"Poul Nielsen" <mega@lan.dk> wrote in message 
news:459fb32a$0$49196$14726298@news.sunsite.dk...
>
> "Allan Riise" <ari06@pc.dk> skrev i en meddelelse
> news:459fb08b$0$2091$edfadb0f@dtext02.news.tele.dk...
>>
>> > Det mener jeg ikke er tilfældet, Der er enkeltstående tilfælde af
> tortur,
>> > men det kan du jo ikke dømme hele USA´s militær på. For de der er
>> > interesseret i at vide mere om dette emne kan Pentagon channel bruges
>> > (hvis
>> > du har en parabol) ellers kan du læse mere information om dette emne 
>> > fra
>> > USA
>> > ´s forsvarsministerium.
>> > 
http://www.pentagonchannel.mil/
>>
>>
>> Det vil jo svare til at når du mangler høns i din hønsegård så spørger du
>> Ræven om han har spist om, og så tror du på hans svar, uagtet at han har
>> hønsefjer i munden.
>>
>
> Jamen hvofor skulle de bruge pres??, flere af de anholdte på Guantanamo 
> har
> jo selv indrømmet, ja enddog pralet med at de ville begå mere terror imod
> vesten hvis de fik chancen igen, der er tale om enkelstående tilfælde. USA
> har flere gange taget afstand fra tortur.
NEWS BRIEF: "Torture Inc. America's Brutal Prisons", By Deborah Davies, 
Global Research, 23 May 2005
"They are just some of the victims of wholesale torture taking place inside 
the U.S. prison system that we uncovered during a four-month investigation 
for BBC Channel 4 . It's terrible to watch some of the videos and realise 
that you're not only seeing torture in action but, in the most extreme 
cases, you are witnessing young men dying. The prison guards stand over 
their captives with electric cattle prods, stun guns, and dogs. Many of the 
prisoners have been ordered to strip naked. The guards are yelling abuse at 
them, ordering them to lie on the ground and crawl. 'Crawl, motherf*****s, 
crawl.' If a prisoner doesn't drop to the ground fast enough, a guard kicks 
him or stamps on his back. There's a high-pitched scream from one man as a 
dog clamps its teeth onto his lower leg.
"Another prisoner has a broken ankle. He can't crawl fast enough so a guard 
jabs a stun gun onto his buttocks. The jolt of electricity zaps through his 
naked flesh and genitals. For hours afterwards his whole body shakes. Lines 
of men are now slithering across the floor of the cellblock while the guards 
stand over them shouting, prodding and kicking. Second by second, their 
humiliation is captured on a video camera by one of the guards.
The images of abuse and brutality he records are horrifyingly familiar. 
These were exactly the kind of pictures from inside Abu Ghraib prison in 
Baghdad that shocked the world this time last year. And they are similar, 
too, to the images of brutality against Iraqi prisoners that this week led 
to the conviction of three British soldiers. But there is a difference. 
These prisoners are not caught up in a war zone. They are Americans, and the 
video comes from inside a prison in Texas They are just some of the victims 
of wholesale torture taking place inside the U.S. prison system that we 
uncovered during a four-month investigation for Channel 4 that will be 
broadcast next week."
"Our findings were not based on rumour or suspicion. They were based on 
solid evidence, chiefly videotapes that we collected from all over the U.S. 
Each tape provides a shocking insight into the reality of life inside the 
U.S. prison system - a reality that sits very uncomfortably with President 
Bush's commitment to the battle for freedom and democracy against the forces 
of tyranny and oppression."
"In fact, the Texas episode outlined above dates from 1996, when Bush was 
state Governor."
Let this fact sink in very, very deeply into your mind and heart. Torture 
very similar to that which was occurring in Afghanistan and Iraqi jails was 
occurring in American prisons -- including Texas -- in 1996, a year in which 
George W. Bush was Governor of the state of Texas! Since this fact is true, 
we should not have been too surprised to learn that torture of prisoners 
followed the attacks of 9/11 quickly.
Og...
US seeks to block enforcement of anti-torture treaty
By Patrick Martin
5 August 2002
Use this version to print | Send this link by email | Email the author
Torture should be added to the list of evils that the Bush administration is 
defending, in accordance with a foreign policy based on unilateral American 
domination of the globe. On July 24, the American delegation to the United 
Nations Economic and Social Council (UNESOC) tried and failed to table an 
anti-torture protocol, losing the vote 29-15. The protocol was then approved 
by a 35-8 vote and goes to the fall session of the UN General Assembly for 
ratification. Since it is not a Security Council resolution, the measure is 
not subject to US veto.
