Bush proíbe a tortura do suspeito do CIA, tipo de

George Bush, presidente dos E.U., assinou uma ordem executiva que proíbe o CIA para torturar, humilha ou abusa terroristas suspeitados em seu programa da interrogação do uma vez que-segredo.
Mas os grupos das direitas humanas condemned o que se chamaram a língua vaga do decree, dig atingiu uma “confiança nós” a aproximação que para fora detalhes críticos esquerdos.
Bush requisitou que o programa do CIA, revelado publicamente em setembro 2006, deve abide pelo artigo comum III das convenções de Genebra em detidos do wartime.
But the decree does not describe in any further detail a secret CIA prison network that has drawn outrage from US allies in Europe.
‘Incommunicado detention’
Tony Snow, a presidential spokesman, said the order barred “cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment or punishment” and “acts of violence serious enough to be considered comparable to murder, torture, mutilation, and cruel and inhuman treatment”.
“It also prohibits ‘willful and outrageous acts of personal abuse done for the purpose of humiliating or degrading the individual in a manner so serious that any reasonable person, considering the circumstances, would deem the acts beyond the bounds of human decency’.”
“And the order forbids acts intended to denigrate detainees’ religion, religious practices, or religious objects,” Snow said.
Jennifer Daskal, a senior counter-terrorism counsel with Human Rights Watch, said: “The key aspect of this is all the parts that aren’t said.”
Daskal said that the order allowed “a system of incommunicado detention to continue, with the blessing of the president.
“What we have here is an administration basically reciting a number of legal principles and saying “trust us.” And that’s hard to take from an administration that refuses to renounce waterboarding,” she said.
Waterboarding is a practice in which a prisoner is tied down and water is poured over the face or over a cloth stretched over the face, producing the sensation of drowning.
Irreplaceable information
Michael Hayden, the director of the CIA, told employees in a statement that the order was necessary in order to make sure the detention and interrogation problem followed recent US Supreme Court rulings.
Hayden repeated the frequent cklaim made by the White House that Common Article III “contains vague language that has been subject to a variety of interpretations, not only within the US but internationally.”
The order “gives us the legal clarity we have sought,” Hayden said. “It gives our officers the assurance that they may conduct their essential work in keeping with the laws of the United States.”
Hayden defended the usefulness of the program after the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks, declaring: “Simply put, the information developed by our program has been irreplaceable.
“We have shouldered that responsibility for just one reason: to learn all we can about our nation’s most deadly and fanatical enemies so that our operations to undermine them are as effective as possible.”
Colonoscopy
Meanwhile Snow announced Bush is due to have a routine colonoscopy on Saturday and will temporarily hand presidential powers to Dick Cheney, the vice president, the White House said.
Snow said Bush will have the procedure at his Camp David mountaintop retreat.
He last had a colorectal cancer check on June 29, 2002. For the general population, a colonoscopy to screen for colon cancer is recommended every 10 years.
But for people at higher risk or if a colonoscopy detects precancerous polyps, follow-up colonoscopies often are scheduled in three to five year intervals.
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