Saturday, April 23, 2005

Human Rights Watch isn't satisfied

Following my last post...
The United States should name a special prosecutor to investigate the culpability of Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld and ex-CIA Director George Tenet in cases of detainee torture and abuse, Human Rights Watch said in releasing a new report today. The report, Getting Away with Torture? Command Responsibility for the U.S. Abuse of Detainees, is issued on the eve of the first anniversary of the publication of the Abu Ghraib photos (April 28). It presents substantial evidence warranting criminal investigations of Rumsfeld and Tenet, as well as Lt. Gen. Ricardo Sanchez, formerly the top U.S. commander in Iraq, and Gen. Geoffrey Miller the former commander of the prison camp at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba.

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Despite [the] evidence, Human Rights Watch said, the United States has deliberately shielded the architects of illegal detention policies through the refusal to allow an independent inquiry of prisoner abuse and the failure to undertake criminal investigations against those leaders who allowed the widespread criminal abuse of detainees to develop and persist.

[...]

"A year after Abu Ghraib, the United States continues to do what dictatorships and banana republics do the world over when their abuses are discovered-cover up the scandal and shift blame downwards," said Brody. "A wall of immunity surrounds the architects of the policy that led to all these crimes."

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Among Human Rights Watch's findings:

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