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	<title>Free Talha Ahsan</title>
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		<title>Press Release : Where are Talha Ahsan &amp; Babar Ahmad Now?</title>
		<link>http://freetalha.org/2013/05/press-release-where-are-talha-ahsan-babar-ahmad-now/</link>
		<comments>http://freetalha.org/2013/05/press-release-where-are-talha-ahsan-babar-ahmad-now/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 11 May 2013 18:17:56 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Articles]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Featured]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Press Release]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://freetalha.org/?p=1458</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p><img width="300" height="300" src="http://freetalha.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/supermax1-300x300.jpg" class="attachment-medium wp-post-image" alt="supermax1" title="supermax1" /></p>UK Premiere of film about the Connecticut Supermax prison that houses two extradited British nationals. With Amnesty International &#38; Special Guests from the USA Solitary Watch. Date of event : 16th May 2013, 6pm &#8211; 9pm Location : Kings College, Room S-2.08, King’s Building, Strand, London WC2R 2LS We are excited to announce an upcoming [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img width="300" height="300" src="http://freetalha.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/supermax1-300x300.jpg" class="attachment-medium wp-post-image" alt="supermax1" title="supermax1" /></p><p id="ecxdocs-internal-guid-478796ed-8481-9d55-253b-987a9844c8b3" dir="ltr"><em><strong>UK Premiere of film about the Connecticut Supermax prison that houses two extradited British nationals. With Amnesty International &amp; Special Guests from the USA Solitary Watch.</strong></em></p>
<p><strong>Date of event : 16th May 2013, 6pm &#8211; 9pm</strong></p>
<p dir="ltr"><strong>Location : Kings College, Room S-2.08, King’s Building, Strand, London WC2R 2LS</strong></p>
<p dir="ltr">We are excited to announce an upcoming special event entitled “Extradited to a future of Torture: the reality of Solitary Confinement in the USA”, hosted by the International State Crime Initiative at King’s College. The event will feature the UK premiere of a new 30 minute film made by Valarie Kaur with the Yale Visual Law Project. Worst of the Worst  exposes the physically and psychologically abusive conditions of confinement in the Northern Correctional Institution in Somers, Connecticut, the prison that houses extradited British citizens Talha Ahsan and Babar Ahmad.</p>
<p dir="ltr">Special guests from the USA James Ridgeway and Jean Casella (directors of Solitary Watch) and Amnesty International’s Tessa Murphy will discuss the issues in a human rights framework.</p>
<p dir="ltr">Talha Ahsan’s new creative writing from Supermax prison will be read by his brother Hamja Ahsan. Writings from other prisoners in solitary confinement will be read by poet and playwright Avaes Mohammad.</p>
<p dir="ltr">Special guest James Ridgeway said :</p>
<p dir="ltr">&#8220;Supermax prisons and solitary confinement units are America&#8217;s domestic black sites, these are places where genuine torture takes place.&#8221;</p>
<p dir="ltr">“People in the UK should care about what happens in American supermax prisons, just as they care about what happens at Guantanamo&#8230; [because] British nationals are now being extradited to the U.S. to face decades of torture in solitary confinement.&#8221;</p>
<p dir="ltr">Aseem Mehta (co-Director of Worst of the Worst ) said :</p>
<p dir="ltr">“In making the film, we listened to all of the actors whose lives were touched by supermax - the inmates in solitary, the guards who report for duty each day, the policymakers and officials who oversee the facility, the architect whose legacy has become the prison, the family members and friends whose loved ones are inside, the lawyers and advocates who navigate the law that governs the prison&#8217;s logic. We came away with the conclusion that the institution harms everyone who it touches, that everyone who enters Northern ultimately leaves damaged.&#8221;</p>
<p dir="ltr">All welcome. Tickets are free</p>
<p dir="ltr"><a href="http://www.eventbrite.com/event/6291986501" target="_blank">http://www.eventbrite.com/event/6291986501</a></p>
<p dir="ltr">Twitter hashtag: #SupermaxUS</p>
<p dir="ltr">Contact: <a href="mailto:info@freetalha.org">info@freetalha.org</a><br />
Additional Photographs &amp; Images available on request from Hamja Ahsan, Talha’s younger brother and campaign leader 07542993012</p>
<p dir="ltr">The event host is Dr. Ian Patel of International State Crime Intitiative. Contact : <a href="mailto:ian.patel@kcl.ac.uk">ian.patel@kcl.ac.uk</a></p>
<p dir="ltr">
<strong>Notes to Editors:</strong></p>
<p dir="ltr">1. Talha Ahsan is an award-winning British muslim poet and translator. He was been detained over 6 years without trial, charge or prima facie evidence on the controversial 2003 US-UK Extradition treaty on allegations relating to association with an obsolete foreign jihad website from 1997-2002 covering Bosnia, Chechnya and Afghanistan. He was extradited to the USA on 5th October with his co-defendent Babar Ahmad and is now in solitary confinement in Connecticut at the Northern Correctional Institution. The trial will be in October 2013.  Full details on the case and family campaign: <a href="http://www.freetalha.org/" target="_blank">www.freetalha.org</a></p>
<p dir="ltr">2. Babar Ahmad is Talha’s co-defendant. Before he was extradited, he was detained without trial for over 8 years, the longest period of detention without trial faced by any prisoner in British history. An e-petition to have his trial in the UK gathered over 149,000 signatures. See <a href="http://www.freebabarahmad.com/" target="_blank">http://www.freebabarahmad.com/</a> for more information.</p>
<p dir="ltr">3. James Ridgeway and independent media editor Jean Casella co-founded Solitary Watch (<a href="http://www.solitarywatch.com/" target="_blank">www.solitarywatch.com</a>) in 2009, in order to &#8220;bring the widespread practice of solitary confinement out of the shadows and into the light of the public square.&#8221; Their work has helped to fuel a growing national movement opposing the use of solitary in U.S. prisons, jails, juvenile facilities, and immigrant detention centers. This is their first visit to the UK.</p>
<p dir="ltr">4. The Visual Law Project at Yale Law School was launched in 2010 with two primary goals in mind: to create a cutting-edge pedagogical space where law students could be trained in the art of visual advocacy and to produce well-researched, professional documentary films on legal and policy issues. See trailer online : <a href="http://yalevisuallawproject.org/film/the-worst-of-the-worst/" target="_blank">http://yalevisuallawproject.org/film/the-worst-of-the-worst/</a> The film tour the UK with dates TBC in Scotland, Wales, North England in Summer 2013.</p>
<p>5. The director of the film, Valarie Kaur, is an award-winning filmmaker, civil rights advocate, and interfaith leader based in Connecticut who wanted to make this film on Supermax prisons after visiting Guantanamo Bay. She is the founder of Yale Visual Law <a href="http://www.valariekaur.com/" target="_blank">http://www.valariekaur.com/</a></p>
<p dir="ltr">6. The host of the event is Dr. Ian Patel, who is in the law department at King&#8217;s College London. He specialises in criminal justice, criminal law, and international human rights. He is a fellow at the<a href="http://www.statecrime.org/" target="_blank"> International State Crime Initiative</a>. His recent article on Talha Ahsan case and prelonged solitary was published in the New Statesman <a href="http://www.newstatesman.com/politics/2013/02/impossible-injustice-talha-ahsan%E2%80%99s-extradition-and-detention" target="_blank">http://www.newstatesman.com/politics/2013/02/impossible-injustice-talha-ahsan%E2%80%99s-extradition-and-detention</a></p>
<p dir="ltr">7. Avaes Mohammad is a poet and playwright, winner of the Amnesty International Media Award 2005. He recently appeared in the film Extradition(<a href="http://www.extraditionfilm.com/" target="_blank">www.extraditionfilm.com</a>) reading the prison poetry of Talha Ahsan. His website is <a href="http://avaesmohammad.com/" target="_blank">http://avaesmohammad.com/</a></p>
<p>8 The Amnesty International report on Supermax  prisons by speaker Tessa Murphy can be read here:<a href="http://www.amnestyusa.org/research/reports/the-edge-of-endurance-prison-conditions-in-california-s-security-housing-units" target="_blank">http://www.amnestyusa.org/research/reports/the-edge-of-endurance-prison-conditions-in-california-s-security-housing-units</a></p>
<p>In a 2012 statement of concern about Talha Ahsan &amp; Babar Ahmad’s extradition, Amnesty International noted: “There is ample evidence in the USA and elsewhere that prolonged confinement to a cell with social isolation can cause serious physical and psychological harm. Concerns about such impact are heightened with regard to individuals, like some of those extradited, who have pre-existing medical conditions or mental disabilities. ” (Full statement available at <a href="http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/info/AMR51/086/2012/en" target="_blank">http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/info/AMR51/086/2012/en</a>).</p>
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		<title>Extradited to a Future of Torture: The Reality of Solitary Confinement in America</title>
		<link>http://freetalha.org/2013/04/extradited-to-a-future-of-torture-the-reality-of-solitary-confinement-in-america/</link>
