Subscribe to Common Dreams News Updates
Progressive Community
The press releases posted here have been submitted by
America's Progressive Community
For further information or to comment on this press release, please contact the organization directly.
Most Popular This Week
Today's Top News
|
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE |
CONTACT: ACLU Robyn Shepherd, (212) 519-7829 or 549-2666; media@aclu.org |
On Anniversary of Treaty Ratification, US Should Ensure Prohibition of Torture Meets International Standards
NEW YORK - October 21 -
Today marks the fifteenth anniversary of the U.S. ratification of the
United Nations Convention Against Torture, but U.S. policy continues to
fall short of ensuring full compliance with the treaty. For example, an
appendix to the Army Field Manual (AFM) can still facilitate cruel
treatment of prisoners and detainees at home and abroad, says the
American Civil Liberties Union.
The Convention Against Torture and
Other Forms of Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment (CAT) is the most
comprehensive international human rights treaty dealing exclusively
with the issues of torture and abuse. It came into effect in 1987, and
has been ratified by 146 countries. The treaty was initially signed by
the Reagan administration in 1988 and was ratified by the Senate on
October 21, 1994, but with reservations, understandings and
declarations (RUDs) that failed to make the treaty fully applicable.
The Bush administration exploited these RUDs to justify abusive
interrogation policies including the use of waterboarding, stress
positions, extreme isolation and sleep deprivation. In 2006, the
Committee Against Torture, which reviews country compliance with CAT,
criticized the U.S. for failure to uphold the treaty and called for
full compliance.
After taking office, President Obama
admirably issued an executive order prohibiting torture. But under an
appendix to the 2006 revised U.S. Army Field Manual - the most recent
edition - practices considered incompatible with CAT and international
law are still allowed, including force-feeding, psychological torture,
sleep deprivation and sensory deprivation. Under Appendix M to the AFM,
detainees can be 'separated' or held in isolation from other detainees
for 30 days, or longer with authorization, and allowed only four hours
of continuous sleep per night over 30 days, which can be prolonged upon
approval.
The following can be attributed to Jamil Dakwar, Director of the ACLU Human Rights Program:
"In recent years, the United States
has shamefully evaded international human rights commitments and
exempted itself from universally recognized standards of humane
treatment. Fifteen years after ratifying CAT, the Obama administration
has an opportunity to change course and ensure that the U.S. does not
interpret any of the CAT's provisions in a way that fails to uphold
human rights obligations. To fulfill its human rights requirements, the
administration must also fully investigate crimes of torture committed
in violation of U.S. and international law and withdraw the Army Field
Manual's Appendix M."
For more on the Committee Against Torture's recommendations and follow-up letters to the U.S. government, please see: www2.ohchr.org/english/bodies/

1 Comment so far
Show AllI had never heard of the RUDs and Appendix M to the AFM. Thanks to the ACLU, I'll be studying these things.
There was an interesting segment on John Yoo yesterday on the News Hour (PBS). But it never asked or answered fundamental questions like what particular things Yoo did are deemed by his opponents to violate what particular laws. This is typical of media coverage.
No one has ever answered my question, frequently asked on CD, concerning what laws require leaving enforcement of the anti-torture laws (international and U.S. federal laws) to the DOJ and/or Eric Holder; that is, why none of the thousands of U.S. district attorneys, federal grand juries, and their state counterparts, can't move to indict Bush era officials for their violations of the criminal statutes. Even the ACLU seems to believe everything must be left in Holder's hands. Well?