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US tortures two detainees to death in Afghanistan
By Peter Symonds
10 March 2003
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New evidence has emerged that the US military has tortured
to death at least two of the detainees held at its special interrogation
centre at the Bagram Air Base, just north of the Afghan capital,
Kabul. At any one time, up to 100 prisoners are being held without
charge at the base and subjected to various forms of humiliation,
disorientation and physical hardship in order to break their resistance
to questioning.
The deaths of the two young men took place last December, but
were brushed off by US spokesmen as being due to natural causes.
No detailsnot even the names and hometowns of the two detaineeswere
released. Assurances were offered that the circumstances of their
deaths would be fully investigated, but after two months, the
incidents were all but officially buried.
However, an article in the New York Times on Tuesday
revealed that the deaths were not from natural causes. The journalist
tracked down the relatives of one of the two men, Dilawar, a 22-year-old
farmer and part-time taxi driver, to a small village in eastern
Afghanistan, where his elder brother produced a copy of Dilawars
death certificate. It was handed to the family along with the
body on January 17, but no one understood its contents.
According to the document, dated December 13, Dilawar had been
found unresponsive in his cell while in custody. He
died as a result of blunt force injuries to the lower extremities
complicating coronary artery disease. In the section dealing
with mode of death, four alternatives were listed:
natural, accident, suicide and homicide. The box for homicide
was marked.
US officials have since confirmed the authenticity of the document,
which was signed by one of the armys own specialist pathologists.
Military spokesman Colonel Roger King admitted that the death
of Mullah Habibullah on December 3 was also attributed to a blunt
force injury, in addition to a blood clot in the lung. Habibullah
was aged about 30, from the southern province of Oruzgan. The
US military has told his family nothing about his death, which
they learned about through the International Red Cross.
King said the deaths were the subject of ongoing investigations
and provided no further details. He spoke dismissively of the
death certificates, declaring: It still doesnt mean
it is necessarily a criminal act. Criminal homicide is dependent
on intent. His comments are a cynical evasion. At the very
least the treatment meted out to the two men, as well as the lack
of any regard for their underlying medical conditions, constitutes
gross criminal negligence in any court of law.
Moreover, Kings concern for the letter of the law in
relation to the US interrogators stands in complete contrast to
the flagrant abuse of their victims democratic rights. Dilawar,
who had a wife and two-year-old daughter, was detained when his
taxi was stopped by Afghan guards near a US base at the town of
Khost. His two passengersa local village policeman and another
villagerwere also seized and are still being held in custody
without charge.
The New York Times spoke to several men who saw Dilawar
during his detention at Bagram. They describe a large hangar,
divided into two floors, with isolation and interrogation cells
on the upper floor and a larger holding area on the ground level.
Abdul Jabar and Hakkim Shah said that they were held upstairs
for two weekshooded, naked, their arms raised and chained
to the ceiling and their feet shackled. They were only released
to eat, pray, go to the toilet and for daily interrogation. The
guards kept them awake by shouting or kicking them.
Jabar remembered seeing Dilawar, hooded, being led down downstairs
to the bathroom. I asked who he was because he seemed to
be struggling a lot, he said. Dilawar seemed to be having
difficulty breathing and lay on the ground when released from
his chains. He was scared because he could not get enough
oxygen, Jabar said.
Shah said he saw Dilawar when he was made to sweep the downstairs
room. He did not look healthy. His face was a dark colour.
His feet were chained so he could not move well. He was looking
very worried. During his own ordeal, Shahs legs had
become so swollen that the shackles around his ankles stopped
the flow of blood. He was finally permitted to sit, but when the
shackles were finally removed he could not feel or move his feet.
US officials have admitted to some of the stress and
duress techniques used on detainees, but baldly deny that
the treatment amounts to torture. We feed them a balanced
diet, see to the fact that they are kept out of the weatherthey
live in a building, I live in a tent. We do our best to treat
them in a humane fashion, King declared, adding that the
US followed international conventions.
His remarks simply underscore the contempt of the Bush administration
and the US military for international agreements and democratic
rights. The hundreds of detainees at Bagram, Guantanamo Bay in
Cuba and elsewhere are being held and interrogated in violation
of their basic rightsin the case of combatants, under the
Geneva Convention. Even what is known of the methods used at Bagram
violates the UN anti-torture convention that was ratified by the
US Congress in 1994. An associated law made torture committed
in the US, or by an American anywhere, a felony punishable by
20 years jail. Torture resulting in death could bring the death
penalty.
Amnesty International recently stated: Despite claims
to the contrary by US officials, the use of sensory deprivation
(hooding), prolonged physical restraint (shackling) and denial
of medical care are all characteristic elements of torture, and,
like psychological torture, are prohibited under international
law... Interrogators at work in Guantanamo or Afghanistan should
not be misled about what constitutes torture and should uphold
their duty to refuse to use techniques that constitute torture.
Deaths in custody and suicide attempts raise grave doubts about
conditions of detention and methods of interrogation that are
not only beyond the pale, but also beyond the law.
There is no reason to believe, however, that the treatment
meted out at Bagram is limited to torture-lite as
the stress and duress techniques are disparagingly
referred to in US intelligence circles. Commenting on the recent
capture of alleged Al Qaeda leader Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, a US
official noted that the UN anti-torture convention has no enforcement
mechanism, so, youre just limited by your imagination.
A US intelligence official told Associated Press that in addition
to the acknowledged methods, authorities at Guantanamo Bay allow
a little bit of smacky-face as some Al Qaeda
just need some extra encouragement.
Democrat Senator John Rockefeller IV suggested that Mohammed
be handed over to a third country where torture is not illegala
practice known as rendition that has been covertly
used by the CIA in the past. I wouldnt rule it out,
he said. I wouldnt take anything off the table where
he is concerned, because this is the man who has killed hundreds
and hundreds of Americans over the last 10 years.
Rockefellers comments simply highlight the fact that
since the September 11 attacks, the Bush administration, whatever
the public denials, is condoning the use of torture by the military
and CIA. Unsubstantiated allegations against figures like Mohammed
are being exploited to create a climate for the arrest, torture
and indefinite detention of hundreds of people who have never
been charged or brought before a court.
In the case of the young taxi-driver Dilawar and villager Mullah
Habibullah, the US military is directly responsible for their
deathsa crime for which American authorities are unlikely
to hold anyone accountable.
See Also:
New account of US
torture of Afghan and Arab prisoners
[30 December 2002]
Detainee dies during
US interrogation in Afghanistan
[11 December 2002]
The CIAs international
dirty war
US oversees abduction, torture, execution of alleged terrorists
[20 March 2002]
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