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Brighton - Against Guantanamo
Actors for Human Rights: Rendition Monologues in Brighton PDF Print E-mail
Actors for Human Rights: Rendition Monologues in Brighton

WHEN: Wednesday, July 23 @ 7:30pm.
WHERE: Sallis Benney Theatre, University of Brighton, 58-64 Grand Parade, Brighton BN2 2JY
TICKETS: £5 and available on the door.
Performance hosted by Brighton Voices in Exile/Brighton Against Guantanamo Campaign and sponsored by University of Brighton's Centre for Applied politics, Philosophy and Ethics (CAPPE)

'You are in a land where there are no laws. Do you know what that means? We can bury you or keep you in this prison for 20 years and nobody on earth would ever know.'

Rendition Monologues weaves together the first-hand testimonies of victims of extraordinary rendition; the kidnapping and illegal transfer of terrorism suspects and others considered to be implicated in the ‘War on Terror’ to be interrogated in nation states with a reputation for torture. A long list of nations, including the UK, have colluded in these rendition flights. As the truth begins to filter out about this issue, we hope that Rendition Monologues can contribute to a full reckoning over human rights abuses committed in the name of the 'War on Terror'.

Speaking about Rendition Monologues, Clive Stafford Smith, Director of Reprieve said:?'If anyone doubts the shocking reality of rendition, they should see this performance. The word 'rendition' sounds innocuous enough, but what it actually means is kidnapping and torture, without any kind of legal process whatsoever. Reprieve’s client, Binyam Mohamed – one of several prisoners whose stories are brought to life in this piece – knows all about rendition’s true face. Sent to Morocco by the Americans, he confessed to all manner of crimes, but only after 18 months of torture, when he repeatedly had his penis cut with a razor.'

Bisher Al-Rawi, ex Gunatanamo prisoner and rendition victim: 'Really, I am almost lost for words. The show was really very moving, scarily so. The performance really brought it home. I was very, very impressed with the performance - it was very powerful.. I was almost living through their experiences and mine as well. I hope everyone here found it as effective and revealing as I did.'



iceandfire creates compelling theatre making real and relevant the impact of human rights issues on our everyday lives. Rendition Monologues is performed by members of their national outreach network, Actors for Human Rights, whose first production Asylum Monologues has been seen by almost 10,000 people all over the UK. Rendition Monologues was launched in June 2008 and is available upon request through Actors for Human Rights.
iceandfire.co.uk/afhr

Reprieve uses the law to enforce the human rights of prisoners, from death row to Guantánamo Bay. Reprieve investigates, litigates and educates, working on the frontline, to provide legal support to prisoners unable to pay for it themselves. The organization promotes the rule of law around the world, securing each person’s right to a fair trial and saving lives. Clive Stafford Smith is the founder of Reprieve and has spent 25 years working on behalf of people facing the death penalty in the USA and now represents 35 prisoners held in Guantánamo Bay.
www.reprieve.org.uk



Brighton acts to bring Binyam back from Guantanamo PDF Print E-mail
Brighton Against Guantanamo is supporting all the efforts to get Binyam Mohamed back to Britain.
 

If you are based in the Brighton or anywhere along the south coast and are interested in working with us email .
 

Brighton Against Guantanamo is an outcome of the Save Omar campaign.
 

Save Omar: we fought against Guantanamo (and we won)
Save Omar began as a group of Brighton people who got together to campaign for the release of Guantanamo detainee Omar Deghayes, and his return to his home and family in Saltdean, a neighbourhood in the east of Brighton. Omar has spent six years in prison camps, the first in Bagram Air Base and the next five in Guantanamo Bay. During this time he was never charged with any crime. He had no trial. The Save Omar campaign directed their protests at United States administration responsible for the creation of a network of illegal jails as part of its so-called “war on terror” and the British government, which not only looked away when US systematically tortured detainees but was complicit through the supply of “intelligence” and by refusing to protect refugees, like Omar Deghayes, who been granted asylum in Britain.
 
