Red Cross says detainees reported abuse

RushlimboRushlimbo Posts: 832
edited March 2007 in A Moving Train
Amerika.......

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By KATHERINE SHRADER, Associated Press Writer
Tue Mar 20, 4:34 PM ET

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070320/ap_on_go_ca_st_pe/detainees_red_cross

Terror detainees once held in the CIA's secret prisons were kept and questioned under highly abusive conditions, the International Committee of the Red Cross says in a confidential report based on interviews with high-value terror suspects.

The Red Cross said the techniques reported by the 14 prisoners, including sleep deprivation and the use of forced standing and other so-called "stress positions," were particularly harsh when used together. The prisoners were transferred from CIA custody to a military prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, in September.

The CIA's detention methods were designed to soften detainees and make them more likely to talk during interrogation. Human rights organizations say the CIA's extreme conditions of detention and the coercive questioning techniques constitute torture.

The report is the first independent accounting of the detainees' allegations against the CIA since its detention and interrogation program began in 2002.

U.S. officials familiar with the report, who spoke only on condition of anonymity because the highly sensitive document has not been released, said it is based entirely on accounts from interviews with detainees and has not been verified. One official cautioned that the claims were made by terror suspects who could be charged in the deaths of innocent civilians.

Red Cross spokesman Simon Schorno said that the committee's visits with the 14 detainees served two purposes: to assess their current conditions in detention and to give them an opportunity to talk about past detentions.

"We do not comment on our findings publicly. The report is a confidential document," Schorno said Monday.

CIA spokesman Mark Mansfield declined to comment on any ICRC reports, citing the organization's practice of keeping its findings confidential.

Speaking generally of CIA interrogation program, Mansfield said the United States does not practice or condone torture. "CIA's terrorist interrogation program has been conducted lawfully, with great care and close review, producing vital information that has helped disrupt plots and save lives," he added.

House Intelligence Chairman Silvestre Reyes (news, bio, voting record), D-Texas, said he has gotten a general briefing on the ICRC report but has not read it. "There are allegations that are made by these 14, and they are vehemently denied by General Hayden and the intelligence folks," he said, referring to CIA Director Michael Hayden.

Not long after the March 2002 capture of top al-Qaida operative Abu Zubaydah, the CIA began formalizing its detention and interrogation program. The CIA decided it would need to hold high-value terrorists such as Zubaydah for extended periods in an effort to extract information.

They began using some "enhanced interrogation techniques" — or "EITs" in CIA-speak — with success.

Those widely reported practices include openhanded slapping, induced hypothermia, sleep deprivation and — perhaps most controversially — waterboarding. In that technique, a detainee is made to believe he is drowning.

Buttressed by at least one classified legal opinion from the Justice Department, the CIA believed it was operating lawfully in detaining and interrogating roughly 100 suspected terrorists at locations from Southeast Asia to Europe.

"The (interrogation) procedures were tough, and they were safe, and lawful, and necessary," President Bush said in September when he announced that all the CIA's remaining detainees had been moved to military custody at Guantanamo Bay.

Asked last month if the prisons were still empty, a CIA official declined to comment.
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Comments

  • mwachsmanmwachsman Posts: 474
    Not to say that they weren't abused, but even if they were imprisoned at the Ritz Carlton they would say they were abused.
    "So, you must really love Led Zeppelin. That’s the oldest shirt I’ve ever seen on someone who wasn’t a bum."
    "Hey, if God didn’t want me to wear it so much, he wouldn’t have made them rock so hard."
  • blackredyellowblackredyellow Posts: 5,889
    mwachsman wrote:
    Not to say that they weren't abused, but even if they were imprisoned at the Ritz Carlton they would say they were abused.

    Ya, once again this administration's actions have killed our credibility. If Abu Garab never happened, and the administration didn't fight to change the Geneva Convention, and if extraordinary rendition wasn't standard operating procedure, these types of allegations of abuse wouldn't carry much weight (even if it did happen).
    My whole life
    was like a picture
    of a sunny day
    “We can complain because rose bushes have thorns, or rejoice because thorn bushes have roses.”
    ― Abraham Lincoln
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