands of former colleagues.

While Murray's account is a personal one, it echoes the experiences 
of many honest government officials and even mainstream journalists 
who have revealed inconvenient truths about wrongdoing by powerful 
Establishment figures and paid a high price.

Below is a partial transcript of Murray's remarks:

I was just having dinner in a restaurant that was only a block from 
the White House. It must have been a good dinner because it cost me 
$120. Actually it was a good dinner. Š

Continues below.

http://www.thetruthseeker.co.uk/print.asp?ID=11539

How a Torture Protest Killed a Career
Craig Murray - Consortium News October 24, 2009


I've never, ever spoken in public about the pain of being a
whistleblower. Partly because of the British stiff-upper lip thing and
partly as well because if you wish to try eventually to get on and
reestablish yourself then it doesn't do to show weakness. Š




I was sitting in this place on my own and feeling rather lonely.
And there were a whole bunch of people in dark suits coming from
government offices, in many cases in groups, and there they were with
the men's suits sleek and the ladies, the whole office, power-politics
thing going on, having after-dinner champagne in the posh bar.




And I was remembering how many times I'd been the center of such
groups and of how successful my life used to be. I was a British
ambassador at the age of 42. The average age for such a post is 57.




I was successful in worldly terms. And I think I almost never sat
alone at such a place. Normally if I had been alone in such a place, I
would have ended up probably in the company of a beautiful young lady
of some kind.




I tell you that partly because this whole question of personal
morality is a complicated one. I would never, ever, no one would have
ever pointed at me as someone likely to become or to be a person of
conscience. And yet eventually I found myself on the outside and
treated in a way that challenged my whole view of the world.





Mission to Tashkent

Let me start to tell you something about how that happened. I was a
British ambassador in Uzbekistan and I was told before I went that
Uzbekistan was an important ally in the war on terror, had given the
United States a very important airbase which was a forward mounting
post for Afghanistan, and was a bulwark against Islamic extremism in
Central Asia.




When I got there I found it was a dreadful regime, absolutely
totalitarian. And there's a difference between dictatorship of which
there are many and a totalitarian dictatorship which unless you've
actually been in one is hard to comprehend.




There's absolutely no free media whatsoever. News on every single
channel, the news programs start with 12 items about what the president
did today. And that's it. That is the news. There are no other news
channels and international news channels are blocked.




There are about 12,000 political prisoners. Any sign of religious
enthusiasm for any religion will get you put into jail. The majority of
people are predominantly Muslim. But if you are to carry out the
rituals of the Muslim religion, particularly if you were to pray five
times a day, you'd be in jail very quickly. Young men are put in jail
for growing beards.




It's not the only religion which