Perhaps Newsweek was not far from reality with its Quran mistreatment
coverage.
David Bier

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/8090656/

Pentagon details mishandling of Quran
Detainees’ copies of holy book kicked, splashed with urine
The Associated Press
Updated: 8:51 p.m. ET June 3, 2005

WASHINGTON - The Pentagon on Friday released new details about
mishandling of the Quran at the Guantanamo Bay prison for terror
suspects, confirming that a soldier deliberately kicked the Muslim
holy book and that an interrogator stepped on a Quran and was later
fired for “a pattern of unacceptable behavior.”

In other confirmed incidents, water balloons thrown by prison guards
caused an unspecified number of Qurans to get wet; a guard’s
urine
came through an air vent and splashed on a detainee and his Quran; and
in a confirmed but ambiguous case, a two-word obscenity was written in
English on the inside cover of a Quran.

The findings, released after normal business hours Friday evening, are
among the results of an investigation last month by Brig. Gen. Jay
Hood, the commander of the detention center in Cuba, that was
triggered by a Newsweek magazine report " later retracted
" that a
U.S. soldier had flushed one Guantanamo Bay detainee’s Quran
down a
toilet.

The story stirred worldwide controversy and the Bush administration
blamed it for deadly demonstrations in Afghanistan.

‘Respectful handling of the Quran’
Hood said in a written statement released Friday evening, along with
the new details, that his investigation “revealed a consistent,
documented policy of respectful handling of the Quran dating back
almost 2½ years.”

Hood said that of nine mishandling cases that were studied in detail
by reviewing thousands of pages of written records, five were
confirmed to have happened. He could not determine conclusively
whether the four others took place.

In one of those four unconfirmed cases, a detainee in April 2003
complained to FBI and other interrogators that guards
“constantly
defile the Quran.” The detainee alleged that in one instance a
female
military guard threw a Quran into a bag of wet towels to anger another
detainee, and he also alleged that another guard said the Quran
belonged in the toilet and that guards were ordered to do these
things.

Hood said he found no other record of this detainee mentioning any
Quran mishandling. The detainee has since been released.

Reprimand in urine splashing case
In the most recent confirmed case, Hood said a detainee complained on
March 25, 2005, of urine splashing on him and his Quran. An
unidentified guard admitted at the time that “he was at
fault,” the
Hood report said, although it did not say whether the act was
deliberate. The guard’s supervisor reprimanded him and
assigned him to
gate guard duty, where he had no contact with detainees for the
remainder of his assignment at Guantanamo Bay.

As described in the Hood report, the guard had left his observation
post and went outside to urinate. He urinated near an air vent and the
wind blew his urine through the vent into the cell block. The incident
was not further explained.

In another of the confirmed cases, a contract interrogator stepped on
a detainee’s Quran in July 2003 and then apologized.
“The interrogator
was later terminated for a pattern of unacceptable behavior, an
inability to follow direct guidance and poor leadership,” the
Hood
report said.

Hood also said his investigation found 15 cases of detainees
mishandling their own Qurans. “These included using a Quran as
a
pillow, ripping pages out of the Quran, attempting to flush a Quran
down the toilet and urinating on the Quran,” Hood’s
report said. It
offered no possible explanation for those alleged abuses.

In the most recent of those 15 cases, a detainee on Feb. 18, 2005,
allegedly ripped up his Quran and handed it to a guard, stating that
he had given up on being a Muslim. Several of the guards witnessed
this, Hood reported.

Last week, Hood disclosed that he had confirmed five cases of
mishandling of the Quran, but he refused to provide details.
Allegations of Quran desecration at Guantanamo Bay have led to
anti-American passions in many Muslim nations, although Pentagon
officials have insisted that the problems were relatively minor and
that U.S. commanders have gone to great lengths to enable detainees to
practice their religion in captivity.

Hood said last week that he found no credible evidence that a Quran
was ever flushed down a toilet. He said a prisoner who was reported to
have complained to an FBI agent in 2002 that a military guard threw a
Quran in the toilet has since told Hood’s investigators that
he never
witnessed any form of Quran desecration.

Desecration allegations
Other prisoners who were returned to their home countries after
serving time at Guantanamo Bay as terror suspects have alleged Quran
desecration by U.S. guards, and some have said a Quran was placed in a
toilet.

There are about 540 detainees at Guantanamo Bay. Some have been there
more than three years without being charged with a crime. Most were
captured on the battlefields of Afghanistan in 2001 and 2002 and were
sent to Guantanamo Bay in hope of extracting useful intelligence about
the al-Qaida terrorist network.

Both President Bush and Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld have
denounced an Amnesty International report that called the U.S.
detention center at Guantanamo Bay “the gulag of our
time.”

The president told reporters at a press conference on Tuesday that the
report by the human-rights group was “absurd.”

On Wednesday, Rumsfeld called the characterization
“reprehensible” and
said the U.S. military had taken care to ensure that detainees were
free to practice their religion. However, he also acknowledged that
some detainees had been mistreated, even “grievously”
at times.




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