U.S. Violates Treaty Against Torture Abroad and at Home (4/27/2006)
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT: media@aclu.org
ACLU Submits Report to U.N. Committee Against Torture Detailing Abuses
NEW YORK -The American Civil Liberties Union today released a detailed report
on the failure of the U.S. abroad and at home to comply with the treaty against
torture. The report was filed with the U. N. Committee Against Torture,
which will review U. S. compliance with the Convention Against Torture in early
May. "America’s image was tarnished not just by the Abu
Ghraib photographs but by the failure to hold high level officials accountable
for the abuse that happened on their watch," said Anthony D. Romero, Executive
Director of the ACLU. "It’s been two years -- too little and too late when
it comes to accountability. When our leaders allow torture and are not held
accountable for illegal abuses, all of America suffers.”
The report, Enduring Abuse: Torture and Cruel Treatment by the United States
at Home and Abroad, is based on a range of sources, including more than 100,000
government documents turned over to the ACLU as a result of Freedom of
Information Act (FOIA) litigation. The documents reveal a systemic and
pervasive pattern of torture and abuse of detainees in U.S. custody, including
evidence that detainees have been beaten; forced into painful stress positions;
threatened with death; sexually and religiously humiliated; stripped naked;
hooded and blindfolded; exposed to extreme heat and cold; denied food and water;
isolated for prolonged periods; subjected to mock drownings; and intimidated by
dogs.
The ACLU also today made public a powerful new Web-based search engine that
allows users to comb through and analyze the massive number of documents
released as a result of the ACLU’s lawsuit. This is the first time this
important set of documents has been made easily searchable and available to
journalists, scholars and the public.
According to the ACLU report, violations of the torture treaty are not
limited to actions by military personnel overseas in the “war on terror,” but in
fact are all too common here at home. In a stark example of the horrific
conditions of confinement that persist in prisons throughout the country, more
than 1,000 prisoners were abandoned and left in their cells for days without
food, water or ventilation when Hurricane Katrina hit New Orleans in August
2005. Abusive conditions of confinement also persist in so-called Supermax
prisons: prison rape and sexual assault are daily occurrences, and the use of
Tasers and restraint devices have endangered numerous detainees and prisoners
held domestically.
"Too often, the 2.2 million men, women and children in our nation's prisons
and jails are exposed to disgusting living conditions and grossly inadequate
medical and mental health care,” said Elizabeth Alexander, Director of the ACLU
National Prison Project. “The dangerous use of restraint chairs and
electroshock weapons, as well as the failure to protect prisoners from sexual
assault, is far too common. It is particularly shocking that federal law
makes it difficult to redress many of the human rights violations in the
courts."
The ACLU is the nation’s largest civil liberties organization, and is one of
the few domestic groups involved in a broad expanse of legal cases and advocacy
efforts involving both domestic and extra-territorial abuse. The report
was submitted to the Committee Against Torture, which is the world’s leading
human rights body tasked with holding countries accountable for abuse.
“After the horrors of World War II, our leaders helped to draft universal
principles that prohibit torture,” said Ann Beeson, Associate Legal Director of
the ACLU. “We must defend this legacy and demand that our government
comply with the universal prohibition against torture.”
The ACLU report also makes a number of concrete recommendations designed to
bring the U.S. into compliance with the treaty. Included are: - Amending and passing laws to criminalize torture;
- Ensuring that
international monitoring bodies have access to all prisoners and detainees in
U.S. custody;
- Ending secret detentions and the policy of extraordinary
rendition;
- Bringing the conditions under which prisoners and detainees are
held into conformity with the treaty;
- Investigating and ending the use of
dangerous and cruel restraint methods;
- Investigating prison rape and sexual
assault;
- Conducting timely and independent investigations of all allegations
of torture and abuse of persons in U.S. custody; and,
- Holding accountable all
perpetrators of torture and abuse.
The U. S. ratified the Convention Against Torture in 1994. The U.N.
Committee Against Torture meets twice a year to examine individual nations’
compliance with the treaty; at the Geneva session starting May 1, it will review
the U.S. report, which was submitted 19 months after it was due. The ACLU
will send a delegation to the meeting to observe and participate in the
session.
In 2004, the ACLU created a Human Rights Working Group specifically dedicated
to holding the U.S. government accountable to universal human rights principles
in addition to rights guaranteed by the U.S. Constitution. The ACLU Human Rights
Working Group incorporates international human rights strategies into ACLU
advocacy on issues relating to national security, immigrants' rights, women's
rights and racial justice.
The ACLU’s new powerful search engine for documents that detail torture and
abuse of detainees is available online at: www.aclu.org/torturefoiasearch
Background about the FOIA lawsuit is online at: www.aclu.org/torture
The ACLU’s report to the Committee Against Torture is available online at: www.aclu.org/safefree/torture/25354pub20060427.html
ACLU Executive
Director Anthony D. Romero's statement on the second anniversary of the release
of the Abu Ghraib photos is available at: www.aclu.org/safefree/torture/25365prs20060427.html
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