Pentagon to follow Geneva treaty for detainees

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Great news. Let's see what Congress does next:

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/07/11/world/11cnd-detain.html?hp&ex=1152676800&en=e36adb8e22b9523a&ei=5094&partner=homepage

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn (Alfred Soto), Tuesday, 11 July 2006 14:43 (nineteen years ago)

Good news indeed, but...


Fidel Castro's prisons in Cuba contain around 300 political prisoners who have been denied basic rights, are detained in squalid conditions with little or no visitation rights, and are not even allowed visits from the Red Cross or organisations like Human Rights Watch. But for some reason nobody on the British left really gives a toss about them.

Hello Sunshine (Hello Sunshine), Tuesday, 11 July 2006 14:58 (nineteen years ago)

Fidel's almost always ignored in the press for two reasons (1) stereotypes about the Cuban Right-Wing Miami Mafia; and (2) recidivist lefty loyalty for el comandante.

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn (Alfred Soto), Tuesday, 11 July 2006 15:07 (nineteen years ago)

... because of this there dinosaurs!

http://www.cmnh.org/pressroom/images/velociraptor.jpg

Machibuse '80 (ex machina), Tuesday, 11 July 2006 16:04 (nineteen years ago)

LEAHY: I don’t think the President was talking about the nuances of the law of war paradigm, he was saying this was going to tell him that he could keep Guantanamo open or not, after it said he could.

BRADBURY: Well, it’s not —

LEAHY: Was the President right or was he wrong?

BRABURY: It’s under the law of war –

LEAHY: Was the President right or was he wrong?

BRADBURY: The President is always right.

kingfish cyclopean ice cream (kingfish 2.0), Wednesday, 12 July 2006 16:45 (nineteen years ago)

three years pass...

CHANGE

An American military detention camp in Afghanistan is still holding inmates for sometimes weeks at a time and without access to the International Committee of the Red Cross, according to human rights researchers and former detainees held at the site on the Bagram Air Base.

The site consists of individual windowless concrete cells, each lighted by a single light bulb glowing 24 hours a day, where detainees said that their only contact with another human being was at twice-daily interrogation sessions.

The jail’s operation highlights a tension between President Obama’s goal to improve detention conditions that had drawn condemnation under the Bush administration and his desire to give military commanders leeway to operate. In this case, that means isolating certain prisoners for a period of time so interrogators can extract information or flush out confederates.

While Mr. Obama signed an order to eliminate so-called black sites run by the Central Intelligence Agency in January, that order did not apply to this jail, which is run by military Special Operations forces.

Military officials said as recently as this summer that the secret Afghanistan jail and another like it at the Balad Air Base in Iraq were being used to interrogate high-value detainees. And officials said recently that there were no plans to close the detention centers.

In August, the administration restricted the time that detainees could be held at the secret jails to two weeks, changing previous Pentagon policy.

In the past, the military could obtain extensions. The interviewed detainees had been held longer but before the new policy went into effect.

Detainees call the Afghan site the black jail.

“The black jail was the most dangerous and fearful place,” said Hamidullah, a spare-parts dealer in Kandahar who was detained in June and who, like some Afghans, doesn’t use a last name. “They don’t let the I.C.R.C. officials or any other civilians see or communicate with the people they keep there. Because I did not know what time it was, I did not know when to pray.”

Mr. Hamidullah was released in October, after five and half months in detention, five to six weeks of it in the black jail, he said.

Although his and other detainees’ accounts could not be independently corroborated, each was interviewed separately and described similar conditions. Their descriptions also matched those obtained by two human rights workers who had interviewed other former detainees at the site.

While two of the detainees were captured before the Obama administration took office, one was captured in June of this year.

All three detainees were later released without charges. None said they had been tortured, though they said they heard sounds of abuse going on and certainly felt humiliated and roughly used. “They beat up other people in the black jail, but not me,” Hamidullah said. “But the problem was that they didn’t let me sleep. There was shouting noise so you couldn’t sleep."

Others, however, have given accounts of abuse at the site, including two Afghan teenagers who told The Washington Post that they had been subjected to beatings and humiliation by American guards.
Human rights officials said the existence of a jail where prisoners were denied contact with the Red Cross or their families contradicted the Obama administration’s drive to improve detention conditions....

“Holding people in what appears to be incommunicado detention runs against the grain of the administration’s commitment to greater transparency, accountability, and respect for the dignity of Afghans,” said Jonathan Horowitz, a human rights researcher with the Open Society Institute....

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/11/29/world/asia/29bagram.html?_r=1&hp=&pagewanted=all

Feingold/Kaptur 2012 (Dr Morbius), Saturday, 28 November 2009 18:03 (sixteen years ago)


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