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Britain |
Briton Guantanamo Detainee Alleges Torture |
2004-10-02 |
![]() Begg, 36, is among four Britons being held at the U.S. prison camp for terrorist suspects at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. Five other Britons were released this year, and Prime Minister Tony Blair has asked President Bush to free the remaining British detainees. Begg's lawyers said they would file a lawsuit Monday demanding the United States stop what they called the "inhumane treatment" of Begg and urging the British government to press harder for his release. In Begg's letter, handwritten in formal, legalistic language and dated July 12, he says he was kidnapped from his Pakistan home in January 2002 and taken to Afghanistan, where he was "degraded and physically abused" during a year at the U.S. military base near Kabul. "During several interviews, particularly though unexclusively in Afghanistan, I was subjected to pernicious threats of torture, actual vindictive torture and death threats amongst other coercively employed interrogation techniques," Begg wrote. He said interviews "were conducted in an environment of generated fear resonant with terrifying screams of fellow detainees facing similar methods." "This culminated, in my opinion, with the deaths of two fellow detainees at the hands of U.S. military personnel, to which I myself was partially witness," Begg wrote. He did not provide further details, but he referred to an earlier letter his lawyers said they had not seen. The lawyers said they could not reach Begg to ask him about the letter, and they did not clarify what "partially witness" meant. Asked about the allegations, the Pentagon did not comment specifically on Begg's case but said "all interrogation techniques used at Guantanamo are within the standards accepted internationally." U.S. policy prohibits torture, and American personnel are required to follow that policy, the Pentagon said. "All detainees are treated humanely and to the extent appropriate and consistent with military necessity in accordance with the principles of the Third Geneva Convention of 1949," it said. Credible allegations of illegal conduct by soldiers are taken seriously and investigated by the military, the Pentagon statement said. Begg also alleged he had been held in solitary confinement since February 2003 and was forced to sign statements under threat of torture and "long-term imprisonment, summary trials and execution." One of Begg's U.S.-based lawyers, Clive Stafford Smith, urged that any evidence of torture at the American facility be made public. He said another lawyer, Gitanjali Gutierrez, had met with Begg in August, but she was forbidden from revealing details of their discussions. In the letter, Begg denied involvement with al-Qaida or any "synonymous paramilitary organization." "I am a law-abiding citizen of the U.K. and attest vehemently to my innocence before God and the law of any crime, though none has ever been alleged," he said. The letter was addressed "to whom it may concern" with a note that copies should go to Blair, the U.S. Supreme Court and Amnesty International, among others. |
Posted by:Fred |
#5 Could we release a couple of tapes with Mr. Begg begging and squealing on his buddies? |
Posted by: mojo 2004-10-02 6:11:04 PM |
#4 What?.... no women's panties on his head? Someone's losing their touch, then. |
Posted by: Sgt. Mom 2004-10-02 2:10:43 PM |
#3 "It was like a 'Queer Eye for the Straight Guy' episode, except it was WOMEN doing the makeover. It was HELL." |
Posted by: Anonymoose 2004-10-02 1:29:45 PM |
#2 Partially of me thinks we should have kept this for aging. |
Posted by: Shipman 2004-10-02 1:04:39 PM |
#1 Thank you... Next. Thank you... Next. |
Posted by: tu3031 2004-10-02 12:54:03 PM |