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Citing the "Prevention of Terrorism" act, British Police
have arrested and interrogated three of the stars of the award-winning film
"The
Road to Guantanamo", together with the three ex-Guantanomo
detainees on whose story the film is based.
Acclaimed director Michael Winterbottom ("A Cock and Bull Story",
"24 Hour Party People", "Welcome to Sarajevo") had been
showing the film at the Berlin Film Festival, where it has won a number of top
awards.
"The Road to Guantanamo" traces
the true story of Shafiq Rasul, Asif Iqbal and Ruhal Ahmed, three Muslim friends
from Birmingham who were picked up as aliens in Afghanistan by US forces and
ended up in Guantanamo for three years, where they suffered brutal and humiliating
treatment.
Extensive interrogation established that they had no connection with al-Qaida,
and despite their plight being ignored by British authorities, eventually they
were returned home. The UK media covered live the return of these "Suspected
terrorists" and the massive police convoy that brought them in to Ventral
London for questioning. Their release after the UK police also found they had
no connection with terrorism was, naturally, hardly mentioned.
Last week the three ex-detainees travelled to the Berlin Festival with the
Winterbottom party, and were arrested yesterday under the Prevention of Terrorism
Act as they returned with the Winterbottom Party. They were held by Special
Branch and questioned for several hours about where they had been and who they
had met. They were also questioned on Michael Winterbottom's politics.
Even more worrying, the three actors who portrayed them in the film were also
arrested and questioned. The actors have no particular political or religious
affiliation and were also arrested apparently purely on the basis that they
were Asian. None of the white members of the group were arrested.
Following legal intervention by Gareth Peirce, the group were eventually released.
Special Branch claimed they had not been arrested, merely detained under the
Prevention of Terrorism Act.
On Saturday the party will be returning to Berlin again to accept the film's
awards. We wait to see what will happen when they come home this time.
"The
Road to Guantanamo" will premiere on Channel 4 on 9 March.
If you are concerned about this latest abuse of "anti-terrorism"
powers, please write to your MP free of charge via the website
www.writetothem.com.
UPDATE - Craig Murray says:
"On both www.craigmurray.co.uk and Blairwatch people have been
questioning my source for this, and particularly querying why it is not in the
mainstream media if it is true.
Well, I was in Winterbottom’s office yesterday, and heard it
first hand, from people who were there when it happened. Nowadays the real news
isn’t in the mainstream media, I am afraid. Leave them to their celebrity
stories, and if you want to know what’s important, come to the web."