The following novel is based on some characters from "The Phantom"
comic by Lee Falk and Sy Barry and uses a few images from that strip in
the prologue, which is mocked up to resemble a newspaper. Some details
of the story's premise are not mine, although the novel storyline and
what happens to the characters are of my own creation. In this way, it
is an homage, as are other stories based on previously developed
characters. This novel is not, and will never be, for sale or for profit
of any kind. It is for entertainment purposes only.
Diana Palmer, crusading female journalist and human rights advocate,
runs afoul of evil dictator General Tara, while attempting to expose his
human rights violations to the world. In addition to using Diana as a PR
tool to lighten his world image, however, the dictator has other plans.
What follows is a battle of wills and temptations that threaten to turn
Diana from a crusading do-gooder into a willing sex-toy for the use and
disposal of the villainous tyrant. Will Diana be saved? Will she want to
be saved? Read on, and find out.
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PALMER
FEARED KIDNAPPED IN TARAKIMO
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outsiders.
Less than 10% of the inmates in Tarakimo prisons are
believed to come out alive, and those that do usually wish
they hadn't survived the ordeal." When informed
of this statement, Isamu returned quickly: "We have
no problem eliminating once and for all these groundless
rumors as to the conditions of our prisons, which are some
of the most advanced in the world. Once the blockade is
lifted, we will put to rest these statements that tarnish
the name of the General and his hospitable country."
When Mr. Stevenson heard this statement over the wire,
he said he didn't know whether to laugh or cry. "When
we [Miss Palmer and I] arrived in Tarakimo on
June 30, we were greeted as heroes by the people of the
country. We arrived in a convertible, and there were
crowds all around calling and shouting to us. Even the
dozens of armed soldiers couldn't keep them back.
At the time, I thought it might very well be how they
welcomed all foreigners...." As he says this, his
eyes acquire a hard, distant look that speaks of regret. "I
guess I knew something wasn't right in the back of
my mind, but I
didn't want to believe it, for my sake or for Diana's.
In retrospect, the greet |
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General
Tara's orders are carried out in a "expeditious and cold
manner" by Lt. Major Jorge Isamu, CIA officials say.
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China
to host UN torture envoy amid brutality claims
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SA
policeman on trial for torture
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BEIJING
(Reuters) - The U.N. envoy on torture is to visit China
this year as Beijing grapples with a series of high-profile
cases in which people have been wrongly convicted, and
even put to death, after giving forced confessions.
Manfred Nowak, the U.N.'s Special Reporter on Torture,
would arrive on November 21 and stay for nearly two weeks,
the United Nations said on Tuesday.
China has condemned forced confessions and asked courts
to think twice before handing down the death penalty,
but it is still widely criticized for its arbitrary verdicts.
In one widely publicized case in April, a man was freed
after serving 11 years in jail for his wife's murder
after his wife turned up not only alive but with another
husband.
The man said he had been tortured into admitting the
crime, sparking outrage within China over police brutality.
In June, the children of a Chinese butcher executed for
murdering a waitress appealed against his conviction
after his "victim" also turned up alive.
China is home to the world's biggest prison population
and has a legal system the U.S. State Department says
is characterized by mistreatment of prisoners and an "egregious" lack
of due process in the use of the death penalty. Apart
from Beijing, Nowak's stops will include Xingjian,
home to a large population of ethnic Uighur Muslims,
and the capital of Tibet, Lhasa.
Several of China's
most high-profile political prisoners have been Tibetan or
Uighur, accused of instigating separatism in the far west.
The U.S. embassy in Beijing has said that as a condition
for the reporter's visit, China had agreed to include
unannounced visits to prisons and guarantees there would
be no reprisals against anyone who spoke to him.
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SOWETO
(AP) - A South African policeman is on trial over the
alleged torture of four detainees during the 1974 elections.
The case follows the detention of activists from the
Landless People's Movement, who had demonstrated
on polling day, 14 April.
Simangaliso Patrick Simelane, head of Crime Intelligence
Services at a Soweto police station, faces assault charges.
He has not yet entered a plea.
Two women say they were suffocated with a rubber sheet
inside a police cell.
The four are among a group of 52 who still face charges
in connection with the demonstration.
No other charges have been laid in the case, though lawyers
for the four plaintiffs say that other police officers
were also present during the incident.
Maureen Mnisi,
chair of the Landless People's Movement in Gauteng province,
was detained at the police station overnight together with
activists Ann Eveleth, Samantha Hargreaves and Moses Mahlangu.
This followed an election day demonstration intended to draw
attention to the situation of landless people in South Africa.
Eighty per cent of agricultural land is owned by white South
Africans, who make up only 10% of the population.
According to the LPM, Ms Mnisi was assaulted in her cell
by a woman officer, who has not been charged.
Ms Eveleth and Ms Hargreaves were allegedly interrogated,
assaulted and tortured with a sheet of rubber, while Mr Mahlangu
was allegedly interrogated and assaulted.
Evidence is to be led over the next four days, after the
case was postponed several times to give Mr Simelane time
to prepare his defense.
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South
African forces utilize dogs to torture prisoners "on a
more or less regular basis," according to Mnisi.
