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Filmmaker speaks with WSWS about Guantanamo Bay and David
Hicks
By Richard Phillips
15 March 2004
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Filmmaker Curtis Levy spoke with
the World Socialist Web Site recently about The President
versus David Hicks, his documentary about the illegal detention
of David Hicks, a 28-year-old Australian citizen held without
charge for over two years in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
Levy has been producing documentaries for over 30 years. He
began his career as an assistant producer for a commercial television
network, made his first film about childrens theatre in
1973 and then worked for ABC television. During the 1970s he produced
a number of films for the Institute for Aboriginal StudiesLockhart
Festival (1974), Lurugu (1974), Mourning for Mangatopi
(1975), Sons of Namatjira (1975) and Malbangka Country
(1977).
The award-winning director has made five films about Indonesia,
including Riding the Tiger (1992), a three-part series
on the Suharto dictatorship, Invitation to a Wedding (1995)
about Islamic dissidents, and High Noon in Jakarta (2001)
on the Wahid presidency.
Some of his other documentaries are: Breakout (1984),
which examines the mass escape of Japanese soldiers from an Australian
prison camp during World War II; The White Monkey (1987),
about Father Brian Gore, an Australian priest who was framed up
for murder and imprisoned by the Marcos regime in the Philippines;
The Queen Goes West (1989)a wry look at an Australian
outback towns preparations for an 80-minute visit by Britains
Queen Elizabeth; and Hephzibah (1998), an exploration of
the complex life of Hephzibah Menuhin, sister of acclaimed violinist
Yehudi Menuhin.
Richard Phillips: Why did you decide to make the film?
Curtis Levy: I was having coffee one morning and reading
all the sensational headlines denouncing David Hicks as a traitor
and began to wonder whether anyone could be as bad as he was being
portrayed. What had this guy from the suburbs of Adelaide, a former
rodeo rider and stockman, done to deserve all this?
Ive always been interested in anyone who has been demonised
by society and seem to have an obsession about incarceration.
So I thought it would be important to get to the truth of all
this and show what this guy was really all about. My experiences
with Islam in Indonesia also made me curious about Davids
decision to become a Muslim. Contrary to what [Australian Prime
Minister] John Howard says about Hicks, things are always more
complex than they appear.
RP: What was your main aim?
CL: To humanise David and explain his journey. I was
also concerned about his legal plight. Even now, two years later,
nobody has come up with any real evidence against him.
RP: Having worked in Indonesia, have you seen anything
to compare with the violation of basic democratic rights occurring
at Guantanamo Bay?
CL: Probably not. Indonesia is pretty horrificjournalists,
trade unionists and others would be rounded up and held for yearsbut
the US is now moving in the same direction. On the face of it
America is supposed to be a free country and I suppose theyre
not locking up journalists yet, although they do have a lot of
American journalists rather intimidated at the moment. There was
the case of the lawyer who was charged for defending an alleged
terrorist.
Prisoners in Guantanamo Bay have no democratic rights. In some
ways its similar to what the Howard government did when
it forced asylum seekers offshore to put them out of reach of
any legal processes. Perhaps the Bush administration learnt from
Howard on this.
RP: The citing of David Hicks letters in the film
helps to puncture the government and media sensationalism.
CL: Yes, I found his letters absolutely fascinating.
They provide some real insights into how he changed and got caught
up with various unhealthy elements, such as the Taliban. I dont
know how sophisticated Davids understanding was, but he
went through a long period of religious training in Pakistan and
was told that the Taliban were pure Islam.
RP: The letters also show some of his doubts during
his stay in Pakistan and then his transformation into an Islamic
militant, giving vent to anti-Semitic diatribes about a world
Jewish conspiracy.
CL: Thats true. But from my reading of the letters,
he always seemed to retain a fairly innocent or naïve outlooksomeone
caught up in something he didnt fully understand.
I dont really understand the transformation from being
a horse trainer in Japan to suddenly taking off to Kosovo and
becoming a Kosovo Liberation Army fighter. Some of his friends
whom I met in Adelaide said he had never been an aggressive type
or expressed any wish to be a soldier prior to this. Whatever
happened, it seems he became a fervent Muslim because he saw it
as a way of redressing the injustice he saw in the world. In my
view, if it hadnt been for 9/11, people like David Hicks,
John Walker Lindh and others probably would never have been heard
of, unless theyd chosen to write books about their lives.
RP: One of the civil rights lawyers shown in the film
tells a press conference that he fully supports the war
on terrorism. This issue, or its real meaning, unfortunately,
isnt explained in the film.
CL: I dont know, perhaps he said that to counter
possible accusations that he might be aligned with the people
he was defending. American lawyers are under tremendous pressure
at the moment. Whatsoever the reason, the so-called war on terror
has been invented by the US to deal with all sorts of movements
that America doesnt agree with. Bush seized 9/11 to attack
a whole lot of groups, including Saddam Hussein in Iraq, who had
nothing to do with 9/11.
The phrase has little to do with looking for the perpetrators
of 9/11, but is a convenient excuse to further American territorial
ambitions, which are mainly oil related. And now this catchall
term is used by all sorts of governmentsIsraeli, Indonesian
and othersfor attacking their perceived enemies, internal
and external.
RP: As the film shows, the organisations David Hicks
is alleged to have been involved with were, at one point or another,
supported by the US.
CL: Yes. Pakistans ISI [Inter Services Intelligence
Agency] brought Osama bin Laden over from Saudi Arabia to lead
the Arab contingent of those forces fighting the Russians in Afghanistan.
The CIA funded and trained many of these Islamic militants and
Al Qaeda came out of that initial group.
