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New US torture revelations
Former prisoners demand release of Guantanamo Bay videotapes
By Richard Phillips
21 May 2004
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Statements by former British prisoners at Guantanamo Bay over
the past week provide further damning proof that the sadistic
torture used at Abu Ghraib in Iraq originated in Afghanistan and
the Pentagons infamous military prison in Cuba. The declarations
were followed by new evidence that Australian detainees in Guantanamo
BayDavid Hicks and Mamdouh Habibwere beaten and abused.
On May 13, Shafiq Rasul and Asif Iqbal, two British prisoners
released in March, issued an open letter to US President
Bush and the Senate Armed Services Committee detailing the abuse
and denouncing Washingtons denials of torture in Guantanamo
Bay. They have demanded full public access to all video and photographs
taken during interrogation sessions at the top-security American
jail. (See: http://www.ccr-ny.org/v2/reports/docs/ltr%20to%20Sentate%2012may04v2.pdf).
Held by the US military in Guantanamo Bay without charge for
over two years, Rasul and Iqbal said they were forced into making
false confessions after prolonged solitary confinement and other
forms of psychological and physical abuse. In Afghanistan they
were beaten and had guns held to their heads by US Army officers
who threatened to kill them.
From the moment of our arrival in Guantanamo Bay (and
indeed long before that) we were deliberately humiliated and degraded
by the use of methods that we now read US officials denying,
the two men wrote.
Interrogation techniques described in their letter include:
short-shackling whereby detainees were forced to squat
with their hands chained between their legs and fastened to the
floor for hours on end during interrogations; leaving detainees
naked and chained to the floor while women were brought into the
room; strobe lights, loud music, and freezing air to make the
difficult physical conditions even worse; and the use of dogs
to terrify prisoners.
We should point out that there were and no doubt still
are cameras everywhere in the interrogation areas. We are aware
that evidence that could contradict what is being said officially
is in existence. We know that CCTV cameras, videotapes and photographs
exist since we were regularly filmed and photographed during interrogations
and at other times, as well.
Physical abuse was commonplace, the letter continued. Soldiers
told us personally of going into cells and conducting beatings
with metal bars which they did not report. Soldiers told us we
can do anything we want.
On one occasion a man who had become psychologically disturbed
was lying on the floor of his cage when a group of eight or nine
guards known as the Extreme Reaction Force (ERF) severely assaulted
him. They stamped on his neck, kicked him in the stomach,
even though he had metal rods there as a result of an operation,
and they picked up his head and smashed his face into the floor,
the letter said.
One female officer was ordered to go into the cell and
kick him and beat him, which she did, in his stomach. This is
known as ERFing. Another detainee, from Yemen, was
beaten up so badly that we understand he is still in hospital
18 months later. It was suggested that he was trying to commit
suicide. This was not the case.
We wish to make it clear that all of these and other
incidents and all of the brutality, humiliation and degradation
were clearly taking place as a result of official policies and
orders.
Under General Geoffrey Miller, now commander of all US-run
detention centers in Iraq, it was regular practice at Guantanamo
Bay for detainees to have all their hair, including their beards,
shaved off for failing to cooperate during interrogations. Prisoners
were also moved to the Romeo block where they would
be kept naked for weeks on end for violating camp rules, such
as having two plastic cups in their cage, instead on one, or too
much toilet paper.
We are completely sure that the International Red Cross
has all of these complaints recorded and must undoubtedly have
drawn all of them to the attention of the Administration. We therefore
find it extraordinary that such lies are being told publicly today
by senior officials as to the conditions and methods used at Guantanamo
Bay. We are confident that records and pictures must exist and
that these should all now be provided to the public in your country
as well as ours at the earliest opportunity so that they can form
their own judgement.
Tarek Dergoul
Three days after publication of the open letter,
Tarek Dergoul, who was also released from Guantanamo Bay in March,
confirmed Rasul and Iqbals allegations in a chilling interview
with Britains Observer newspaper. Twenty-six year-old
Dergul had been so traumatized by the physical and mental abuse
during his two-year detention that he had been unable to speak
about it publicly until last Sunday. He still has nightmares,
suffers memory loss and migraines and is being treated at the
Medical Foundation for the Care of Victims of Torture.
