Wednesday, December 3, 2008

"Truth Serum" to be Used on Mumbai Terror Suspect


Indian police interrogators are preparing to administer a "truth serum" on the sole Islamic militant captured during last week's terror attacks on Mumbai to settle once and for all the question of where he is from.

The mystery of the man dubbed "the baby-faced gunman" has weighed heavily on India's relations with Pakistan as the nuclear-armed neighbours dispute each other's accounts of his origin.

Police interrogators in Mumbai told The Times that they have "verified" that Azam Amir Kasab, who was captured after a shoot-out in a Mumbai railway station on Wednesday night, is from Faridkot, a small village in Pakistan's impoverished south Punjab region. They say that the nine dead gunmen are also Pakistani.

Disputing that account, President Asif Ali Zardari of Pakistan told CNN last night: "We have not been given any tangible proof to say that he is definitely a Pakistani. I very much doubt it ? that he is a Pakistani."

He added: "The gunmen plus the planners, whoever they are, [are] stateless actors who have been holding hostage the whole world."

Proof that the militants were Pakistani would rapidly escalate the pressure on Mr Zardari's government to take action or risk a backlash from allies including the United States.

Police interrogators in Mumbai told The Times that they are poised to settle the matter of Kasab's nationality through the use of "narcoanalysis" – a controversial technique, banned in most democracies, where the subject is injected with a truth serum.

The method was widely used by Western intelligence agencies during the Cold War, before it emerged that the drugs used – typically the barbiturate sodium pentothal – may induce hallucinations, delusions and psychotic manifestations

Mumbai police said that their evidence of a Pakistan link includes hand grenades manufactured in the city of Rawalpindi, in Pakistan, and satellite phone calls traced back to the country.

Deven Bharti, a deputy police commissioner in Mumbai and one of the interrogators, told The Times that Kasab had shown no remorse for his part in a terror attack that had killed nearly 200 people.

"He is a 24-year-old boy with the eyes of a killer," Mr Bharti said.

"Nobody should doubt: he is a highly-trained murderer. He has told us he came to Mumbai from Pakistan to cause maximum casualties."

The photographs of the gunman firing indiscriminately at the city's largest train station, wearing combat trousers, trainers, a black T-shirt and a blue haversack stuffed with ammunition, have become the defining image of the assault on Mumbai, the deadliest terror strike unleashed in India in 15 years.

The police officer added that the interrogation had been carried out in Punjabi and that Kasab also spoke a little, rough Hindi. "He can barely speak a sentence in English, only names of weapons and such," Mr Bharti said.

"He resisted at first, but soon he began to talk. We have our techniques, but we don't disclose our tactics."

Mr Bharti said Kasab is being held in an undisclosed location: "All I can say is that it isn't five-star luxury."

The portrait revealed by police questioning is that of a village boy from a poor family who failed to complete primary school but went on to undertake months of military training at four or five militant camps in Pakistan, the last of which was near Muzaffarabad, the capital of Pakistan-controlled Kashmir.

He said that Kasab, together with the nine other gunmen killed during last week's attacks, had been chosen from a group of 24 that had gone through the same training regime.

The young men were prepared with violent footage from Iraq, Afghanistan and the Palestinian territories. "All the traditional indoctrination methods you would associate with al-Qaeda or Lashka [Lashka-e-Taiba] have been used on these men," Mr Bharti said.

The police say that Kasab has given his home village as Faridkot, in the Okara district of Punjab. "We have verified, cross-checked this,"

Mr Bharti said. "We know his father owned a food stall there".

Mr Bhatri said that there was "no doubt" that Kasab will be subjected to "narcoanalysis", a technique which is common in serious crime investigations in India.

The drug, which will be administered through a drip, will lull Kasab into a trance-like state. Usually, a forensic psychologist then questions the prisoner.

Such methods are banned in the UK and the US, though some security officials suggest they should be adopted in anti-terrorist cases in the West.

Do you think this is a form of torture?
Would this be a justified approach in this country?

18 comments:

Ezequiel Savedra 7 said...

ezequielsavedra7

To answer your question if the truth serum is torture. In my opinion for the crimes that Kasab committed, I think that it is more of heaven to him. For crimes in The United States it will be considered torture. The crimes here are bad but the ones that Kasab did are horrible to human-kind. I hope The United States do not permit the truth serum because of the side effects and to me the serum will be considered abuse to the body and mind.

jakelabrec7 said...

i dont think it is torture but i dont think that they should use this to get the answers from people since it has the effects that it has. i also think that we should use it in cases that we need to for like national security and stuff like that.

yay for html!

JA7 said...

I do not believe that it is quite right to us the truth serum on the suspect. I know they just want to get the truth and not torture people, but i think that they're being kind of irrational in the way that they're trying to drag out the truth.I would understand if they had been working on the guy for a week or so, but that's not the case I think that they're kind of jumping the gun a little bit.

!xobile said...

i think Indian police should use "truth serum" to find all the links related to the attack. i think this is torture, but in terror attacks like this they should use the truth serum on the suspects and try to find out the truth. this approach can be used for terror attacks only.

mariimalagayo3 said...

