The Mark of Cain

British SoldiersThe Mark of Cain is a film made by Channel Four about a group of young British soldiers in Iraq. In it “Iraqi detainees are mistreated at the hands of the soldiers; de-sensitised by violence and encouraged by their mates.” According to the Guardian it is based on more than 100 interviews with soldiers, their families, MPs and others. It also draws heavily on the courts martial of soldiers accused of torturing and humiliating Iraqi prisoners. It is due to go out on Thursday. A lot of people are saying that it shouldn’t be shown because it might encourage negative feelings towards British troops in the Middle East, in particular those marines and sailors who are currently being held in Iran.

I just finished re-reading The Colditz Story, a documentary account by a former prisoner of war, P.R.Reid, of the lives and antics of British POWs held in Germany during the Second World War. In it he frequently mentioned how grateful he and his fellow prisoners were for the protections they enjoyed under the Geneva conventions. It contrasted pretty starkly with the dismissive and flippant attitude towards those conventions that I’ve been hearing from politicians and commentators recently.

One of the reasons why we need commonly agreed ways of treating prisoners of war is that we want to protect our own service men and women when they are captured. If we choose to disregard or cynically bypass the fragile standards that do exist it is they who will end up paying the price. So I think that this week, when everyone is thinking about the British prisoners in Iran, is the perfect time to show a drama about the mistreatment of prisoners during conflict. Where human rights are concerned you really should do unto others as you would have others do unto you. The contrast between the way Iran has treated their British prisoners and the way the British have treated some of their own prisoners-of-war should be obvious to even the most thick-skulled Daily Mail reader.

1 Response to “The Mark of Cain”


  1. 1 Ally

    B and I were talking about this in the context of the Iranian captives a couple of days ago. We similarly concluded that actually, as a country we have NO moral high ground to stand on and shout ‘unfair’ since Guantanamo and the like. We’ve made our bed, and our service people have to lie in it. Wrong wrong wrong.

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