US interrogators may have killed dozens, human rights researcher and rights group say
United States interrogators killed nearly four dozen detainees during or after their interrogations, according a report published by a human rights researcher based on a Human Rights First report and followup investigations.
In all, 98 detainees have died while in US hands. Thirty-four homicides have been identified, with at least eight detainees — and as many as 12 — having been tortured to death, according to a 2006 Human Rights First report that underwrites the researcher’s posting. The causes of 48 more deaths remain uncertain.
The researcher, John Sifton, worked for five years for Human Rights Watch. In a posting Tuesday, he documents myriad cases of detainees who died at the hands of their US interrogators. Some of the instances he cites are graphic.
Most of those taken captive were killed in Afghanistan and Iraq. They include at least one Afghani soldier, Jamal Naseer, who was mistakenly arrested in 2004. “Those arrested with Naseer later said that during interrogations U.S. personnel punched and kicked them, hung them upside down, and hit them with sticks or cables,” Sifton writes. “Some said they were doused with cold water and forced to lie in the snow. Nasser collapsed about two weeks after the arrest, complaining of stomach pain, probably an internal hemorrhage.”
Another Afghan killing occurred in 2002. Mohammad Sayari was killed by four U.S. servicemembers after being detained for allegedly “following their movements.” A Pentagon document obtained by the American Civil Liberties Union in 2005 said that the Defense Department found a captain and three sergeants had “murdered” Sayari, but the section dealing with the department’s probe was redacted.
Perhaps the most macabre case occurred in Iraq, which was documented in a Human Rights First report in 2006.
“Nagem Sadoon Hatab… a 52-year-old Iraqi, was killed while in U.S. custody at a holding camp close to Nasiriyah,” the group wrote. “Although a U.S. Army medical examiner found that Hatab had died of strangulation, the evidence that would have been required to secure accountability for his death – Hatab’s body – was rendered unusable in court. Hatab’s internal organs were left exposed on an airport tarmac for hours; in the blistering Baghdad heat, the organs were destroyed; the throat bone that would have supported the Army medical examiner’s findings of strangulation was never found.”
In another graphic instance, a former Iraqi general was beaten by US forces and suffocated to death. The military officer charged in the death was given just 60 days house arrest.
“Abed Hamed Mowhoush [was] a former Iraqi general beaten over days by U.S. Army, CIA and other non-military forces, stuffed into a sleeping bag, wrapped with electrical cord, and suffocated to death,” Human Rights First writes. “In the recently concluded trial of a low-level military officer charged in Mowhoush’s death, the officer received a written reprimand, a fine, and 60 days with his movements limited to his work, home, and church.”
Another Iraqi man was killed in a US detention facility on Mosul in 2003.
“U.S. military personnel who examined Kenami when he first arrived at the facility determined that he had no preexisting medical conditions,” the rights group writes. “Once in custody, as a disciplinary measure for talking, Kenami was forced to perform extreme amounts of exercise—a technique used across Afghanistan and Iraq. Then his hands were bound behind his back with plastic handcuffs, he was hooded, and forced to lie in an overcrowded cell. Kenami was found dead the morning after his arrest, still bound and hooded. No autopsy was conducted; no official cause of death was determined. After the Abu Ghraib scandal, a review of Kenami’s death was launched, and Army reviewers criticized the initial criminal investigation for failing to conduct an autopsy; interview interrogators, medics, or detainees present at the scene of the death; and collect physical evidence. To date, however, the Army has taken no known action in the case.”
Death from interrogation is hard to separate from simple detainee death while in US custody. But one particular case stands out that seems to have fallen by the wayside — the murder of CIA “ghost” detainee named Manadel al-Jamadi, who was tortured to death by a CIA team at Abu Ghraib in 2003.
“Pictures of Abu Ghraib guards Charles Graner and Sabrina Harman posing with al-Jamadi’s dead body, the so-called Ice Man, were among the most notorious of the Abu Ghraib photographs published in April 2004,” Sifton notes. “A CIA officer named Mark Swanner and an interpreter led the team that interrogated al-Jamadi. Nine Navy personnel were also implicated. An autopsy conducted by the U.S. military five days after al-Jamadi’s death found that the cause: “blunt force injuries complicated by compromised respiration.”
