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Khadr審訊提出令人焦慮的問題
星期一, 2008年7月14日 談論這個報告在RINF論壇 >
由 | 第一次Omar Khadr被問了,他在一張軍醫院床在阿富汗在他的胸口在與二個敞開的孔-通過他的被射擊在他的捕獲之前由美國子彈的出口創傷。 特種部隊。 審問者在Bagram美國。 軍事基地密切注視一15年老加拿大人,當觀看他連接的嘀嘀叫的和嗡嗡叫的機器時。 「我們要求他幾個自傳問題和它是真正地整潔的。 我知道這聽起來病,但它是整潔的在感覺可能看他的脈衝舉起在機器和他的呼吸作用增長的,如果他得到了緊張」,前美國的您。 戰士Damien Corsetti在採訪說。 「我們被教完全看標誌的它,但您能(通常)從未真正地看見它實際上發生在顯示器在您前面」。 Khadr是一個得獎的俘虜。 他長大與許多阿爾凱達的精華,在巴基斯坦的非法的部族區域掩藏,他們出逃了和可能知道關於即將來臨的攻擊。 它不是一年,在9/11攻擊和情報機構和軍事想知道之後什麼他知道。 那問在2002年8月是一个參加一系列審訊與持續超過二年的多倫多少年。 在Bagram單獨,他被採訪了超過40次,經常八小時每天。 三個不同星期在關塔那摩海灣隔離營2003年和2004年,加拿大人問問題。 然後他們提供了Khadr的答復給美國。 揭示星期四一位加拿大外交事務官員認識Khadr被服從了到睡眠剝奪政權美國。 軍事叫「慣常飛行節目」,并且那Khadr告訴他被拷打了和被驚嚇他的美國俘虜的加拿大人,關於加拿大的法律責任的培養新的問題和道德責任。 什麼Khadr告訴他的審問者在關塔那摩也期望是關鍵證據在他的10月軍事試驗。 五角大樓充電他以五戰爭犯罪,包括謀殺為三角洲力量戰士克里斯托弗Speer死亡。 Khadr is alleged to have thrown the grenade that fatally wounded Speer during a firefight in Afghanistan on July 27, 2002. The following reconstruction of Khadr’s interrogations is based on interviews conducted over the past two years with more than a dozen sources, which include former detainees who knew Khadr, interrogators who questioned him, and prosecutors now trying him. It also includes an examination of hundreds of pages of court and government records and the statements made by Khadr himself. Claus would later be convicted for his role in the death of another detainee at Bagram – an innocent Afghan taxi driver named Dilawar. Claus pleaded guilty to maltreatment and assault in return for a five-month jail sentence in 2005. The 2,000-page confidential army file on the investigation into the case, obtained by The New York Times, quotes another soldier saying that Claus twisted a hood over Dilawar’s head the day he died. “I had the impression that Josh was actually holding the detainee upright by pulling on the hood.” During the only interview Claus has granted, he told the Toronto Star any allegations of Khadr’s mistreatment were false. “They’re trying to imply I’m beating or torturing everybody I ever talked to,” Claus said. “Omar was pretty much my first big case,” Claus added. “With Omar, I spent a lot of time trying to understand who he was and what I could say to him or do for him, whether it be to bring him extra food or get a letter out to his family … I needed to talk to him and get him to trust me.” Khadr also described his interrogations, but the U.S. Department of Defense has censored some of the details in his sworn affidavit. “During this first interrogation, the young blond man would often (censored) if I did not give him the answers he wanted,” Khadr claimed. “Several times, he forced me to (censored), which caused me (censored) due to my (censored). He did this several times to get me to answer his questions and give him the answers he wanted.” Later he writes: “I figured out right away that I would simply tell them whatever I thought they wanted to hear in order to keep them from causing me (censored).” Guantanamo prosecutors initially claimed that Claus (who is identified in court documents only as Sgt. C) would be a key witness at Khadr’s military trial. They’ve recently changed their position. “The government was confident we could prove our case beyond a reasonable doubt without Sgt C’s testimony,” prosecutor Marine Major Jeff Groharing wrote in a recent email to the Star. Khadr’s lawyers plan to argue that Claus abused the Canadian teen and that threat of harm overshadowed any subsequent interrogations, making anything Khadr said unreliable and inadmissible for his trial. At Guantanamo, three months after his capture, Khadr’s interrogations began again in a military hospital. Still recovering from his wounds, he claims in his affidavit the first interrogators spoke to him for about six hours over two days. “One interrogator was in civilian dress clothes and I think he told me he was with the (censored). The other was in military camouflage. They asked me questions about everything. I don’t think there was anything new.” British detainee Ruhal Ahmed used to watch Khadr come and go. Sometimes Khadr would be excited and tell Ahmed about all the things his interrogator had let him do – like watch Hollywood movies, or eat candy, Ahmed