Roger is being held in Pentonville Prison in London which was built in
1842 and is in disrepair. He is charged with breaking bail conditions
over an action that saw activists throw paint on the walls of the four
major political parties, as well as conspiracy to cause criminal damage.
A Green Party member leaked to the British police a recorded Zoom
discussion Roger was having with three other members of Burning Pink, an
anti-political party organized to create citizen assemblies to replace
ruling governing bodies, as they discussed upcoming actions.
The homes of the four activists on the Zoom meeting – Roger Hallam, Blyth
Brentnall, Diana Warner, Ferhat Ulusu and Anglican priest Steven Nunn –
were raided on Aug. 25. Their electronic devises were confiscated by
police and they were arrested.
Chris Hedges: The Cost of Resistance
September 23, 2020
https://consortiumnews.com/2020/09/23/chris-hedges-the-cost-of-resistance/
You can measure the effectiveness of resistance by the fury of the
response by ruling elites.
By Chris Hedges - ScheerPost.com
Two of the rebels I admire most, Julian Assange, the WikiLeaks publisher,
and Roger Hallam, the co-founder of Extinction Rebellion, are in jail in
Britain. That should not be surprising. You can measure the effectiveness
of resistance by the fury of the response.
Julian courageously exposed the lies, deceit, war crimes and corruption
of the ruling imperial elites. Roger has helped organized the largest
acts of mass civil disobedience in British history, shutting down parts
of London for weeks, in a bid to wrest power from a ruling class that has
done nothing, and will do nothing, to halt the climate emergency and our
death march to mass extinction.
The governing elites, when truly threatened, turn the rule of law into
farce. Dissent becomes treason. They use the state mechanisms of control
– intelligence agencies, police, courts, black propaganda and a compliant
press that acts as their echo chamber, along with the jails and prisons,
not only to marginalize and isolate rebels, but to psychologically and
physically destroy them.
The list of rebels silenced or killed by ruling elites runs in a direct
line from Socrates to the Haitian resistance leader Toussaint
L’Ouverture, who led the only successful slave revolt in human history
and died in a frigid French prison cell of malnutrition and exhaustion,
to the imprisonment of the socialist Eugene V. Debs, whose health was
also broken in a federal prison.
Rebel leaders from the 1960s, including Mumia Abu Jamal, Sundiata Acoli,
Kojo Bomani Sababu, Mutulu Shakur and Leonard Peltier, remain, decades
later, in U.S. prisons. Muslim activists, including those who led the
charity The Holy Land Foundation and Syed Fahad Hashmi, were arrested,
often at the request of Israel, after the hysteria following 9/11, and
given tawdry show trials. They also remain incarcerated.
Resistance, genuine resistance, exacts a very, very high price. Those in
power drop even the pretense of justice when they face an existential
threat. Most rebels, like Ernesto “Che” Guevara, and the tens of
thousands of rebels the U.S. has had kidnapped, disappeared and brutally
tortured and killed throughout American history end up as
martyrs.
Once a rebel is caged the state uses its absolute control and array of
dark arts to break them.
Julian Assange in dated photo. (Twitter)
Julian, whose extradition hearing is underway in London, and who spent
seven years trapped as a political prisoner in the Ecuadorian embassy in
London, is taken from his cell in the high security Belmarsh Prison at
5:00 am. He is handcuffed, put in holding cells, stripped naked and
X-rayed. He is transported an hour and a half each way to court in a
police van that resembles a dog cage on wheels. He is held in a glass box
at the back of court during the proceedings, often unable to consult with
his lawyers. He has difficulty hearing the proceedings. He is routinely
denied access to the documents in his case and is openly taunted in court
by the judge.
It does not matter that Julian, being prosecuted under the 1917 Espionage
Act, is not a U.S. citizen. It does not matter that WikiLeaks, which he
founded and publishes, is not a U.S.-based publication.
The ominous message the U.S. government is sending is clear: No matter
who or where you are, if you expose the inner workings of empire you will
be hunted down, kidnapped and brought to the U.S. to be tried as a spy
and imprisoned for life. The empire intends to be unaccountable,
untouchable and unexamined.
The U.S. created in the so-called war on terror parallel legal and penal
codes to railroad dissidents and rebels into prison.
These rebels are held in prolonged solitary confinement, creating deep
psychological distress. They are prosecuted under special administrative
measures, known as SAMs, to prevent or severely restrict communication
with other prisoners, attorneys, family, the media and people outside the
jail. They are denied access to the news and other reading material. They
are barred from participating in educational and religious activities in
the prison. They are subject to 24-hour electronic monitoring and 23-hour
lockdown. They must shower and go to the bathroom on camera. They are
permitted to write one letter a week to a single member of their family,
but cannot use more than three pieces of paper. They often have no access
to fresh air and must take the one hour of recreation in a cage that
looks like a giant hamster wheel.
‘Communications Management’
The U.S. has set up a segregated facility, the Communication Management
Unit, at the federal prison in Terre Haute, Indiana. Nearly all the
inmates transferred to Terre Haute are Muslims. A second facility has
been set up at Marion, Illinois, where the inmates again are mostly
Muslim but also include a sprinkling of animal-rights and environmental
activists. Their sentences are arbitrarily lengthened by “terrorism
enhancements” under the Patriot Act.