Dergoul said that the methods used at Guantanamo Bay mirrored
those used at Abu Ghraib and included sexual humiliation. American
military officers also threatened to render him to
other countries where he would be subjected to even more violent
forms of torture. He also revealed that every time the Extreme
Reaction Force was unleashed against a prisoner it was recorded
on digital video by military officers. Lieutenant Colonel Leon
Sumpter, the Guantanamo Joint Task Force spokesman, later told
the British media that these tapes did exist and were archived
at Guantanamo Bay.
Dergoul was captured by Northern Alliance forces in Afghanistan
and handed over to the US military in exchange for a $5,000 cash
payment. He had nothing to do with the Taliban or Osama bin Laden
but was wounded when US planes bombed a house where he was staying.
Dergoul said that the sexual humiliation and violence that occurred
at Abu Ghraib was standard operating procedure.
When I arrived [at Bagram] with a bag over my head,
he said, I was stripped naked and taken to a big room with
15 or 20 MPs [military police]. They started taking photos and
then they did a full cavity search. As they were doing that they
were taking close-ups, concentrating on my private parts.
Dergoul, who saw guards with guns and baseball bats threatening
detainees in Afghanistan, was accused of being a member of Al
Qaeda and subjected to 20 to 25 interrogations at the US airbase.
I was in extreme pain from the frostbite and other injuries
and I was so weak I could barely stand. It was freezing cold and
I was shaking and shivering like a washing machine. The interrogatorswho
questioned me at gunpointsaid if I confessed Id be
going home. Finally, I agreed Id been at Tora Borathough
I still wouldnt admit Id ever met bin Laden.
They had already searched me and my cell twice that day,
gone through my stuff, touched my Koran, felt my body around my
private parts. And now they wanted to do it again, just to provoke
me, but I said no, because if you submit to everything you turn
into a zombie.
I heard a guard talking into his radio, ERF, ERF,
ERF, and I knew what was comingthe Extreme Reaction
Force. The five cowards, I called themfive guys came running
in with riot gear. They pepper-sprayed me in the face and I started
vomiting; in all I must have brought up five cupfuls. They pinned
me down and attacked me, poking their fingers in my eyes, and
forced my head into the toilet pan and flushed. They tied me up
like a beast and then they were kneeling on me, kicking and punching.
Finally they dragged me out of the cell in chains, into the rec
yard, and shaved my beard, my hair, my eyebrows.
A month later he was moved to a Kandahar prison camp. His frostbitten
feet, which were not treated, became septic, the infection spread
and his toe had to be amputated. Part of his arm also had to be
amputated because of shrapnel wounds.
He told the Observer that he was only allowed two showers
in three months at Kandahar before being transportedbound,
blindfolded and sedatedto Guantanamo Bay. He was held in
a high-level isolation block at Camp Delta for over a year where
he was deprived all stimulation or comfort items.
Because he helped organize a series of hunger strikes and other
protests he was targeted by the ERF.
For a month last year he was taken every day to an interrogation
room chained to a ring in the floor and then left alone for up
to eight hours with the air conditioning running at the lowest
temperatures and unable to go to the toilet. The cold air would
become extremely painful on his amputation stumps. Eventually,
he would be taken back to his cell for a few hours and then returned
to the freezing interrogation room again. It was not about
trying to get information. It was just about trying to break you,
he said.
The London-born and raised Dergoul, who said he had been non-political
prior to his illegal detention, told the newspaper: I now
look on America as a terrorist state because thats what
they have doneterrorized usand I condemn Britain as
well for contributing to it.
Hicks and Habib tortured
In other developments, lawyer Stephen Kenny, who is representing
Australian prisoner, David Hicks, said last week that his 28-year-old
client had been subjected to orchestrated abuse at
the prison. Hicks has been illegally incarcerated in Guantanamo
Bay without charge for almost two and a half years.
