Sunday, November 06, 2005

Rendering official

US Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld today defended the government's decision not to permit United Nations human rights investigators to speak to detained terror suspects at Guantanamo Bay.

Last week the US Defence Department invited three UN experts to visit the detention facilities in Cuba.
While the experts said they were happy the invitation finally came after more than three years of requests, they said they would not go if they could not interview prisoners.
"It makes no sense (to go)," Manfred Nowak, special investigator on torture and other cruel treatment, told reporters at UN headquarters in New York yesterday.

"You cannot do a fact-finding mission without talking to the detainees."

Rumsfeld told a Pentagon news conference that it was not appropriate to give UN investigators the same extensive access at Guantanamo that has been granted to officials of the International Committee of the Red Cross.
"There has to be a limit to how one does that," Rumsfeld said. He said the decision not to provide full access to the UN officials was made not by the Pentagon but by the US government as a whole.
Rumsfeld also was asked why he believes some of the detainees have been conducting a hunger strike.
"What they're trying to do is capture press attention, obviously, and they've succeeded," he replied.
Seven of the detainees on the hunger strike are hospitalised and being force-fed, according to the government.
Many of the nearly 500 prisoners at Guantanamo Bay have been held more than three and a half years without charge or access to lawyers.
Most were captured in the Afghanistan war, suspected of ties to the al-Qaeda terrorist network or the Taliban regime ousted by US forces in late 2001.