Torture? Seriously? No, not even.
This guy killed nearly 200 people, I don't think they make "torture" bad enough for that kind of crime.
That question makes me sick.
Kasab has information on terrorist techniques and tactics and possibly future attacks, and someone out there is worried that this murderer might have hallucinations?
Even though it probably won't happen, I do support the use of narcoanalysis in the U.S. for certain cases, mostly situations that would involve the prevention of the lives of many Americans.

Erick Capulong 3 said...

I don't think narcoanalysis is a form of torture simply because we're in a time period where methods like these call for it.

Since the World Wars, everything had been "safer", simply because we knew where everything was. Because of this, it was easy to send in the tanks. Retrieving info was not a problem. Now we're in a war where you can't send in the tanks. We're in a war where you look at the civilians and guess which one is the terrorist.

With the limited amount of info we have, I can see how narcoanalysis would be a legitimate approach to the solution, but I don't think the reasons are enough for the approach to be considered justified simply because of the difference of morals and ethics between the people in this country.

isaacpena7 said...

I think that having the truth serum method in the US is not acceptable at all. Over there I suppose it is not torture in this situation because they are trying to find answers to a HUGE problem which needs to be solved. The whole dazed state the person is in during the interrogation is somewhat against our rights in the US because that is an invasion of privacy which has been broken before:P But all in all it is an effective method but must be used only in big problems such as Terrorist Attacks.


~Isaac

BaiJiXie 1 said...

I think that this form of interogation would norlt be allowed in the united states because the mere use of it is unethical
The other countries permit this use is mainly because that the need of this serum is great and there would be little to no public opinion against it however in the us the public would protest against such inhumane treatment however the use of this serum on terrorist is perfectly legitimate

han yu 4th said...

l don't think this is torture.These killer killed many people.And Turth Serum just let them tell us the turth.India goverment didn't hurt them.l think this is a justified approach in this country.They are torrorist.They are terrible for everyone except for themself.

LeenaAlSouki_1 said...

I don't think that using narcoanalysis on terrorists should be labeled as torture, however; it does violate a person's rights which would make it very difficult to condone in the United States.

SajaKhweis04 said...

first of all, i want to understand why is it that when a muslim kills people, he is identified with his religious background. when hitler killed the jews, most people, including myself, don't know what his religious background was simply because he was not muslim and did not mention his religion in the headlines. it truly frustrates me when news stories do that. it makes people generalize and stick muslims in one category:terrorists. back to the questions, in no way is using the truth serum torture. this man (notice i did not put muslim man) killed over 200 people, the side effects would merely be a slight punishment for his terrible actions. Honestly, the truth serum is a good approach for finding information, but i doubt that americans would agree to using it. They will go into the issues of breaking certain rights and humanity rights and all that stuff. However beneficial it may be, it would not pass with the citizens of this country.

komalparikh1 said...

Narcoanalysis, I think, is an acceptable form of torture. I think that if you use it for the greater good of the public, it isn't completely inhumae. Is "torturing" one murderer who killed 200 people in exchange for information that links to this attack and future attacks?

courtneycox3 said...

personally i dont think any uman being should have to be tortured...but now we are coming into times where it seems that narconanalysis might need to be necessary to save and prevent American lives. i think the "truth serum", though it seems morally wrong, and im sure some can argue if its constitutional or not, may be the only way to save more lives from terrorist attacks

bushbenjamin01 said...

I don’t understand why it matters if the use of "narcoanalysis" is tortures or not! They are dealing with a terrorist that has taken the lives of hundreds of innocent people. Who knows what techniques are used by our government when it comes to interrogating terrorist? I am willing to bet that our government uses every technique of torture known to man when dealing with terrorist! I think that the use of “narcoanalysis” would be a justified approach in this country. I am sure that there would be millions of people in opposition to this idea but is pulling out a fingernail for every answer any better?

ErikTough4th said...

In cases such as this, a few people have endangered many lives. Many more training camps exsist, and a terrorist that has been injected with truth serem could reveal more camps, locations and future plans. I do not belive that this would be inhumane to use truth serem.

Ashley said...

I think that this is a cultural issue because of its varying acceptance. It is also dependent on the situation. It would be inappropraite for some cases and extremely handy for others. But moral codes and cultrual standards in the U.S. would make it's use clearly unacceptable despite the advantages.

mirandamartell7 said...

Well to be honest it is kinda like torture, but its for a good reason. Although with something as great as Truth Serum it has its side effects. But i really do think that it would come in handy if there's a crime and you never know who's telling the truth or not so it is kinda hard to say if i like it or not because of the side effects that do come with it but it really just depends on the situation i guess.

JeremyTow01 said...

They have allowed waterboarding at gitmo, so I don't think a truth serum. There is, however, something unethical about the truth serum.

A terrorist who has taken so many lives should deserve some serious consequences. Before his fate can be determined, the pawn must have some information forced out of him, in order to find the true artisans and masterminds of the slaughtering. Mumbai will be remembered for a long time, and this man was a direct cause of the killings. The masterminds of this operation must be found in order to prevent any more tragedies.