		<comments>http://freetalha.org/2013/04/extradited-to-a-future-of-torture-the-reality-of-solitary-confinement-in-america/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 29 Apr 2013 10:14:33 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Events]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Featured]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://freetalha.org/?p=1453</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p><img width="300" height="300" src="http://freetalha.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/supermax1-300x300.jpg" class="attachment-medium wp-post-image" alt="supermax1" title="supermax1" /></p>&#160; Thursday, May 16, 2013 6:00pm until 9:00pm Extradited to a Future of Torture: The Reality of Solitary Confinement in America Location: Room S-2.08, King&#8217;s Building, King&#8217;s College London, Strand, London WC2R 2LS All welcome. Tickets are free http://www.eventbrite.com/event/6291986501 Twitter hashtag: #SupermaxUS This event, hosted by International State Crime Initiative, will feature the UK premiere [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img width="300" height="300" src="http://freetalha.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/supermax1-300x300.jpg" class="attachment-medium wp-post-image" alt="supermax1" title="supermax1" /></p><p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><strong>Thursday, May 16, 2013</strong></p>
<p><strong>6:00pm until 9:00pm</strong></p>
<p><strong>Extradited to a Future of Torture: The Reality of Solitary Confinement in America</strong></p>
<p>Location: Room S-2.08, King&#8217;s Building, King&#8217;s College London, Strand, London WC2R 2LS</p>
<p>All welcome. Tickets are free<br />
<a href="http://www.eventbrite.com/event/6291986501">http://www.eventbrite.com/event/6291986501</a><br />
Twitter hashtag: #SupermaxUS</p>
<p>This event, hosted by International State Crime Initiative, will feature the UK premiere of the new documentary by Valerie Kaur of Yale Visual Law. The documentary, entitled The Worst of the Worst, is a portrait of Northern Correctional Institution, a US supermax prison in Connecticut to which British citizens Babar Ahmed and Talha Ahsan were extradited in 2012.</p>
<p>Film trailer: http://yalevisuallawproject.org/film/the-worst-of-the-worst/</p>
<p>Before the film showing, Tessa Murphy of Amnesty International will introduce the issue of solitary confinement as a human rights concern. Author of &#8220;The Edge of Endurance&#8221; &#8211; Amnesty International special report on US Supermax isolation.</p>
<p>Then special guests from America, James Ridgeway and Jean Casella , will give a presentation a supermax prisons and solitary confinement in America. http://www.solitarywatch.com/</p>
<p>After the film showing, Hamja Ahsan, the brother of Talha Ahsan, will read from Talha’s new supermax prison writings and answer questions about his brother’s conditions. http://www.freetalha.org/</p>
<p>Film trailer: http://yalevisuallawproject.org/film/the-worst-of-the-worst/</p>
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		<title>Statement of Support &#8211; David Bermingham</title>
		<link>http://freetalha.org/2013/04/statement-of-support-david-bermingham/</link>
		<comments>http://freetalha.org/2013/04/statement-of-support-david-bermingham/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 23 Apr 2013 16:38:40 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Featured]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Statements of Support]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://freetalha.org/?p=1448</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p><img width="300" height="168" src="http://freetalha.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/david-bermingham-300x168.jpg" class="attachment-medium wp-post-image" alt="david bermingham" title="david bermingham" /></p>It has become depressingly familiar over the past decade for the UK Government to abandon its own citizens to the nightmare of the US criminal justice system. The cases of Talha Ahsan and Babar Ahmad, however, stand out as the single worst example of this political betrayal, because these men face the worst possible consequences [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img width="300" height="168" src="http://freetalha.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/david-bermingham-300x168.jpg" class="attachment-medium wp-post-image" alt="david bermingham" title="david bermingham" /></p><p>It has become depressingly familiar over the past decade for the UK Government to abandon its own citizens to the nightmare of the US criminal justice system. The cases of Talha Ahsan and Babar Ahmad, however, stand out as the single worst example of this political betrayal, because these men face the worst possible consequences of a system that would shame a banana republic. Stripped of the presumption of innocence, incarcerated in solitary confinement until such time as they are ready to admit to whatever the prosecutors have decided that they did, irrespective of any evidence. Their plight is a stain on our country.</p>
<p>Politicians of all hues have publicly condemned our extradition arrangements with America, but then walked to the other side of the street when presented with the opportunity to do something about it. They should hang their heads in shame. If Babar Ahmad and Talha Ahsan have committed a crime, they should face the music in the UK, not in some far off land where their treatment is beyond review, and without any semblance of humanity or regard for the most basic of human rights.</p>
<p>Even if, as seems unlikely, Babar and Talha are tried and convicted in a US court, the very least that we should be demanding is that they are repatriated to the UK, where they belong.</p>
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		<title>Event: Lessons from US Prisons</title>
		<link>http://freetalha.org/2013/04/event-lessons-from-us-prisons/</link>
		<comments>http://freetalha.org/2013/04/event-lessons-from-us-prisons/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 14 Apr 2013 15:49:06 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Events]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Featured]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://freetalha.org/?p=1443</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p><img width="300" height="168" src="http://freetalha.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/47865_561837900501924_2115751953_n-300x168.jpg" class="attachment-medium wp-post-image" alt="47865_561837900501924_2115751953_n" title="47865_561837900501924_2115751953_n" /></p>Join Clive Stafford Smith, John Podmore, and David Jessel in the third annual Prisoners’ Advice Service/ JusticeGap debate. Book now. The debate – 1.6m behind bars: are there any lessons to learn from the US prison system? – will be chaired by investigative journalist, author and campaigner David Jessel. Confirmed panelists so far are: - [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img width="300" height="168" src="http://freetalha.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/47865_561837900501924_2115751953_n-300x168.jpg" class="attachment-medium wp-post-image" alt="47865_561837900501924_2115751953_n" title="47865_561837900501924_2115751953_n" /></p><p>Join Clive Stafford Smith, John Podmore, and David Jessel in the third annual Prisoners’ Advice Service/ JusticeGap debate. Book now.</p>
<p>The debate – 1.6m behind bars: are there any lessons to learn from the US prison system? – will be chaired by investigative journalist, author and campaigner David Jessel.</p>
<p>Confirmed panelists so far are:</p>
<p>- Clive Stafford Smith, founder of Reprieve who has spent 25 years working on behalf of defendants facing the death penalty in the US;</p>
<p>- Hamja Ahsan, brother of Talha Ahsan, detained without trial in the UK for six years before being extradited to the USA in October 2012 – details of the Free Talha Ahsan campaign www.freetalha.org</p>
<p>- Dr Sharon Shalev, research fellow at the Mannheim Centre for Criminology, London School of Economics, and author of Supermax: controlling risk through solitary confinement;</p>
<p>- John Podmore, chair of the Prison Reform Trust and ex-prison governor.</p>
<p>When: Tuesday May 21st, 630pm</p>
<p>Where: Gustav Tuck Lecture Theatre, University College of London campus, Gower Street, London</p>
<p>Book: email mary-rachel@thejusticegap.<wbr>com; or hywel.probert@prisonersadv<wbr>ice.org.uk. We need name; address; organisation &amp; contact number. Tickets are free. Max two tickets.</wbr></wbr></p>
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		<title>Interview with family of Talha Ahsan &#8211; BBC Asian Network 10/04/13</title>
		<link>http://freetalha.org/2013/04/interview-with-family-of-talha-ahsan-bbc-asian-network-100413/</link>
		<comments>http://freetalha.org/2013/04/interview-with-family-of-talha-ahsan-bbc-asian-network-100413/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 10 Apr 2013 15:44:26 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Media]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Video]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://freetalha.org/?p=1440</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Talha&#8217;s family speak about the plight of Talha Ahsan since his extradition to the US.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><iframe src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/7aJY2cr8Oyc" frameborder="0" width="560" height="315"></iframe></p>
<p>Talha&#8217;s family speak about the plight of Talha Ahsan since his extradition to the US.</p>
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		<title>London family&#8217;s concern for terror suspect Talha Ahsan</title>
		<link>http://freetalha.org/2013/04/london-familys-concern-for-terror-suspect-talha-ahsan/</link>
