BBC - Heated Debate Over Use Of Torture
[ Middle East News Service comment: This is one time Israelis must be thanking the one above that the BBC does not follow normal Israeli procedure. When
“ordinary” question like support for daylight saving or for the war in Lebanon pollsters often poll the Israeli-Jewish
population only. [It’s a different story for election polling as the pollster cannot ignore Arab opinion then.] The BBC
polled all Israelis. According to the Hebrew Ynet (which apparently obtained more detail results than appear here) 53
per cent of the Jewish-Israeli population support torture and only 38 opposed it a different proportion than in the rest
of the world. The Muslim-Israeli population (don’t Christian Arabs count?) were overwhelmingly opposed to torture – Sol
Salbe.]
Heated Debate Over Use Of Torture
By Jonathan Marcus
BBC diplomatic correspondent
Story from BBC NEWS:
Can the so-called "ticking bomb" defence - the argument that using some degree of torture may save lives - ever be a
justification for mistreating suspects?
The findings of the opinion poll for the BBC World Service indicate that 59% of the world's citizens say "no": they are
unwilling to compromise on the protection of human rights.
A sizeable majority of people around the world are opposed to torture even if its purpose is to elicit information that
could save innocent lives from terrorist attack.
Nonetheless, almost as striking, is that almost one-third of those questioned - 29% - think that governments should be
allowed to use some degree of torture in certain cases.
Overall, more than 27,000 people were questioned in 25 countries.
Differing attitudes
Support for using torture is generally greatest in those countries who see themselves as actively engaged in a struggle
against political violence.
43% of those questioned in Israel; 42% in Iraq; 36% of Americans; and 32% in India believe that some degree of torture
should be allowed if it provides information that saves innocent lives.
In China too there is significant support for torture - 37% for, 49% against.
In Britain, by contrast, an overwhelming 72% opposes torture in any circumstances - a reflection of the strong antipathy
towards such practices in Western Europe.
The Israeli figure is interesting since it conceals a stark difference in attitude between the country's Jewish majority
and its minority of Arab citizens.
This in turn is a reflection of their obvious differences in attitude towards the prevailing security climate.
What is torture?
Of course, as so often in the debate on torture, there are clear definitional problems.
This opinion poll makes no effort to define the term.
How far can interrogation go before an investigator becomes a torturer? Where does pressure and coercion stop and
torture begin?
It's a question that has been very much at the centre of the debate in the United States, as the country pursues what
the Bush administration describes as a "global war on terror".
The controversy over rendition - the secret movement of suspects from one country to another, possibly to locations or
jurisdictions where torture is practiced - has caused tensions between the United States and some of its key European
allies.
Rearguard action
This is much more than a debate between idealists and pragmatists. It is a matter of practical day-to-day politics.
The man who could be the leading Republican contender for the White House in 2008, Senator John McCain, has led a strong
rear-guard action against the Bush Administration to outlaw torture once and for all.
His efforts were prompted by the abuses against Iraqi prisoners at the Abu Ghraib facility and reports from other
detention centres in both Iraq and Afghanistan.
This resulted in new legislation intended to ban torture and other forms of cruel or degrading treatment.
What was actually passed, though, is something of a compromise between the administration and its critics - a measure
that human rights groups and lawyers say still leaves open the possibility of mistreatment.
As important as defining and outlawing specific practices, they say, is the need to ensure that there is legal oversight
of the authorities' actions.
This is an area where there are no easy answers.
For many - a large majority, if this opinion poll's indications are correct - torture per se is abhorrent. There are
simply no circumstances in which it can be justified.
But for a smaller, though significant section of the global population - more in some countries than others - some form
of torture has a place, albeit in certain specific circumstances.
It's back to that ticking bomb again and the essential question: just how far should interrogators be allowed to go?
Published: 2006/10/19 06:16:22 GMT
© BBC MMVI
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[ The independent Middle East News Service concentrates on providing alternative information chiefly from Israeli
sources. It is sponsored by the Australian Jewish Democratic Society. The views expressed here are not necessarily those
of the AJDS. These are expressed in its own statements]