Thursday 28th of November 2024

broadening understanding

broadening understanding

Razorwire "humanlely" deployed

From the ABC

US declines UN request for information on Guantanamo
The United States has turned down a United Nations human rights panel's request to provide information about its detention centres in Guantanamo Bay, as well as Afghanistan and Iraq, a report reveals.
Washington declined to include information on detention facilities outside US territory in its report submitted to the UN Human Rights Committee, according to the document.
The committee, made up of 18 independent experts elected by the UN General Assembly, in July 2004 pressed Washington for information about its overseas military detention centres.
However, the US response late last month says these fall outside the committee's remit because they are "governed by the laws of war".
Like the other 153 signatories of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, the United States is bound to submit regular reports to the committee on its implementation of what is the UN's core human rights accord.
Washington reaffirmed its stance that the covenant only applies on US territory - something the committee has disputed in the past.
"The obligations assumed by the United States under the Covenant apply only within the territory of the United States," said the report.
"The United States has sought to respond to the Committee's concerns as fully as possible, notwithstanding the continuing difference of view between the Committee and the United States concerning certain matters relating to the import and scope of provision of the Covenant," it added.
The UN committee also gathers information from non-governmental sources.
Released detainees and advocacy groups have made regular allegations of human rights violations at the US military's foreign detention centres, stoked by the Abu Ghraib prisoner abuse scandal in Iraq.
Controversy has raged over the Guantanamo centre, in a US military enclave in Cuba.
About 500 people are being held there, most without charges, as enemy combatants in the US war on terrorism. Most were captured in 2001 in Afghanistan.

Last week, Washington announced that it would invite three UN human rights experts to visit the base for a day, with the goal "to broaden understanding of US detention operations and to demonstrate that detainees at Guantanamo are treated humanely".
But on Monday the experts - who are not part of the committee - said they would only go on their proposed December 6 mission if they have free access to the prisoners.

guantanamo guest services .....

‘Three U.N. experts said yesterday that they would not accept a US government invitation to tour Guantanamo unless they are granted private access to detainees, a concession the US has not been willing to make, citing the ongoing war on terror and security concerns. Last week, the United States invited the UN representatives on torture and arbitrary detention to the facility, and the experts said yesterday that they hope to visit in early December. But they described their demand for access to the detainees as "non-negotiable." 

 

"They said they have nothing to hide," Manfred Nowak, U.N. special rapporteur on torture, said yesterday at a news conference in New York. "If they have nothing to hide, why should we not be able to talk to detainees in private?" 

 

Guantanamo Desperation Seen in Suicide Attempts

sharing our values .....

Vocals by Laura Bush & Mothers of America.

 

Pictures provided by President G. W. Bush.

 

Iraqi Lullaby