We worked together against these powerful state authorities and we won. Omar is home. When he returned to Britain in December 2007, he was re-arrested, tagged and subject to a curfew. Spain had instigated extradition proceeding that, three months later, came to nothing. Most people saw through the extradition case; it was political vehicle, serving to justify Guantanamo by defaming those illegally detained there.
 

Omar’s case demonstrates the local effects of a global war and the role that people can play in their own communities against the abuse of human rights. We helped secure this release from Guantanamo because we were able to explain the existence of such a jail ran counter to any common sense understanding of how the world (local or global) should be. We had justice on our side, if that doesn’t sound too grand. There were also a number of other more practical factors.
 

The Deghayes family courageously spoke out about Omar’s story and their family history. Establishing the Save Omar group provided some political hope and practical support, ensuring that the Deghayes family did not have to face the global bureaucracy of torture alone. But nor did the Save Omar campaign operate in isolation. It drew upon support from Brighton’s anti-war and human rights movements as well as Brighton’s Muslim community and its wider inter-faith collectives. We built a broad base and earned local legitimacy that secured continued coverage in Brighton’s newspaper, The Argus (http://www.theargus.co.uk). We were difficult to ignore and were quite persistent, always keeping the paper informed of any new developments or pending actions. Importantly, The Argus ran its own principled campaign. A number of committed journalists were genuinely moved by Omar’s case, recognising that he had neither been fairly nor humanely treated. Without doubt, The Argus played a key part in his return to Brighton. Press coverage kept up the pressure on politicians.
 

At our first public meeting back in the Spring of 2005, human rights lawyer, Clive Stafford Smith, stated the court where arguments against Guantanamo would be most effective was the “court of public opinion.” In the campaign to release Omar legal and political battles overlapped. The most significant legal move was the case brought by Omar’s family and that of fellow British resident, Jamil el Banna, against the British Foreign Minister in an attempt to compel his office to intervene to prevent continued their torture in Guantanamo. As well as following the steps taken by Gareth Peirce, who represented the families in the High Court, the Save Omar group attempted to interpret legal language and arguments, carrying out our own reading and research.
 

But from the very start we understood that Guantanamo was, and is, on our doorstep. Justice for a local man was at the centre of our demands for its closure, for an end to the practice of rendition and detention without trial. People are rightly concerned about what is understood as a return to torture in the twenty-first century and it is important to recognise the conditions that make it is possible for torture to be practiced: the loss of rights in (or through) illegal prisons. Omar’s return to Brighton was a big step for us in this wider struggle to re-assert basic human rights in the face of their erosion in the “war on terror” and there is much still to do. All detainees must be released to countries where they will not suffer further abuse.
 
Brighton Against Guantanamo has been set up to continue the work that Save Omar began. Our methods of working are simple. Our meetings are open. People attend as often as they can and take up whatever tasks they feel able to do. We share skills. We educate ourselves. Our actions include writing letters of protest to politicians and letters of support to detainees as well as participation in street protests, street theatre and community art.
 

 

Save Omar Deghayes Campaign Newsletter PDF Print E-mail
Brighton law student, Omar Deghayes, has been held in Camp V, Guantanamo Bay, for four years. The anti-Guantanamo campaign in Brighton, called Save Omar, seeks to highlight the injustices of his case.

Save Omar is made up of local people who hold open friendly meetings and carrying all kinds of campaigning activities: letter-writing, street stalls, information meetings, political theatre and street protests.

For more information about Omar Deghayes and the campaign for his release and return to Brighton click on www.save-omar.org.uk and see below for one of our current campaigns.

Postcards from Brighton

A recent High Court ruling has recognised that Omar Deghayes and other British residents, Jamil el-Banna and Bisher al-Riwi, are being tortured in Guantanamo Bay and as British refugees have a just claim to British protection. The ruling did not require British ministers to actually do anything about individual cases of abuse by US authorities,  leaving it to British Ministers "discretion." Brighton people are sending postcards to Foreign Secretary Margaret Beckett asking her to step up and act for Omar Deghayes and also invite her, if she needs to know more about his case, to visit us in our, and Omar's, home town.

Email if you would like to receive or sell the postcards in your local area.

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