American foreign policy in places like Afghanistan, Pakistan
and Saudi Arabia has created all sorts of monsters, which are
now coming back to bite them. If Musharrafs government [in
Pakistan] falls to the Islamic militants, then you will have nuclear
weapons in the hands of these fundamentalists.
RP: Could you speak about the impact of David Hicks
detention on his family?
CL: Terry [Hicks] constantly surprises me with his resolveits
incredible. When I saw his early television interviews he was
quietly spoken and I imagined that he, and his wife Bev, held
fairly conservative political values. I guess they previously
thought that the Australian government would help them.
But having gone through this ordeal they are deeply angry with
the government and have become very sophisticated in their understanding
of what is happening. They have been transformed and have an inner
strength that constantly amazes me. It shows that ordinary people
can summon up tremendous reserves to campaign against injustice.
RP: And Terrys decision to visit Afghanistan?
CL: It was his first trip outside Australia and he obviously
gave it a lot of thought. In the first place he felt terribly
frustrated because he wasnt getting anywhere with the government.
He had been to Canberra to try and meet the prime minister and
Liberal party officials, but they all refused to see him. He also
tried on numerous occasions to speak with government ministers
and all he got was knockbacks.
He felt that the democratic process in Australia was not open
to someone like him to make any impact, or even get any access.
He didnt want to spend all his time in Australia bashing
his head against a brick wallor maybe its marble in
Canberraand so he decided to visit Pakistan and Afghanistan.
Retracing some of Davids steps might be another way to help.
In many ways I think the journey helped him understand his son
a lot more and strengthened the bonds between them.
RP: Could you comment on the situation in Afghanistan?
CL: There are large areas of the country still controlled
by the Talibanan Australian helicopter pilot was shot down
recently. In fact, there seems to be a resurgence of support for
the Taliban, particularly in the south. Even though they represent
no solution to the problems, the Taliban can appeal to those living
in fear of the warlords and what they represent.
Parts of the country are very dangerous. One of the reasons
the US never built the road between Kandahar and Kabul properly
is because they knew it was too dangerous and so they just put
down a thin layer of tar over the existing road.
We travelled with armed bodyguards and our driver was very
nervous because quite a lot of peopleincluding foreigners
and aid workershad been attacked in the last few months.
The Taliban dont want the new government to establish itself
in these areas.
Nobody attacked us and I think there was a bit of a lull while
we were there. The Afghan people were quite friendly and we were
banking on the fact that people would be sympathetic to the father
of someone in Guantanamo Bay. Terry and I are older and dont
look like the sort of people who might be CIA or US military or
even aid workers. Having armed guards also helped, I suppose.
RP: The film includes footage you shot at Guantanamo
Bay. What were you able to find out there?
CL: Not a lot. There were no real surprises. We didnt
expect to find out very much but wanted to capture the surreal
Kafkaesque atmosphere. It was very weird, a place where people
are kept under bright lights in cages and platoons of soldiers
going in and out each day.
They took us into the minimum-security areathis is where
the prisoners wear white, instead of orange, uniforms and are
allowed to fraternise in groups, rather than being in solitary.
But we werent allowed to talk to them and were told that
if we did, the visit would be ended.
We were only there for three daysa media tour to try
and give the impression that America observes human rights. The
US has come under such international criticism over this that
theyre trying to improve their image. I guess there are
a lot of uncritical journalists sent there who repeat what theyre
toldthat the prisoners are bad people and deserve to be
kept in cages.
Nobody would admit that David Hicks was there. They are not
allowed to talk about any prisoner individually but refer to them
as numbers. This is part of the dehumanising process so the guards
become immune to crueltyputting people in cages, not giving
them any recourse to justice.
Many of the soldiers are just reservists who have no idea of
the consequences of their actions. They have their own American
way of life there, with McDonalds, restaurants, clubs and
an outdoor cinema, and live their lives without thinking about
who theyre guarding. We met one of the church ministers
there and asked him how he could be involved in this inhumane
system. He responded with various parables to justify it.
RP: Could you comment on the Howard governments
refusal to demand Hicks repatriation?
CL: There is no evidence to suggest that Howard has
ever considered requesting Davids repatriation. Recent statements
from government ministers make clear they dont want him
back. This puts Howard at odds with every government in the world
with prisoners in Guantanamo Bay.
Even Denmark, which has one of its nationals there, has asked
that he be returned. Apparently he is being sent back home and
will be set free when he arrives. In Britain, 112 MPs took up
a petition condemning what was happening in Guantanamo Bay. But
there is no sign of this sort of thingapart from the Greensanywhere
in the Australian parliament.
RP: Did you attempt to interview any Australian government
officials for the film.
CL: Yes, I wrote to Attorney-General Philip Ruddock
and the prime minister telling them I was making a documentary
and asking if they could appear and give their perspective on
the issue. Neither responded.
RP: What was the most significant thing you learnt while
making the film?
CL: Thats difficult. I suppose its that
ordinary people like David Hicks and his family are very indefensible
on their own against monolithic powers.
I dont see David as a saint or anything like that. Far
from it. He was misled into supporting undesirable groups. But
I dont see him as undesirable or anything remotely like
that. I find him a fascinating character and hope to meet him
some day. He had had little education and came from a difficult
family situation. But he was an adventurer who got caught up in
the wrong situation. No matter what he is supposed to have done
it is incredible that after two years incarceration he has still
not been able to prove or disprove the accusations against him.
We still dont even know what the accusations are.
There has been a barrage of propaganda to justify all this.
Im very concerned that there hasnt been enough of
an outcry against the government over this attack on basic democratic
rights, especially the junking of habeas corpus. But I hope that
my film will help to change this. There are signs that people
are beginning to become concerned about this.
See Also:
An antidote to government lies about
David Hicks
The President versus David Hicks, directed by Curtis Levy
and Bentley Dean
[15 March 2004]
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