Commentary from World Socialist Website

http://www.wsws.org/articles/2003/sep2003/amne-s25.shtml

Amnesty International report denounces US treatment of war prisoners
By Ruby Rankin
25 September 2003
A recent report by Amnesty International (AI) warns that the Bush
administration is repudiating basic democratic rights and undermining the
entire post-World War II system of international humanitarian law.

The 60-page document, which exposes US torture of those captured in the "war
on terror", is entitled The threat of a bad example: undermining
international standards. It details the US government's treatment of foreign
war prisoners held without charge and denied access to their families and
legal counsel for almost two years in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba and Bagram US Air
Base, Afghanistan.

AI quotes the US president and other high-level government officials,
including the secretary of state, condemning the use of torture by various
countries and proclaiming America as the world's foremost proponent of human
rights. These comments are juxtaposed against current examples of
US-inflicted torture.

"Allegations of abuses such as arbitrary arrests, prolonged incommunicado
detention, ill-treatment, interrogations without legal counsel and threats
of unfair trials by military bodies are raised each year in the US State
Department's reports on human rights practices in other countries," the
report states. "Now they are being made against the US government in the
context of its 'war on terror'."

AI interviewed some of the handful of prisoners released from US military
detention, establishing that those held at Guantanamo Bay, Bagram Air Base
and other locations are regularly being tortured with "stress and duress"
techniques.

Detailing the methods used, the AI report says: "Colonel Roger King, the
chief US military spokesman in Bagram, confirmed that 'we do force people to
stand for an extended period of time... Disruption of sleep has been
reported as an effective way of reducing people's inhibition about talking
or their resistance to questioning.' He was reported as saying that a
'common technique' was to maintain 24-hour illumination in cells or to wake
inmates up every 15 minutes to disorient them. Forced standing, he said,
could also be used to punish any inmate who spoke to another.... Lt. Gen.
Daniel K. McNeill, Commander of Joint Task Force 180 in Afghanistan, also
acknowledged that prisoners had been subjected to forced prolonged standing
in Bagram."

Those detained at Guantanamo Bay are subject to President Bush's Military
Order enacted following the September 11 terrorist attacks on the US. It
renders them eligible for trial by military commission. Under this order
anyone who is not a US citizen can be arrested, held incommunicado and even
executed in secrecy without recourse to due process of law. These methods
are no different from those used by military dictatorships in Argentina,
Chile, Peru and other Latin American countries during the 1970s and 80s.

AI notes the discrimination between US nationals and others, with only
non-US citizens subject to the Military Order. It also records, however,
that US citizens are not immune from arbitrary and inhumane treatment. The
Bush administration has no hesitation in eliminating anyone it regards as
standing in its way. For example, a CIA-controlled Predator unmanned aerial
vehicle summarily executed a US citizen in November 2002 in Yemen.

The report refers to "irregular rendition"-a technique employed by the US
government to avoid normal channels of extradition between countries. This
involves the kidnapping of individual suspects by foreign military and
police authorities, working under US direction, and moving them to third
countries for torture.

Using this method, men deemed as terrorists by US authorities have been
picked off the streets in Pakistan, Afghanistan, Malawi and other countries,
held incommunicado and tortured. The "lucky" ones are released days, weeks
or months later. No charges are laid or trial held. Others kidnapped in this
way have been transported by the US military to Guantanamo Bay, Bagram or
other undisclosed locations, including Zimbabwe, Morocco, Jordan or Egypt,
where they are being held without charge.

Demolishing Bush administration claims that those held in Guantanamo Bay
were "illegal combatants" captured "on the battlefield aiding and abetting
the Taliban", AI cited several cases of men captured outside Afghanistan but
"rendered" to Guantanamo Bay. This included six Algerian men in
Bosnia-Herzegovina who were handed over to US authorities in January 2002 by
Bosnian police and two men arrested in Gambia, and secretly transferred to
Bagram then Guantanamo.