Amnesty International has called the Marion prison facility “inhumane.”
All calls and mail – although communication customarily is off-limits to
prison officials – are monitored in these two Communication Management
Units. Communication among prisoners is required to be only in English.
The highest-level “terrorists” are housed at the Penitentiary
Administrative Maximum Facility, known as Supermax, in Florence,
Colorado, where prisoners have almost no human interaction, physical
exercise or mental stimulation. It is Guantánamo-like conditions in
colder weather.
Assange in Distress
Julian is already very fragile. His psychological and physical distress
include dramatic weight loss, severe respiratory problems, joint
problems, dental decay, chronic anxiety, intense, constant stress
resulting in an inability to relax or focus, and episodes of mental
confusion.
These symptoms indicate, as Nils Melzer, the United Nations’ special
rapporteur on torture who met and examined Julian in prison has stated,
that he is suffering from prolonged psychological torture.
If Julian is extradited to the U.S. to face 17 charges under the
Espionage Act, each carrying a potential 10 years, which appears likely,
he will continue to be psychologically and physically abused to break
him.
He will be tried in the burlesque of a kangaroo court with “secret”
evidence, familiar to Black and Muslim radicals as well as rebels such as
Jeremy Hammond, sentenced to 10 years in prison for hacking into the
computers and making public the emails of a private security firm that
works on behalf of the government, including the Department of Homeland
Security, and corporations such as Dow Chemical.
Roger is being held in Pentonville Prison in London which was built in
1842 and is in disrepair. He is charged with breaking bail conditions
over an action that saw activists throw paint on the walls of the four
major political parties, as well as conspiracy to cause criminal damage.
A Green Party member leaked to the British police a recorded Zoom
discussion Roger was having with three other members of Burning Pink, an
anti-political party organized to create citizen assemblies to replace
ruling governing bodies, as they discussed upcoming actions.
The homes of the four activists on the Zoom meeting – Roger Hallam, Blyth
Brentnall, Diana Warner, Ferhat Ulusu and Anglican priest Steven Nunn –
were raided on Aug. 25. Their electronic devises were confiscated by
police and they were arrested.
Roger is housed in a dirty, vermin-infested cell and denied books and
visitors. A vegan, he is forced to live on a diet of cold cereal and
bread. On many days there is no hot food served in the prison. Violent
altercations within the prison are commonplace. The overcrowded cells
often lack lighting and heat. He has no change of clothes and has been
unable to wash the clothes he is wearing for weeks. He stuffs bed sheets
and paper in the cracks of the door to block mice and cockroaches. The
toilet in his cell has no seat, is covered in excrement and does not
flush properly. He goes days without access to the outside. His reading
glasses are broken. He is waiting on a request for tape to fix them. The
Covid-19 pandemic is in the prison. Two of the staff have died from the
virus. Roger could be imprisoned in these conditions until February if he
is denied bail in a hearing scheduled for Tuesday.
Roger’s arrest came as Extinction Rebellion was planning the blockade of
the printing presses of News Corps Printworks, which prints the
newspapers The Times, Sun on Sunday, Sunday Times, The Daily Mail and The
London Evening Standard. The blockade took place on Sept. 4 to protest
the failure of the news outlets to accurately report on the climate and
ecological emergency. The blockade delayed distribution of the papers by
several hours.
“The days of standing up to tyranny have long faded,” Roger writes from
prison. “The life-and-death struggle against Hitler and fascism is
consigned to the history books. Today’s liberal classes believe only in
one thing: maintaining their privilege. Their one priority is power. The
number one rule is: preserve our careers, our institutions at all cost.
The historical rule number one of fighting evil is the willingness to
lose your career and to risk the closing down of your
institution.
The prospect of death and destruction is lost in a postmodernist haze.
Leadership has decayed into sitting behind a desk, following public
relations protocols (otherwise known as lying). Leading from the front,
the first to go to prison Martin Luther King-style died with the passing
of the World War II generation.”
“The game is up,” Roger continued.
“The old alliance with the liberal classes is dead. New forms of
revolutionary initiative and leadership are rising up. Members of the new
political party Burning Pink have thrown paint at the doors of the NGOs
and political parties calling for open dialogue and public debate. The
response, true to form, has been a lethal and deafening silence. We are
now in prison from where I write this article after a Green Party member
recorded a Zoom call and passed it to the police. We have not been let
out for exercise for the first five days. We have no kettle, no pillows,
no visits. But we don’t give a shit. We are doing something about
Evil.”
Chris Hedges is a Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist who was a foreign
correspondent for 15 years for The New York Times, where he served as the
Middle East bureau chief and Balkan bureau chief for the paper. He
previously worked overseas for The Dallas Morning News, The Christian
Science Monitor and NPR. He is the host of the Emmy Award-nominated RT
America show “On Contact.”
This column is from Scheerpost, for which Chris Hedges writes a regular
column twice a month. Click here to sign up for email alerts.