Afghan detainees routinely tortured and humiliated by US troops

Duncan Campbell and Suzanne Goldenberg
Wednesday June 23, 2004
The Guardian

Detainees held in Afghanistan by American troops have been routinely
tortured and humiliated as part of the interrogation process, in the
same way as those in Iraq, a Guardian investigation has found.

Five detainees have died in custody, three of them in suspicious
circumstances, and survivors have told stories of beatings, strippings,
hoodings and sleep deprivation.

The nature of the alleged abuse indicates that what happened at Abu
Ghraib prison in Iraq was part of a pattern of interrogation that has
been common practice since the US invasion of Afghanistan.

Yesterday, in an attempt to stem charges that senior officials in the
Bush admin-istration condoned the use of torture in the war on terror,
the White House released hundreds of pages of documents outlining its
internal deliberations on interrogation.

The memos, which originated at the Pentagon, the White House and the
justice department and date from January 2002 to April last year, were
intended to show that the president and his aides insisted that
detainees at Guantanamo Bay should be treated humanely.

But one such memo leaked earlier this month said that Mr Bush had the
legal authority to allow torture, giving new impetus to a campaign by
human rights organisations and Democrats.

Senator Patrick Leahy, the Democratic member of the Senate subcommittee
on foreign operations, told the Guardian that prisoners in Afghanistan
"were subjected to cruel and degrading treatment, and some died from
it".

"These abuses were part of a wider pattern stemming from a White House
attitude that 'anything goes' in the war against terrorism, even if it
crosses the line of illegality."

Syed Nabi Siddiqi, a former police officer, said he was beaten and
stripped. "They took off my uniform. I showed them my identity card from
the government... Then they asked me which of those animals - they made
the noise of goats, sheep, dogs, cows - have you had sexual activities
with?"

A second detainee, Noor Aghah, said he was forced to drink bottles and
bottles of water during his interrogation.

Another prisoner, Wazir Muhammad, was held for nearly two years, firstly
in Afghanistan and then at Guantanamo Bay.

"At the end of my time in Guantanamo, I had to sign a paper saying I had
been captured in battle, which was not true," he said. "I was stopped
when I was in my taxi with four passengers. But they told me I would
have to spend the rest of my life in Guantanamo if I did not sign it, so
I did."

Parts of an inquiry by Brigadier General Chuck Jacoby into allegations
of abuse in custody are to be made public next month by the head of the
US forces in Afghanistan, Lieutenant General David Barno.

Gen Barno said: "I will tell you without hesitation that intelligence
procedures have got to be done in accordance with the appropriate
standards _ all our forces will treat every detainee here with dignity
and respect."

The network of US detention centres around Afghanistan has largely
avoided scrutiny, yet, according to the coalition forces last week, more
than 2,000 people have been detained there since the war.

"In some ways the abuses in Afghanistan are more troubling than those in
Iraq," said John Sifton of Human Rights Watch. "While it is true that
abuses in Afghanistan often lacked the sexually abusive content of the
abuses in Iraq, they were in many ways worse.

"Detainees were severely beaten, exposed to cold and deprived of sleep
and water. Five are known to have died [two of natural causes]."

[there's a longer "G2 cover story" in the GUARDIAN on-line]

------------------------
Jim Devine [EMAIL PROTECTED] &  http://bellarmine.lmu.edu/~jdevine

Reply via email to