*****   Detainee dies during US interrogation in Afghanistan

By Peter Symonds
11 December 2002

US authorities last week reported that one of the detainees being
held by the military for interrogation at the Bagram Air Base in
Afghanistan had died. Almost nothing is known about who he was, why
he was detained or the circumstances surrounding his death.

A terse official statement explained that the man was in his 30s and
had been captured in Afghanistan during the previous week. He died,
allegedly from natural causes, at around 1 pm on December 4 after
being taken to the base hospital. "The matter will be fully
investigated," the statement added.

Citing US military regulations, spokesman Colonel Roger King refused
to release the prisoner's name, hometown or nationality, or to state
the reasons for his detention. It is not even clear whether the man's
family and friends have been notified of his death.

A New York Times report noted: "The man was among those Taliban and
Al Qaeda suspects held in a large warehouse on the base while
undergoing interrogation. The detention building has remained off
limits to journalists, but released detainees have described being
held in barbed-wire pens inside the large building, under constant
electric light. Some have complained of beatings or injuries received
when they were captured."

Neither the New York Times nor other media outlets have raised any
questions about the death or criticised the treatment being meted out
to alleged terrorist suspects, in breach of their most basic
democratic rights. A man can be detained indefinitely without charge
and die in unexplained circumstances-and the media, including the
so-called liberal New York Times, passes over the matter in
silence....

<http://www.wsws.org/articles/2002/dec2002/afgh-d11.shtml>   *****

*****     New York Times  5 December 2002

Detainee at Base in Afghanistan Dies

By THE NEW YORK TIMES

KABUL, Afghanistan, Dec. 4 - The American military said today that a
man in United States custody at Bagram Air Base just north of Kabul
had died. In a tersely worded statement, American authorities here
said only that the man died Tuesday night, apparently from natural
causes.

"The matter will be fully investigated," the statement read.

The man was among those Taliban and Al Qaeda suspects held in a large
warehouse on the base while undergoing interrogation. The detention
building has remained off limits to journalists, but released
detainees have described being held in barbed-wire pens inside the
large building, under constant electric light. Some have complained
of beatings or injuries received when they were captured.

Some detainees have been elderly and sick. Two of three Afghan
prisoners released in November after months of detention in
Afghanistan and then the Guantánamo Naval Base in Cuba, were over 70.
The confused state of one of them about his circumstances prompted
the government of President Hamid Karzai to announce that he was
sending a delegation to Guantánamo to check on the condition of other
Afghan detainees.

American military officials say the detainees are afforded rights
according to international conventions. They say that prisoners have
been visited by officials of the international Red Cross, and that
the injured have been treated in a field hospital run by the
coalition forces at Bagram.

<http://www.nytimes.com/2002/12/05/international/asia/05BAGR.html>   *****
--
Yoshie

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