|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
: Britain
Terror suspects held in brutal conditions in British jail
By Harvey Thompson
24 January 2002
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
Detainees held in Britain in the aftermath of the September
11 bombings are being kept in barbaric conditions,
according to medical experts.
The seven suspects at Belmarsh high-security prison in south-east
London, all male Arab Muslims, are being kept locked up for 22
hours a day and are prevented from seeing daylight. On detention
they were not allowed access to their lawyers or to their families,
and are still unable to speak to their families in Arabic without
the presence of an official translator, who only visits once a
week. The men were given just five days to appeal against their
internment.
Female prison officers have subjected the detainees to body
searchesan action especially offensive to practicing Muslims.
The men are also prevented from praying, apart from a period of
15 minutes on Fridays, without an imam (Muslim priest).
Gareth Pierce, the legal representative for several of the
prisoners, told the Observer newspaper January 20, These
men have been buried alive in concrete coffins and have been told
the legislation provides for their detention for life without
trial.
The Home Offices own medical experts have condemned the
conditions the seven suspects are being held in as barbaric.
Complaints lodged with the Home Secretary have so far received
no response.
An ex-internee revealed further evidence of the inhuman conditions
at Belmarsh. Djamel Ajouaou, who works as a volunteer translator,
was one of eight foreign nationals held towards the end of last
year as part of the Blair governments support for the war
against terrorism. He returned to his family home in Morocco
rather than face the threat of repeated arrest.
Speaking from his mothers house in Tangiers, Ajouaou
told how the prison guards (who have dubbed the inmates Binmen
in a derogatory reference to Osama bin Laden) taunted the suspects,
The guards shouted at us, called us Bin Ladens
and threatened us if we didnt strip naked. Ajouaou
was also refused medication while in detention.
Liberal Democrats Home Affairs spokesman Norman Baker said,
These are very serious allegations that require immediate
investigation. If true, it is shameful that the British government
has allowed these men to be treated in this way, especially when
they have been convicted of no crime. Both the British and US
governments have lost the moral high ground.
The draconian regime being enforced in such facilities as Belmarsh
have long raised concerns. In 1996, the governments former
Chief Medical Officer, Donald Acheson, produced a damning internal
report for the Prison Service that concluded with the warning
that conditions in certain secure units could contribute to mental
illness. Amnesty International has also warned that lack of adequate
daylight, exercise and medical treatment would lead to the mental
and physical deterioration of inmates.
Muslim leaders in Britain have also condemned the conditions
at Belmarsh. The leader of the Muslim Parliament, Dr Ghayasuddin
Siddiqui, announced that his organisation would be lodging an
official complaint. The government has expressed concerns
over the treatment of prisoners in Guantanamo Bay [the US naval
base in Cuba]yet they are doing the same thing here.
Inayat Bunglawala of the Muslim Council of Britain said, The
war on terrorism was meant to be a war on behalf of civilised
values.
Roger Bingham, a representative of the civil rights organisation
Liberty, said, These reports would be cause for concern
if someone had been convicted of a serious crime, but these people
havent even been charged.
Since September 11, there have been dozens of arrests throughout
Britain. Several have been carried out under the governments
recently enacted internment legislation, which was rushed through
parliament with minimum debate. Most of the remaining arrests
were for alleged immigration offences.
On January 17, 17 arrests were made in London and Leicester.
In the East Midlands city, police officers conducted dawn raids
on several houses that had been under surveillance. Nine people
were arrested under anti-terror laws and the rest under immigration
laws. Six men and two women were later transferred to the custody
of the Immigration Service. Two Algerian men are accused of being
members of Osama bin Ladens al-Qaeda network and have been
remanded in custody.
Police raids have also been carried out in Newcastle, Birmingham
and other towns and cities across the country. Police chiefs at
Scotland Yard claim there may be hundreds more al-Qaeda
supporters and other terrorists active in the UK.
Gareth Pierce said, Aid workers, dissidents and those
struggling against oppressive regimes all now qualify as terrorists.
They are being rounded up by the police and intelligence services,
who have no comprehension of the culture, religion and way of
life of these refugee communities.
See Also:
US flouts world opinion and Geneva Convention
in treatment of Afghan war prisoners
[23 January 2002]
British government defends conditions
at Guantanamo
[18 January 2002]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |