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GliderGuider

(21,088 posts)
6. This year I'm dedicating Remembrance Day to the memory of Shidane Arone (Trigger Warning)
Mon Nov 9, 2015, 02:12 PM
Nov 2015

Shidane was a sixteen year old Somali boy who was savagely beaten to death for sport by Canadian soldiers in 1993. For me he is emblematic of all the people we do not remember on Remembrance Day - all the innocent men, women and children who get "lit up" and then dismissed as collateral damage or just forgotten. May the afterlife of these soldiers be an eternity of icy solitude.

The Death of Shidane Arone

On March 16, 1993, Captain Michael Sox found Shidane Abukar Arone hiding in a portable toilet in an abandoned American base across from the Canadian base and, believing he was attempting to sneak into the Canadian base to steal supplies, turned him over to another soldier, who led the teenager to a bunker being used to house munitions. Arone protested, claiming he had simply been trying to find a lost child.

At 21:00, Sgt. Mark Boland replaced Master Corporal Clayton Matchee as guard of the prisoner, and ordered that his foot bindings be removed, and replaced with fetters as the ropes were too tight. Warrant Officer Murphy took the opportunity to kick Arone "savagely", which was later claimed to be implicit permission to abuse the prisoner. At this time, Matchee began his abuse of Arone by removing the captive's clothing and using it to crudely waterboard the youth until Boland objected, and Matchee left the bunker.

At 22:00, Trooper Kyle Brown took over guard duty, and brought Matchee back with him. Brown punched Arone in the jaw, and was told by Boland, rather prophetically, "I don't care what you do, just don't kill the guy", to which Brown replied that he wanted to "kill this fucker". Boland then joined Matchee and Matt McKay for beers in the mess hall, where Matchee spoke about what he wanted to do to Arone, and suggested he might put out cigarette butts on his feet. McKay suggested that Matchee might use a ration pack or phone book to beat the youth, as it would not leave any traces.

Matchee and Brown, both members of 2 Commando, then proceeded to beat Arone. Matchee used a ration pack to beat the youth, as well as a broomstick, and sodomised the teenager with it. Brown participated in the abuse, but was primarily an observer and took sixteen "trophy photos" of the beating, including one of Matchee forcing Arone's mouth open with a baton, and one of himself holding Pte. David Brocklebank's loaded pistol to Arone's head. At approximately 23:20, Master Cpl. Giasson entered the bunker, Matchee showed him Arone, who was now semi-conscious and bleeding, and boasted that "in Canada we cannot do that, and here they let us do it".

Estimates have ranged from 15-80 other soldiers could hear or observe the beating, but did not intervene. Corporal MacDonald, acting as duty signaller that night, was asked by Sgt. Major Mills about "a long dragged out howl" heard from the vicinity of the bunker, but MacDonald refused to stop playing Game Boy to investigate. Later, Matchee came by to borrow a cigarette from MacDonald and mentioned that "now the Black man would fear the Indian as he did the white man", and MacDonald went outside to check on Arone's status. He saw Matchee hitting him in the face with the baton, and reported that the prisoner was "getting a good shit-kicking" to Sgt. Perry Gresty, before retiring to bed for the night.

Arone fell unconscious after several hours of beatings, after shouting "Canada! Canada! Canada!" as his last words. When Brown mentioned the event to Sergeant J.K. Hillier, the non-commissioned officer noted there "would be trouble" if the prisoner died, and went to check on the youth whom he found had no pulse, and base medics confirmed that the boy was dead. It was later discovered that Arone had burn marks on his penis.

In memory of Shidane Arone.





Recommendations

0 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):

This is why I not only do NOT support our endless wars, SheilaT Nov 2015 #1
So I was thinking the other day upaloopa Nov 2015 #17
I get it all the time... Wounded Bear Nov 2015 #25
Vietnam Roy Rolling Nov 2015 #26
Please, DU. Give me a way to upvote (or downvote) individual comments. This is a +++. erronis Nov 2015 #41
+1000's ozone_man Nov 2015 #84
Why? Because usually no one else will step up unless we do. 7962 Nov 2015 #85
You're quite the belligerent neocon eh? nyabingi Nov 2015 #97
You dont think the Balkans was headed towards genocide? Really? 7962 Nov 2015 #99
We never intervene to stop massacres, and nyabingi Nov 2015 #100
Yes we do. You ignore it because you want to. And you ignore the Balkans example. 7962 Nov 2015 #102
Our intervention, especially when NATO is involved, nyabingi Nov 2015 #104
Chavez and Maduro have taken VZ into the worst economy in the world 7962 Nov 2015 #105
Are you really not aware of the nyabingi Nov 2015 #106
Yes, YOU understand it all dont you? Ha. 7962 Nov 2015 #107
No I don't understand it all nyabingi Nov 2015 #108
But the people only benefitted for a short time. Thats always the problem. 7962 Nov 2015 #109
And it is frightening how many know and still go. raouldukelives Nov 2015 #96
If I may offer the following definitions. Bluenorthwest Nov 2015 #37
You were drafted. Every single soldier currently SheilaT Nov 2015 #54
And most of these "volunteers" do so because they were fooled to believe that it was either rhett o rick Nov 2015 #61
Nor does the reason they volunteered SheilaT Nov 2015 #68
I agree. nm rhett o rick Nov 2015 #77
You are wrong. The majority do not sign up because of romance/duty/patriotism. KittyWampus Nov 2015 #101
I agree this is a huge problem. But poverty isn't on the agenda of a Goldman-Sachs sponsored rhett o rick Nov 2015 #103
No, you're not a warmonger arikara Nov 2015 #64
But that is not the whole point of the OP - truedelphi Nov 2015 #69
Current generations don't understand the draft. trof Nov 2015 #83
I get what you're saying Victor_c3 Nov 2015 #59
I'm so sorry for what you went through arikara Nov 2015 #65
Good on you for unloading. snort Nov 2015 #67
I know how you feel. The River Nov 2015 #72
You're a good person. It's why you're suffering so much now renate Nov 2015 #73
I heard a top VA psychologist say exactly the same thing at a PTSD conference decades ago pinboy3niner Nov 2015 #93
Telling me your story isn't unloading. I absolutely don't feel attacked. SheilaT Nov 2015 #88
Message auto-removed Name removed Nov 2015 #95
Can't agree with you Joey Liberal Nov 2015 #70
I've been married to 2 men Caretha Nov 2015 #90
You should watch John Oliver from last night. Initech Nov 2015 #87
Yes, that is heartbreaking. And very powerful, I hope he has a lot of support in his life. nt. polly7 Nov 2015 #2
How many warriors appear on TV news compared to their commanding Generals and politicians? Fred Sanders Nov 2015 #3
They fight to protect corporations not Americans bjobotts Nov 2015 #23
" You go to war with the army you have". Inferring sit down and shut up! The Wielding Truth Nov 2015 #92
War - What's It Good For - Absolutely Nothing - Props To Edwin Starr cantbeserious Nov 2015 #4
Service members? HassleCat Nov 2015 #5
Your post made me curious about their pay uppityperson Nov 2015 #7
It might not seem like much HassleCat Nov 2015 #9
US military pay scale, 2015 sarge43 Nov 2015 #18
The pay is much better now than when I served Joey Liberal Nov 2015 #71
My first paycheck, post basic, $98.00. That's a month's worth. sarge43 Nov 2015 #75
Case of beer on Navy base in Guam 1960 $1.50 - $2.00 WHEN CRABS ROAR Nov 2015 #82
There are things like free base housing, including for dependents (though not on active duty, of merrily Nov 2015 #31
Damn. That sounds like SOCIALISM! And WE CAN"T HAVE THAT in the USofA! erronis Nov 2015 #42
The base houses arikara Nov 2015 #66
I've lived in U.S. apt. style base housing and been invited to base homes where officers live. merrily Nov 2015 #78
PX & commissary prices arent a lot lower these days. And not all housing is free. 7962 Nov 2015 #86
