From Worldwide Faith News <wfn@igc.org>
Date Wed, 27 Sep 2006 22:19:12 -0700
NCC commends video on secret detention and torture
New York City, September 27, 2006--"These stories are hard to watch," says the Rev. Bob Edgar, general secretary of the National Council of Churches USA. He is describing a video, "Outlawed: Extraordinary Rendition, Torture and Disappearances in the 'War on Terror'". It documents the stories of two men who were secretly detained, tortured and flown between countries for months without access to lawyers or representatives of their governments.
"What kind of a nation are we," asks Edgar in the introduction to the video produced by Witness, a Brooklyn-based group using videos to help human rights organizations. "Do we want to lift our nation," asks Edgar, "to higher standards and a moral commitment to civil rights, human rights and people's rights?"
The video uses personal stories of Khaled El-Masri and Binyam Mohamed, two men who suffered in secret detention, along with interviews of family members plus news video of U.S. government officials. The video was produced in association with 14 organizations, including the NCC, Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch. Edgar recommends the video for congregational discussion groups to address this question of torture as part of our national security policy. The NCC's Justice and Advocacy Commission says the video can stimulate conversations at an adult forum but is not suitable for children due to its description of torture.
The General Assembly of the NCC and Church World Service, its partner humanitarian ministry, issued a statement at its 2005 meeting in Maryland denouncing torture. "Torture, regardless of circumstance, humiliates and debases torturer and tortured alike," the statement said in part (complete text below).
The release of the video comes at the same time a Canadian citizen, Mahar Arar, brought legal action against the United States and Canada for his secret detention and alleged torture in a Syrian jail.
The 27-minute documentary is produced by Witness
, a video production company that helps non-profit groups tell their stories in pictures. Witness was started by musician Peter Gabriel and the Reebok Human Rights Foundation. It has made several documentaries in collaboration with human rights organizations around the world.
The National Council of Churches is America's leading ecumenical voice of 35 member Protestant, Orthodox, Anglican, historic African American and peace churches comprising 45 million faithful in 100,000 congregations.
more...
http://www.wfn.org/2006/09/msg00347.html