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Detainee dies during US interrogation in Afghanistan
By Peter Symonds
11 December 2002
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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 prisoners name, hometown or nationality,
or to state the reasons for his detention. It is not even clear
whether the mans 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 circumstancesand the
media, including the so-called liberal New York Times,
passes over the matter in silence.
There are only a limited number of possibilities. In normal
circumstances, young men do not suddenly die. The detainee may
have been sick, injured or woundedeither before or during
his capturein which case he should have been taken to hospital,
not an interrogation centre. Or he may have fallen ill, and, likewise,
been given proper medical treatment. The only other possibility
is that the interrogation itself contributed directly to his death.
Whichever is the case, serious questions of gross negligence and/or
mistreatment are raised.
Some idea of what happened can be gauged from what is known
about US interrogation methods. The most detailed account emerged
during the trial of John Walker Lindhthe so-called American
Talibanwho was detained following the Talibans surrender
of the northern city of Kunduz last November. He survived the
massacre of Taliban prisoners at Qala-i-Jangi fortress outside
Mazar-i-Sharif and was then flown to the US base dubbed Camp Rhino
near Kandahar in southern Afghanistan for interrogation.
Lindh was subject to continual verbal abuse and taunts as well
as death threats. He was malnourished, sick and had a bullet wound
in his leg. He was deliberately kept in this state until he agreed
to answer questions. During the first two days of his detention
in Camp Rhino, he was blindfolded, stripped naked, bound to a
stretcher and then placed inside a metal shipping container without
heating or insulation. He received only limited food and medical
attention. Only after his interrogation was he transferred to
the USS Peleliu, where he was treated for dehydration, hypothermia
and frostbite, and the bullet removed from his legmore than
a fortnight after his initial capture.
At no stage was Lindh advised of his legal rights or informed
that his parents had retained a lawyer on his behalf. The treatment
of Lindh, as well as that of the hundreds of men currently imprisoned
as Taliban or Al Qaeda suspects in Afghanistan and at Guantanamo
Bay in Cuba, is in open breach of Geneva Convention rules for
the detention of prisoners of war.
More than 600 detainees have been held and interrogated without
charge at Guantanamo Bay for nearly a year. Only four prisoners
have been releasedthree Afghans and a Pakistani in late
October. US authorities admitted that they were not dangerous
or linked to any terrorist group. Two of the four were in their
70s. The men complained that they were kept locked in tiny cells
in sweltering heat and underwent lengthy interrogations. They
had no contact with their families until shortly before their
release.
It appears, however, that the interrogation regime at Bagram
Air Base is even more aggressive. According to an October 29 article
in the Washington Post, Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, is
losing its usefulness as a place for gathering valuable intelligence
information, while interrogations at the US military base at Bagram,
and elsewhere abroad, have proven more fruitful...
Because Guantanamo is so close to the United States and
is continually being visited by US and foreign officials, informed
sources said, the camp operates in more of an atmosphere of political
correctness than does the Bagram facilitya sense among
interrogators that they must not allow detainees an opening to
complain of mistreatment.
At Bagram, which operates in more of a frontier atmosphere,
interrogators feel no such constraint. The military insists it
operates within rules that ban the use of physical and mental
torture, drugs and the exposure to inhumane treatment. But no
one is permitted inside the facility. Other than an occasional
visit by the international Red Cross, there is no check on the
treatment of prisoners.
Moreover, as interrogators candidly admit, one of the techniques
employed is to threaten detainees with being handed over to Afghan
authorities or to third countries where physical torture is used
without qualms. As the World Socialist Web Site reported
in March, prisoners have already been shipped to Egypt and Jordan
where they have been brutalised by local torturers operating under
CIA supervision.
Similar methods are being used in Kabul, just 60 km from Bagram.
A report by journalist Robert Fisk in the Independent in
August cited a military source who explained that the CIA was
employing Afghan soldiers based in a former torture centre in
Kabul to carry out their dirty work. Its the Afghan
Special Forces who beat the Pashtun prisoners for information
nownot the Americans. But the CIA are there during the beatings,
so the Americans are culpable, they let it happen, the source
said.
Bagram, which reportedly has a capacity of 40 to 80 detainees,
has clearly become a key processing centre for US interrogation.
Suspects seized in other countries are being flown to Afghanistan,
not Cuba. A further report by Fisk in the Independent described
how FBI agents working with local police seized three men in Pakistan
in May and Juneincluding a doctor and a teacherand
detained them indefinitely without informing their families of
their whereabouts.
The newspaper located one of them. He is a prisoner in
a cage on the huge American air base at Bagram in Afghanistan.
He was kidnappedthere appears to be no other word for itby
the Americans and simply flown over the international frontier
from Pakistan. His crime is unknown. He has no lawyers
to defend him. In the vacuum of the US war on terror,
Mr Abdul Qadir has become a non-person.
In June, suspected Al Qaeda member Omar al Faruq was detained
by Indonesian intelligence agents, handed over to the CIA and
flown to Bagram for interrogation. Classified documents leaked
to Time magazine explain that he was subjected to
three months of psychological interrogation tacticsa US
counterintelligence official says they included isolation and
sleep deprivation before he finally broke down
and allegedly provided details of Al Qaeda operations in South
East Asia.
Just who the detainee was who died last week at Bagram and
what ordeals he suffered remains a matter of speculation. More
information may be forthcoming. What is certain, however, is that
the Bush administration and the US intelligence apparatus are
responsible for depriving him of his freedom and basic democratic
rights, and subjecting him to a system of interrogation, and possibly
torture, that, at the very least, appears to have directly contributed
to his death.
See Also:
The CIAs international
dirty war
US oversees abduction, torture, execution of alleged terrorists
[20 March 2002]
US torture of John Walker
Lindh exposed as frame-up continues
[25 June 2002]
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