US suspected of keeping secret
prisoners on warships: UN official
VIENNA
(AFP) - The UN has learned of "very, very serious" allegations that
the United States is secretly detaining terrorism suspects in various locations
around the world, notably aboard prison ships, the UN's special rapporteur on
terrorism said.
While
the accusations were rumours, rapporteur Manfred Nowak said the situation was
sufficiently serious to merit an official inquiry.
"There
are very, very serious accusations that the United States is maintaining secret
camps, notably on ships," the Austrian UN official told AFP, adding that
the vessels were believed to be in the Indian Ocean region.
"They are
only rumours, but they appear sufficiently well-based to merit an official
inquiry," he added.
Last Thursday
Nowak and three other UN human rights experts said they were opening an inquiry
into the US detention camp at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, where Washington has been
holding more than 500 people without trial, and into other such locations.
The United
States has neither refused nor granted requests by Nowak's group to visit
Guantanamo.
"We
have accepted, upon the request of the State Department and
Pentagon, to
limit our investigation for now to Guantanamo, but even in accepting this we
have not had a positive response" to the
request for a visit, Nowak said.
He said that
if the "investigation into
Guantanamo leads us to other things, we will follow them. We will bring up all
these matters to the US government and expect Washington to say officially
where these camps are."
The use of
prison ships would allow investigators to interrogate people secretly and in
international waters out of the reach of US law, British security expert
Francis Tusa said. "This opens the door to very tough interrogations on key prisoners
before it even has been revealed that they have been captured," said
Tusa, an editor for the British magazine Jane's Intelligence Review.
Nowak said the
prison ships would not be "floating
Guantanamos" since "they
are much smaller, holding less than a dozen detainees." Tusa said the Americans
may also be using their island base of Diego Garcia in the Indian Ocean as a
site for prisoners.
Some 520
people suspected of terrorism are currently being held without trial at
Guantanamo and others are in camps the United States has refused to acknowledge,
the human rights organization Amnesty International has said. The United States
has said that prisoners considered foreign combatants in its "war on terrorism"
are not covered by the Geneva Conventions.
[But
who told them these tortures and abuses are outside Geneva Convention? Aren’t they
are the ones defining ‘foreign combatants’ to hide their felonies/ War Crimes!]
Related Poem: Guantanamo Bay Related Article: What is Al-Qaeda?