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¡¡¡¡VII. On the United States' Violation of Human Rights in Other
Countries
Relying on its strong military power, the United
States have trespassed on the sovereignty of other countries and violated human
rights in other countries.
A large number of innocent Iraqi civilians have died
in the war launched by the United States in 2003. On Oct. 11, 2006, the
Washington Post reported that a survey of Bloomberg School of Public Health
under Johns Hopkins University estimated that more than 655,000 Iraqis have died
in Iraq since war started in March 2003, meaning about 500 unexpected violent
deaths per day throughout the country. The estimate was produced by interviewing
residents during a random sampling of households in 47 neighborhood clusters
throughout Iraq. On Nov. 19, 2005, a U.S. marine unit searched an Iraqi
community door-to-door and slaughtered 24 Iraqi civilians after a marine was
killed by a roadside bomb in Haditha. Those who died included a 76-year-old
disabled man, a three-year-old child, and seven women. (Haditha 'Massacre' - One
Year on, BBC News, Nov. 19, 2006) According to another report by British
newspaper the Sunday Times (March 26, 2006), a family of eleven were shot dead
by U.S. troops on March 15, 2006; among the dead were five children aged from
six months to five years, and four women. On March 12, 2006, four U.S. soldiers
raped 14-year-old girl Abeer Qassim al-Janabi and then killed her, her parents
and her five-year-old sister ( [UK] The Independent website Aug. 7, 2006). On
May 31, 2006, U.S. forces killed two Iraqi women, one of them about to give
birth, when the troops shot at a car that failed to stop at an observation post
in a city north of Baghdad. On June 5, 2006, CNN reported that U.S. squad took a
52-year-old disabled Iraqi to a roadside hole and shot him before planting a
shovel and an AK-47 to make it appear that he was an insurgent planting a bomb.
On December 8, 2006, U.S.-led forces killed 20 suspected insurgents during a
raid targeting fighters from the group al-Qaeda in Iraq northwest of Baghdad.
Amir Alwan, mayor of Ishaqi, said 10 men, four women and 10 children in his
village were killed (The Washington Post, Dec. 9, 2006). The Associated Press
reported that on May 9, 2006 four U.S. soldiers murdered three suspected
insurgents (Iraqi civilians) during a raid called "Objective Murray" in Salah
ad-Dinof Iraq. Raymond L.Girouard, a soldier of the four, said they were under
orders to "kill all military age males", which is also the ROE (rule of
engagement) of "Objective Murray".
The United States has a flagrant record of violating the
Geneva Convention in systematically abusing prisoners during the Iraqi War and
the War in Afghanistan. A report released in News Night of British Broadcasting
Corporation (BBC), originally provided by the U.S.-based Human Rights First,
showed that since August 2002, 98 prisoners had died in American-run prisons in
Iraq and Afghanistan. Among the dead, 34 died of premeditated murder, 11 deaths
were suspicious, and 8 to 12 were tortured to death (AFP, Feb. 21, 2006). A
Human Rights Watch report in July 2006 said torture and other abuses against
detainees in U.S. custody in Iraq were authorized and routine. Detainees were
routinely subject to severe beating, painful stress positions, severe sleep
deprivation, and exposure to extreme cold and hot temperatures. Soldiers were
told that many abusive techniques were authorized by the military chain of
command and Geneva Conventions did not apply to the detainees at their facility.
Detainees at Camp Nama, a U.S. detention center at the Baghdad airport - in
violation of international law - not registered with the International Committee
of the Red Cross, were regularly stripped naked and subject to beatings. Some
detainees were used for target practice. In May 2006 human rights group Amnesty
International condemned the detention of some 14,000 prisoners in Iraq without
charge or trial. On February 15, 2006, Australia's SBS TV aired more than
10pictures and video clips taken at Iraq's Abu Ghraib prison; the images
included: a man's throat was cut off, left forearm of a man was left with burns
and shrapnel wounds, a blood-stained interrogation room, and a seemingly insane
man's body covered with his own feces. U.S. army's criminal investigation
division gathered materials included 1, 325 photographs and 93 video clips of
suspected abuse of detainees, 546 photographs of suspected dead Iraqi detainees,
all recorded between Oct. 18 and Dec. 30, 2003 ( [UK] Guardian, Feb. 17, 2006).
Another report carried by the New York Times in December 2006 says a man named
Donald Vance, a 29-year-old Navy veteran from Chicago who went to Iraq as a
security contractor, was detained by American soldiers and put into detention
center Camp Cropper for 97 days. The man said American guards arrived at his
cell periodically, shackled his hands and feet, blindfolded him and took him to
a padded room for interrogation. When he was returned to his cell, he was
fatigued but unable to sleep, for the fluorescent lights were never turned off
and at most hours, heavy metal or country music blared in the corridor. He was
not allowed to use telephone and denied the right to a lawyer at detention
hearings. The New York Times reported on March 18, 2006 that an elite Special
Operations forces unit Task Force 6-26 converted one of Saddam Hussein's former
military bases near Baghdad into a top-secret detention center. There, American
soldiers made one of the former Iraqi government's torture chambers into their
own interrogation cell. They named it the Black Room. In the windowless,
jet-black garage-size room, some soldiers beat prisoners with rifle butts.
