By Moazzam Begg
(ex-Guantanamo Prisoner)
Guantanamo Bay, Cuba
June 2004
Moazzam Begg (born 1968) is one of nine British Muslims who were held in extrajudicial detention in the Guantanamo Bay detainment camp, in Cuba, by the government of the United States of America. [1] He was released on January 25, 2005 along with Feroz Abbasi, Martin Mubanga and Richard Belmar, without charge though he received no compensation or an apology. President Bush released Moazzam Begg over the objections of the Pentagon, the CIA, and the FBI, who warned that Mr. Begg could still be a dangerous terrorist.[2]
[You can read more about Moazzam Begg here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moazzam_Begg ]
The following is a powerful poem penned by Moazzam Begg, ex-Guantanamo Bay captive, which sheds light on America's brutal and dark past. It exhibits Moazzam's utter contempt and hatred for the U.S.A., after what he was put through at Gitmo.
"Indictment U.S.A."
Incarceration upon my own
Right here in G’tmo Bay,
Brings to mind a distant home
Far, far, far away…
But temperaments begin to sour
Upon this doleful day,
Reflecting on the ‘super-power’
Known as the USA.
Examining this mystery,
And its status as today,
Begins the sordid history
Of an early USA:
PART 1
The ‘Fathers Pilgrim’ sailed the brine
Aboard the ‘Flower of May’,
And Anchored in the fateful sign
Of a covetous USA (1)
Achieving an independence,
Through hard won battle-play,
They focused on the presence
Of the native USA (2)
The receptive Indian nations
Were fought and held at bay
In exclusive ‘reservations’
At the hotel USA (3)
The irony is ‘Thanksgiving’
As a national holiday!
That not a native living
Observes in the USA (4)
The nation chants, “…home of the brave”,
But remind them, if one may,
It really was home of the slave
To the darker USA
It caused a brutal civil war,
Though some would otherwise say;
A vibrant, living racist core
Still breeds in the USA
Lynchings, hangings, burning crosses -
Symbols of the KKK,
Identify the appalling losses
Of the African USA
An impassioned vocal adversary
Of a nation gone astray,
Did “By any means necessary…”
Chastise the USA (5)
Another said, “I have a dream…” (6)
But they soon blew him away;
And hopes of a racially utopian scene
In the ghettos of the USA
Freedom was stolen, along with title,
From Mohammad Ali (Clay);
Rejecting war he made a revival
That stunned the USA
PART 2
Through a relatively short existence
The chronicles betray
An impertinent persistence
Of a meddlesome USA:
The quest for mass destructive-arms
Recalls ‘Enola Gay’; (7)
Her genocidal atomic charms
Were Made in the USA
Blameless Japanese Americans
(Referred to as ‘Nisei’),
Were thrown into internments
By a paranoid USA (8)
The Korean War evinced no gain,
Except a mighty fray,
And arousal of a new disdain
For an intrusive USA (9)
Insurgent Cuban fighters
At the ‘Pigs’ entitled Bay,
Were routed, since inciters
Were a prudent USA (10)
‘Napalm’, ‘My Lai’ (11) – Vietnam
Speak messages that convey
The massacres by Uncle Sam
In the name of the USA
An abortive hostage rescue attempt, (12)
Becoming of the Green Berét,
The Iranians regarded with contempt
And derision of the USA
Over ten score on an airbus tour
Killed by a missile ‘stray’,
Were targets sure for the Naval Corps
And a hit for the USA! (13)
Grenada created many fears, (14)
Within their hearts’ inlay:
With bows and arrows (and some spears)
That scared the USA!
In Somalia, with Black Hawk aid,
They augmented decay
When thousands died as bullets sprayed
By a charitable USA (15)
Attacks on a Sudanese hospital (16)
Earned them a scathing flay,
As another destitute capital
Fell victim to the USA
In a Persian War they chose to ignore
Where millions in coffins lay,
The dictator with a chemical store
Was funded by the USA (17)
Kuwait was invaded – like Palestine –
But freed without delay;
For abundant crude-oil to refine
As fuel for the USA
Rounds of depleted uranium
Did little to allay
Ill-effects on the cranium
Of the soldier USA
The debacle staged in Iraq
Is a protracted replay
Of a tendency to overact
By the players: USA
Naked prisoners on parade
In pyramid-like array,
Served the purpose to degrade
A shameless USA (18)
As bombs fell on Afghanistan
The innocent had to pay
The price – in this impoverished land –
For the nemesis USA:
The man was sought in a mountain resort,
Like a needle in a stack of hay;
But if he’s caught is there much thought
Of a peaceful USA?
