The US announced today that the Abu Ghraib prison - the site of human rights violations inflected against Iraqis by American soldiers - would be closed. Before the US invasion the prison housed Iraqi citizens imprisoned and tortured by their government.
What now?
The Rev. Bob Edgar, general secretary of the National Council of Churches USA, said in a statement that the next step should be the closure of the Guantanamo Bay retention camp in Cuba:
Abu Ghraib has become a dark icon of history, forever etched in our minds as a place of horror, torture and death. It is good that it is closing and we pray that it will soon be turned to rubble and dust. Unfortunately, the memories will not go away.
In recent years, both Iraqis and Americans abused and tortured prisoners at Abu Ghraib, both sides convinced that their heinous acts were necessary to preserve a regime or protect other lives. With the closing of Abu Ghraib, it's time to renew our resolve as a nation that torture and abuse must never be weapons for our defense. To declare that torture may be necessary to protect safety and freedom is illogical, immoral and profane. It's as chilling as an analogy from another era: that in order to save a village, it is necessary to destroy it. Our liberties will be left defenseless if we abandon our commitment to just and humane treatment, in war or in peace.
Recently the National Council of Churches also called for the closing of another dark icon, the Guantanamo Bay retention camp in Cuba. We endorsed a United Nations Report recommending that the U.S. refrain from "any practice amounting to torture" and to bring the detainees to trial or release them without further delay. This is the urgent call of civilized nations around the globe. This is the urgent call of Americans who love their country and all that it stands for.
The National Council of Churches also renews its request -- issued three times since 2003 -- that a small interfaith delegation be allowed to visit Guantanamo to assure the world -- and ourselves -- that our country is committed to the rule of law and humane justice.
The National Council of Churches has proclaimed a forthright policy on human rights since 1963, and as the U.S. government prepares to decide what it will do after the closing of Abu Ghraib, it seems important to quote it again:
"Christians believe that man is made in the image of God, that every person is of intrinsic worth before God, and that every individual has a right to the fullest possible opportunity for the development of life abundant and eternal. Denials of rights and freedoms that inhere in man's worth before God are not simply a crime against humanity; they are a sin against God."
Related Link: The Road to Abu Ghraib from Human Rights Watch