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Democrats praise treatment of Guantánamo detainees
By Kate Randall
29 June 2005
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Members of US Congress returning from a tour of the Guantánamo
Bay prison camp last weekend praised the treatment of detainees
at the facility as humane. A 16-member, bipartisan
contingent from the US House Armed Services Committee traveled
to the camp for a one-day visit on Saturday and a number of senators
visited on Sunday.
More than 520 detainees, classified as enemy combatants
by the Bush administration, are currently imprisoned at Guantánamo.
Many have been held for more than three years and only four have
been charged with any crime. A British lawyer who recently visited
the camp has charged that at least five juveniles under the age
of 18 have been arrested and brought to the camp, including one
who is currently being held in solidarity confinement.
Last month, Amnesty International charged that the Bush administration
had authorized interrogation techniques that violated the
UN Convention Against Torture at Guantánamo and the
secretary general of the London-based human rights organization
denounced the camp as the gulag of our time and called
for it to be shut down.
But to listen to the comments of the congressmen returning
from the Guantánamo trip, one would have the impression
that great strides in human rights are being made. Sen. Jim Bunning,
Republican of Kentucky, said he was surprised to learn that some
detainees even have air conditioning and private showers.
Republican Senator Michael D. Crapo of Idaho said US troops at
the camp get more abuse from the detainees than they give
to the detainees.
At a time when opposition among the American population to
Bushs war policy has reached an all-time high, the fact-finding
mission amounted to a public relations stunt to boost the governments
sagging ratings and dampen criticism of the war and the use of
torture at US prisons in Guantanamo, Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere.
It was strategically timed for the weekend before Bushs
nationally televised speech on Iraq.
To a man, alongside their Republican colleagues, congressional
Democrats who visited the prison camp lauded the treatment of
the detainees. They all pretended that the dog and pony show staged
for them by military authorities at the prison camp provided a
true picture of the conditions under which prisoners are being
held.
The congressmen toured cell blocks and ate lunch with US troops.
They watched the interrogations of three detainees, including
one who was read a Harry Potter book for hours until he turned
his back and covered his ears. Much was made of the lunch of chicken,
rice and okra that the congressmen shared with the US troops,
which was also reportedly fed to the prisoners.
Amnesty International official Jumana Musa dismissed the tour
as this little congressional show and tell. Whether
or not people are being fed orange chicken, Ms. Musa said,
does not get at the heart of the issue.
The Democrats were nevertheless insistent that real steps improvements
were being made. California Rep. Ellen Tauscher said, The
Guantánamo we saw today is not the Guantánamo we
heard about a few years ago. Texas Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee,
who previously called for the camp to be closed, said, What
weve seen here is evidence that weve made progress.
Democratic Senators Ron Wyden (Oregon) and Ben Nelson (Nebraska)
were also in Cuba over the weekendto discuss new agricultural
trade measuresand stopped by the Guantánamo camp
on Sunday. I feel very good about the detainees
treatment, Wyden said.
At a press conference on Monday, he added, Despite multiple
instances of unacceptable practices in the past by US personnel
at Guantánamo, based on what I learned and observed I strongly
prefer the improved procedures and conditions at Camp Delta to
the outsourcing of prisoner interrogation to countries with a
far less firm commitment to human rights...
The Bush administration is correct when they say these
are unique circumstances. We are in a war and these are not your
garden-variety criminal defendants.
In a press release Monday, Nelson praised the leadership of
US Army Brigadier General Jay Hood, commander of the Joint Task
Force (JTF) at Guantánamo, saying Hood has taken
steps to improve conditions for detainees and to ensure proper
use of interrogation techniques.
The Democrats comments are all the more cynical coming
in the wake of new charges of abuse at Guantánamo. A report
in the upcoming July 7 issue of the New England Journal of
Medicine says that since late 2002, psychiatrists and psychologist
have participated in a program designed to increase fear and distress
among prisoners so as to extract information.
Lawyers representing Guantánamo detainees charge that
interrogators are conducting a campaign to interfere with lawsuits
filed on behalf of 200 prisoners. Thomas Wilner, an attorney representing
11 Kuwaiti detainees, said in court papers that detainees have
been pressured to drop their lawsuits by interrogators who told
them that most of the prisoners who have been released did not
have counsel.
USA Today quotes attorney Marc Falkoff, who represents
15 Yemeni detainees, saying, They believe they have been
punished for having lawyers, and they are convinced that they
will not be allowed out of Guantánamo so long as they keep
their lawyers.
See Also:
Durbins tearful apology
Democrats make cowardly retreat on Guantánamo torture
[24 June 2005]
Bush administration defends Guantánamo
prison camp
[20 June 2005]
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