The target of the US diplomatic assault was a measure negotiated over the 
past ten years to implement the International Convention Against Torture, a 
treaty that went into force in 1987 and was ratified by the US Congress in 
1994. The anti-torture treaty, like most international human rights 
agreements, lacks an enforcement mechanism, because those regimes that are 
engaged in human rights abuses are willing to sign a treaty, but oppose any 
serious measures to implement its provisions. This is precisely the position 
of the US, which is now on record as opposing the implementation of the 
treaty on torture.
The proposal brought before the UNESOC called for the establishment of a 
system of regular inspections of prisons and detention centers in every 
country adhering to the protocol. The purpose would be to seek evidence of 
torture or "other cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment or punishment" 
directed against prison inmates, prisoners of war, refugees or other 
detainees.
Accepting the protocol would be voluntary, meaning that countries that had 
signed the anti-torture convention could block inspections. But even a plan 
for voluntary inspections was too much for Washington. The Bush 
administration moved to table the protocol and negotiate a new one that 
would be less "intrusive"-an effort that human rights groups branded as an 
attempt to block any enforcement provision at all.
Martin MacPherson, head of the legal program for Amnesty International, 
said, "A vote against the optional protocol would be a disastrous setback in 
the fight against torture." Amnesty reported that people were tortured or 
ill treated by political authorities in 111 countries last year.
The Bush administration has three major concerns about the treaty. Its 
immediate fear is that many countries will demand access to the detention 
camp at the US naval base in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, where more than 500 
prisoners of war from Afghanistan are being held as alleged Al Qaeda 
members. Many European and Middle Eastern countries have criticized the 
conditions at Guantanamo as a violation of the Geneva Convention.
Secondly, there is considerable discussion in official Washington 
circles-both government and media-about the possibility of introducing 
torture for terrorist suspects following the model of Israel. The Israeli 
government follows a policy of permitting "limited physical pressure" 
against prisoners in the name of preventing terror bombings. Such language 
covers a multitude of practices illegal under international law, from 
holding prisoners indefinitely to physical violence such as electric shock 
treatment.
Thirdly, international observers may seek access to the US prison system 
itself, one of the largest in the world with more than two million 
incarcerated, most of them in state prisons and local jails. Bush 
administration officials said that giving foreigners the right to enter such 
facilities would be unconstitutional because it would violate "states' 
rights," since many US states currently refuse entry to foreign inspectors.
Numerous US states also refuse to recognize obligations under international 
treaties that give foreign nationals the right to see a consular official 
from their home country if arrested abroad. Bush's home state of Texas 
actually argued, in the case of an immigrant who was executed without ever 
seeing his consul, that since the United States had signed the consular 
treaty, but Texas had not, the state was not obligated to obey it.
The vote at the UN produced an unusual line-up, with China and Cuba strongly 
supporting the US position, since neither country wishes to open its 
extensive prison system to international inspection. Australia, which has 
come under mounting international criticism for abuse of refugees, also 
voted for the US resolution, along with Libya, Pakistan, Egypt, Japan and 
Russia.
Every member of the European Union (EU) on the United Nations Economic and 
Social Council, every African country, and all the Latin American and 
Caribbean countries except Cuba voted against the US resolution.
The effort to subvert enforcement of the Convention Against Torture 
demonstrates how far the Bush administration has moved from norms of 
international conduct that were long upheld, at least for propaganda 
purposes, by every American government since World War II. As long ago as 
1948, the UN General Assembly inserted a prohibition against torture in the 
Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which states, "No one shall be 
subjected to torture or to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or 
punishment."
Similar language, reflecting international revulsion at the bestial methods 
of the Nazis, appears in the Geneva Conventions. Torture is such a serious 
breach of international law that any state is empowered to exercise 
jurisdiction over it, regardless of where the crime took place, the 
nationality of the perpetrator, or the nationality of the victim. This means 
that charges against US government officials could be brought in the courts 
of, say, Belgium or Sri Lanka.
US courts have themselves found torture to be prohibited by the Eighth 
Amendment of the US Constitution, which bans "cruel or unusual punishment," 
the Fifth Amendment protection against self-incrimination, and the 
Fourteenth Amendment guarantee of due process. But the Bush administration, 
arguing before UNESOC, cited the Fourth Amendment to the US Constitution, 
which upholds the right to be free of "unreasonable search or seizure," 
claiming that international inspections of US prisons would constitute such 
an violation.
The attempt to sabotage the anti-torture treaty is the latest in a series of 
Bush administration moves to rip up international treaty obligations. The 
same week, the US became the first country to rescind pledged contributions 
to the UN Population Fund, contending that family planning funds might be 
used to promote forced abortions in China. The European Union attacked the 
US argument as specious and the decision as a cave-in to right-wing 
fundamentalist forces at home. The EU voted to provide the UN with $32 
million out of the $34 million cut by the US.
http://www.wsws.org/articles/2002/aug2002/tort-a05.shtml
-- 
Allan Riise