		<comments>http://freetalha.org/2013/04/london-familys-concern-for-terror-suspect-talha-ahsan/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 10 Apr 2013 01:42:09 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Featured]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://freetalha.org/?p=1437</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p><img width="300" height="205" src="http://freetalha.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/02/freetalha2-300x205.jpg" class="attachment-medium wp-post-image" alt="freetalha2" title="freetalha2" /></p>By Divya Talwar BBC Asian Network Syed Talha Ahsan was arrested in July 2006 at his home in Tooting In a small room, in the home in south London where Syed Talha Ahsan grew up, just a few plastic bags containing his belongings remain in the UK. The British terror suspect from Tooting, known as [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img width="300" height="205" src="http://freetalha.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/02/freetalha2-300x205.jpg" class="attachment-medium wp-post-image" alt="freetalha2" title="freetalha2" /></p><h1><strong style="font-size: 13px;">By Divya Talwar<br />
BBC Asian Network</strong></h1>
<div><img src="http://news.bbcimg.co.uk/media/images/66914000/jpg/_66914748_54201130.jpg" alt="Syed Talha Ahsan" width="304" height="171" /></p>
<p><em>Syed Talha Ahsan was arrested in July 2006 at his home in Tooting</em></div>
<p id="story_continues_1">In a small room, in the home in south London where Syed Talha Ahsan grew up, just a few plastic bags containing his belongings remain in the UK.</p>
<p>The British terror suspect from Tooting, known as Talha, has spent the last six months in the US, where he is being held in a &#8220;supermax&#8221; high-security prison in Connecticut.</p>
<p>Mr Ahsan has the developmental disorder Asperger&#8217;s syndrome and his family say they are growing increasingly concerned about his welfare in custody.</p>
<p>Experts stress though, that because of the serious nature of the charges he faces, Mr Ahsan&#8217;s treatment is not unusual.</p>
<p>&#8216;Extremely harsh&#8217;</p>
<p>But, his brother Hamja said: &#8216;It&#8217;s been six months now and we didn&#8217;t even get to say bye.</p>
<p>&#8221;We saw him taken away in a van on the TV and that was the last we saw of him.</p>
<p>&#8221;The conditions he is facing in prison are extremely harsh. My brother spends 23 hours a day in solitary confinement.</p>
<p id="story_continues_2">&#8221;He spends most of his time in a tiny cell memorising the Koran or writing poetry.&#8221;</p>
<p>Mr Ahsan, 33, was extradited to the US last year after a last-minute appeal was overturned by the High Court.</p>
<p>He had already spent six years in high-security prisons in the UK.</p>
<p>He has never been charged in Britain, but US prosecutors accuse him and Babar Ahmad of running a pro-jihadist website from London that provided material support for terrorists.</p>
<p>Although the site was run from London, prosecutors allege it was hosted on American internet service providers.</p>
<p><strong>Inmates &#8216;shackled&#8217;</strong></p>
<p>Mr Ahsan, a British-born poet and writer, denies being involved in terrorist activity.</p>
<p>International human rights campaigners have raised concerns over prisoners&#8217; mental health in solitary confinement.</p>
<p>Mr Ahsan&#8217;s family say they are worried about the impact it will have on his long-term health.</p>
<p>Hamja said: &#8221;The regime in the supermax is brutal.</p>
<p>&#8220;Inmates are shackled even when they are showering and they have to have a strip search before they can make a phone call to their own family.</p>
<p>&#8221;I&#8217;m extremely worried about the long-term effects of extreme isolation on my brother.&#8221;</p>
<p>Mr Ahsan&#8217;s father, Syed Abu, added: &#8220;The prison he is staying in is for people who are on death row waiting for the death penalty.&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>&#8216;Extremely serious allegations&#8217;</strong></p>
<p>But some groups do not believe Mr Ahsan is facing unjust treatment in the US.</p>
<p>Robin Simcox, of the Henry Jackson Society, a foreign policy think tank based in London, said the conditions Talha is being subjected to are normal and acceptable for the charges he is facing.</p>
<p>&#8221;Talha has been accused of extremely serious allegations,&#8221; he said.</p>
<p>&#8220;If he is being detained for 23 hours, then that is what he must face while awaiting trial.</p>
<p>&#8221;His treatment is not unusual in any way and he is not being singled out.</p>
<p>&#8221;It&#8217;s the standard way in which people who have been charged with dangerous offences, specifically terrorism-related, are treated in the US.</p>
<p>&#8221;America is one of the world&#8217;s leading democracies and he will receive a fair trial there.&#8221;</p>
<p>The Foreign and Commonwealth Office said it is continuing to provide consular assistance to Mr Ahsan and his family.</p>
<p>He is facing his first hearing in the US later this year.</p>
<p><strong><a href="http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-london-22087245">SOURCE: BBC News</a></strong></p>
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		<title>The impossible injustice of Talha Ahsan’s extradition and detention</title>
		<link>http://freetalha.org/2013/02/the-impossible-injustice-of-talha-ahsans-extradition-and-detention/</link>
		<comments>http://freetalha.org/2013/02/the-impossible-injustice-of-talha-ahsans-extradition-and-detention/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 21 Feb 2013 19:49:45 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://freetalha.org/?p=1431</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p><img width="300" height="225" src="http://freetalha.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/hamjaproperty2-300x225.jpg" class="attachment-medium wp-post-image" alt="hamjaproperty2" title="hamjaproperty2" /></p>Talha Ahsan was extradited to the US in 2012 after spending six years in high security prisons in the UK. Like Gary McKinnon, he has Asperger Syndrome, and is now in a supermax prison in Connecticut. Ian Patel explains how this was able to happen. BY IAN PATEL  A still from the Yale Law School film [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img width="300" height="225" src="http://freetalha.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/hamjaproperty2-300x225.jpg" class="attachment-medium wp-post-image" alt="hamjaproperty2" title="hamjaproperty2" /></p><h1><span style="font-size: 13px; font-weight: normal;">Talha Ahsan was extradited to the US in 2012 after spending six years in high security prisons in the UK. Like Gary McKinnon, he has Asperger Syndrome, and is now in a supermax prison in Connecticut. Ian Patel explains how this was able to happen.</span></h1>
<p><strong>BY <a title="View author posts." href="http://www.newstatesman.com/writers/110971">IAN PATEL</a> </strong></p>
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<div><img title="A still from the Yale Law School film &quot;The Worst of the Worst&quot; about the prison where Ahsan is being held." src="http://www.newstatesman.com/sites/default/files/imagecache/fullnode_image/articles_2013/wire.jpg" alt="A still from the Yale Law School film &quot;The Worst of the Worst&quot; about the prison " width="510" height="348" /></div>
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<div>A still from the Yale Law School film &#8220;The Worst of the Worst&#8221; about the prison where Ahsan is being held.</div>
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<p>In theory, what has happened to Talha Ahsan should not be possible. It might come as a surprise to many to learn that Ahsan, a British national judged to be “extremely vulnerable” by a psychiatrist, is currently in pre-trial detention in a so-called “super-maximum security” prison in the United States.  Ahsan is being held at Connecticut supermax prison, which is the subject of a recent documentary by Yale Law School entitled <a href="http://yalevisuallawproject.org/film/the-worst-of-the-worst/"><em>The Worst of the Worst</em></a>.</p>
<p>Why is this impossible? Despite being extradited to the US under the terms of a 2003 Treaty with the US (according to which no <em>prima facie</em> evidence is necessary), Ahsan is protected by national and international law – specifically the UK Human Rights Act and the European Convention on Human Rights, among other international protections against torture. Since supermax prisons would undoubtedly be judged illegal were they to be proposed in any European state signed to the European Convention, Ahsan should have been protected from what he now endures and is likely to endure for decades to come.</p>
<p>Before his extradition Ahsan made a joint petition to the European Court of Human Rights to have the extradition blocked, protesting the conditions he would face in America. The story of his petition and its rejection shows a disturbing violation of uninfringeable human rights protections.</p>
<p>Ahsan’s story is particularly troubling since he has Asperger Syndrome and the same associative risks as Gary Mackinnon. Ahsan is 33 years old and grew up in Tooting, south London.  He attended The School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), University of London, taking his degree in Arabic.</p>
<p>When the US formally requested the extradition of Ahsan on 15 September 2006, the request alleged involvement in the commission of four felonies between 1997 and 2004; specifically, “conspiracy to provide material support to terrorists”, “providing material support to terrorists” and “conspiracy to kill, kidnap, maim, or injure persons”. This material support is alleged to have been provided by Ahsan’s supposed participation in an Islamic media website (that at the time of his arrest had been offline for four years) one of whose servers operated out of Connecticut. Ahsan spent over six years (without bail) in high security prisons in the UK before finally being extradited to the US – along with Abu Hamza, Babar Ahmad, Adel Abdul Bary and Khaled al-Fawwaz – on 5 October 2012.</p>
