Further abuse at Abu Ghraib detailed - ACLU forces US to disclose records
Monday, November 1, 2004 at 04:46PM
TheSpook
Government documents made public Thursday provide
fresh details about allegations of abuse by guards at the Abu Ghraib
prison in Iraq and other detention facilities in Afghanistan and
Pakistan. They include incidents in which a female prisoner was
sexually humiliated by US military intelligence officers and a male
inmate was shot at to force cooperation. Meanwhile, a military judge
has ordered two US Army reservists to stand trial in Baghdad for
allegedly abusing Iraqi inmates at Abu Ghraib. Specialist Charles
Graner Jr., 36, of Uniontown, Pa., will face a court-martial Jan. 7,
while Sergeant Javal Davis, 26, of Maryland, is set to be tried Feb. 1.
The US documents, obtained by the American Civil Liberties Union under
court order, include an internal FBI memo from last May that shows
bureau employees based at Abu Ghraib witnessed a number of troubling
incidents, but ''did not believe [that what they saw] rose to the level
of misconduct or mistreatment." The materials also describe the deaths
of three Abu Ghraib prisoners, all reportedly of heart attacks, within
days of each other in August 2003, weeks before the now-infamous
episodes of photographed abuse began occurring at the prison. [more ]
Abu Ghraib Guards Kept a Log Of Prison Conditions, Practices [more ]
Michigan lawyer sues for Iraqi man over Abu Ghraib [more ]
Justice Department authorized illegal transfers of detainees out of Iraq for interrogation. The
Washington Post reported Sunday that in response to a request by the
CIA, the US Justice Department drafted a memo in March 2004 that
authorized the transfer of detainees out of Iraq for interrogation.
International law experts say this is an unconventional and disturbing
circumvention and reinterpretation of the Geneva Convention, Article 49
of which prohibits "[i]ndividual or mass forcible transfers, as well as
deportations of protected persons from occupied territory . . .
regardless of their motive." [more ]
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