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California Becomes First State to Condemn Use of Torture in “War on Terror”

Posted on August 15, 2008
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Sacramento, CA – The California Legislature today adopted a resolution
aimed at preventing California health professionals from engaging in
coercive interrogations of detainees at Guantánamo and other U.S. military
prisons.

Senate Joint Resolution 19 instructs the state’s licensing boards to inform
California doctors, psychologists and other health professionals of their
obligations under national and international law relating to torture. The
boards will warn the licensees that they may one day be subject to
prosecution if they participate in interrogations that do not conform to
international standards of treatment of prisoners.

“The resolution calls attention to the intolerable dilemma that torture
presents when those who are supposed to be the healers in our society are
involved in the abuse of prisoners,” said Eisha Mason, associate regional
director for the American Friends Service Committee, one of the
organizations that sponsored the resolution.

State Senator Mark Ridley-Thomas (D-Los Angeles) introduced the resolution
in response to evidence that – despite the medical oath to “first, do no
harm” – some physicians, psychologists and other health personnel have been
complicit in abusive interrogations of detainees by the military and the
Central Intelligence Agency.

“As professional licensure and codes of ethics are regulated by states,
California has the obligation to notify members of laws concerning torture
that may result in their prosecution,” said Ridley-Thomas.

SJR 19 aims to protect the integrity of the health professions and
individual practitioners by informing them of their legal and ethical
obligations, and giving them a legal reference to remove themselves from
abusive situations should they have to contravene the orders of a military
superior.

A survey of medical students conducted by the Harvard Medical School,
published in the October, 2007 issue of the International Journal of Health
Services, found that one-third of the respondents did not know that under
the Geneva Conventions, they should refrain from participating in coercive
interrogations.

“This is an important advance, not just in the U.S., but internationally as
well,” said Dr. Steven H. Miles, professor of medicine and bioethics at the
University of Minnesota. “More doctors abet torture than treat its victims,
and it is time for them to be called to the mission of medicine-not to
practice torture-and to be reminded that they will be held accountable to
international law.”

“No government has the authority to legalize torture,” Miles added.

The resolution further requests that the Department of Defense and the CIA
remove California-licensed health professionals from participating in
coercive interrogations.

“This has been an effort for almost three years,” said Dr. Jose Quiroga,
himself a torture survivor and now medical director of Program for Torture
Victims, a sponsor of the resolution. “The California Legislature is
sending a message to the Federal Government that they are wrong, and I hope
that other state legislatures will begin to do this.”

The passage of SJR 19 makes California the first state in the nation to
officially condemn the use of torture since the beginning of the “War on
Terror.” A measure currently under consideration by the New York State
Legislature, which would prohibit the state’s health professionals from
participating in the torture or improper treatment of detainees, is
expected to pass later this year.

“California’s adoption of the resolution sends a clear message that we are
going to live by the principles that this country is founded on,” said
Martha Dina Argüello, executive director of Physicians for Social
Responsibility – Los Angeles, another of the resolution’s sponsoring
organizations. “We will not let fear erode our civil liberties and we will
hold health professionals accountable to ethical and legal standards.”

The California State Senate gave final approval to the resolution in a
21-13 roll call vote. On Tuesday, it passed the Assembly 45-31.

“Torture is much more than a political issue,” Ridley-Thomas said. “It is
an ethical, moral and spiritual issue that has not only become a shame, but
it is an evil in our midst.”

The Los Angeles offices of the American Friends Service Committee,
Physicians for Social Responsibility, and Program for Torture Victims
coordinated the campaign in favor of SJR 19. The resolution had the
additional support, through petitions and testimony, of numerous faith,
human rights and medical groups including the California Medical
Association.

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