<p>Sections of the British press portrayed Ahsan as an “<a href="http://www.dailymail.co.uk/debate/article-2127831/Rendition-Belhadj-MI6-CIA-shadowy-operations-prosecuted-security.html#ixzz21ZN7Herw">unwanted guest</a>”, a natural partner to Abu Hamza. I met with Hamja Ahsan, Talha’s brother, to discuss Talha’s early life.</p>
<p>Ahsan’s Bengali parents settled in Tooting, London, in 1964. As a child Talha won a financially assisted place to Dulwich College in south London. His literary ambitions and facility were obvious from an early age and his intellectual influences developed to be eclectic, ranging from Linton Kwesi Johnson to Seamus Heaney. He has a reverence for the English literary canon, particularly admiring the poetry of Ted Hughes. Zadie Smith’s <em>White Teeth</em> is one of his favourite novels. At HMP Long Lartin he translated a tenth-century Arabic poem, <em>Above the Dust</em>, by Abu Firas Al-Hamadani, who was held captive in Byzantium. On the day of his arrest he had a job interview to be a librarian.</p>
<p>Ahsan is now gaining recognition as a poet, recently winning the Koestler Trust’s <a href="http://www.koestlertrust.org.uk/pages/uk2012/koestler_poems_writing2012.pdf">2012 Platinum Award</a> for his poem “Grieving”, which is taken from his second, forthcoming book of poems. Ahsan’s first book of poems, <a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2012/may/09/solitary-confinement-talha-ahsan-poet"><em>This Be the Answer</em></a>, has brought him support and praise from writers A.L. Kennedy and Michael Rosen.</p>
<p>His poetry is luxuriously observant and its erudition guarded. Sometimes it is sad:</p>
<p align="left">it is not that the<br />
world isn’t full of<br />
beautiful things,<br />
only that some are rare …</p>
<p align="center">***</p>
<p><strong><img src="http://www.newstatesman.com/sites/default/files/images/P1000124.JPG" alt="" /></strong></p>
<p><em>Hamja (Talha&#8217;s brother) and the remains of Talha&#8217;s<br />
prison possessions from HMP Long Lartin</em></p>
<p>Pressure is mounting against supermax prisons and other “correctional” institutions which place prisoners in solitary confinement. In supermax prisons, prisoners are in open-ended isolation for 24 hours a day and, in certain cells, denied natural light. Prisoners have monitored and extremely restricted contact with their families and no access to educational programs. Perhaps the most devastating aspect of supermax prisons is the fact that they are designed to prevent any meaningful contact or communication whatsoever with other people.</p>
<p>In his <a href="http://cad.sagepub.com/content/49/1/124.abstract">groundbreaking research</a> on supermax prison conditions, Craig Haney writes that prisoners are subject to “a totality of isolation” and “complete idleness for extremely long periods of time”. Even interaction with prison officers is prevented by technological sophistications such as computerised locking and tracking of movement. Meetings with doctors and psychotherapists are conducted by video-conference in order that human interaction is kept at nil. On the basis of Haney’s research the United Nations has <a href="http://www.ohchr.org/en/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=11506&amp;LangID=E">stated</a> that “indefinite and prolonged solitary confinement, in excess of fifteen days, should also be subject to an absolute prohibition”.</p>
<p>Up to 25,000 people are held in supermax prisons across 40 US states. Supermax conditions were originally justified as a means of isolating “the worst of the worst” – that is, the most violently dangerous prisoners – from the rest of a prison population. Today however many prisoners without histories of physical violence are subject to leg-shackles during showering among other out-of-cell physical restraints.</p>
<p>In 2012 opposition to supermax prisons and solitary confinement included a<a href="http://www.amnestyusa.org/sites/default/files/california_solitary_confinement_report_final.pdf">report</a> by Amnesty International, three civil-rights lawsuits, a <a href="http://www.judiciary.senate.gov/hearings/hearing.cfm?id=6517e7d97c06eac4ce9f60b09625ebe8">Congressional Hearing</a>, a documentary by former hostage <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&amp;v=KS7hCZ8IiMc">Shane Bauer</a>, and a photography<a href="http://www.juvenile-in-justice.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/06/Ross_JuvInJusticeCover_05_06_121.jpeg">project</a> on children in solitary confinement.</p>
<p>So far this year, the New York State Bar Association has passed a <a href="http://www.nysba.org/Content/NavigationMenu42/January252013HouseofDelegatesMeetingAgendaItems/CivilRightsReportreSolitaryConfinement.pdf">resolution</a>calling for a radical curtailment of the use of solitary confinement, The Federal Bureau of Prisons has <a href="http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/02/05/us-usa-prisons-solitary-idUSBRE91404L20130205">announced</a> “a comprehensive and independent assessment” of solitary confinement practices, and a coalition of over 35 organisations has <a href="http://www.nyclu.org/news/human-rights-mental-health-and-faith-based-organizations-ask-un-investigate-solitary-confinemen">petitioned</a> the United Nations to investigate the use of solitary confinement in New York State prisons. The states of Colorado, Illinois, Maine, California and Mississippi have recently taken steps to reduce the number of prisoners confined in solitary (as much to reduce expenditure as satisfy recent advocacy campaigns).</p>
<p align="center"><strong>***</strong></p>
<p>A mere 11 days after Ahsan was flown to the US, Gary Mackinnon’s extradition to the US (for “<a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/oct/16/gary-mckinnon-timeline-extradition">the biggest military computer hack of all time</a>”) was blocked by Theresa May. Mackinnon had claimed his diagnosis of Asperger Syndrome should be taken into consideration before a ruling on his extradition was given. The United Nations agrees with him, <a href="http://daccess-dds-ny.un.org/doc/UNDOC/GEN/N11/445/70/PDF/N1144570.pdf?OpenElement">reporting</a> that “prisoners with mental health issues deteriorate dramatically in isolation … Some engage in extreme acts of self-mutilation and even suicide”. Indeed over fifty percent of suicides in US prisons are committed in solitary confinement. Despite being independently assessed as a suicide risk and diagnosed with Asperger Syndrome in June 2009, Ahsan’s extradition was ordered to proceed regardless. (As a devout Muslim, the issue of vulnerability to any concept of suicide would never have been one that he himself could countenance being advanced on his behalf.)</p>
<p>In a Home Office <a href="http://www.liberty-human-rights.org.uk/news/2012/home-secretary-accepts-it-was-the-human-rights-act-that-.php">letter</a> to Mackinnon’s legal team, May concludes that extradition “would give rise to such risks to [Mackinnon’s] health, and would, in particular, give rise to such a high risk of him ending his life, that a decision to that effect would be incompatible with his human rights under Article 3 [protection against torture or inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment]”.</p>
<p>May’s careful duplicity and manipulation of human rights standards in her cross-dealings with Ahsan and Mackinnon are astonishing. Compare her pious references to the 1998 Human Rights Act with her opening <a href="http://www.politics.co.uk/comment-analysis/2012/10/09/theresa-may-speech-in-full">gambit</a> to the Conservative Party Conference seven days before: &#8220;Wasn’t it great to say goodbye – at long last – to Abu Hamza and <em>those four other</em> terror suspects on Friday?”.</p>
<p align="center"><strong>***</strong></p>
<p>Before his extradition, Ahsan had appealed to the High Court to have his extradition order overturned, arguing that his case ought to be heard in a UK court. When this appeal was rejected Ahsan made use of the final instance of legal protection and redress available to him, an individual petition to the European Court of Human Rights.</p>
<p>Under Article 25 of the European Convention on Human Rights “any person, non-governmental organisation or group” can petition the European Court of Human Rights alleging a violation of their rights. The Court then decides whether to pursue a particular case, which in the last instance is decided by the Grand Chamber of the Court. Such “right of individual petition” is a unique means by which an individual can bring their own legal system into regulation with the norms of international justice. Many have availed themselves of this right. In 2010 the Court received <a href="http://www.echr.coe.int/NR/rdonlyres/0A35997B-B907-4A38-85F4-A93113A78F10/0/Analysis_of_statistics_2010.pdf">61,300</a>applications, a figure that testifies to the stature the Court has attained.</p>
<p>States that are party to the European Convention on Human Rights are beholden to the Strasbourg Court’s decisions. Under Article 15 of the Convention, however, states can “derogate” or formally withdraw from a limited number of their obligations to the Convention in certain prescribed circumstances such as “in time of war or other public emergency threatening the life of the nation”. For example, in late 1970s the UK derogated from the Convention specifying a terrorist threat emanating from Northern Ireland, and would derogate again in the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks. In its counter-terrorism efforts, the UK derogated from Article 5, allowing the government to increase its powers of arrest, detention and internment.</p>
