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Rumsfeld to Visit Guantanamo as US Congress Delegation Denies Detainee Mistreatment

 

A group of U.S. detainees shackled, blindfolded, kneeling and wearing earmuffs

WASHINGTON, Jan. 27 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - U.S. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld is set to fly to Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, on Sunday to inspect the U.S. naval base where captured Taliban and Al Qaeda fighters are being detained and talk to military officials, the Pentagon announced.

On Friday, a delegation of 20 members of the U.S. Congress toured a detention camp housing 158 prisoners from Afghanistan, following allegations of ill-treatment of inmates.

The visit is the latest in a series arranged by the U.S. military in the face of accusations of mistreatment of the prisoners who arrived shackled and hooded at the open-air, maximum-security facility for indefinite incarceration.

International outcry against conditions in the camp followed the recent release of a U.S. Department of Defense photograph showing a group of prisoners shackled, blindfolded, kneeling and wearing earmuffs.

The U.S. lawmakers said conditions were 'generally good' at the camp, and Peter DeFazio, a Democrat representative from Oregon, said, "one photo has been taken out of context."

Many human rights organizations have raised concern about the conditions and treatment of the 168 detainees, who are kept in 8-by-8-foot outdoor cells, with solid roofs and walls made of fencing material.

Indiana Republican Steve Byer also dismissed charges of ill treatment following the tour.

"The allegations are unsubstantiated," he told reporters following the visit.

He said earlier the primary objective of the tour by 17 members of the U.S. House of Representatives and three U.S. Senators was to "see how we treat our detainees, but also give our support to the military forces."

Two members of the U.S. Senate's Armed Forces Committee, Florida Democrat Bill Nelson and Alabama Republican Jeff Sessions, were on the trip.

The U.S. military has temporarily suspended transfers of prisoners from Afghanistan, though officials have strenuously denied that the halt came in response to mounting criticism, even from European allies, about mistreatment of the detainees called "the worst of the worst" by the Bush administration.

Representative Constance Morella, a Republican from Maryland, said after the visit that the 158 detainees on the base came from 25 nations. Some of the detainees she saw were reading the Qur’an, the Muslim holy book, she said.

"We felt that the principles of the third Geneva Convention of 1949 were basically being followed," said Morella, reported CNN. "They do have water, they have food, shelter. They have medical treatment. ... We came back feeling that a good job was being done under the difficult circumstances."

The military classifies the detainees as "war criminals," not prisoners of war, exempting the U.S. from requirements under the 1949 Geneva Convention, which was ratified but not signed by the United States.

The visiting congressional officials defended how the detainees are restrained, noting they are not restrained in their cells, but they are when they are taken out.

"These are very, very dangerous people," DeFazio said. "They were screened and chosen and sent first because of their leadership roles either in Al Qaeda or the Taliban. We are told that there were statements by one of the detainees that when he gets the chance he intends to kill Americans."
 

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