The Sun (Malaysia)

No more torture, says France

- BY ERIC S. MARGOLIS

“THIS is La Main Rouge,” said the gruff voice on our home telephone in Geneva, Switzerlan­d. “Stop your activities on behalf of the FLN or we will kill you.” The mysterious caller hung up.

I was petrified. La Main Rouge was killing supporters of free Algeria across Europe.

This was 1959 where I was studying at the Internatio­nal School of Geneva. The war to liberate Algeria from 130 years of French colonial rule was at its bloodiest and most intense.

As an idealistic student, I was outraged by the brutality of this struggle in which up to 1.5 million Algerians were killed by the French and by fellow Algerians. I organised demonstrat­ions calling for free Algeria, penned articles and carried messages for the Algerian undergroun­d (Front de Liberation National, or FLN)’s branch in Paris.

The death threat was the first of many I would receive over my life, along with much other heavy intimidati­on and offers of bribes to alter my journalist­ic positions. But the bloody Algerian War of Independen­ce, that ran from 19541962, still holds particular resonance for me even though I’ve covered 14 wars since then.

The horrors of Algeria’s massacres and torture have stayed with me all these years.

La Main Rouge (Red Hand), we later learned, was a false flag operation mounted by French intelligen­ce to kill or frighten off supporters of the Algerian cause, notably pro-Algerian leftwing intellectu­als and arms suppliers.

That’s why I was elated to see France’s new president, Emmanuel Macron, officially admit that France had indeed conducted systemic torture in Algeria that he called “a crime against humanity”.

Previous French government­s had denied the crimes in Algeria and censored reports and books about it.

Torture, “disappeari­ng” and judicial executions would no longer be sanctioned in France, even in extreme cases. Macron called France’s repression in Algeria “a crime against humanity”.

The record of the war is ghastly. Tens of thousands of Algerian suspects were rounded up at night, thrown into prisons, and tortured – many to death – using electric generators attached to their genitals or lips with steel clips.

Intense beatings and use of masked informers were common. Many FLN suspects were sent to the guillotine.

The superb film Battle of Algiers recounts ferocious efforts by French elite paratroope­rs and security forces to crush the FLN network. “We far outdid the Nazi SS and Gestapo,” boasted one particular­ly sadistic French general.

As a result of the Algerian War, torture spread to France’s metropolit­an security services and even regular police. But this is always what happens when torture is used. It spreads like a virus.

Back in 1995, then president Jacques Chirac admitted that French police, not Germans, had rounded up 75,000 French Jews and sent them to German concentrat­ion camps. France’s right was outraged.

Now, France’s right is denouncing Macron for finally telling the truth and opening France’s secret archives.

Which raises the question of torture by US occupation forces in Afghanista­n, Iraq, Somalia, and of similar crimes by its satraps Egypt, Morocco, Saudi Arabia, Jordan and Israel.

Under US President Donald Trump, the US is going in precisely the opposite direction as France. Trump and his cohorts have lauded the use and efficacy of torture and called for its wider and more intense use in America’s modern colonial wars. The CIA’s new chief led one part of the torture programmes in Southeast Asia.

France is now purging itself of the crimes against humanity committed during the Algerian War. Nations, like people, need to occasional­ly cleanse their spirit of foul deeds and crimes. But not so the US where the White House and Congress have become cheerleade­rs for torture.

It will be hard for Washington to keep holding itself up to be the world champion of human rights when its torturers are hard at work inflicting unspeakabl­e punishment­s on suspects.

Let’s recall that the Bush-Cheney administra­tion massively increased the use of torture to try to prove a fake link between Saddam’s Iraq and 9/11. America disgraced itself and never could manufactur­e the “evidence”.

America and France are sister democracie­s. Macron has shown Washington how to deal with the crime of torture. We should listen.

Epilogue: Algeria gained independen­ce in 1962 thanks to the wisdom of President Charles De Gaulle. But, as Danton famously stated, “the revolution devours its young”. The FLN’s rival leaders began murdering one another. The once noble struggle for independen­ce turned into a bloodbath. Algeria fell under military rule and suffered worse horrors than even the French inflicted.

Eric S. Margolis is an award-winning, internatio­nally syndicated columnist, writing mainly about the Middle East and South Asia. Comments: letters@ thesundail­y.com

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