<p>However, a “derogation” does not abolish state responsibility to international law. Torture or inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment (Article 3) is prohibited “<a href="http://sitemaker.umich.edu/drwcasebook/files/republic_of_ireland_v._united_kingdom.pdf">in absolute terms</a> … even in the event of a public emergency threatening the life of the nation”. The argument against torture is so cogent as to be universally applicable to all states in all circumstances.</p>
<p>The Strasbourg Court has served the crucial function of protecting against excessively repressive national legislation. For example, after the murder of James Bulger, Home Secretary Michael Howard extended the minimum tariff on the imprisonment of children from eight to 15 years. Howard had made the decision on the basis of public fury and a petition signed by 278,300 people expressing the view that Bulger’s murderers, despite being children, should never be released. The Strasbourg Court <a href="http://hudoc.echr.coe.int/sites/eng/pages/search.aspx?i=001-58593">overturned the increased tariff</a> in 1999, ordering the UK to remain within international standards for juvenile justice.</p>
<p>The Court also has a laudable record in protecting the rights of criminal suspects and has not balked in blocking orders of extradition and deportation in UK cases in the past. In 1989 the Court protected <a href="http://hudoc.echr.coe.int/sites/eng/pages/search.aspx?i=001-57619">Jens Söering</a> from extradition to the US (where he would have faced the death penalty); in 1996, <a href="http://hudoc.echr.coe.int/sites/eng/pages/search.aspx?i=001-58004">Karamjit Singh Chahal</a> from deportation to India; and in 2012, <a href="http://hudoc.echr.coe.int/sites/eng-press/pages/search.aspx#%7B%22display%22:[%221%22],%22dmdocnumber%22:[%22898583%22]%7D">Abu Qatada</a> from deportation to Jordan. In December 2012 the Court ruled that the CIA’s “extraordinary rendition” of <a href="http://hudoc.echr.coe.int/sites/fra-press/pages/search.aspx?i=001-115621">Khalid El-Masri</a> amounted to torture. So why did the Court neglect Talha Ahsan?</p>
<p>Ahsan’s petition to the Court claimed violations of several Articles of the Convention, with the emphasis on an Article 3 violation. Some of Ahsan’s complaints were judged inadmissible, but the Court did consider whether Ahsan’s detention in a supermax solitary confinement facility (specifically the Administrative Maximum Facility in Florence, Colorado) would violate Article 3; whether his mental health would be so affected as to violate Article 3; and whether he was likely to face a sentence so detrimental to his person as to violate Article 3.</p>
<p align="center"><strong>***</strong></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>The crucial aspects of Ahsan’s petition concerned the restrictive conditions in supermax prisons (ADX specifically), the damaging periods of detention spent without human contact, and the concerns surrounding his mental health.</p>
<p>Simply put, on these issues the Court had to decide whether supermax prison conditions stayed within the threshold set by Article 3 or whether they violated it. At the outset, one might have said that Ahsan’s chances were good: the Court’s case-law provides precedents in which solitary confinement of prisoners can be shown to violate Article 3; moreover, the Court has held on many occasions that the detention of a person who is ill may raise issues under Article 3 and that the lack of appropriate medical care may amount to treatment contrary to that provision. Of course, <a href="http://sitemaker.umich.edu/drwcasebook/files/republic_of_ireland_v._united_kingdom.pdf">each case is unique</a> and the decision is a process that “depends on all the circumstances of the case, such as the duration of the treatment, its physical and mental effects and, in some cases, the sex, age and state of health of the victim”.</p>
<p>In its final <a href="http://hudoc.echr.coe.int/sites/eng/pages/search.aspx?i=001-110267">judgement</a> on Talha Ahsan’s petition the Court ruled “no violation of Article 3 as concerned the possible detention at ADX supermax prison”. Despite psychiatric assessments from both external and internal prison psychiatrists describing Ahsan as “extremely vulnerable” and his diagnosis of Asperger Syndrome, the Court <a href="http://hudoc.echr.coe.int/sites/eng/pages/search.aspx?i=001-110267">ruled</a> no violation with respect to mental health conditions, noting that “those [same] mental health conditions have not prevented [Ahsan] being detained in high-security prisons in the United Kingdom”. With respect to the severity of punishment Ahsan faced, the Court <a href="http://hudoc.echr.coe.int/sites/eng/pages/search.aspx?i=001-110267">referred</a> simply to “the serious nature of the allegations made against these applicants, and the full range of protections available in the United States (including the Eighth Amendment’s protection from grossly disproportionate sentences)”.</p>
<p>In its final reasoning in the Ahsan case the Court seems to have either relied on UK national policy for direction or to have simply dismissed out of hand claims of US carceral violations. The judgement does not satisfactorily engage the question of whether a vulnerable, non-violent prisoner needs ever to be held in solitary confinement, since solitary confinement can only be justified for security, disciplinary or protective reasons.</p>
<p>Crucially the Court accepted statistical evidence submitted by the US Bureau of Prisons on the kind of supermax prisoner program Ahsan would likely face. As Ahsan’s legal team would state after the Court’s decision, it was “in large part on the basis of disputed statistics” that the Court ruled that “isolation in a US Supermax prison is ‘relative’ and will become a violation of Article 3 ECHR which prohibits torture, only if it extends indefinitely”. A total of 26 US human rights organisations protested to the Court that it had “based its decision in part on information provided by the U.S. Federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP) that was insufficient and misleading”.</p>
<p>With unmerited optimism, the Court judgement suggests that supermax prisons provide “recreation, education, religious expression and engagement with the outside world” – but at the same time rather tellingly concedes that “communication with other inmates” is available “admittedly only through the ventilation system”. The Court judgement refers to the “psychiatric services” available in supermax prisons, yet this turns out to equal only two doctors for 3,200 inmates.</p>
<p>The comparisons the judgement makes between high-security prisons in the UK (in Ahsan’s case, HMP Long Lartin) and supermax prisons are disingenuous. HMP Long Lartin does not practice prisoner isolation, it has fewer restrictions on exercise and provides better educational facilities. It does not severely limit prisoners’ access to family members.</p>
<p>In its judgement the Court comments that the Eight Amendment US constitutional protection against “cruel and unusual punishment” is directly comparable to European Article 3 protections. Yet the New York City Bar Association <a href="http://www2.nycbar.org/pdf/report/uploads/20072165-TheBrutalityofSupermaxConfinement.pdf">stated</a> in 2011 that “in many cases supermax confinement constitutes torture under international law and according to international jurisprudence and cruel and unusual punishment under the U.S. Constitution”.</p>
<p>A detailed third-party <a href="http://www.interights.org/document/129/index.html">report</a> submitted to the Court by Repreive, Interrights and the American Civil Liberties Union maintains that the Eight Amendment provides “only limited protection” since the legal avenues by which a prisoner might report mistreatment are harder to access in the American system. Most worryingly, the report points out that Article 3 provides “much greater protection against mental suffering and psychological harm arising from conditions of detention” than that provided under the Eighth Amendment.</p>
<p>The Court’s judgement that the extradition of Ahsan and his co-defendants does not violate Article 3 has been met with extraordinary objection. Supporters include the UK’s leading human rights lawyers Gareth Pierce (who represents Ahsan) and Geoffery Bindman (who has <a href="http://www.opendemocracy.net/ourkingdom/geoffrey-bindman/extradition-muddled-unjust-in-desperate-need-of-reform">criticised</a> the UK-US Extradition Treaty). Supporters also include former UN advisor Philip Alston, Noam Chomsky, and America’s foremost constitutional legal scholar, Bruce Ackerman. The Court’s rulings appeared in the face of a submission by the UN Special Rapporteur on Torture, Juan Méndez.</p>
<p align="center"><strong>***</strong></p>
<p>It is well-known that international human rights bodies (most obviously the UN Security Council) are subject to the vested interests and machinations of superpowers. The Strasbourg Court’s judgement on the Ahsan case needs to be seen in the context of strained UK-EU relations, superpower interests, and an ideological struggle against figures seen to embody “international terrorism”.</p>
<p>Talha Ahsan’s case was put before the Court in 2012 (it passed its final decision in April 2012). By chance this same period saw David Cameron assume the rotating presidency of the Council of Europe, giving him the opportunity to address (on 25 January 2012) the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe in Strasbourg.</p>
<p>Cameron’s speech, delivered to the Assembly three months before the Court’s decision, reveals the proper context in which Ahsan’s case should be seen. Cameron began his <a href="http://news.bbc.co.uk/democracylive/hi/europe/newsid_9688000/9688270.stm">speech</a> by emphasising that his chairmanship would focus on the reform of the Court before giving way to his misgivings about individual petitionary rights:</p>