“Reporting by The New Yorker’s Jane Mayer and NPR’s John McChesney revealed that al-Jamadi was strung up from handcuffs behind his back, a torture tactic sometimes called a ‘Palestinian hanging,’” he adds. “After an investigation, the CIA referred the case to the Department of Justice for possible criminal prosecution of the CIA personnel involved, but no charges were ever brought. Prosecutors accused 10 Navy personnel of the crime; nine were given nonjudicial punishments, such as rank reductions and letters of reprimand, and a 10th was acquitted.”
Additionally, Sifton notes the CIA may have had some close calls with detainees nearly dying during interrogations: the May 10, 2005, Bush Administration torture memo by Stephen Bradbury notes that doctors were nearby to perform a tracheotomy if during waterboarding the suspect is approaching death.
“Most seriously, for reasons of physical fatigue of psychological resignation, the subject may simply give up, allowing excessive filling of the airways and loss of consciousness,” Bradbury wrote. “An unresponsive subject should be righted immediately, and the integrator should deliver a sub-xyphoid thrust to expel the water. If this fails to restore normal breathing, aggressive medical intervention is required….’”
The memo says CIA doctors were on hand with necessary equipment to perform a tracheotomy if necessary during waterboarding sessions: “[W]e are informed that the necessary emergency medical equipment is always present—although not visible to the detainee—during any application of the waterboard.”
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I am no attorney but this sounds a lot like murder to me.
US Law states that when an American tortures and the torture causes the death of the prisoner..
the Torturer deserves the Death Sentence, by US Law.
Someone MUST GO TO JAIL… or the gallows.
We hung torturers at Nuremburg and in Japan.
The lawyers that conspired to legalize Torture should be prosecuted. US Law clearly states that Conspiracy To Torture IS A Federal Crime.
(a) Offense.—… commits or attempts to commit torture shall be fined…or imprisoned not more than 20 years, or both, and if death results to any person from conduct prohibited by this subsection, shall be punished by death or imprisoned for any term of years or for life.
(c) Conspiracy.— A person who conspires to commit an offense under this section shall be subject to the same penalties (other than the penalty of death) as the penalties prescribed for the offense, the commission of which was the object of the conspiracy.
SEE the Law http://tinyurl.com/besdd3
Obama is Soft On Crime If He Ignores The Bush Crimes.
Obama clearly supports a double standard of justice in America if he fails to prosecute, one for common citizens where we can’t escape obeying the law and another for politicians where Bush and his appointee lawyers are protected from prosecution by their successors, in this case,
Obama and his appointee lawyers.
Sign the Petition To Prosecute Them
http://ANGRYVOTERS.ORG
and forward this url to your friends
We can’t let them bury these crimes.
Over 250,000 signers so far.
.PS: now we find that Holder appreved “rendition” during Clinton’s reign.
Holder needs to RESDIGN Now!
For some unfathomable reason (too many current Senators and Congressmen cowardly, complicit or co-opted in development of torture policy?) the Obama Justice Department is about to give a pass on the people who wrote the legal opinions authorizing tortures that led to these deaths.
The ACLU has a “Letter to the Editor” writing campaign about this…for the letter writing tool and information, go to: http://letters.aclu.org/t/8679/letter/?letter_KEY=1130.
A true grass-roots, “not in our name” movement is the only way to get The Bushmen to be held accountable. If they are so innocent and everything was so legal, you’d think they’d want their day in court to clear their names, wouldn’t you?
Keep the pressure up.
As a medical doctor with some years’ experience as a resident in anesthesiology, I have two things to say about this:
Firstly, no doctor has any place assisting in torture. Anybody who uses his or her medical knowledge for purposes of torture must be known to have left the medical profession and taken up a new occupation as a torturer. Each country has a medical register, and any doctor who commits grave malpractice such as assisting in torture must be struck off so that the medical profession can move on and distance itself from the torturing profession.
Secondly, performing a tracheotomy will not revive a drowned torture victim. Tracheotomy just means cutting a hole into the trachea, or windpipe. This might be of some use to suction water out of the lungs, but it will not help if the victim has aspirated water down into the small airways and drowned.
As an ordinary human being, I’d like to add a couple of comments:
Any act of torture that causes drowning “by accident” is murder.
If you are one of the murderers in any of the incidents described here, or any other murder, you ought to turn yourself in to the police and ask to be prosecuted in a criminal trial so that you can begin to be given the punishment you deserve.
No one is above the law, right? Wrong! Treason is a crime, right? Wrong! If the U.S. enforced its treason laws after the Civil War, Jefferson Davis, Robert E. lee and hundreds of thousands of “traitors” would have been hanged. The powers that be simply are not going to enforce the law, and the powerless must stand by and whine. Meeow!