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US War in Afghanistan
US flouts world opinion and Geneva Convention in treatment
of Afghan war prisoners
By Shannon Jones and Patrick Martin
23 January 2002
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The brutal treatment by the United States of Taliban and al
Qaeda prisoners in its custody, who are being held in open-air
cages at the Guantanamo naval base in Cuba, is provoking growing
worldwide condemnation as a violation of international law.
The International Committee of the Red Cross said January 21
that those being held by American forces must be classified as
prisoners of war under the Geneva Convention and were entitled
to all the protections offered by it. The ICRC is the international
body entrusted with enforcement of the Geneva Convention, and
its decision is a political blow to the Bush administration.
Red Cross officials added that some of the terms used by the
US government to describe the Afghan prisoners, such as battlefield
detainees, have no legal meaning. The Red Cross has further
charged that the US is abusing prisoners in Afghanistan, where
it is holding 360 captured fighters in Kandahar in an unsheltered
stockade, exposed to the bitter winter cold.
Amnesty International joined the Red Cross and other groups
in asking the US government to define the prisoners as POWs. It
is not the prerogative of the Secretary of Defense or any other
U.S. administration official to determine whether those held in
Guantanamo are POWs, the group said in a statement. An
independent US court, following due process, is the appropriate
organ.
The Bush administration and the Pentagon have employed makeshift
and invented terms like illegal combatant to describe
the prisoners, in order to disguise the fact that it is the US
government, not the POWs, which is engaged in illegal activity.
Recognizing the POW status of the captured men would defeat
the entire purpose of their removal from Afghanistan, which is
aimed at facilitating intensive interrogation, drumhead trials
before military tribunals, and prolonged imprisonment. Under the
Geneva Convention, prisoners cannot be forced to reveal more than
their name, rank, serial number and date of birth. Unless they
are formally tried for war crimes, POWs must be returned to their
home countries at the end of active hostilities, which
could be very soon given the collapse of Taliban resistance in
Afghanistan.
An earlier statement by Amnesty International suggested that
the mistreatment of Afghan prisoners may itself constitute a war
crime: Any detainee who is suspected of a crime, whether
or not they are POWs, must be charged with a criminal offense
and tried fairly or released. Denying POWs or other people protected
by the Geneva Conventions a fair trial is a war crime.
Donald Rumsfeld, the US secretary of defense, dismissed the
mounting criticism of US treatment of prisoners: I do not
feel even the slightest concern about their treatment. They are
being treated vastly better than they treated anybody else.
This characterization is not only arrogant but concedes that the
Bush administrations policy is not based on any objective
legal norms.
So weak is the US governments legal position that the
Washington Post published an editorial January 17 under
the headline, Follow the Geneva Convention. It is
remarkable that the principal newspaper in the US capital should
find it necessary to advise the US government not to commit war
crimes, even if that caution is couched in the most mealy-mouthed
terms.
The Post admitted that Rumsfeld does not have a leg
to stand on with his argument that the US is for the most
part observing the Geneva Convention even though the detainees
do not have any rights under the Geneva Convention.
That is not the case, the newspaper said. The
Geneva Convention and other international treaties ratified by
the United States give the detainees specific rights, rights that
the Bush administration should respect.
The first right most of the prisoners have is for a hearing
by a tribunal to determine whether or not they are prisoners of
war. Despite Mr. Rumsfelds declaration, detainees cannot
as a group be designated unlawful combatants by the secretary
of defense; according to most interpretations of the Geneva Convention,
in the case of a dispute about status, prisoners must have a hearing
before a tribunal.
Outrage in Europe
In Europe the position of the US government has provoked widespread
outrage. British newspapers published photographs of the prisoners
at Guantanamo, released by the US Navy, under captions labeling
their treatment as torture. A columnist for the conservative
British newspaper the Daily Mail wrote, this is a
bewildering and shocking experience. Even the SS were treated
better than this. The security chief of the European Union,
Javier Solana, called for the detainees to be treated as POWs
entitled to the protection of international law.
A US federal judge in Los Angeles agreed to hear a petition
filed by the Committee of Clergy, Lawyers and Professors demanding
that the US government bring the prisoners before a US court and
spell out the charges against them. University of Southern California
law professor Erwin Chemerinsky, a leader of the group, said,
These individuals were brought out of their country in shackles,
drugged, gagged and blindfolded, and are being held in open-air
cages in Cuba. Someone should be asserting their rights under
international law.
There was one significant public defense of the brutal treatment
of the prisoners: from Senator Joseph Lieberman of Connecticut,
the Democratic candidate for vice president in 2000. After a briefing
at Central Command headquarters at MacDill Air Force Base in Florida,
he told reporters, I think our military is doing just the
right thing in the way they are handling them at Guantanamo. These
are violent killers. They are already threatening the American
personnel who are there to guard them.