<blockquote><p>The Court is properly safeguarding the right of individual petition, and it is a principle the UK is committed to. But with this comes the risk of turning the court into a court of the fourth instance. Because there has already been a first hearing in a court, a second hearing in an appeal court and a third in a supreme or a constitutional court. In effect, this gives an extra bite of the cherry to anyone who is dissatisfied with the domestic ruling even where that judgement was reasonable, well-founded, and in line with the Convention …</p></blockquote>
<p>With the candidness of barely guarded outrage, Cameron would then move on to discuss the specific quarrel he had with the Court. For, a mere week before Cameron’s speech, on 17 January, the Court had blocked his attempt to deport Abu Qatada to Jordon, ruling that this would breach Article 6 (the right to a fair trial) &#8220;given the real risk of the admission of evidence obtained by torture at [Qatada’s] retrial&#8221;.</p>
<p>In his speech Cameron intones against the folly of European obstruction of the fight against international terrorism, gesturing to the radical reforms this obstruction now demanded:</p>
<blockquote><p>Protecting a country against terrorism is one of the most important tasks of any government. Again, no one should argue – I would never argue – that we defend our systems of rights and freedom by suspending those freedoms. But we do have a real problem when it comes to foreign nationals who threaten our security. In Britain we have gone through all reasonable national processes … including painstaking international agreements about how they should be treated … and scrutiny by our own courts … and yet we are still unable to deport them.</p>
<p>It is therefore not surprising that some people start asking questions about whether the current arrangements are really sensible. Of course, no decent country should deport people if they are going to be tortured. But the problem today is that you can end up with someone who has no right to live in your country, who you are convinced – and have good reason to be convinced – means to do your country harm … And yet there are circumstances in which you cannot try them, you cannot detain them and you cannot deport them.</p></blockquote>
<p>By these words, the Court, whose judgement was barely three months away, was put on notice for acquiescence in the Ahsan case.</p>
<p>On first hearing, Cameron’s speech might be dismissed as toothless posturing. Yet the twelve months preceding Cameron’s 2012 address had seen sustained criticism of the Strasbourg Court by UK senior politicians and by sections of the British press. Hostility had grown particularly intense in 2005 with respect to the Court’s decision (in the case of <em>Hirst</em>) regarding prisoners’ voting rights, an issue which <a href="http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2237134/Lets-quit-European-Court-Human-Rights-says-ex-justice-minister-Uproar-Commons-votes-prisoners.html#axzz2KW689hr1">continues</a> to foment aggression towards the Court. In February 2011, the influential think-tank Policy Exchange released a major <a href="http://www.policyexchange.org.uk/images/publications/bringing%20rights%20back%20home%20-%20feb%2011.pdf">report</a> setting out a plan for UK withdrawal from the Court and the Convention, if not the Council of Europe and the European Union. The conciliatory outgoing President of the Court, Nicolas Bratza, would <a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/law/2012/oct/21/sir-nicolas-bratza-defends-echr">admit</a> in 2012 that “the UK leaving [the Court] would be very damaging”.</p>
<p>This aggression towards the Court was, among other things, stoked by blocks to extradition. As far back as 1989 the Court had blocked extradition on the basis of an Article 3 violation. As a yet another Conservative-backed <a href="http://www.makinghumanrightswork.org.uk/Human%20rights%20-%20Making%20them%20work%20for%20the%20people%20of%20the%20UK%20%5Bweb%5D.pdf">report</a>put it in 2011, referring to the case of <em>Chahal</em>, “the Strasbourg Court has set a rather low threshold on what may constitute, in particular, degrading punishment”.</p>
<p>In other words, individual petitions asking for the Court’s protection from an Article 3 violation – the exact nature of Ahsan’s petition – had been signally opposed by UK government figures in the run up to Ahsan’s petition to the Strasbourg Court. Then, in January 2012, Cameron would add to this momentum against the Court by invoking the struggle against terrorism specifically.</p>
<p>Although the Strasbourg Court is a judicial body independent of the European Council, Commission, and Parliament – and the politicking that surrounds them – it would be naïve to suggest that Cameron’s vehement address to the Court did not have political aims beyond a reformist agenda for the Court. The fractious and defensive qualities of the speech recall strained UK-EU relations, which also threatened to make the UK’s relationship with the Court unsustainable.  Cameron’s speech has half a populist eye to conservative anti-EU sentiment, and accordingly the British press would <a href="http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2091672/Cut-meddling-national-affairs-Cameron-tells-human-rights-judges-Europe.html#axzz2K2c6keF0">conflate</a> anti-Court sentiment with anti-EU sentiment.</p>
<p>In this light can we see Ahsan’s case as a Rubicon moment for the Strasbourg Court? Was the Ahsan decision an opportunity for the Court to make a reconciliatory gesture to the UK, reassuring the UK government that it respected its vested national interests, and that it was prepared to recognise exceptional terrorist threats? Or, alternatively, would the decision cue the UK’s withdrawal from the Court, the Convention, and even from the Council of Europe itself, in the name of the fight against international terrorism?</p>
<p align="center"><strong>***</strong></p>
<p>Of course, another superpower’s interests were also at stake in the Ahsan decision. A largely unknown fact about the case is that on March 1 2012, the month before the Ahsan judgement was given, Strasbourg judges – including two members of the Court Chamber who judged on the Ahsan case, Lech Garlicki and Nicolas Bratza – visited Washington to take part in a closed conference with US Supreme Court Justices. The first of its kind, this closed-door conference – <em>Judicial Process and the Protection of Rights:</em><em> the U.S. Supreme Court and the European Court of Human Rights</em> – brought together members of the Strasbourg Court with Supreme Court Justices Stephen Breyer, Samuel Alito, Anthony Kennedy and Sonia Sotomayor. Also present were the UK government’s in-house legal counsellor, Derek Walton, who was representing the UK in Ahsan’s European Court case, and the vastly influential Harold Koh, who was serving as Obama’s appointed Legal Advisor to the State Department.</p>
<p>There are several things here that raise concern: first, the simple fact that there was a closed-door meeting that included sitting judges of the Strasbourg Court on an open case in which the US was implicated. More concerning still is the fact that the conference discussed “rights protection” – a key issue about to be decided in Ahsan’s appeal by the same judges in Strasbourg – and the parallels in rights protection between the US Supreme Court and the Strasbourg Court.</p>
<p>Crucial to the Ahsan case was the question of whether the US Eighth Amendment provided the same protection as Europe’s Article 3, and it is therefore deeply troubling that sitting judges attended a conference designed to emphasise similarities in legal practice between Supreme Court justices and Strasbourg justices.</p>
<p>Superpower influence is not always sustained in observable or overt ways. Diplomatic assurances that there are reasonable legal protections in place, and that a state’s highest judges are concerned about rights protections, is another means by which a superpower can influence events. While UK Law Lords have warned against “<a href="http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKHL/2005/71.html">diplomatic assurances</a>” from non-Western states known to practice torture, they are unlikely to apply the same censure to US polices.</p>
<p align="center"><strong>***</strong></p>
<p><strong><img src="http://www.newstatesman.com/sites/default/files/images/7983980288_cfbb9c3e03_c.jpg" alt="" /></strong></p>
<p><em>Talha Ahsan&#8217;s father, brother and mother. Photograph: Aimee Valinski</em></p>
<p>It appears that the judgement of the European Court of Human Rights that there was no Article 3 violation in the Ahsan case was influenced in some way by the unique combination of state pressure from two superpower governments. And it is at least arguable that the Court’s decision was based more on diplomatic assurance than on judicial resolution.</p>
<p>Hamja Ahsan was hopeful that the Strasbourg Court would protect his brother. In the days before the Court’s final decision, he listened to Gary Mackinnon’s <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Id-EsD5-1BI"><em>Song of Silence</em></a> on repeat late into the night. But the Court did not even spell Talha Ahsan’s name correctly, let alone uphold his rights. Since the decision Hamja has been <a href="http://www.southlondon-today.co.uk/news.cfm?id=38703">recognised</a> for his campaign work on his brother’s case.</p>
<p>The UK and US will continue to attempt to protect themselves from censure by invoking Constitutional traditions and common law protections – “reasonable national processes”, in Cameron’s words, in the face of threats to national security. Yet it is clear that these long-established constitutional procedures that ensure the protection of individuals have been cast aside. Norms of state practice are now based on the exceptional threats posed by terrorism, for which supposedly no legal protections can (nor ought) to apply. This new order of state practice has allowed a violation of international law to be concealed by judicial obedience to state interests.</p>
