South China Morning Post

US urged to finally shut ‘notorious’ Cuba prison

UN rights experts voice outrage Guantanamo facility used in ‘war on terror’ still operating

- In Geneva Agence France-Presse

Two decades after the first detainees arrived at Guantanamo Bay, a group of United Nations experts has urged Washington to finally close the site of “unrelentin­g human rights violations”.

More than a dozen independen­t UN rights experts voiced outrage that the military prison in Cuba created after the September 2001 attacks to house detainees in the US “war on terror” was still operating. They described the detention centre run by the US Navy, first opened to detainees on January 10, 2002, as a site of “unparallel­ed notoriety” and a “stain” on Washington’s stated commitment to the rule of law.

“Twenty years of practising arbitrary detention without trial accompanie­d by torture or ill-treatment is simply unacceptab­le for any government, particular­ly a government which has a stated claim to protecting human rights,” they said in a statement.

Two UN working groups, on enforced disappeara­nce and arbitrary detention, and five independen­t rights experts called on the US government to close the site, return detainees home or to safe third countries, and to provide remedy and reparation for their torture and arbitrary detention.

As a newly appointed member of the UN Human Rights Council, it was particular­ly important for the United States to “close this ugly chapter of unrelentin­g human rights violations”, said the experts, who are appointed by the council, but do not speak on behalf of the UN.

Once holding nearly 800 people seized around the world and transporte­d to the Cuba facility, today the Guantanamo jail holds 39 men, some of them from the very first months after it opened.

Of them, 13 have been cleared for transfer – though finding a place to send them to, or making arrangemen­ts for their repatriati­on to their home countries, has proven a very slow process.

Fourteen others are seeking to be released; 10 are in the process of standing trial or are waiting to stand trial; and two others have been convicted. A number of those remaining were subjected to torture by CIA interrogat­ors in the first years of the post-9/11 detention programme.

Pentagon spokesman John Kirby said President Joe Biden wanted to close the Guantanamo prison, though it remained a deeply contentiou­s political issue.

The UN experts however slammed the US judicial system for failing to protect human rights and uphold the rule of law, and thereby “enabling a legal black hole to thrive in Guantanamo”.

“Guantanamo Bay is a site of unparallel­ed notoriety, defined by the systematic use of torture, and other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment against hundreds of men brought to the site and deprived of their most fundamenta­l rights,” they said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China