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David Hicks details abuse in Guantánamo Bay
By Richard Phillips
18 December 2004
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An affidavit by David Hicks, a 29-year-old Australian citizen
captured in Afghanistan and held by the US military since December
2001, was released last week by his lawyers during legal action
in the US courts. Dated August 5, it is the first statement by
a current detainee in Guantánamo Bay on the abuse of prisoners
and adds to the mountain of evidence about Bush administrations
criminal actions in the notorious jail.
Hicks is one of four Guantánamo Bay prisoners formally
charged on allegations of terrorist activity and due to face trial
early next year. He explained that he was beaten before,
after, and during interrogations... [and] threatened, directly
and indirectly, with firearms and other weapons before and during
interrogations during his three-year detention.
He also heard the bashing of other detainees during interrogations
and saw their injuries. He states that he has been hit in the
face, head, feet, and torso with hands, fists and other objects,
including rifle butts.
At one point, a group of detainees, including myself,
was subjected to being randomly hit over a eight-hour session
while handcuffed and blindfolded, he said. His head was
rammed into the ground several times.
While the Bush administration and the Howard government still
claim that prisoners are not tortured in Guantánamo Bay,
Hicks affidavit demonstrates, yet again, that physical and
psychological abuse is part of the jails standard operating
procedure. It also confirms statements by British detainees released
this year that dogs were used to terrorise prisonersmethods
later employed in Abu Ghraib in Iraq.
I have witnessed the activities of the Internal Reaction
Force (hereinafter IRF), which consists of a squad
of soldiers that enter a detainees cell and brutalise him
with the aid of an attack dog. The IRF invasions were so common
that the term to be IRFed became part of the
language of the detainees. I have seen detainees suffer serious
injuries as a result of being IRFed. I have seen detainees
IRFed while they were praying, or for refusing medication.
Hicks stated that he was deprived of sleep as a matter
of policy, forcibly injected with unknown sedativeshis
requests for information about the drugs ignoredand beaten
while under their influence. He was handcuffed so tightly, and
for up to 15 hours at a time, that his hands became numb and remained
that way for a considerable period. He was regularly forced to
run in leg shackles that ripped the skin off his ankles.
Military officers repeatedly told Hicks that he would be sent
home if he assisted them. Failure to cooperate meant the loss
of necessities, such as showers, sufficient food, and access to
reading material, including receiving mail.
I was told there was an easy way and a hard
way to respond to interrogation, he said. Interrogators
once offered me the services of a prostitute for fifteen minutes
if I would spy on other detainees. I refused. He said interrogators
attempted to turn other prisoners against him by spreading false
rumours.
I have also heard that religious detainees were exposed
to pornography, he said, and were dragged around naked
in order to break their will. Food was withheld from detainees
during Ramadan.
Cooperation with interrogators, Hicks stated, offered
the only means of relief from the miserable treatment and abuse
the detainees suffered. Those who failed to comply suffered abuse
until they gave in.
Hicks was moved to Camp Echo on July 9, 2003 and held in solitary
confinement. He stated that he lost 30 pounds that year and was
not allowed outside his cell for exercise in the sunlight until
March 10, 2004.
Hicks said he repeatedly asked for a lawyer during interrogations
and questioned why he was not being treated as prisoner
of war. He protested his mistreatment to American military
officials on several occasionsin Afghanistan and Guantánamo
Bayand told Red Cross representatives about the abuse.
The statement emphasised that it was only an outline
of the abuse and mistreatment he received, witnessed,
and/or heard about while jailed by the US military and that
he could provide additional details if requested by US legal authorities.
Pentagon officials responded to media questions about Hicks
last week by claiming that his allegations had already been investigated
and dismissed. It provided no specific information, however, about
its so-called inquiry.
In Australia, Attorney-General Philip Ruddock, aided by perfunctory
coverage in the local press, claimed that Hicks accusations
contradicted previous statements by his lawyers.
[Their declarations] also suggested that while he was
at Guantánamo Bay there were no allegations ... other than
I think deprivation of his liberty and like matters ... We have
been told by the Americans that (Hicks) is being treated humanely
and we have visited him on a number of occasions with foreign
affairs consular officials, who report that they have no signs
of abuse, Ruddock said.
These claims are both cynical and absurd.
As well as consistently protesting his treatment to the US
military and the Red Cross, Hicks has given Australian foreign
affairs officials and intelligence officers who have visited him
details of his abuse by the American military.
The Howard government has suppressed these reports, publicly
denounced Hicks as a dangerous terrorist and given
Washington a virtual blank cheque in the treatment of him. It
has also mounted a high-level legal action to prevent Hicks
lawyers and his family, and journalists, gaining Freedom of Information
access to relevant information, including correspondence between
Canberra and Washington on Hicks incarceration.
Moreover, Ruddock knows that Hicks lawyers are banned
from making public statements about the treatment of any prisoner,
including their own client, in Guantánamo Bay. They can
be removed from the case and barred from the prison if they violate
this ruling. These restrictions, which contravene international
law, the US Constitution and previous US military law, were established
when the Pentagon commissioned the military tribunals.
Contrary to Ruddocks claims, Hicks testimony is
a convincing account of his treatment by the American military,
which is confirmed by the almost daily exposures of US torture
in Iraq, Afghanistan and Guantánamo Bay. The sadistic abuse
of war prisoners is not an aberration or confined to a few bad
apples in the US armed forces but the inevitable product
of the Bush administrations global war on terror.
See Also:
Guantánamo Bay trial
of David Hicks adjourned
[9 November 2004]
Father of Australian Guantánamo
Bay prisoner denounces Howard government
[14 September 2004]
Hicks pleads not guilty at
Guantánamo Bay kangaroo court
[1 September 2004]
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