<p>Although the legal proceedings against Talha Ahsan are scheduled to begin in October 2013, it is unclear how long he will spend in pre-trial detention in the US – it could be years – in addition to the six years he has already spent in prison without trial or evidence of his guilt. His family reports that Ahsan continues to read broadly and build his literary career despite his extreme confinement. If he is found guilty, however, and his sentence is imposed to its maximum of life imprisonment, his future lies inside the walls of a supermax prison.</p>
<p><em>The campaign to free Talha Ahsan can be found online <a href="http://www.freetalha.org/" target="_blank">here</a></em></p>
<p><a href="http://www.newstatesman.com/politics/2013/02/impossible-injustice-talha-ahsan%E2%80%99s-extradition-and-detention"><strong>SOURCE: New Statesman</strong></a></p>
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		<title>No Complacency on Human Rights &amp; Civil Liberties</title>
		<link>http://freetalha.org/2013/02/no-complacency-on-human-rights-civil-liberties/</link>
		<comments>http://freetalha.org/2013/02/no-complacency-on-human-rights-civil-liberties/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 15 Feb 2013 01:08:09 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Articles]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Statements of Support]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://freetalha.org/?p=1429</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The Muslim Council of Britain continues to receive messages of concern from its network of mosques and affiliates with the cavalier attitude by those entrusted to observe due process with matters of civil rights and liberties of British residents and citizens. In the past year the Muslim community has seen the deportation to the US of Babar [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><span style="font-family: Arial, sans-serif; font-size: small;">The Muslim Council of Britain continues to receive messages of concern from its network of mosques and affiliates with the cavalier attitude by those entrusted to observe due process with matters of civil rights and liberties of British residents and citizens.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-family: Arial, sans-serif; font-size: small;">In the past year the Muslim community has seen the deportation to the US of Babar Ahmad and Syed Talha Ahsan. In what can only be construed as insensitivity and prejudice, the Home Secretary awaited their extradition before paving the way three months later for implementation of the ‘Forum Bar’ – a process that allows British courts to block an extradition request if they believe it is in the interests of justice for the defendant to stand trial in the UK.  </span></p>
<div><span style="font-family: Arial, sans-serif; font-size: small;">More recent is the distressing case of the 23 year old Somali Mahdi Hashi, who lived in the UK since childhood, but was stripped of his British citizenship in what appears to be a move to facilitate rendition to the US, where he now languishes after torture in Djibouti.  </span></div>
<p><span style="font-family: Arial, sans-serif; font-size: small;">However even graver is the travesty of the detention of Shaker Aamer, a British resident, now slowly dying in Guantanamo where he has been for eleven years today without trial!</span></p>
<div><span style="font-family: Arial, sans-serif; font-size: small;">The MCB, speaking for many Muslims in Britain, calls on the Foreign Secretary to seek their urgent repatriation to the UK, to face trial if necessary, and to give them back their lives.</p>
<p><strong>SOURCE: Muslim Council of Britain</strong></span></div>
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		<title>Prison Writing and Fighting Extradition &#8211; An Event with Gary Mulgrew</title>
		<link>http://freetalha.org/2013/01/prison-writing-and-fighting-extradition-an-event-with-gary-mulgrew/</link>
		<comments>http://freetalha.org/2013/01/prison-writing-and-fighting-extradition-an-event-with-gary-mulgrew/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 23 Jan 2013 19:55:30 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Events]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://freetalha.org/?p=1425</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p><img width="300" height="180" src="http://freetalha.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/01/Gary-Mulgrew-007-300x180.jpg" class="attachment-medium wp-post-image" alt="Gary-Mulgrew-007" title="Gary-Mulgrew-007" /></p>PRISON WRITING &#38; FIGHTING EXTRADITION with Gary Mulgrew &#38; Amrit Wilson Part of the Tinag Festival Sunday January 27th 3.30pm &#8211; 5pm Bishopsgate Institute 230 Bishopsgate, London, EC2M 4QH Tube : Liverpool Street How is the law being used to erode civil liberties and transgress so-called &#8216;Nation-State&#8217; protection/boundaries? What is the meaning of sovereignty and citizenship? [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img width="300" height="180" src="http://freetalha.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/01/Gary-Mulgrew-007-300x180.jpg" class="attachment-medium wp-post-image" alt="Gary-Mulgrew-007" title="Gary-Mulgrew-007" /></p><p><strong>PRISON WRITING &amp; FIGHTING EXTRADITION</strong></p>
<p><strong>with Gary Mulgrew &amp; Amrit Wilson</p>
<p>Part of the Tinag Festival<br />
</strong></p>
<p><strong>Sunday January 27th</p>
<p>3.30pm &#8211; 5pm</strong><br />
<strong>Bishopsgate Institute<br />
</strong>230 Bishopsgate, London, EC2M 4QH<br />
Tube : Liverpool Street<br />
How is the law being used to erode civil liberties and transgress so-called &#8216;Nation-State&#8217; protection/boundaries? What is the meaning of sovereignty and citizenship? What are the impacts of extreme isolation in US prisons? What is it like to be extradited? How does the plea bargain work? What is it like to be detained for 8 years without trial? What are the long-term collective strategies in the fight against the notorious 2003 US-UK Extradition Treaty? These questions will be explored through personal experience, film clips, literary readings and discussion.</p>
<p>Join us for a special event &#8211; fighting extradition the notorious 2003 US-UK Extradition Treaty, Solitary confinement &amp; writing &amp; reading in prison</p>
<p>Featuring. Talha Ahsan Koestler award-winning prison poetry, short films and special guests:</p>
<p>- Gary Mulgrew &#8211; one of the Natwest Three, highest profile extradition cases, author of prison memoir Gang of One on ordeal of extradition and US prison system &#8211; soon to be made into a film starring Dougray Scott. Nominated for political book of the year.</p>
<p>- Hamja Ahsan &#8211; brother of Talha Ahsan, head of campaign to reform Extradition laws, solitary confinement &amp; civil liberties. Shell Our Heroes Award 2013 nominee.</p>
<p>- Amrit Wilson (chair) &#8211; activist and writer. Winner of Martin Luther King Award.</p>
<p>We will be discussing prison writing &amp; reading &amp; updates on Talha cases - with Talha prison poetry &amp; film clips</p>
<p>There will be a small exhibition from Arts Against Extradition collective too :</p>
<p>Festival programme:<br />
<a href="http://www.facebook.com/l.php?u=http://www.thisisnotagateway.net/&amp;h=8AQEuSsO4&amp;s=1" rel="nofollow nofollow" target="_blank">http://www.thisisnotagateway.net/</a><br />
<a href="http://www.facebook.com/events/398868546868626/" target="_blank"></p>
<p>http://www.facebook.com/events/398868546868626/</a></p>
<p>Free, no booking taken.</p>
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		<title>Extradite me…I’m British</title>
		<link>http://freetalha.org/2013/01/extradite-meim-british/</link>
		<comments>http://freetalha.org/2013/01/extradite-meim-british/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 23 Jan 2013 19:18:52 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://freetalha.org/?p=1420</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p><img width="300" height="219" src="http://freetalha.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/01/HAMJA-BROTHER-640x468-300x219.jpg" class="attachment-medium wp-post-image" alt="Abu Hamza extradition case" title="Abu Hamza extradition case" /></p>Syed Talha Ahsan is a British citizen. He has served the equivalent of a twelve year prison sentence without trial. Despite suffering from Asperger’s Syndrome, he is a Platinum Koestler Award winning poet and translator. In pretrial solitary confinement in a Supermax security prison in Connecticut, his work continues to be projected across what he [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img width="300" height="219" src="http://freetalha.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/01/HAMJA-BROTHER-640x468-300x219.jpg" class="attachment-medium wp-post-image" alt="Abu Hamza extradition case" title="Abu Hamza extradition case" /></p><h2><span style="font-size: 13px; font-weight: normal;">Syed Talha Ahsan is a British citizen. He has served the equivalent of a twelve year prison sentence without trial. Despite suffering from Asperger’s Syndrome, he is a Platinum Koestler Award winning poet and translator. In pretrial solitary confinement in a Supermax security prison in Connecticut, his work continues to be projected across what he thought was his home.</span></h2>
<p>Talha was arrested on 19 July 2006 without prima facie evidence. The British arrest was a response to a request from the USA under the 2003 Extradition Act. On 6 October 2012, Talha was extradited to the United States where he pleaded not guilty of conspiracy to support terrorists in Afghanistan and Chechnya. He is accused of involvement with a series of Azzam websites, which have been denounced by authorities as part of a conspiracy to provide material support and communication links to people engaged in terrorism. One of these websites was located on a server in the United States.</p>