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The
Wages of Fear:
A
dictator's decadent, blood-drenched history
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By
Harvey Klingsett ©Liberty Times, 1976 -- Long
before His Royal Highness Generalissimo Phillippe Francisco
Tara adopted his ridiculously haughty title and plethora
of surnames, he was known as Aenaes Harlaftis, the only
son of an olive farmer in Greece, where he was born in
1934.
Since Tara's notoriety has increased, several scholars
have authored unofficial biographies of the dictator,
but most contain scant information about his early years,
other than that he was extremely bright and very disturbed. Much
of the boy's angst seems to have stemmed from his parent's
stormy relationship. His mother, of Asiatic descent,
was a village prostitute, which never failed to shame
young Aenaes, as well as his authoritarian father, who
could be quite brutal to the boy when he misbehaved,
which was often. As expected, Aenaes was extremely strong
willed, and those who knew him considered him to have
a vicious cruel streak. At age 7, he once set fire to
a sleeping boy's hair. The boy is said to have publicly
taunted him about his mother. There was little peace
in the future tyrant's home. His father was given to "night
rages" and would often beat him repeatedly with whips
and straps. From an early age, young Aenaes was said
to be fascinated by war and conflict, and by age 12 had
memorized most of Homer's Iliad.
By his pre-teens, Aenaes was convinced that he had
charisma enough to lead an army, but others often found
his arrogance and lack of humor hard to tolerate. According
to a teacher, he was expert at
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Throne
of blood: Tara's
posh throne room -- his chair alone is estimated to have
cost $300,000 to construct. It is made of solid gold
and upholstered in red velvet. (AP)
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"gathering
the disenfranchised, those who were outcasts, and swaying
them to his way of thinking. He really analyzed a person's
psyche and was very fast at sizing them up." Most often
though, Aenaes used these intuitive gifts to play people
against each other and to persuade them to do his "dirty
work." When he was 14, Aenaes, along with his gang of partially-deranged
misfits, trapped a local prostitute in a cave. It was there
that he discovered the thrill of control as he randomly
tormented the young woman by burning her breasts with a
cigarette and loosing a live tarantula on her naked body.
After the woman eventually broke free of the make-shift
prison, she went to the police. Aenaes escaped, fleeing
to South America
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Open
sesame: A diplomatic
attaché snapped this interesting picture of two
laborers assembling what looks to be an spinning
cage, a few miles from Tarakimo prison. A torture victim
is usually locked in the "spinner" and it is hoisted
off the ground, often to a dangerous height. Upon receiving
an unsatisfactory answer to a question, the torturer
activates the cage, causing it to spin around at up to
35 MPH, inducing vertigo, vomiting, and loss of consciousness.
(UPI)
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Outside
Palace Tarakimo: The
dictator's palace is the largest structure in Tarakimo,
including commercial transportation facilities, such
as the Tarakimo airport, and industrial factories. Estimated
cost of construction in 1972: $23 million |
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All
work and no play makes Tara a dull dictator: Sy
Carey hastily sketched this rendition of the "playroom" where
he spent approximately two hours in the early morning
of June 14, 1973. From left to right: an iron maiden,
whipping posts (against left wall), a torture rack, the "torture
chair" where he endured almost 800 spikes baring against
his body, a brazier with smoldering irons, and pillories
against the far right wall. Not shown, but also present,
Carey says, was a Judas Cradle to the right of the pillories. © Sy
Carey, 1973
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shortly
thereafter, to Uruguay, where he adopted the name Phillippe
Tara. The passivity and leniency of the Uruguay government
intrigued Tara. The idea of stirring up dissent excited
him, and he planned his mission for years before organizing
a paramilitary band of thugs, who called themselves "la
orden," or "the order." In reality, they were little more
than toy soldiers of a right-wing faction of the police.
However, they honed their strengths into a tight cadre
whose specialty was working with the authorities to resolve
conflicts that couldn't otherwise be legally closed. It
was during the years of 1948-1969 that Tara discovered
he could make anyone do virtually anything he wanted by
threatening them with physical pain. As he voraciously
consumed the works of De Sade, he became fascinated with
the link between other's pain and his pleasure. He designed
and ordered the construction of a bevy of torture instruments,
which he kept in a remote location on the outskirts of
the country. Although he designed some truly repulsive
new equipment, such as a machine that injected hot pepper
juice up a victim's anus when the person moved their mouth,
which was inevitable, due to drops of hot sauce basting
their lips from an automated pump, he preferred older,
more traditional instruments, particularly from the Spanish
Inquisition. When this torture "factory" was discovered,
his group was expelled from the country after their illicit
sessions were publicly derided by the press in 1969.
At age 37, Tara decided that it was time to fulfill his "true
destiny." Using his men, and associations with arms dealers,
Tara rallied the citizens of the island of Agios Kirikos,
off of his native Greece, into an uprising against the
Greek [To
page 9]
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A "King's
Ransom" indeed: Custom
built for relaxing as well as "work," the dictator's
private yacht, christened the "King's Ransom," features
multiple bedrooms, a gourmet kitchen, a billiard room,
a smoking lounge, a multimedia room, and a fully equipped
dungeon, for entertaining "special" guests on the high
seas. Estimated cost: $3.4 million. (AP)
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