Kenny, who is legally bound by a special agreement with the
US military not to reveal conditions inside Guantanamo Bay, told
the Australian media: Im referring to specific incidents
that I believe were not just the actions of individual guards,
but rather a well-known activity that must have been authorized
by some reasonably high-up people in the chain of command of US
forces. He said that Hicks had complained to the Red Cross
about these abuses in 2002 and assumed that this information would
be passed on to the US and Australian governments.
Additional details on Hickss treatment emerged on May
19 when Shah Mohammed, who had been in an adjoining cell in Guantanamo
Bay, was interviewed in the Australian media. Mohammed, a former
baker who was handed over to US forces by the Northern Alliance,
was released from Camp Delta last year and repatriated to Afghanistan.
He said that US soldiers had viciously bashed Hicks, who was
bound and chained, on at least three occasions during two-hour
interrogation sessions in Afghanistan and that the interrogations
and beatings were videotaped. He said US soldiers deliberately
targeted Hicks because of his ethnic background. According to
a Sydney Morning Herald report, Hicks was beaten
for hours, denied sleep and shackled during interrogations.
The newspaper said that the most savage and prolonged abuse occurred
on US Navy ships.
Stephen Kenny and Terry Hicks, Davids father, have called
on the Howard government to release all information it has on
these incidents. The Howard government, which, like the Bush and
Blair administrations, claims that Guantanamo Bay prisoners have
been treated humanely, has refused to provide Kenny
with any details. It has transcripts of Australian intelligence
agency interrogation sessions with Hicks but blocked access to
these and other documents, claiming that it would endanger national
security if they were released.
On Thursday Stephen Hopper, Mamdouh Habibs lawyer, said
that his client had been systematically assaulted in Egypt with
electric shocks, beatings and death threats and then psychologically
and physically abused in Guantanamo Bay.
Habib was seized in Pakistan in October 2001, before the US
invasion of Afghanistan. Under the direction of the US military
and with Australian consular support, he was rendered
to Egypt for five months before being removed to Guantanamo Bay
in May 2002. (See: Howard
government complicit in detention of Australian citizen by US
military )
In an interview broadcast on Australian television last night,
Tarek Dergoul, who spent three months in a cage alongside Habib
in Guantanamo Bay, confirmed these allegations. On the television
program, Dergoul told Hopper and Mamdouh Habibs wife, Maha,
that he saw the 48-year-old father of four beaten and sprayed
with pepper gas.
He said that Habib was kept in solitary confinement for long
periods. His skin was covered with a tropical skin rash, he could
hardly walk and had become mentally unbalanced. Habib constantly
told Dergoul that his family had been killed by US agents and
refused to answer their letters, believing them to be fakes. Maha
Habib has not had any contact with her husband for over 18 months.
Hopper said the Australian government had aided and abetted
the torture of an Australian citizen and demanded it reveal who
authorized Habibs rendering to Egypt. Stephen Kenny said
allegations of abuse were now so overwhelming that
there had to be a full inquiry into the treatment of prisoners
in Afghanistan and Guantanamo Bay.
The sadistic abuse, sexual humiliation and others forms of
torture used at Guantanamo Bay, Abu Ghraib and other US military
prisons constitute the real face of the Bush administrations
war against terror. These actions, along with the
illegal and unprovoked invasion of Afghanistan and Iraq, are war
crimes under the Geneva Conventions and comparable with the methods
of Hitlers Nazi Germany. All those responsible for these
activitiesfrom the top levels of the government and the
military downmust be brought to trial and prosecuted.
See Also:
Father of Guantanamo Bay prisoner says
son has been abused
[21 May 2004]
US press accounts confirm: Rumsfeld,
Bush approved Iraq torture policy
[18 May 2004]
What the record shows: hypocrisy and
lies over US torture of Iraqis
[12 May 2004]
US war crimes: Torture of
Iraqi prisoners exposed
[30 April 2004]
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