Usa
Interrogation techniques amount to torture
Amnesty
International
Coercive
interrogation methods endorsed by members of the US government amount
to torture or cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment and violate international
law and the USA's treaty obligations, Amnesty International said today,
as it called on the USA to end its practice of holding detainees incommunicado
and in secret detention.
Citing current and
former officials, today's New York Times claims that Khalid Shaikh Mohammed,
an alleged leading member of al-Qa'ida held in an undisclosed location
for more than a year, has been subjected to interrogation techniques
including "water boarding" in which the prisoner is forcibly
pushed under water to the point that he believes he will drown. "This
would be a clear case of torture", Amnesty International said,
adding that water submersion is a technique that has been used by countries
notorious for their use of torture.
The New York Times
states that the techniques used against Khalid Shaikh Mohammed were
among a set of secret rules approved by the administration for use against
"high value" detainees in the so-called "war on terror".
Separately, Secretary of Defence Donald Rumsfeld told a Senate committee
yesterday that Pentagon lawyers had approved methods of interrogation
in Iraq such as "sleep management", "dietary manipulation"
and "stress positions". Such so-called "stress and duress"
techniques have been widely alleged by former detainees held in US custody
in Afghanistan some of whom were subsequently transferred to Guantánamo
Bay.
Under questioning
by the committee, Secretary Rumsfeld said that: "Any instructions
that have been issued or anything that's been authorised by the Department
have been checked by the lawyers" and "deemed to be consistent
with the Geneva Conventions". "These techniques of torture
or cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment are grave breaches of the Fourth
Geneva Convention, amounting to war crimes, and violate the Convention
Against Torture to which the USA is a state party," Amnesty International
reiterated.
Amnesty International
noted that the Committee Against Torture, the expert body established
by the Convention Against Torture to oversee its implementation, has
expressly held that restraining detainees in painful positions, hooding,
threats, and prolonged sleep deprivation are methods of interrogation
which violate the prohibition on torture and cruel, inhuman or degrading
treatment. In the past two years, human rights organisations, including
Amnesty International, have raised this issue at the highest levels
of the US administration. "The US administration still has not
learnt that ill-treatment and abuse are a slippery slope to torture
and should be totally prohibited", Amnesty International said,
reiterating that torture is strictly prohibited in all circumstances,
including in times of emergency and war. "All US detention facilities
around the world, holding prisoners captured in the context of the "war
on terror", must be opened to independent monitors and all allegations
of torture and cruel treatment subjected to vigorous independent investigation."
Amnesty
International is a London based Human rights organisation.