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Tough tactics used often at Guantanamo
Uncooperative Guantanamo Bay detainees were regularly subjected to highly abusive treatment over a long period of time, unidentified guards at the U.S. military base, intelligence agents and others who worked in the prison told The New York Times.
U.S. military officials have long maintained such treatment had occurred in isolated cases and was not common. Prisoners at the Cuban base include those captured in Afghanistan and Iraq and suspected of association with or membership in extremist organizations. Human rights groups have criticized the United States for indefinitely detaining prisoners at the base, most without charges or legal representation. Earlier this year, photographs of U.S. personnel abusing Iraqi prisoners at Abu Ghraib prison outside Baghdad generated outrage around the world. The Times reported in its Sunday editions that prisoners
at Guantanamo deemed uncooperative were stripped to their underwear, shackled
hand and foot to a bolt in the floor and forced to endure strobe lights and loud
music played from close loudspeakers, while the air conditioning was turned up
to maximum levels for periods as long as 14 hours. "It fried them," the newspaper quoted the official as saying. The unidentified official told the newspaper he spoke because of anger over the treatment of the prisoners. Pentagon officials would not comment on the details of the Guantanamo allegations, the Times said. The Defense Department said in a statement quoted by the Times that the military was providing a "safe, humane and professional detention operation at Guantanamo." |
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