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Subcommittee on International Human Rights committee  Good afternoon, Chairman Reid, distinguished members of the Subcommittee on International Human Rights, ladies and gentlemen. I am grateful for the opportunity to speak with you today about the dire need for the protection of the 3,100 individuals currently detained in Iraq's s

February 11th, 2014Committee meeting

Jared Genser

Subcommittee on International Human Rights committee  Thank you very much for the actually critical question that you're asking. I do want to clarify that while I previously represented the residents for about a year and a half in relation to the arbitrary detention, for the last year and a half I have not represented them directl

February 11th, 2014Committee meeting

Jared Genser

February 11th, 2014Committee meeting

Jared Genser

Subcommittee on International Human Rights committee  I will just briefly add to that. I agree, of course, with Colonel Martin's testimony, as well as his answer. I would only say that for me this isn't about politics, although the situation is intensely political. This is about saving human lives, and as an international human righ

February 11th, 2014Committee meeting

Jared Genser

Subcommittee on International Human Rights committee  There's an irony here. Based on the conversations I've had, particularly with the survivors of the recent Camp Ashraf attack, the residents themselves desperately want to get out of Iraq because they know they're doomed in the current situation, and yet.... You would think that i

February 11th, 2014Committee meeting

Jared Genser

Subcommittee on International Human Rights committee  If I might just add, one of the challenges is created by the way the Iraqi government is handling this. The residents are denied all visitors. There are no people who can visit them except for a rare U.S. government official and a rare UN official. They're able to communicate by

February 11th, 2014Committee meeting

Jared Genser

Subcommittee on International Human Rights committee  Thank you, Professor Cotler, for the very pointed question, because we looked at the September massacre in great detail, but one can't forget that seven people were disappeared by Iraqi security forces and that they may well be in Tehran. The intelligence is very spotty. The UN

February 11th, 2014Committee meeting

Jared Genser

Subcommittee on International Human Rights committee  No, indeed. Look, the U.S. shouldn't have turned over responsibility for Camp Ashraf to the Iraqis in the first place. In fact, I wrote a memo back in late 2008 that I provided to the state department quoting public statements by the Iraqi Prime Minister and the national security

February 11th, 2014Committee meeting

Jared Genser

Subcommittee on International Human Rights committee  No, that was surrounding Camp Ashraf originally, which had also been winnowed back in size. But, yes, there were 1,300 around Camp Ashraf at the time the massacre took place.

February 11th, 2014Committee meeting

Jared Genser

Subcommittee on International Human Rights committee  But it's also worth noting—and, again, Colonel Martin, feel free to jump in because this is your expertise, I'm speaking a little out of my depth, but I know these facts to be accurate. There are five security checkpoints—this is in the Red Zone in Iraq, right outside of Baghdad—

February 11th, 2014Committee meeting

Jared Genser

Subcommittee on International Human Rights committee  They don't ever come inside Camp Liberty. They come to the border. This is one of the things that the residents have been promised, 24-7 monitoring at Camp Liberty, which hasn't existed. It's now being interpreted by the UN to say that you could reach somebody on a telephone 24

February 11th, 2014Committee meeting

Jared Genser

Subcommittee on International Human Rights committee  I'll have one cut at it and I'm sure Colonel Martin will have his views as well. In essence the UN has a whole series of challenges as well as personnel inside Iraq trying to help rebuild Iraq after the U.S. invasion there. Ambassador Kobler's predecessor, who for many years wa

February 11th, 2014Committee meeting

Jared Genser

Subcommittee on International Human Rights committee  I'll get you a sworn affidavit from Tahar Boumedra that lays it out in a dozen pages. It's a good summary of his point of view and what he witnessed in Iraq working with Kobler. It's pretty chilling. It reminds me of what we've seen recently in Haiti with the UN engagement with t

February 11th, 2014Committee meeting

Jared Genser

Subcommittee on International Human Rights committee  Thanks so much, Chairman Reid, members of the distinguished subcommittee, ladies and gentlemen. It's great to be here with you again today. As you will recall, I spent five years as Aung San Suu Kyi's international lawyer. I currently represent Liu Xiaobo and prisoner of conscien

November 25th, 2014Committee meeting

Jared Genser

Subcommittee on International Human Rights committee  I'll just mention, with one sentence, that in response to us meeting with the high commissioner and him taking a photograph with her holding the Venezuelan flag, there was a lengthy diatribe presented publicly by the Venezuelan government against the high commissioner, against Li

November 25th, 2014Committee meeting

Jared Genser