According to another report by British newspaper The
Independent, 460 people were confined in the Guantanamo prison camp, including
dozens of adolescent prisoners, with more than 60 under 18 and the youngest only
14. A young man named Mohammed el-Gharani was allegedly accused of member of
al-Qaeda and conspiracy in the 1998 al-Qaeda London terrorist conspiracy when he
was only 12. In 2001, he was arrested at the age of 14 ([UK] The Independent,
Children of Guantanamo Bay, May 28, 2006). According to a report by the
Washington Post, on May 30, 2006, 75 prisoners in Guantanamo went on a hunger
strike against U.S. soldiers' maltreatment. On June 10, 2006, three prisoners
hung themselves with bed sheets and clothing (The Associated Press, June 11,
2006). Mani Shaman Turki al-Habardi Al-Utaybi's family said his organs including
the brain, liver, kidney and heart were all taken away when the corpse arrived.
Mani Shaman Turki al-Habardi Al-Utaybi's cousin said that might be done to
conceal the truth behind his brother's death. Another Saudi Arabian prisoner's
father thought his son's death was not suicide but intentional hanging as he
found bruises on his son's body. The Amnesty International described it as
another "indictment" of the worsening U.S. human rights record. Human rights
experts with the United Nations have condemned the United States for long-term
arbitrary detention of suspects and abuses of detainees as serious violations of
international law and relevant international conventions.
The U.S. Military Commissions Act signed into law on
October 17,2006 allows more severe means be used to interrogate terrorist
suspects. Martin Scheinin, UN special rapporteur on the promotion and protection
of Human Rights and fundamental freedom, issued a statement noting that a number
of provisions of the Act contradictthe universal and fundamental principles of
fair trial standards and due process enshrined in Common Article 3 of the Geneva
Conventions and relevant provisions of the International Convention on Civil
Rights and Political Rights (UN Expert on Human Rights and Counter Terrorism
Concerned That Military Commissions Act is Now Law in United States. Press
Release, United Nations, October 27, 2006).
The United Nations and all peace- and justice-loving
countries and people have unanimously condemned the U.S. act of disregarding
internationally recognized human rights principles and trespassing on other
countries' sovereignty and human rights. In July 2006, at its 87th session the
UN Human Rights Committee expressed its concern over U.S. infringements on human
rights overseas. The committee also expressed concerned and raised
recommendations on U.S. security measures, detaining people secretly and in
secret places for long periods, abuses of prisoners, and non-compliance with
international conventions in the war on terror. On June 14, 2006 five
independent UN Special Rapporteurs on human rights issued a joint statement
calling on the United States to immediately close the Guantanamo Bay detention
center (UN rights experts call for immediate closure of US Guantanamo centre
after suicides, UN News Center, June 14, 2006. http://www.un.org/).
America's international image has been greatly hurt
by its government's violation of human rights flaunting the banner of
"safeguarding human rights". A poll by the BBC World Service released on January
23, 2007 showed that the image of the United States has deteriorated around the
world in the past year. During the poll 26,381 people were questioned in 25
countries. Some 73 percent of the total disapproved of the U.S. government's
handling of the military campaign in Iraq, with 49 percent of respondents saying
Washington was playing a mainly negative role internationally. An average of
only 29 percent of some 18,000 people surveyed in 18 countries over the last
three months believed that the United States is having a mainly positive
influence internationally, down 7 percent from the previous poll conducted a
year earlier.
Though the poll did not directly address their
reasons, GlobeScan President Doug Miller told AFP by phone, the negative views
appeared to be driven by US intervention in the Middle East and the "disconnect"
between its declared values and actions, such as in Guantanamo Bay (AFP, London,
Jan. 23, 2007).
To "name and shame" other countries in annual Country
Reports on Human Rights Practices is a world strategy of the U.S. government to
wage the Cold War in the second half of the last century and typical of Cold War
mentality. To interfere in other countries' internal affairs and provoke
international confrontations on human rights issues not only violates
universally recognized international law principles such as equality of
sovereignty and non-interference in other countries' internal affairs, but also
goes against the trend of our times, which promotes peace, development and
cooperation, and encourages dialogue instead of confrontation in the field of
human rights. The United States has lorded it over other countries by condemning
other countries' human rights practices while ignoring its own problems, which
exposes its double standard and hegemonism on the human rights issue. We urge
the U.S. government to acknowledge its own human rights problems and stop
interfering in other countries' internal affairs under the pretext of human
rights.
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