Afghan Death Case Renews Calls for Independent Investigation of Military Abuses
Tuesday, October 19, 2004 at 05:49AM
TheSpook
Thursday's recommendation by the U.S. Army's
Criminal Investigation Division that 28 soldiers be charged in
connection with the beating deaths of two prisoners held at a detention
facility in Afghanistan in December 2002 has spurred new calls for an
entirely independent investigation of abuses of detainees by U.S.
forces in "war on terrorism." The announcement, which said that charges
could include involuntary manslaughter and maiming, as well as less
serious offenses, came just shy of two years after the two prisoners
died. Human rights observers have deplored the military's failure to
immediately investigate the deaths, suggesting there may have been an
attempt to cover them up. "Taking 22 months to investigate apparent
homicides that occurred in U.S.-run overseas prisons is not conducive
to protecting prisoners from torture and abuse," said Jumana Musa of
Amnesty International USA (AIUSA) shortly after the announcement. "In
fact, the failure to promptly account for the prisoners' deaths
indicates a chilling disregard for the value of human life and may have
laid the groundwork for further abuses in Abu Ghraib (prison in Iraq)
and elsewhere." "This announcement is further evidence that the
ill-treatment of detainees did not start at Abu Ghraib (prison in
Iraq), and will not stop without a comprehensive independent
investigation of the torture scandal, including all identified and
'secret' detention facilities operated or accessed by the U.S." she
added. [more ]
Army Implicates 28 U.S. Troops in Deaths of 2 Afghan Detainees [more ]
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