<p>He has never been arrested or questioned by British police, despite a number of men being so from his local area in December 2003 for similar allegations, all of whom were released without charge. Talha will stand trial in America on terrorism-related offences; if convicted he will spend 70 years in supermax solitary confinement.</p>
<p>Hamja Ahsan, Talha’s brother, has subsequently dedicated his life to the fight against his brother’s extradition. I wanted to know about the man who had perhaps been lost in his Government’s war on terror. “He was ironically concerned with civil liberties’ erosions himself, and campaigned for the British Guantanamo bay detainees and against torture, illegal detention years before it was fashionable and mainstream – as well as the Babar Ahmad extradition, attending a demo at Royal Courts of Justice – just imminently prior to his own arrest.”</p>
<p>“He remained concerned about other British injustices such as deaths in Hillsborough and deaths in police custody, right until his own extradition in his family prison conversations at visits. He had a job interview to be a librarian on the day of his arrest, and that is the type of person he is, he still talks of his imaginary PhDs he would like to do. He gained a 1st class degree in Arabic at SOAS whilst teaching himself the language from a book at the age of 16.”</p>
<p>In reference to the websites and charges of terrorism related offences, “President Bill Clinton said any association with the Islamic Emirate government (1995-2001) after 1998 would be illegal (as the government were seen as harbouring at the time) – there is no actual act of terror that has any direct link – even 9/11 is condemned on the site. Chechen Independence leader Ahmed Zakayev lives in exile in Britain, and Chechen insurgent is not on the list of proscribed terrorist organisations in the UK and never has been.”</p>
<blockquote><p>“Every time he calls from a US Supermax prison, our family huddle together in a room, and it’s as if time stops still.”</p></blockquote>
<p>How did he respond to the US allegations and US indictment against his brother? “The US indictment from the state of Connecticut concerns allegations from 1997 – 2004 relating to an obsolete website (obsolete since 2001 in US servers and 2002 in UK/Asia servers) and a London-based publishing house concerned with conflicts in the Bosnia, Chechen independence and the Afghan Islamic Emirate government with assorted articles on Iraq sanctions, Palestine and Dagestan. Whilst claiming to be an independent news service about foreign and historical Mujahideen – the US indictment alleges “conspiracy to material support” and “aiding and abetting”.</p>
<p>The “aiding and abetting” concerns the distribution of a video in Bosnia which has already been cleared by a British anti-terrorism judge as a historical document and not terrorist material. “Unfortunately, precedent in British law doesn’t apply in US cases. The use of pseudo-experts, such as the notorious Evan Kohlmann, a terrorism expert who doesn’t even speak or read Arabic, inflates claims that it is used by US prosecutors. It means a US judge may look at the same facts differently. Talha denies all charges and simply said, put me on trial in the UK for the six years of my detention without trial or prima facie evidence.”</p>
<p>Why did Hamja believe the Statutory appeal to the High Court of England and Wales was rejected, alongside the claim or a judicial review against the DPS in 2008, and then at the appeal to the House of Lords in May 2009? “The US-UK Extradition treaty of 2003 was part of the reckless authoritarian legislation done – eroding cornerstone civil rights such as habeas corpus and the presumption of innocence – under David Blunkett and the Blair-Bush partnership. It removed the requirement of prima facie evidence from the previous extradition, which had previously saved Lotfi Raissi, the Algerian pilot falsely accused of training 9/11 hijackers. He has since been paid £2 million in compensation from the Home Office.”</p>
<p>Hamja works with the ‘Friends Extradited’ and the ‘We are Babar Ahmad’ campaign, who requested Talha was put him on trial in the UK to determine if he was guilty. Then if Talha were found guilty, Britain could put him on trial with evidence in a UK court of law. Requests are being made for a “forum” bar, which means a British judge rather than US prosecutor can decide where the best place for the trial to take place is. The campaign hopes to raise the profile of prolonged solitary confinement and extreme isolation in US prisons, something which has been condemned by the United Nations Special Rapporteur on Torture.</p>
<div id="attachment_70973"><a href="http://freetalha.org/?attachment_id=70973" rel="attachment wp-att-70973"><img src="http://www.nouse.co.uk/wp-content/article_images/body/2013/01/freetalha3-400x266-300x199.jpg" alt="Photo credit:freetalha.org" width="300" height="199" /></a>Photo credit: freetalha.org</p>
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<p>“We are asking for the same provisions that Liberty asked for and sentences served in their home country rather than in US prisons, which are scandalous and terrifying places, thousands of miles away from home, family and friends. Please bear in mind that Talha never set foot in the US.” The campaign ‘Friends Extradited’ is asking for trial-ready cases, instead of spending years in pretrial custody and solitary confinement prior to a trial.<br />
“I have found a new set of heroes in the United States such as Robert King of Angola 3 (who made a video for Talha) and we have talked on platforms together. There is also Bonnie Kerness, a pioneering Quaker prison activist, academic Jeanne Theoharis and Valarie Kaur, a film-maker and advocate based in Connecticut who just made a film on the Supermax prison that Talha and Babar are detained in, which I hope to tour next year. There is James Ridgeway, the veteran journalist who founded Solitary Watch. All of them have since written to the family or Talha in prison.”</p>
<p>26 human rights organisations within the United States, along with 150 academics have objected to the European Court Judgement on the case of Talha, Babar Ahmad and others vs. US, which examined US prison conditions of extreme isolation and life without parole. In The Nation, Jeanne Theoharis and Saskia Sassen said it gave a green light to torture through extreme isolation. All of which was not reported in the UK press. Inspired by Talha’s spirit of endurance and courage along with his ability to maintain his sense of humour, Children’s Laureate Michael Rosen read out Talha’s poem entitled, Sonnet of Grime for my Right Honourable Theresa May, in which the last line reads, ‘Theresa May, my babe, my crazy chick, all I ask: drop this extraditing shtick.’</p>
<p>Theresa May, home secretary, fought for Gary McKinnon, who won his appeal against extradition and has also been diagnosed with Asperger’s Syndrome. “Many anti-racist organisations such as JUST and Muslim organisations such as Islamic Human Rights organisation and the Muslim Council for Britain, saw this as a case of racist two-tier law or a partisan application of the law. It was the condition of Asperger’s Syndrome with an assessed suicide risk, which were also in Talha’s papers. Theresa May has a long-track record of racism, with the detention of Palestinian activist Raed Saleh and the banning of popular TV show host Zakir Naik from the UK. I think The Daily Mail was the pivotal factor – which had a British justice for British Citizens’ campaign but referred to the British Muslim suspects as ‘other unwanted guests’”.</p>
<p>Hamja believes that Theresa May made the right and compassionate decision for Gary, “I am happy for my friend Janis Sharp, Gary’s mother and campaigner, who spoke on a platform with my dad at a demonstration outside Downing Street. I am happy that her family does not have to go through the same terrifying hellish ordeal that my family are going through. After nearly two months we received a phone call and now, usually, we receive a phone call and a letter every month. Every time he calls from a US Supermax prison, our family huddle together in a room, and it’s is as if time stops still.”</p>
<p>What does a future in solitary confinement hold for Talha? “Prolonged isolation in a US prison causes long-term physical and psychological damage. 23 hours a day in a room the size of your bathroom with no human contact. So I always worry for him. It has been psychological hell for the family. This is the strongest case against extradition, the hell on the families, caused by separation, and is not something the government whitewash, the Scott Baker report, even vaguely considers. The plea-bargaining system, the damage caused by years of pretrial solitary confinement and the post-9/11 hysteria trial by media, may likely result in an unfair trial and an unjust outcome.”</p>
<p>If convicted, Talha will slip out of the agenda and into a Supermax prison in Colorado. It holds some of the world’s most notorious American terrorists and murderers. In April 2012, Mark Collins, a spokesman for the prison told the BBC, “We have only the most violent, disruptive and escape-prone inmates in the federal system”. It is nothing less than a cleaner version of hell.</p>
<p>Whilst Asperger’s Syndrome may limit those who are afflicted with this form of autism, from effectively communicating, Talha’s words persist in unfolding his torment. Talha’s fate has become tangled in this war in terror. Extradition has written him out of the script of living history. In Talha’s poem Extradition he laments, “Perhaps they’ll clean their hands of me once there. And then my country feels I’m wiped away.” Talha’s case doesn’t start until October 2013.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.nouse.co.uk/2013/01/22/extradite-me-im-british/"><strong>SOURCE: Nouse.co.uk</strong> </a></p>
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