The US treatment of the Afghan prisoners violates international
law in many respects. The US says that it will carry out intense
interrogation of captured fighters. But Article 17 of the
Geneva Convention states, No physical or mental torture,
nor any other form of coercion, may be inflicted on prisoners
of war to secure from them information of any kind whatever. Prisoners
of war who refuse to answer may not be threatened, insulted, or
exposed to unpleasant or disadvantageous treatment of any kind.
As a columnist for the Toronto Star wrote, Those
detainees, brought shacked, shaved and blindfolded to Cuba, are
kept in chain link pens under the constant glare, night and day,
of halogen lamps (The blindfolding, deliberate disorientation,
discomfort and constant light are staples of police states all
over the world. The idea is to break down the inmate, weaken him
from lack of sleep and thereby make him more pliable when the
interrogators begin their work.)
POWs and the Geneva Convention
The Bush administration plan to use secret military tribunals
to try captured al Qaeda and Taliban is a further violation of
international law. Article 84 of the Geneva Convention stipulates:
In no circumstances whatever shall a prisoner of war be
tried by a court of any kind which does not offer the essential
guarantees of independence and impartiality as generally recognized,
and in particular, the procedure of which does not afford the
accused the rights and means of defense provided for in Article
105.(Right to choose own counsel, right to call witnesses)
Article 102 further enumerates the rights of prisoners of war
to a fair trial: A prisoner of war can be validly sentenced
only if the sentence has been pronounced by the same courts according
to the same procedures as in the case of members of the armed
forces of the Detaining Power.
And article 107 the Geneva Convention stipulates: Every
prisoner of war shall have, in the same manner as the members
of the armed forces of the Detaining Power, the right of appeal
or petition from any sentence pronounced upon him, with a view
to the quashing or revising of the sentence or the reopening of
the trial.
Under terms of Article 130 grave breaches of international
law include willfully depriving a prisoner of war of the
rights of fair and regular trial presented in this convention.
The housing of prisoners in open-air, chain-link cages six
feet by eight feet with concrete floors is both inhuman and a
violation of minimum standards set by the Geneva Convention. Article
25 stipulates: Prisoners of war shall be quartered under
conditions as favorable as those for the forces of the Detaining
Power who are billeted in the same area....
The foregoing provisions shall apply in particular to
the dormitories of prisoners of war as regards both total surface
and minimum cubic space, and the general installations, bedding
and blankets.
The premises provided for the use of prisoners of war
individually or collectively shall be entirely protected from
dampness and adequately heated and lighted, in particular between
dusk and lights out....
The US is violating both terms of the Geneva Convention and
the Vienna Convention on Consular Access in holding captives incommunicado
and refusing to release their names. Article 70 of the Geneva
convention states: Immediately upon capture, or not more
than one week after arrival in camp, even if it is a transit camp
... every prisoner of war shall be enabled to write direct to
his family, on the one hand, and to the Central Prisoner of War
Agency, on the other hand ... informing his relatives of his capture,
address and state of health.
The Geneva Convention stipulates that all prisoners, regardless
of their exact status, be treated humanely.
Article 4 outlines broad terms under which captured belligerents
must be considered prisoners of war. These include irregular forces
such as Members of other militias and members of other volunteer
corps and Members of regular armed forces who profess
allegiance to a government or authority not recognized by the
detaining powers.
Article 5 stipulates that disputes over the status of prisoners
cannot be unilaterally decided by the Detaining Power but must
be arbitrated by third parties: Should any doubt arise as
to whether persons, having committed a belligerent act and having
fallen into the hands of the enemy, belong to any categories enumerated
in Article 4, such persons shall enjoy the protection of the present
Convention until such time as their status has been determined
by a competent tribunal.
Further, prisoners may not be indefinitely detained following
the end of hostilities. Under terms of the Geneva Convention those
held must be either repatriated or charged with specific crimes.
The Bush administration actions violate even official US military
policy. According to Army regulations, Leaders and soldiers
must be knowledgeable of the Geneva and Hague conventions, applicable
protocols, AR (Army Regulations) and US laws.
The US policy demands that all persons who are captured,
detained, or held by US forces during conflict be treated humanely.
This policy applies from the moment captives are taken until they
are released, repatriated or transferred.
A 1994 Department of Defense document on the treatment of prisoner
of war states: It is DoD policy that: 1 The U.S. Military
Services shall comply with the principles, spirit, and intent
of the international law of war, both customary and codified,
to include the Geneva Conventions.
See Also:
Afghan POWs at Guantanamo base: bound
and gagged, drugged, caged like animals
[14 January 2002]
Thousands of POWs held in appalling conditions
in Afghanistan
[8 January 2002]
More evidence of US
war crimes in Afghanistan: Taliban POWs suffocated inside cargo
containers
[13 December 2001]
The Geneva Convention
and the US massacre of POWs in Afghanistan
[7 December 2001]
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