The orders do not come from us.Come from Exxon etc bjobotts Nov 2015 #29
If we lived under a functional democracy I would agree with you, but we dont. Volaris Nov 2015 #51
This year I'm dedicating Remembrance Day to the memory of Shidane Arone (Trigger Warning) GliderGuider Nov 2015 #6
One of the reasons to never go to war, of not make the decision lightly is that people dehumanize uppityperson Nov 2015 #8
and we call them heroes? and thanks them for their service? saturnsring Nov 2015 #10
We are victims of a weird kind of Stockholm Syndrome GliderGuider Nov 2015 #15
Holy shit that is sickening.... blackspade Nov 2015 #14
A good reminder... CanSocDem Nov 2015 #62
Only one solution. Don't sign up. I wish more young people realized this. valerief Nov 2015 #11
No more fucking military war propaganda at sporting events. pangaia Nov 2015 #20
We have too much sports in America, but it's actually military training. valerief Nov 2015 #21
Football today reminds me of something from the "Starship Troopers" movie n/t arcane1 Nov 2015 #33
I don't watch movies with names like that, so I don't know exactly what you mean. valerief Nov 2015 #35
I see very few make this connection but it seems obvious to me. harun Nov 2015 #57
Very well said! Thanks for the comparison. nt valerief Nov 2015 #79
How about government? Almost everything feeds it. merrily Nov 2015 #27
? Not sure what your question is. nt valerief Nov 2015 #30
The question was rhetorical. The entertainment industry is not all feeding the military frenzy merrily Nov 2015 #34
Oh, yes, of course. That's true. Because the military is where the oligarchs valerief Nov 2015 #40
I know an awful lot of young people who lusted after the signup bonus ($5-20k) erronis Nov 2015 #45
And this is why the oligarchs don't want a strong middle class. valerief Nov 2015 #80
Since WWII, we fought in Korea, Viet Nam, Cambodia, various places in Africa, too many to name JDPriestly Nov 2015 #12
Media are monopolies abelenkpe Nov 2015 #38
You may add Grenada, Pananma, Somalia, and Lebanon. bvar22 Nov 2015 #53
2016 we can change directions... tecelote Nov 2015 #13
But war is always like this, and we keep having them. The kid of the 60s and their kids jtuck004 Nov 2015 #16
Stormtroopers for Empire Pharaoh Nov 2015 #19
i watched the latest dr who last night. man, deep anti war writing. pansypoo53219 Nov 2015 #22
I am not going to blame any 20 year old who grew up on jingoism from Dems and Repubs for a thing. merrily Nov 2015 #24
We've abused our military professionals far past their breaking point. Rex Nov 2015 #28
And the Bushes laugh, all the way to the bank. forest444 Nov 2015 #36
He's right on the money. Hulk Nov 2015 #32
''Money trumps peace.'' -- appointed pretzeldent George Walker Bush, Feb. 14, 2007 Octafish Nov 2015 #39
Hillary is partly responsible for this Android3.14 Nov 2015 #43
Thanks for posting. JEB Nov 2015 #44
Elections matter folks. Choose wisely. riderinthestorm Nov 2015 #46
Are there politicians anywhere that support eliminating the military? GliderGuider Nov 2015 #49
Each time I see a "Freedom isn't free" bumper sticker, I want to scream in frustration. Bubzer Nov 2015 #47
K & R N/T w0nderer Nov 2015 #48
Major General Smedley Butler (USMC) hifiguy Nov 2015 #50
Brilliant!!! Thespian2 Nov 2015 #91
He just described a "gun grab" too. Spitfire of ATJ Nov 2015 #52
i feel like hillary would read this retrowire Nov 2015 #55
And how many are going to bring that “blasé” mentality back to the world... MindPilot Nov 2015 #56
They're just following orders rocktivity Nov 2015 #58
This should be posted silenttigersong Nov 2015 #60
Let's be honest The Wizard Nov 2015 #63
I am not able to go to the link. Mira Nov 2015 #74
War is Hell. War is a Racket. -nt- 99th_Monkey Nov 2015 #76
Been there. Done that. Truth. Bottoms_Up Nov 2015 #81
Did anyone see the PBS series "Vietnam: a Television History"? thucythucy Nov 2015 #89
Our Leaders Should Pay The Price billhicks76 Nov 2015 #94
"so “blasé” about drone strikes and other civilian deaths". IMO, why some ex-Vets make bad police. Sunlei Nov 2015 #98
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