Op-Ed Contributor

Arrested Development (Children, too, are abused in U.S. prison!!!) 

By ARLIE HOCHSCHILD of UC Berkeley

Published: June 29, 2005

Berkeley, Calif.

LAST month John Miller, director of the State Department's Office to Monitor 
and Combat Trafficking in Persons, said that half the victims of human 
trafficking may be children under 18. Children are "at the center" of the 
problem of trafficking, which, Mr. Miller noted, is one of the great human 
rights issues of the 21st century. Yes, children should be at the heart of our 
concern for human rights. But that concern should start with the children 
detained in American prisons in Afghanistan, Iraq and Guantánamo Bay. 

Under international law, the line between childhood and maturity is 18. In 
communications with Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch, the Pentagon 
has lowered the cutoff to 16. For this reason among others, we don't know 
exactly how many Iraqi children are in American custody. But before the 
transfer of sovereignty from the Coalition Provisional Authority to an Iraqi 
interim government a year ago, the International Committee of the Red Cross 
reported registering 107 detainees under 18 during visits to six prisons 
controlled by coalition troops. Some detainees were as young as 8. 

Since that time, Human Rights Watch reports that the number has risen. The 
figures from Afghanistan are still more alarming: the journalist Seymour Hersh 
wrote last month in the British newspaper The Guardian that a memo addressed to 
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld shortly after the 2001 invasion reported 
"800-900 Pakistani boys 13-15 years of age in custody." 

Juvenile detainees in American facilities like Abu Ghraib and Bagram Air Base 
have been subject to the same mistreatment as adults. The International Red 
Cross, Amnesty International and the Pentagon itself have gathered substantial 
testimony of torture of children, bolstered by accounts from soldiers who 
witnessed or participated in the abuse.

According to Amnesty International, 13-year-old Mohammed Ismail Agha was 
arrested in Afghanistan in late 2002 and detained without charge or trial for 
over a year, first at Bagram and then at Guantánamo Bay. He was held in 
solitary confinement and subjected to sleep deprivation. "Whenever I started to 
fall asleep, they would kick at my door and yell at me to wake up," he told an 
Amnesty researcher. "They made me stand partway, with my knees bent, for one or 
two hours." 

A Canadian, Omar Khadr, was 15 in 2002 when he was captured in Afghanistan and 
interned at Guantánamo. For 2½ years, he was allowed no contact with a lawyer 
or with his family. Seventeen-year-old Akhtar Mohammed told Amnesty that he was 
kept in solitary confinement in a shipping container for eight days in 
Afghanistan in January 2002.

A Pentagon investigation last year by Maj. Gen. George Fay reported that in 
January 2004, a leashed but unmuzzled military guard dog was allowed into a 
cell holding two children. The intention was for the dog to " 'go nuts on the 
kids,' barking and scaring them." The children were screaming and the smaller 
one tried to hide behind the larger, the report said, as a soldier allowed the 
dog to get within about one foot of them. A girl named Juda Hafez Ahmad told 
Amnesty International that when she was held in Abu Ghraib she "saw one of the 
guards allow his dog to bite a 14-year-old boy on the leg."

Brig. Gen. Janis Karpinski, formerly in charge of Abu Ghraib, told Maj. General 
Fay about visiting a weeping 11-year-old detainee in the prison's notorious 
Cellblock 1B, which housed prisoners designated high risk. "He told me he was 
almost 12," General Karpinski recalled, and that "he really wanted to see his 
mother, could he please call his mother." 

Children like this 11 year old held at Abu Ghraib have been denied the right to 
see their parents, a lawyer, or anyone else. They were not told why they were 
detained, let alone for how long. A Pentagon spokesman told Mr. Hersh that 
juveniles received some special care, but added, "Age is not a determining 
factor in detention." The United States has found, the spokesman said, that 
"age does not necessarily diminish threat potential." 

It's true that some of these children may have picked up a stone or a gun. But 
coalition intelligence officers told the Red Cross that 70 percent to 90 
percent of detainees in Iraq are eventually found innocent and released. Many 
innocent children are swept up with their parents in chaotic nighttime dragnets 
based on tips from unreliable informants. "We know of children under 15," 
Clarisa Bencomo of Human Rights Watch told me, " held for over a year at 
Guantánamo Bay, whom the government later said were not security risks." Even 
if a child is found guilty, he or she should be treated humanely, rather than 
tortured or "rendered," as the C.I.A. puts it, to third parties that torture.

AMBASSADOR MILLER is right. Children matter. To really place them "at the 
center" of our human rights concerns, the United States should hasten to ratify 
the Convention on the Rights of the Child, from which only we and Somalia 
abstain. And if the Pentagon must detain children, it should do so in separate 
facilities, with access to family, and under humane conditions that include the 
offer of rehabilitation and education. 

Finally, the Pentagon should open all prisons to human rights inspectors. By 
taking these steps, the United States could begin to reverse some of the 
terrible harm that continues to be done to children in our name.

Arlie Hochschild is a professor of sociology at the University of California, 
Berkeley, and the co-editor of "Global Woman: Nannies, Maids and Sex Workers in 
the New Economy."

@ Copyright 2005 The New York Times Company 
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/29/opinion/29hochschild.html? 

 


                
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