Itās an old adage but itās true, especially when it comes to policing: an injury to one really is an injury to all. Thatās because like a bad movie, bad police tactics spread the globe. Accountability can go global too, but as in a recent case out of Ireland, justice moves more slowly.
Shortly after the death of Baltimoreās Freddie Gray, a leaked police document claimed that a prisoner transported with Gray heard him ābanging against the wallsā of the vehicle as if he āwas intentionally trying to injure himself.ā
That prisoner quickly refuted the story, but not before it brought to my mind very similar claims from police in Northern Ireland.
“Throwing oneself down stairsā¦punching own face and poking own eyes…injury to the neck by attempted self-strangulation.ā
Thatās how investigators explained injuries sustained in police custody in Ireland according to documents recently dug up by human rights investigators. Theyāve spent years getting beneath the spin, and now we know that while they fed the public guff about āself inflictedā harm, internally British ministers sanctioned torture .
The new evidence is returning attention to a case that has serious implications for the UK and the US also. Ā It involves twelve men, aged between 19 and 42, who were rounded up during the period of mass internment in the early ā70s and subject to hooding, prolonged stress positions, white noise, sleep deprivation and deprivation of food and drink āthe so-called āfive techniquesā developed by the British Army during what they called āThe Troubles.ā
When the European Court of Human Rights ruled on the case in ā78, theyĀ declared the treatment āinhuman and degradingā but not torture. Ā The Bush administration reportedly cited that decision in justifying its own torture programs. Soon enough, Britainās āfive techniquesā started showing in Abu Graib and Gitmo.
Now the Irish Government is backing a call for the Court to reopen the case. And all because the families simply wouldnāt give up. Theyāll be represented this time by among others, attorney Amal Clooney, but her celebrity shouldnāt obscure decades of work done by the families and grassroots groups like the Center for the Administration of Justice and the Pat Finucance Center. Ā Their victory would be huge on that side of the Atlantic and this one.
It all goes to show that the police tactics a far-off stranger is facing today just may be what youāre up against tomorrow. Can I hear it for a global movement?
You can watch my interview with Black Lives Matter co-founder Patrisse Cullors on building a global justice movement this week on The Laura Flanders Show on KCET/LINKtv and TeleSUR and find all my interviews and reports at Ā GRITtv.org. To tell me what you think, write to: [email protected].
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