Reuters. 20 January 2002. Britain Wants U.S. to Explain Guantanamo Bay
Photos.

LONDON -- Britain said Sunday it wanted an explanation from the United
States about published photographs showing Taliban and al Qaeda
prisoners on a U.S. base in Guantanamo Bay kneeling and tightly
manacled.

British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw said in a statement that
"prisoners, regardless of their technical status, should be treated
humanely and in accordance with customary international law."

"We have always made that clear and the Americans have said they share
this view...As for the photographs of detainees published today, I have
asked our officials in Guantanamo Bay to establish with the U.S. the
circumstances in which these photographs were taken."

Human rights groups have already expressed horror that the prisoners
were shackled and blindfolded for the long flight to the camp in Cuba,
destined for 6-foot by 8-foot enclosures with roofs and floors but only
chain-link walls.

Britain said Friday that a team of its officials had arrived at the U.S.
prison camp in Guantanamo Bay to visit three of the al Qaeda detainees
there who say they are Britons.

Blair has been an unflinching ally of the United States since the Sept.
11 attacks on New York and Washington. But at home, friends and
opponents are increasingly uneasy at images of manacled prisoners at the
compound dubbed "Camp X-Ray."

They warned that the pictures could cost Blair and President Bush the
moral high ground in their "war on terror."

Sunday newspapers in Britain carried photographs of prisoners in red
overalls -- eyes and ears covered, with their arms tightly shackled --
kneeling behind wire fences.

"Manacled hand and foot, they kneel in submission. Is this how Bush and
Blair defend our civilization?" the normally right-wing Mail Sunday
asked on its front page.

Tony Lloyd, an MP in Blair's Labor Party and a former foreign office
minister, told BBC Television: "The treatment does seem to be way below
the standards you would expect."

Liberal Democrat foreign affairs spokesman Menzies Campbell asked: "What
sort of effect will these pictures have in capitals like Cairo or Amman?
I don't believe we will successfully fight a campaign against terror if
we publicly treat people in the way in which these photographs suggest."

A team from the International Committee of the Red Cross is at the U.S.
base on the eastern tip of Cuba to inspect the prison and interview each
detainee.

Their findings will not be made public.


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Barry Stoller
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ProletarianNews
featuring one of the photos in question
attached to this story


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