The star witness in the
trial of US troops for prisoner abuse in Iraq and Afghanistan has
mysteriously disappeared. Omar al-Farouq would
have been the first detainee to testify against an American soldier.
The US regime previously claimed that Omar al-Farouq was a "top
al-Qaeda operative" and "one of Osama bin Laden's top lieutenants",
but now they claim that he was somehow able to escape. The only
evidence of his escape is an anonymous "leak" to the mass media, as
usual from an "unnamed" US official.
Three other witnesses are said to have "escaped" at the same time, so
the only four people ever to succeed in an "escape" from a
Guantanamo-bay-style maximum secutity US military prison all happen to
be witnesses who wanted to testify against the US military.
There is sufficient anecdotal evidence here to justify asking the
question: is the US military willing to eliminate people who threaten
their position in occupied countries? Yet there is no hint of this
obvious question in the western media. As previous examples
demonstrate, the mass media would not be so restrained if the same
incident happened in an enemy state.
SOURCE
Washington Post, "Pentagon: Top al-Qaida Operative Escaped", 1 November
2005.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/11/01/AR2005110101423.html
FORT BLISS, Texas -- A man once considered a
top al-Qaida operative escaped from a U.S.-run detention facility in
Afghanistan and cannot testify against the soldier who allegedly
mistreated him, a defense lawyer involved in a prison abuse case said
Tuesday.
Omar al-Farouq was one of Osama bin Laden's top lieutenants in
Southeast Asia until Indonesian authorities captured him in the summer
of 2002 and turned him over to the United States.
A Pentagon official in Washington confirmed Tuesday evening that
al-Farouq escaped from a U.S. detention facility in Bagram,
Afghanistan, on July 10. The official spoke on condition of anonymity
because of the sensitivity of the information.
An Army lawyer for Sgt. Alan J. Driver, a reservist accused of abusing
Bagram detainees, asked Tuesday where al-Farouq was and what
the Army had done to find him in time for Driver's court proceedings.
Capt. John B. Parker, a prosecutor, said
al-Farouq and three others escaped from the Bagram detention center and
have not been found. "If we find him ... we will make him available,"
Parker said [with a smirk on his face].