Petition
We call on Alberto Gonzales, nominee for chief law enforcement
officer of the United States, members of the U.S. Senate,
and other responsible government officials, to sign the Declaration
Against Torture, unequivocally renouncing all forms of torture
and abuse as instruments of U.S. policy.
> Sign the petition at MoveOn.org.
Declaration Against Torture
Whereas torture and cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment:
- Are contrary to the fundamental moral values on which
the United States was founded;
- Violate United States and international law;
- Increase the risk to U.S. citizens serving abroad, and
as Secretary of State Colin Powell warned “undermine
the protections of the law of war for our troops;"
- Weaken national security by inciting anti-American hatred,
fanning the flames of terrorist recruitment, and providing
comfort to enemies of the United States;
- Compromise the global fight against terrorism, by making
foreign governments more reluctant to turn over suspected
terrorists to the U.S.;
- Are “useless as interrogation techniques,”
according to the U.S. Army Field Manual.
We therefore unequivocally declare that the U.S. must:
- Respect and enforce, across all agencies, and among all
employees and contract agents of the U.S. government, all
obligations under the laws of war and duly ratified treaties
that prohibit cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment;
- State directly and forthrightly that torture and cruel,
inhuman and degrading treatment are always unacceptable
and that anyone who engages in such behavior or knowingly
condone it will be punished;
- Apply to all detainees of the United States the legal
protections against torture contained in the 1949 Geneva
Conventions, as incorporated in the U.S. Law of Land Warfare,
banning "any ... form of coercion" or "unpleasant
or disadvantageous treatment" to get information from
prisoners of war; and in the international Convention Against
Torture (1984), to which the U.S. is party, prohibiting
"any act by which severe pain or suffering, whether
physical or mental, is intentionally inflicted on a person
for such purposes as obtaining … information;”
- Repudiate all claims of presidential power that allow
for the use of torture, or for imprisonment without due
process;
- Halt the practice of “extraordinary rendition,”
by which some detainees and prisoners are transferred to
nations that employ torture.
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