I have just returned from five days in Egypt. To me, visiting foreign
countries is so enlightening as an
American who grew up as parochial and nationalistic as the
next. However, since my son was killed in Iraq,
I have had a crash course in foreign “relations” and cultures
that came with too steep a price.
Ironically, I was in Egypt because 40 members of the Muslim Brotherhood
are being tried in military tribunals. Trying civilians in
a military tribunal is against every law one can name (except
in the US where we have the Military
Commissions Act that contradicts international law and our
own Constitution). While I was in Egypt to
stand in solidarity with the families of the accused, I heard
on the BBC about six men being tried at Guantanamo
for the crime against humanity that occurred here on 9-11.
I turned on the TV in my motel room just
as a military officer was reading the charges against the
six detainees and for a
brief moment my heart skipped a beat with joy. I mistakenly
believed that the officer was reading charges against BushCo: “killing
civilians; destroying civilian property and committing acts
of terrorism.” My happiness that someone, anyone in our nation,
was taking seriously his oath to “protect and defend our Constitution
from all enemies foreign and domestic” was short-lived though,
as the pictures of the six accused flashed on the screen.
Although the case against Khalid Sheikh
Mohammed, et al and the 40 members of the Muslim Brotherhood
could not be more
different, there are also some similarities. We all know that
Khalid Sheikh Mohammed is accused of being the “mastermind
of 9-11″(hey, wasn’t that Osama bin Laden before it was
Saddam Hussein?); however, very few Americans know about the
case of the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt.
Of course, when some people hear the term “Muslim Brotherhood,” they
are automatically going to be translating that into “terrorist.” These
are the same people who get their “news” from Fox and believe
that almost 5 million “terrorists” have been killed wounded
or displaced in Iraq. These people could
not be more wrong about the people of Iraq or the Muslim Brotherhood (MB). According
to a scholarly article in Foreign Affairs (March/April 2007),
the MB “reject global Jihad while embracing elections and other
features of democracy.” The MB is a moderate Islamist group
that is the largest and most influential in the world. The
MB promotes change through the ballot box, non-violent protest
and charity. As a woman, I may not like that the men (always
nicely garbed in Western suits) wipe their hands off on their
coats after they shake my hand, but they are in no way terrorists
and are often targeted by radical Islamist groups that do not
agree with the MB’s moderate positions.
It seems that the “crime” that the MB
has committed in Egypt is winning too many seats in Parliament
(as Independents as the MB is an outlawed organization in Egypt) and in coalition could
have been an effective opposition voice to Egyptian President
Hosni Mubarak, who has been a puppet of American Imperialists
since 1981. I heard many citizens in his country from cab drivers
to tour guides derisively (and quietly) refer to Mubarak as “President
for Life.” Anyway, in an early morning raid over one year ago,
40 members of the MB were rounded up in tactics that reminded
me of stories that my Iraqi friends have recounted: yelling
soldiers bursting into their homes wearing riot gear and brandishing
terrifying weapons, frightening women and children and hauling
off the breadwinner to be swallowed by the depths of a prison
in moves calculated to instill terror and suppress dissent.
After four civilian courts exonerated
the accused, Mubarak had the prisoners transferred to a military
prison and given
a kangaroo court trial. The families are expecting a pre-determined
guilty verdict that could carry strict sentences. And of course,
George Bush, who is a paragon of virtue and respects “human
rights and human dignity,” (BBC interview, Feb 15th) has harshly
condemned Mubarak, and has threatened to withhold some American
largesse (Egypt is
second only to Israel in US aid) due to the gross violations of international
law and human rights, right? Well, not exactly. While Amnesty
International and Human Rights Watch, among others, have condemned
the Egyptian government for this travesty, BushCo has been
oddly silent.
Of course, although George can say that
he has the “moral
high ground,” (BBC, again), the US is one of the international
leaders in detaining people without due process and has committed
water torture and other inhumane practices in the Middle East
and in our own backyard in Guantanamo.
While I was in Guantanamo, Cuba and Cairo, Egypt advocating
for human rights, I dared not make any judgment of an individual
detainee’s guilt or innocence. Although the MB 40 have been
acquitted four times, I cannot presume to judge the “evidence” that
I haven’t seen, anyway. And although the confessions of the
six that will be on trial for 9-11 were garnered through torture,
I of course, cannot judge their guilt or innocence, because
I have not seen (nor will see) the evidence against them. This
is the inherent problem of military tribunals: they are neither
transparent nor fair and there is almost always a foregone
verdict. This secrecy is not fair to the victims either, who
deserve to know the “truth, the whole truth, and nothing but
the truth,” and rarely receive anything resembling “the truth.”
How do these military tribunals in Egypt and Guantanamo affect
us here in the US?
Americans always receive fair and equal treatment under the
law, right? Wrong! Madam Justice’s fabled scales are heavily
weighted to benefit the wealthy or the established ruling class.
Ask any person of color or poor citizen here how the American
justice system works for them. There is no place for secrecy
or suppression of dissent in any free, open or democratic society.
In allowing these military tribunals to continue, the very
cornerstone of human rights is being shattered.
One does not have to be clever or have a particularly vivid
imagination to fear an even harsher police state in America where any of us can be rounded up, tortured,
and tried for opposing the government. Detention
centers are already being built.
Besides, for argument’s sake, even if these military tribunals
have absolutely no implication here in America, humans are
being profoundly hurt by the policies of our allied governments
that are dancing the “Totalitarian Two-step” and as MLK, Jr.
wrote from the Birmingham Jail:
Injustice anywhere is
a threat to justice everywhere.
BC Guest Commentator, Cindy Sheehan is the mother of Spc.
Casey Austin Sheehan who was KIA in Iraq on 04/04/04. She is a co-founder and President
of Gold
Star Families for Peace and the author of two books: Not One More Mother’s Child and Dear President Bush. Click
here to
contact Ms. Sheehan.