Update on NY Anti-Torture Advocacy: May 18th and a cross-post from the ACLU
As a participant in the May 18th medical student day of action with the New York Coalition Against Torture, I would like to thank our readers for their support — whether in coming to Albany, contacting their NY state representatives, or signing the PHR petition. The event was very successful and inspiring, and we have received a lot of positive feedback. I look forward to updating the GPJ community on the effort’s progress. In the meantime, I have a more detailed review of the event at the ACLU’s blog:
During the white-coat advocacy day on Tuesday, the medical student group conducted over 25 meetings with lawmakers and staff, met with the bill’s sponsors, and hand-delivered copies of the petition signed by hundreds of their peers and fellow New York State residents. They also conveyed the support of state and national professional organizations for this landmark legislation…(more)
The medical student action event was also mentioned on the Huffington Post and on PHR’s Health Rights Advocate blog. Since then, NYCAT has also released a letter of support for the Gottfried-Duane Bill signed by prominent leaders of medicine in New York state, including medical school deans, hospital CEOs, and Nobel Prize laureates.
Related reading:
- ACLU’s resources on torture
- The National Religious Campaign Against Torture (NRCAT)
- NRCAT, ACLU, and PHR: Working together against inhumane detention conditions at home?
UPDATE [06-08-2010]: PHR’s newest report, Experiments In Torture, raises concerns that the actions of CIA doctors who participated in waterboarding and other methods amounted to illegal human experimentation. Read coverage of the report in The New York Times and commentary at The Washington Post and The Atlantic.
Looking for ways to get involved closer to home? NRCAT has a list of events across the country for the month of June.
Related: China bans the use of torture in extracting confessions.

The the Gottfried-Duane Bill would prohibit the participation of health care professionals in torture and improper treatment of prisoners – as was documented at Guantánamo Bay and elsewhere. PHR applauds the hard work and dedication of our partners – the New York Coalition Against Torture, The Bellevue/NYU Program for Survivors of Torture, and the Center for Constitutional Rights. Medical students are leaders in the fight for justice and accountability.