Prison camp pictures spark protests
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Bob's Note: Here is a fine example of the brain-dead left's behavior. The terrorists are getting a terrific menu, they shower daily, they have all been deloused. There has not been a single incidence of a guard beating the terrorists, they are sleeping on clean foam mattresses. I've personally worked in jails a total of about 7 years and this article shows they are actually getting better treatment than American inmates often get. American inmates often NEVER get outside and are only given 1 hour a day outside their cells. In medium security they have more time but still often only can see walls, no sky, no fresh air. These terrorists who shot kneeling unarmed women in stadiums full of Afghanis and thought nothing of torturing helpless locals, slept in the dirt, ate garbage cooked over camel shit fires, and had lice so thick they used them for pillows never had it so good.
Sunday, 20 January, 2002, 15:49 GMTThe US says pictures are 'not representative'
The US Government has released photographs of the Taleban and al-Qaeda suspects held at its prison camp in Cuba which show them being subjected to sensory deprivation.
The prisoners are shown kneeling down, wearing goggles, ear muffs, surgical masks and heavy gloves.
There is no obvious explanation of these measures except an attempt to degrade the man-Amnesty medical officer Jim West
They are also handcuffed and held in leg-irons.
The chief medical officer of the human rights group, Amnesty International, Jim West, said the photographs were reminiscent of torture methods used in eastern Europe in the 1970s.
But the US military stressed that the group photographed had just landed at the base and the pictures were not representative of daily life at the camp. Prisoners were normally free to walk around their cells without shackles or any sensory deprivation whatsoever.
They are only shackled when they are taken to shower or for medical checks, the military said.
Red Cross investigation
Representatives of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) are currently interviewing the 110 detainees amid international concern over their treatment.
The US says the ICRC has been given full access the prisoners and is being allowed to
interview them privately and on a voluntary basis.
The commandant at the camp, Brigadier General Mike Lehnert said the ICRC team had already made a number of private recommendations and these would be accommodated where possible.
According to the British newspaper The Mail on Sunday, the US military says the prisoners are forced to wear masks because there is a risk they could spread tuberculosis.
But Mr West disputed this, saying that TB was unlikely to pose a risk outside as it only breeds in confined spaces.
The prisoners were issued with goggles and ear muffs when they boarded the planes to Guantanamo. The US said the goggles were a security precaution and the muffs blocked out the sound of the transport planes in which they were travelling.
Hallucinations
But Mr West said he was shocked to see them still wearing the goggles and ear muffs.
Click here for details of a prisoner's cell
"There is no obvious explanation of these measures except an attempt to degrade the man," he told the newspaper.
Another human rights group said that not being able to see, hear, smell or touch would leave the prisoners feeling disorientated and suffering from hallucinations.
Washington has refused to give the detainees prisoner-of-war status, although it says standards of detention outlined in the Geneva Conventions are being met.
International concern
Even before these latest pictures were released, questions had been raised about conditions at the camp.
They will probably have panic attacks, mood changes and terrible nightmares, said Helen Bamber, The Medical Foundation for the Care of Victims of Torture. Bob's Note: Poor babies!
Amnesty International said that, at eight-by-eight feet, the cells are below US standards for ordinary prisoners.
Deputy Prime Minister John Manley of Canada urged the US to treat the detainees "in accordance with humane norms and international law".
And in Britain, the chairwoman of Parliament's Human Rights Committee, Ann Clwyd, warned against "playing with human rights".
UK officials are in Cuba to question three detainees thought to be British members of al-Qaeda, which is widely held responsible for the 11 September terror attacks on America.
Little American town
Despite the furore over the prisoners' treatment, the US is pressing ahead with its expansion of the camp.
General Lehnert said it would be able to hold 320 detainees - more if there were two to a cell - until a permanent prison was ready.
That would have a capacity of up to 1,000. Hundreds of detainees are in custody in Afghanistan awaiting transfer.
Officials at the base stress that the vast majority of prisoners are quiet and well-behaved, despite an incident last week when one detainee bit a guard on the arm and others made death threats against their captors.