November 13, 2004
U.N. Report Slams Use of Torture to Beat Terror
by Thalif Deen
UNITED NATIONS - No country can justify torture, the
humiliation of prisoners or violation of international
conventions in the guise of fighting terrorism, says a U.N.
report released here.
The 19-page study, which is likely to go before the
current session of the U.N. General Assembly in December,
does not identify the United States by name but catalogues
the widely publicized torture and humiliation of prisoners
and detainees in Iraq and Afghanistan by U.S. troops waging
the so-called ”war on terrorism.”
The hard line taken by the United Nations comes amidst the
controversial appointment of a new U.S. attorney general,
who has implicitly defended the use of torture against
''terrorists'' and ''terror suspects''.
On Wednesday, U.S. President George W Bush named White
House legal counsel Alberto Gonzales as attorney general to
succeed John Ashcroft, who announced his resignation last
week.
In a now-infamous memo to the White House in January
2002, Gonzales argued that captured members of the former
ruling Taliban regime in Afghanistan were not protected
under the Geneva Conventions, which stipulate the treatment
of prisoners of war (POWs). The United States has signed the
Geneva Conventions.
The same policy was applied to prisoners in Abu Ghraib
prison in Baghdad who were tortured and humiliated by U.S.
troops following the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq in March
2003, raising outrage among human rights activists and other
people worldwide.
The U.S. Army Criminal Investigation Command is now
prosecuting several U.S. soldiers on criminal charges,
including involuntary manslaughter, for their treatment of
prisoners.
Gonzales has also described international conventions
governing prisoners of war, including the Geneva
Conventions, as ''obsolete.''
According to the author of the 19-page U.N. report, 'Torture,
and other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or
Punishment',
''The condoning of torture is, per se, a violation of the
prohibition of torture.”
The study, by U.N. Special Rapporteur on Human Rights
Theo van Boven, points out that ''legal argument of
necessity and self-defense, invoking domestic law, have
recently been put forward, aimed at providing a
justification to exempt officials suspected of having
committed or instigated acts of torture against suspected
terrorists from criminal liability.''
But, Van Boven says, ''the absolute nature of the
prohibition of torture and other forms of ill-treatment
means that no exceptional circumstances whatsoever, whether
a state of war or a threat of war, internal political
instability or any other public emergency, may be invoked as
justification for torture.''
Von Boven said he has received information ''on certain
methods that have been condoned and used to secure
information from suspected terrorists.''
He says these include, ''holding detainees in painful
and-or stressful positions, depriving them of sleep and
light for prolonged periods, exposing them to extremes of
heat, cold, noise and light, hooding, depriving them of
clothing, stripping detainees naked and threatening them
with dogs.''
''The jurisprudence of both international and regional
human rights mechanisms is unanimous in stating that such
methods violate the prohibition of torture and
ill-treatment,'' Von Boven adds.
In the aftermath of the Sep. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks
on the United States, he says, ''thousands of persons
suspected of terrorism, including children, have been
detained, denied the opportunity to have legal status
determined and prevented from having access to lawyers.''
Some of them, he adds, are said to be still held in
solitary confinement, ''which in itself may constitute a
violation of the right to be free from torture.''
Asked if he supports a call by Amnesty International for
an independent commission to probe U.S. detention policies
in Iraq and Afghanistan, Van Boven told reporters in October
that such a probe is imperative.
''Whenever there are serious allegations of torture,
investigations are absolutely necessary. And the results of
these investigations should be made public because it's
absolutely a public affair,'' said the special rapporteur.
In view of the U.N. position, the appointment of Gonzales
as the new U.S. attorney general is a slap in the face of
the international community, says Matt Rothschild, editor of
'The Progressive' magazine.
''Bush is thumbing his nose at the international
community and all those who respect human rights by
nominating Gonzales,'' Rothschild told IPS.
''You cannot simply up and bolt from the Geneva
Conventions and the Anti-Torture Convention. Gonzales is
Ashcroft without the edges and the delirium and the
baritone. But the policy will remain the same,'' he added.
''It was Gonzales, along with Ashcroft and (Defense
Secretary Donald) Rumsfeld and (Vice President Dick) Cheney,
who signed off on tougher interrogation methods and on the
hiding of prisoners from the International Red Cross,'' said
Rothschild.
According to Francis A Boyle, who teaches international
law at the University of Illinois, ''As White House counsel,
Alberto Gonzales originated, authorized, approved and aided
and abetted grave breaches of the Third and Fourth Geneva
Conventions of 1949, which are serious war crimes.”
''In other words, Gonzales is a prima facie war criminal.
He must be prosecuted under the Geneva Conventions and the
U.S. War Crimes Act,'' Boyle told IPS.
In any event, the U.S. Senate must reject his nomination,
because, as a presumptive war criminal, Gonzales is not fit
to be attorney general of the United States, he continued.
''Should Gonzales travel around the world in that
capacity, human rights lawyers such as myself will attempt
to get him prosecuted along the lines of what happened to
(former Chilean dictator) General (Pinochet,'' said Boyle,
author of 'Destroying World Order'.
Jordan J Paust, law foundation professor at the
University of Houston, agrees with Boyle's thesis.
''The denial of protections under the Geneva Conventions
is a violation of the Geneva Conventions, and every
violation of the laws of war is a war crime. Complicity in
connection with war crimes (such as aiding and abetting the
denial of protections) is also criminally sanctionable,''
Paust told IPS.
Thus, it appears Gonzales is reasonably accused of
international criminal activity, he added, although he has
the human right to be presumed innocent until proven guilty
in a court of law that provides basic human rights to due
process protections, ”that he chose to deny others with
respect to the military commissions at Guantanamo Bay”
(where Washington detains terror suspects).
''Whether or not Gonzales is guilty, the taint in this
instance is surely enough to require that he not be
confirmed in any U.S. governmental position, especially
since the Bush administration has stated that it is still
the policy of the United States to have a government under
law and to promote the rule of law and human rights --
rights that are reflected also in the Geneva Conventions,''
Paust added.
''Making Alberto Gonzales the attorney general of the
United States would be a travesty,'' says Michael Ratner,
president of the Center for Constitutional Rights.
''It would mean taking one of the legal architects of an
illegal and immoral policy and installing him as the
official who is charged with protecting our constitutional
rights. The Gonzales memo paved the way for Abu Ghraib,''
Ratner said in a statement issued Thursday.
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