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"What they are doing clearly comes within the definition of torture under the international convention," Bourke
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CANBERRA,
Australia, October 8 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) –
Threatening to take the case to international tribunals, an Australian
lawyer accused the United States of using "old-fashioned"
torture techniques to force confessions out of prisoners at the
Guantanamo military camp.
"They
are engaging in good old-fashioned torture, as people would have
understood it in the Dark Ages," said Richard Bourke, a
U.S.-based Australian lawyer who has been reprsenting for almost two
years dozens of detainees at Camp X-ray at Guantanamo Bay.
"People
sometimes argue about the definition of torture, what they are doing
clearly comes within the definition of torture under the international
convention, but they are engaging in what amounts to torture in the
medieval sense of the phrase," Bourke told the Australian
Broadcasting Corp. radio (ABC).
He
said reports of torture are being leaked by American military
personnel and backed up by former prisoners.
"One
of the detainees had described being taken out and tied to a post and
having rubber bullets fired at them. They were being made to kneel
cruciform in the sun until they collapsed," Bourke told the ABC.
Media
reports have highlighted that many detainees have attempted suicide
and are suffering mental health problems backed up claims of harsh
treatment, he said.
To
International Tribunals
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The Guanatamo detainees suffer "old-fashioned torture" |
Bourke
is considering taking their cases to international tribunals,
including the United Nations Standing Committee on Torture.
He
said governments around the world must stand up to the U.S. government
and demand that the United Nations investigate the reports of torture.
In
an interview from the U.S. with the World Today, a comprehensive
current affairs program, lawyers representing two Australians being
held by the U.S., namely said that they could be among those being
tortured at the Guantanamo base.
Earlier
this year, U.S. officials denied using torture and said detainees are
interrogated humanely, allowed to practice their religion and given
good medical care.
The
U.S. government rarely comments on activities at the prison which has
been dubbed Camp X-ray because of the strict security.
Families
are denied access and can only communicate with detainees through
heavily censored mail. Human rights groups and the media have been
given only limited and strictly controlled access.
Many
governments and rights group including the United Nations have spoken
out against the treatment of the Guantanamo detainees, who U.S.
President George Bush has said are not prisoners of war and thus
cannot benefit from rights entitled to them under the Geneva
Convention.
The
U.S.-based Human Rights Watch had frequently called on the Bush
administration to investigate and address charges of torture of those
detainees or risk criminal prosecution.
Amnesty
accused
the Bush administration of violating human rights afforded by the
Geneva conventions by refusing to allow the prisoners access to
lawyers, courts or relatives.
A
Pakistani man who was released from the U.S. military prison in
Guantanamo Bay, Cuba filed suit on Sunday, July 20, against the United
States for 10.4 million dollars in compensation for the "torture
and humiliation" he faced in detention.
Reports
also said that the U.S. imposed strict reporting limits on the
journalists to visit the detention camp since the arrests of a Muslim
army chaplain and two interpreters.