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-----Original Message-----
From: International Justice Watch Discussion List
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
On Behalf Of Kathy Kadane
Sent: Wednesday, July 24, 2002 10:35 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Now US opposes UN anti-torture protocol--REPORT

U.S. trying to block U.N. vote on anti-torture plan

http://www.nandotimes.com/nation/story/476642p-3809275c.html

By DAFNA LINZER, Associated Press

UNITED NATIONS (July 24, 2002 2:26 p.m. EDT) - Concerned about the
possibility of independent visits to U.S. civilian and military prisons, the
United States sought Wednesday to block a vote on a U.N. plan meant to
enforce a convention on torture.

The United States wants negotiations on the plan reopened, a move human
rights groups say could kill the proposal, which they believe is essential
to ending torture around the world.

Debate on the anti-torture plan was underway Wednesday in the U.N. Economic
and Social Council, known as ECOSOC, and a vote was expected in the
afternoon.

However, the United States had submitted a proposal to block the vote and it
wasn't clear whether the council would agree to the U.S. request for
open-ended talks on "the current text and the process connected with it."
Among the U.S. concerns is language that could allow for international and
independent visits to U.S. prisons and to terror suspects being held by the
U.S. military at Guantanamo Bay Naval Base in Cuba.

A U.S. official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said allowing outside
observers into state prisons would infringe on states' rights.
Another problem, the official said, is the issue of access to suspected
al-Qaida and Taliban fighters captured in Afghanistan and being held in the
war on terrorism.

The anti-torture proposal enjoys wide support among Western European and
Latin American countries. But conservative Muslim states that shun outside
intervention are likely to back the U.S. request in order to stave off a
vote.

Human rights advocates argue that the optional protocol is essential to
enforce an international convention on torture passed 13 years ago and since
ratified by about 130 countries, including the United States. Countries are
supposed to enforce the convention on their own, but rights groups argue
that that isn't working everywhere.

"A vote against the optional protocol would be a disastrous setback in the
fight against torture," said Martin MacPherson, head of Amnesty
International's legal program. People were tortured or ill-treated by
authorities in 111 countries last year, according to an Amnesty report.
Activists fear that if the United States succeeds in reopening the
negotiations "it will mean a kiss of death," for the protocol, said Rory
Mungoven of the New York-based Human Rights Watch.

"This protocol would create a more pro-active mechanism that includes visits
to prisons and other preventive measures which would help enforce the
convention," Mungoven said.

The protocol, which has been under negotiation for a decade, would be an
optional, supplementary document. According to the text, the objective of
the protocol is "to establish a system of regular visits undertaken by
independent and national bodies to places where people are deprived of their
liberty, in order to prevent torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading
treatment and punishment."

If the protocol is approved, it moves to the General Assembly where it would
need to be approved by a majority of the 190 member states. Then, it will
require 20 ratifications before it can go into force.

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