Re-imposing their idea:
“By force, we’ll have our way…”
Iran is placed, just like Korea,
In the sights of the USA
But wavering allies – one by one –
Resign without essay,
Provoking the opinion
To desert the USA
Redolent with a Yankee stench,
The world is caused dismay;
Many more – like the dainty French
Despise the USA
Part 3
Many a distant mile they’ve flown
To injuries ‘repay’,
Neglecting to look at their own
Deep in the USA:
Rioting youths and police brutality
In South Central L.A.,
Are naked truths to a harsh reality
On the streets of the USA
Juvenile shootings in Columbine (19)
Quite suitably portray
A zone of combat and frontline
In the heart of the USA
Firearms and ballistics,
As promoted by the NRA (20)
Embody the characteristics
Of a gun-toting USA
Gangsters, snipers and drug-dealers
Buy weapons on display;
Perverts, rapists and serial killers
All thrive in the USA
A peerless figure for homicide –
On a global-scale survey –
Is clearly a source of national pride
For the criminal USA (21)
Intelligence oxymoron,
In the ‘Bureau’ and the CIA
Revealed impotence, hence ‘the War on
Terror’ by the USA
The globe is scoured for terrorists,
To halt and catch and slay,
But on closer analysis
They flourish in the USA:
Militias training to produce
A Timothy McVeigh, (22)
Continue this day to induce
An explosive USA
Doomsday cults and ‘Una-bombers’ (23)
Form much of the outlay,
For those entrusted with the honours
To preside the USA
The inane Texan, George .W. Bush,
Has begun to lose his sway,
Requiring but a gentle push
Off the map of the USA
An attitude stern with national concern
Is depicted to outweigh
The perpetual yearn for investment return
By the leader of the USA
“Regional stability” and “foreign aid”
Are an overstated cliché;
But exploitation of the oil trade
Are his goals for the USA
A dark cloud rising overhead
Evicts the blue to grey;
Rearing forth its gruesome head:
The repulsive USA
Throughout the world the masses cry,
“Depart” and “Go away”;
The banners scream emotions high,
“DOWN WITH THE USA!”
Epilogue
And on a rented Cuban patch
The abductees all pray
For justice, and a safe detach
From the clutches of the USA
(They suffered an atrocity
And want us all to pay,
But I want no proximity
To such a USA)
Never, till captivity,
Could I such words relay;
I regard it an epitome
Of the current USA
Vulgarity is not my style,
But still I have to say,
This occasion causes me revile
So f***k the USA
Notes:
1. In reference to the Pilgrim Fathers that sailed across from Europe to America on the Mayflower.
2. The politically correct term for the indigenous aboriginal people of America is now ‘Native American’, in contrast to Red ‘Indian’. The latter description was used erroneously by the first Europeans, thinking they had in fact found a Western passage to India. The term remains in wide use to this day.
3. Initially welcomed by the Natives the descendents of the Pilgrim Fathers began a campaign to seize territory. The natives made momentous stands with names like: Sitting Bull, Crazy Horse, Geronimo; the resistance by the tribes of Sioux, Apache, Cheyenne, Comanche, Blackfoot; the battles of Little Big Horn, Wounded Knee and the Trail of Tears (to the Black Hills of South Dakota) resounding throughout their ill-fated history. Eventually they were relegated to reside in ‘reservations’ - lands exclusively set aside for them. These were mostly barren wastelands or mountainous regions that had been rejected by US government.
4. When Francis Scott Key penned the national anthem from inside a British prison on the East Coast, he must have envisaged a country free from repression – unless you were black!
5. Referring to El Hajj Malik al-Shabazz - popularly known as Malcom X; assassinated in the 1960s
6. From the famous speech of Dr.Maritn Luther King; assassinated in the 1960s
7. The name of the American aeroplane that dropped the atomic bombs on the islands of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, educing the Japanese surrender in 1945.
8. In reference to the notorious (and constitutionally declared illegal) internment camps into which hundreds of thousands of Japanese men, women and children were thrown, after the Japanese air raids on Pearl Harbour, Hawaii, 1942.
9. With no clear winner after years of war between the Western backed ROK and the Chinese backed North, during the 195o's, a line was drawn at the 38th parallel to demarcate the separation of the two Koreas.
10. In 1960's at the last hour, insurgents trained and supported by the USA to mount a counter revolution against Fidel Castro’s forces, were deserted by JFK’s USA. The decision was a prudent one, considering the terror faced soon after with the Cuban Missile Crises.
