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I don't think the Sun cares about anyone's dignity, as long as they can sell more news papers.
Forgive me if I'm wrong but I seem to remember that you were one of the people advocating all kinds of torture and degradation to be carried out on the killers of Mary Ann Lenaghan only a few days ago. Bearing in mind that Saddam Hussein has done equally as repellant things as those killers I find it odd that someone would support torture and slow death in that case but find these pictures a disgrace on the grounds of his dignity.
My position on that was that we should not descend to the level of degrading and torturing people no matter what the provocation and my position here is the same. So I disagree with the publication of the photos.
The photos will have the effect of showing those Iraqis who have still remained loyal to him that he is not super-human, but a pathetic defeated old man, who is rotting away in a 12 x 9 feet cell.
They may then realise that he will not be coming back to 'save' them, and their resiliance against the peace keeping troops may reduce
Great
Can we now have photographs of Ahmed Khalfan Ghailani, Mohammad Naeem Noor Khan and Abu Faraj al Libbi.
These and others have all "disappeared" in US custody.
Time was this sort of behaviour happened in banana republics not America.
At least the photos prove he's not "disappeared off the face of the earth" to quote the CIA on the whereabouts of one detainee.
The pictures are far less striking and certainly less humiliating than the pictures of women and children who were gassed to death in Halabja.
Only The Scum would print such pictures for titillation and as such they should be treated for their comedic value, nothing more. After all, they are hardly the result of dogged investigative journalism are they?
It's actually in breach of the Geneva Convention, that's if Saddam was actually taken prisoner under terms of war (which I'm sure it was).
I don't like Saddam, but it seems that we get angry when people break the Geneva Convention, yet The Sun are advocating breaking the Geneva Convention by publishing these pictures.
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