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From the Los Angeles Times

Report: U.S. Is Abusing Captives
A U.N. inquiry says the treatment of detainees at Guantanamo Bay at
times amounts to torture and violates international law.

By Maggie Farley
Times Staff Writer

February 13, 2006

NEW YORK — A draft United Nations report on the detainees at
Guantanamo Bay concludes that the U.S. treatment of them violates
their rights to physical and mental health and, in some cases,
constitutes torture.

It also urges the United States to close the military prison in Cuba
and bring the captives to trial on U.S. territory, charging that
Washington's justification for the continued detention is a distortion
of international law.

The report, compiled by five U.N. envoys who interviewed former
prisoners, detainees' lawyers and families, and U.S. officials, is the
product of an 18-month investigation ordered by the U.N. Commission on
Human Rights. The team did not have access to prisoners at Guantanamo
Bay.

Nonetheless, its findings — notably a conclusion that the violent
force-feeding of hunger strikers, incidents of excessive violence used
in transporting prisoners and combinations of interrogation techniques
"must be assessed as amounting to torture" — are likely to stoke U.S.
and international criticism of the prison.

Nearly 500 people captured abroad since 2002 in Afghanistan and
elsewhere and described by the U.S. as "enemy combatants" are being
held at Guantanamo Bay.

"We very, very carefully considered all of the arguments posed by the
U.S. government," said Manfred Nowak, the U.N. special rapporteur on
torture and one of the envoys. "There are no conclusions that are
easily drawn. But we concluded that the situation in several areas
violates international law and conventions on human rights and
torture."

The draft report, reviewed by the Los Angeles Times, has not been
officially released. U.N. officials are in the process of
incorporating comments and clarifications from the U.S. government.

In November, the Bush administration offered the U.N. team the same
tour of the prison given to journalists and members of Congress, but
refused the envoys access to prisoners. Because of that, the U.N.
group declined the visit.

Nowak said he did not expect major changes to the report's conclusions
and recommendations as a result of the U.S. government's response,
though there would be amendments on minor issues.

Navy Lt. Cmdr. J.D. Gordon, a spokesman for the Pentagon, said the
Defense Department did not comment about U.N. matters.

The report is not legally binding. But human rights and legal
advocates hope the U.N.'s conclusions will add weight to similar
findings by rights groups and the European Parliament.

"I think the effect of this will be to revive concern about the
government's mistreatment of detainees, and to get people to take
another look at the legal basis," said Kenneth Roth, the executive
director of Human Rights Watch. "There are lots of lingering questions
about how do you justify holding these people."

The report focuses on the U.S. government's legal basis for the
detentions as described in its formal response to the U.N. inquiry:
"The law of war allows the United States — and any other country
engaged in combat — to hold enemy combatants without charges or access
to counsel for the duration of hostilities. Detention is not an act of
punishment, but of security and military necessity. It serves the
purpose of preventing combatants from continuing to take up arms
against the United States."

But the U.N. team concluded that there had been insufficient due
process to determine whether the more than 750 people who had been
detained at Guantanamo Bay since January 2002 were "enemy combatants,"
and determined that the primary purpose of their confinement was for
interrogation, not to prevent them from taking up arms. The U.S. has
released or transferred more than 260 detainees from Guantanamo Bay.

It also rejected the premise that "the war on terrorism" exempted the
U.S. from international conventions on torture and civil and political
rights.

The report said some of the treatment of detainees met the definition
of torture under the U.N. Convention Against Torture: The acts were
committed by government officials, with a clear purpose, inflicting
severe pain or suffering against victims in a position of
powerlessness.

The findings also concluded that the simultaneous use of several
interrogation techniques — prolonged solitary confinement, exposure to
extreme temperatures, noise and light; forced shaving and other
techniques that exploit religious beliefs or cause intimidation and
humiliation — constituted inhumane treatment and, in some cases,
reached the threshold of torture.

Nowak said that the U.N. team was "particularly concerned" about the
force-feeding of hunger strikers through nasal tubes that detainees
said were brutally inserted and removed, causing intense pain,
bleeding and vomiting.

"It remains a current phenomenon," Nowak said.

International Red Cross guidelines state: "Doctors should never be
party to actual coercive feeding. Such actions can be considered a
form of torture and under no circumstances should doctors participate
in them on the pretext of saving the hunger striker's life."

One detainee, a Kuwaiti named Fawzi Al Odah, told his lawyer this
month that he stopped his five-month hunger strike under threats of
physical abuse.

Thomas B. Wilner, a lawyer at Shearman & Sterling in Washington who
has represented 12 Kuwaitis held at Guantanamo Bay, said that Odah
told him that in December guards began taking away clothes, shoes and
blankets from about 85 hunger strikers.

Wilner said Odah described guards mixing laxatives into the liquid
formula they gave to about 40 prisoners through the nose tubes,
causing them to defecate on themselves.

Wilner said Odah told him that on Jan. 9, an officer read what he said
was an order from Guantanamo Bay's commander, Brig. Gen. Jay W. Hood,
stating that hunger strikers would be strapped into a restraint chair
and force-fed with thick nasal tubes that would be inserted and
removed twice a day. After hearing a neighboring prisoner scream in
pain and tell him not to go through it, Odah reluctantly ceased his
hunger strike, Wilner said.

"I stopped it because they forced me to stop," Wilner quoted Odah as
telling him. "They stopped it through torture."

Pentagon officials said the number of hunger strikers had dropped to four.

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--
Jim Devine

Bust Big Brother Bush!

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