Global Human Rights Abuse – Your Burning Questions
By Charlie Perrins
Can you rank human rights in order of importance? Can a government ever ethically use torture? Are Tony Blair and George W. Bush war criminals?
Discussions of human rights force us to question our assumptions about democracy, citizenship, politics and law. While the questions listed above may seem straightforward, the answers from the Yoosk panel on global human rights abuse were often anything but.
The panel consisted of Craig Murray - former British ambassador to Uzbekistan and self proclaimed dissident, Dr Stephen Hopgood - political scientist and human rights expert at the world famous School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS) and Amnesty International UK – the UK arm of the global human rights awareness organisation. Although David Miliband declined to take part in the discussion, questions put to him were dealt with by other members of the panel, and their responses will be shared with readers as soon as possible.
War Criminals?
The online debate was opened by a reader asking Mr. Murray whether he believes there are “grounds for going after Tony Blair and George Bush for human rights abuses?” The panellists responded by debating whether sanctions against Bush and Blair could and should be enforced.
Craig Murray is in “no doubt” that Tony Blair and George W. Bush are “guilty of major breaches of international law”, and defines two specific war crimes: planning an aggressive war and exploiting the resources of an occupied country. Citing the Nuremberg trials and the Hague Convention, amongst many others, he lays out a compelling indictment of the two world leaders and, “on the Nuremberg precedents, their foreign ministers or secretaries of state, their top military leadership and others”.
Sanctions
Dr. Hopgood sets aside the question of legality in the case of the Iraq war, and instead explains how, paradoxically, putting politicians like Tony Blair and George bush on trial for human rights abuse could effectively destroy the international human rights movement.
For Hopgood “politics comes before the law”. By this he means that a legal framework can only exist and be effective if it is “backed by some notion of consent and enforcement.” The various international human rights agreements, treaties and official bodies constitute a legal framework, albeit one not constrained by a state.
“The international human rights regime functions as it does because states like the USA and Britain stand behind it. If you want to get to the situation where you can put the president of the United States on trial [for human rights abuses] then this whole regime is going to collapse completely.”
Murray and Hopgood were rarely in outright disagreement over the issues raised by readers, but they approached their answers to identical questions in very different ways. Not least in their thoughts on the use of torture by the intelligence services.
Torture
Craig Murray left the Foreign and Commonwealth Office after alleging that the UK government makes use of intelligence obtained through torture in Uzbekistan. Murray’s opposition to torture appears predicated on the notion that torture simply does not provide reliable intelligence. He recalls the former head of MI5, Dame Eliza Manningham-Buller, claiming in 2005 that the ricin plot was an example of UK lives being saved by torture:
“The evidence from the ricin plot came from torture in Algeria… The trouble is, that information turned out to be totally bogus. What nobody remembers about the ricin plot was that everyone was found not guilty of conspiracy. The court found that there was no ricin and there was no plot.”
Hopgood to some extent discards the efficacy of the torture as a factor in his evaluation. He also excuses individuals from the ethical dilemma. Focusing on the state’s position, he says:
“If it is democratically mandated in some way that [torture] is an allowable technique, as I would argue implicitly it is in the United States, where there isn't a massive outpouring of anti torture sentiment, then the government would be acting ethically.”
The key for Hopgood is “full and frank” disclosure by the global intelligence community of their activities. A state needs a democratic mandate in order to claim its use of torture is ethical. Societies can only mandate such activities if they are given all the information and then allowed to make their own choices. Hopgood’s position is deliberately idealised in order to emphasise the classic dilemma: Can a democracy decide to do anything that it wants, or do universal human rights exist which must “trump” democracy at some point?
Broader Horizons?
Readers appeared preoccupied with the concept of human rights as they apply to the recent history of liberal intervention by Western governments. Yooskers are of course most likely to be interested in those things that they have found to be controversial or compelling in reported news. One reader pointed out that the UK government does not intervene consistently where international human rights abuses are concerned. Murray is frank in his response to this. “There are very few direct UK interests at stake in Burma and Zimbabwe. I think that altruistic intervention is something of a myth.”
If the government is ignoring human rights abuse in a dark corner of the world the likelihood is that fewer Yooskers will ask questions on that situation. This is where organisations such as Amnesty International do great work – highlighting human rights abuse where and when the world’s media does not.