11. In reference to the notorious massacre of villagers – mostly old men, women and children – perpetrated by US Forces during the height of the Vietnam War.
12. Refers to the botched rescue attempt staged by US Special forces, when attack helicopters fell foul of sand storms during an attempt to rescue American hostages, after they were seized at the US embassy in Tehran by Iranian students, during the revolution of 1979.
13. A civilian Iranian airbus, en route from Dubai to Iran, was shot down in 1980's? over the Persian Gulf by the US Navy as a “mistake”. The death toll was over 200.
14. When the USA invaded Grenada in 198o's, they were ridiculed by much of the world community for sending in a hi-tech, mechanised force against badly armed opponents – many of whom were armed with nothing more advanced than bows and arrows!
15. The USA was putatively part of a United Nations mission to alleviate the suffering of the Somali people. Their mission – Operation Restore Hope – soon mutated into all out war, particularly on the ‘Day of the Rangers’, as the Somalis call it: the engagement dramatised in the film “Black Hawk Down” - in which 19 US soldiers and over 1000 Somalis were killed in one day.
16. The al-Shifa Medical centre and pharmaceutical manufacturers was found to have no tangible link to al-Qaida’s attacks against US embassies in Nairobi and Dar-us-Salaam. That small fact did not prevent the USA from striking it with Tomahawk Cruise missiles.
17. An obvious reference to Saddam Hussain, when he had the full blessing of the USA in his internecine war with Islamic Revolutionary Iran, over the possession of the Shatt al-‘Arab river. At that time Iran was regarded as the international pariah by the USA, and so Saddam’s use of chemical weapons was conveniently overlooked.
18. In reference to the Abu Ghraib atrocities perpetrated by US Forces in Iraq.
19. The schoolboy killings in Columbine College left ?? dead, including the perpetrators.
20. The National Rifle Association (headed by the actor Charlton Heston) is one of the most powerful lobbies in US politics. It campaigns tirelessly for the American citizen’s “right to bear arms”.
21. Statistics show that the USA is plagued with some of the highest crime rates in the world – homicide being top of the list, sardonically, and particularly in Washington D.C.
22. The man charged and convicted and executed for the Oklahoma City bombing in 1996. He is known to have been an active and trained member of the Michigan State Militia.
23. Cult leader David Koresh (who claimed to be Christ) and his followers were killed in a shoot out, following a protracted siege at Wako in Texas,1993; and the ‘Unabomber’ who bombed universities and medical research centres that experimented on live on animals.
The following is an interview that was conducted by PBS' "NOW" program, with Muazzam Begg:
PBS.Now.-.The.Prisoner.(Guantanamo.Detainees)(7-28-06)
Courtesy Of: YouTube
Added : November 24, 2006
From: RythemDrivin
RunTime: 26:48
In his first primetime interview on American television, a former detainee in U.S. prisons abroad tells NOW a disturbing story alleging kidnap, torture and murder.
British citizen Moazzam Begg, who spent three years in captivity at American detention facilities in Afghanistan and Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, gives us a rarely seen intimate view of a detainee's life inside the prisons of the 'war on terror.
'Begg describes a beating he witnessed while being held at a U.S. prison in Bagram, Afghanistan. "I saw his body being dragged in front of me, battered and bruised, limp," Begg said.
Taken suddenly from his home one night in Pakistan, Begg was imprisoned without any charges ever pressed against him. He spent almost 20 months in solitary confinement at Guantanamo, and he said there was no doubt that the Geneva Conventions did not apply there or at any of the other U.S. foreign prisons where he was held.
NOW's David Brancaccio traveled to Begg's hometown in Birmingham, England to find out how a Muslim man from an educated, middle-class family ended up in an a street gang and grew entangled in militant Islamic politics.
The 37-year-old husband and father of four was accused by the U.S. of having "strong, long-term ties to terrorism," an allegation he firmly denies. Although he was set free from Guantanamo last year having never been found guilty of any crime, the U.S. government is adamant that his detention was justified.
As for the remaining 450 Guantanamo prisoners, Congress is working to hack out new laws for trying terrorism suspects after the Supreme Court ruled last month that international law does apply to "enemy combatants.
"Begg recalls a conversation about Guantanamo prisoners that he had with a security guard at the detention camp. "One of the guards, what they said to me is that, 'Hell, if I wasn't a terrorist when I came here I would be by the time I was released because of what had been done to me.' ...
Monday, January 29, 2007
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