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Jake's terror film 'rings true'
19/10/2007 13:29 - (SA)
London - Hollywood's latest take on
kidnapping and torture in the war on terror is surprisingly bold
and realistic but won't change people's views overnight, a
prominent lawyer for Guantanamo Bay prisoners says.
Rendition, starring Jake Gyllenhaal and Reese Witherspoon,
tells the story of an Egyptian man abducted by the United States
as he steps off a flight in Washington.
He is sent to a North African state investigating a suicide
bombing, and systematically tortured under the eyes of a CIA
agent, played by Gyllenhaal.
"I thought it was surprisingly courageous for Hollywood and
it will be seen by millions. Now, will we persuade the world in
a moment? No, of course," lawyer Clive Stafford Smith said at a
preview showing in London ahead of this week's release.
However, he said the media had a vital part to play in
shaping public opinion on the issue, and obtaining justice for
more than 300 prisoners still held as terrorist suspects at the
U.S. prison camp in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
"Not one single person has been ordered free by the court of
law. The court of public opinion, on the other hand, has been
quite successful," said the British lawyer, whose charity
Reprieve represents more than 40 Guantanamo inmates.
Fact and fiction
"We've freed more than half of the prisoners in Guantanamo
Bay ... We (lawyers) legally expose the truth. You (journalists)
follow up on it. That's really important."
Although Rendition is a fictional tale, Stafford Smith
said the scenario and many of the details were authentic.
He knew, for example, of two Syrian men whose names had been
deleted from passenger records in the same way that Anwar
El-Ibrahimi, the central character in the film, is erased from
the flight list of the plane that brought him to Washington.
Stafford Smith said he had also seen at first hand how even
close family members can begin to wonder if a detainee really
has militant links - a form of doubt that briefly troubles
Ibrahimi's American wife, played by Witherspoon, in the movie.
The story has strong echoes of real cases such as that of
Maher Arar, a Syrian-born Canadian who was arrested during a
stopover in New York in 2002, deported to Syria and tortured.
The United States acknowledges it has conducted renditions
- secret international transfers of terrorist suspects - and
held detainees at secret prisons, but it denies torturing them
or handing them to countries that torture.
'Rest of his life in therapy'
It says intelligence gained from interrogating such
prisoners has helped save many lives by thwarting international
terrorist plots - a point made in the movie by a senior CIA
official played by Meryl Streep.
The film strives for balance by showing the militant
Islamist threat as real, and posing the question whether one
person's rights can take precedence over the security of
thousands.
Stafford Smith said the reality for a victim of rendition is
bleak: "He'll spend the rest of his life in therapy, and he'll
have nightmares every night for the rest of his life."
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