Another prisoner, Moazzam Begg, a dual UK/Pakistani national, one of many
seized in Pakistan, was transported in the boot of a car to Kandahar and
then Bagram before being flown, bound and gagged to Guantanamo Bay. He wrote
to his father, "I have not seen the sun for over seven months except once,
for around two minutes." Begg is one of the first six Guantanamo Bay
prisoners who could be brought before a US military tribunal.

Another well-documented example is the case of Sayed Abassin, a 28-year-old
taxi driver detained en route from Kabul to Khost in April 2002. Although
authorities were actually after one of Abassin's passengers, the taxi-driver
was handed over to the US military and flown to Bagram Air Base.

Amnesty International reports that Abassin was held in handcuffs and
shackles, kept under 24-hour lighting and constantly woken by guards when he
attempted to sleep during the first week. He was interrogated six or seven
times, not given enough food or allowed to talk to, or look at, other
detainees, and forced to stand or kneel for hours. Abassin said he was
blindfolded and hooded, with his ears covered, and his hands and feet bound
during his transfer to the US base in Kandahar. He said that if detainees
looked at US soldiers' faces they were made to kneel for an hour. If they
looked twice, they were made to kneel for two hours.

Abassin told the human rights organisation that he was interrogated five or
six times in Kandahar before being transferred to Guantanamo Bay. On arrival
he was grilled 10 or more times in the first few weeks after his arrival and
then held for another 10 months without any interrogations before being
released.


Violation of Geneva Conventions

As the AI report makes clear, the Bush administration is using the "war on
terrorism" to repudiate the US Constitution and numerous Geneva Conventions.

The first Convention, which was inspired by Henri Dunant, founder of the
International Red Cross, was signed in 1864 to protect the sick and wounded
in wartime. Others were adopted in the late nineteenth and twentieth
centuries to deal with chemical and biological warfare and for the humane
treatment of prisoners of war. The four Geneva Conventions enacted in 1949,
following WWII, underlie current international law on the appropriate
conduct of wars, including civil wars, and the treatment of prisoners.

Now in the early days of the twenty-first century, the US government has
abandoned its democratic traditions at home and abroad and repudiated in
practice (if not in words) the international laws that enshrine the most
rudimentary principles of fairness and justice.

Although AI investigators were unable to determine how many children are
imprisoned in Guantanamo Bay, they extracted a statement from Paul Butler,
US deputy assistant secretary of defence, who admitted that the military was
holding a "very small number" of detainees under the age of 16. He claimed
it was "difficult to determine the exact age for the detainees, as birth
records are not readily available".

AI also cites General Richard B. Myers, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff, who "justifies" this violation of basic rights by declaring, without
any evidence, that the children were terrorists. "Despite their age, these
are very, very dangerous people," Myers declared. "They may be juveniles,
but they're not on a little-league team... they're on a major league team,
and it's a terrorist team."

Irrespective of the precise age of the children or the allegations against
them, it is a criminal offence under international law and the various human
rights protocols to hold anyone under the age of 18 as a war prisoner. The
US is a signatory to 17 protocols adopted by the Geneva Convention in 1949
to protect children in war zones and other measures established under the
United Nations Convention of the Rights of the Child.

In highlighting the US government's turn to arbitrary executive power, the
AI report quotes a former judge on the Superior Court of New Jersey: "The
very core of American history, law and culture condemns the ideas of
punishment before trial, denial of due process and secret government by
fiat. Who is an enemy combatant? Today, it can be anyone the president
wants. And that is terrifying."

While Amnesty International provides no analysis of the political character
of the Bush administration and urges the regime to reform its ways, the
report is valuable in that it documents the extent to which Washington is
tearing up basic human rights. It calls on the US government to drop its
plans for military tribunals, to charge and provide a fair trial to the war
prisoners or release them, and to give the human rights body access to
detainees and officials at Bagram and Guantanamo Bay.

See Also:
US tortures two detainees to death in Afghanistan
[10 March 2003]
Another criminal violation of human rights
US admits jailing children at Guantanamo Bay
[1 May 2003]
New revelations about Guantanamo Bay prisoners
[3 January 2003]
The CIA's international dirty war
US oversees abduction, torture, execution of alleged terrorists
[20 March 2002]

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