Lawyer Who Told of U.S. Abuses at Afghan Bases Loses U.N. Post


By WARREN HOGE 
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/04-/30/international/asia/30natio-ns.html?p... 


UNITED NATIONS, April 29 - A United Nations human rights monitor who accused

American military forces and civilian contractors last week of abusing and 
torturing prisoners in Afghanistan has been told his job is over. 
M. Cherif Bassiouni, a professor of law at DePaul University in Chicago who 
was the human rights commission's independent expert for Afghanistan, said 
Friday that he had received an e-mail message from a commission official in 
Geneva a week ago telling him his mandate had expired. 
The day before, he had released a 21-page report saying that Americans 
running prisons in Afghanistan had acted above the law "by engaging in 
arbitrary arrests and detentions and committing abusive practices, including

torture." 
In an interview from his Chicago office, he said that he had been expecting 
a routine two-year renewal but that the United States had lobbied against 
him because of his persistent efforts to examine American-supervised prisons

and his disclosure that prisoners were being detained in remote "fire bases"

constructed for combat operations. 
Kurtis Cooper, a State Department spokesman, denied that Mr. Bassiouni's 
ouster could be attributed to American pressure. "This was a decision that 
was made in light of the fact that more than three years after the Taliban, 
the human rights situation in Afghanistan had evolved to the point where it 
could be monitored under the ordinary procedures of the high commissioner 
for human rights without the need of an independent expert," he said. 
Brenden Varma, a spokesman for Secretary General Kofi Annan, who appointed 
Mr. Bassiouni to the post, said that he was widely respected for his long 
human rights record, but that his tenure was up to the human rights 
commission, and "they decided that the situation had improved and that it 
was time for the mandate to expire." 
Mr. Bassiouni, born in Cairo, was chairman of the Security Council's 
commission to investigate war crimes in the former Yugoslavia from 1992 to 
1994, and leader of a program to train 450 judges in Afghanistan in 2003. 
He said he had not intended to be confrontational. "When I went to 
Afghanistan last year, in my mind, my role was not to go there and shame 
them but to help them," he said. "I didn't see myself as someone going to 
fix the blame but to fix the problem." 
He said he was rebuffed repeatedly in his efforts to visit prisons at the 
United States bases in Bagram and Kandahar by American officials who told 
him he was exceeding his mandate. 
He discovered the use of 14 fire bases for detainees, he said, when he 
spotted an American military order warning commanders against keeping 
captives at the spots for more than two weeks. 
Despite the lack of cooperation, he said, he had no trouble learning of 
rights violations. "Arbitrary arrest and detention are common knowledge in 
Afghanistan because the coalition forces are known to go to villages and 
towns and break down doors and arrest people and take them whenever they 
want," he said. 
He said victims' descriptions of their American captors' appearance had 
struck a grim note of recognition because of his past experience. "It was 
very reminiscent of what I had seen in the former Yugoslavia, where you 
would ask victims of beatings and torture who had abused them and they would

say they couldn't identify them because they wore battle fatigues with no 
names and no insignias." 
Asked what he thought would happen to prisons in Afghanistan now, he said, 
"My guess is that torture will go down at the U.S. facilities, but what will

go up is torture at the Afghan facilities. It's the usual shell game. The 
U.S. feels the heat, it tries to discontinue the practice itself, but it 
finds special forces in the Afghan Army to do its bidding." 


Copyright 2005 The New York Times Company 



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