said in an interview from Britain, where he now lives. Sometimes, Ahmed said, Khadr would return to his cell, put his blanket over his head and sob. Khadr claims in his affidavit that during various interrogations at Guantanamo he was threatened with rape, extradition, he was hit, or left shackled for hours. “A military official then removed my chair and short-shackled me by my hands and feet to a bolt in the floor,” he claimed about one interrogation. “Military officials then moved my hands behind my knees. They left me in the room in this condition for approximately five to six hours, causing me extreme pain.” During a December 2002 interview, the prosecution states Khadr told interrogators he “vowed to die fighting” in Afghanistan on the July 2002 day he was captured. He also told them he armed himself with an AK-47 assault rifle, put on an ammunition vest, and positioned himself by a window near the compound, according to a government court document. Guantanamo’s chief prosecutor, Army Col. Lawrence Morris, told the Star the prosecution plans to enter “into evidence certain statements made by Omar Khadr.” The Military Commissions Act under which the trial is governed forbids the use of evidence gleaned under torture. But the rules allow evidence “in which the degree of coercion is disputed,” if the military judge finds the information is “reliable” and “in the interests of justice.” Critics say this allows evidence obtained under what they call “torture lite.” Jim Gould, a now-retired foreign affairs official who worked for the department’s intelligence section, accompanied the agent on the interview but did not speak. He would return a year later to meet with Khadr alone. Gould would not comment this week, but in interviews given last year, he said that, over the week of interviews with the CSIS agent, Khadr’s demeanour changed dramatically. “The first day we brought a Big Mac. It was just inhaled, like any teenager who hasn’t had a hamburger in six months,” Gould said. “Second day he declared he had been tortured, tore his shirt off to show us how.” In his affidavit, Khadr describes his disappointment in the Canadians. “I was very hopeful that they would help me. I showed them my injuries and told them that what I told the Americans was not right and true. I said that I told the Americans whatever they wanted me to say because they would torture me,” Khadr stated in his affidavit. “(But) the Canadians called me a liar and I began to sob. They screamed at me and told me that they could not do anything for me. I tried to co-operate so that they would take me back to Canada. I told them I was scared.” When Gould returned by himself in March 2004, he was less interested in gleaning intelligence from Khadr, he said, but more concerned with learning about Khadr’s beliefs. “I met him two days for an hour-and-a-half each time. He was just playing with me. `You get me back to Canada and I’ll tell you everything you want to know. You give me this and I’ll tell you everything you want to know,’” Gould said. “In his eyes, (there was) recognition that he was playing. I think he had been hardened in that year since I’d seen him.” Khadr claims Gould told him: “I’m not here to help you. I’m not here to do anything for you. I’m just here to get information.” What wasn’t known until this week, when the government handed over uncensored portions of a 2004 Foreign Affairs document, is that Gould was told by a U.S. soldier that to “prepare” Khadr for the visit, the then-17-year-old had been subjected to the military’s “frequent flyer program.” This meant that, for three weeks, Khadr had been moved from cell to cell, never allowed to sleep for more than three hours. The sleep deprivation was intended to make him more willing to talk. But international law, and even the U.S. Army’s own rules, classify this method as “mental torture.” Canadian Federal Court Justice Richard Mosley wrote in a ruling last month that the practice described to Gould was a “breach of international human rights law.” “Canada became implicated in that violation,” Mosley wrote, when Gould “chose to proceed with the interview.” Michelle Shephard is the Star’s National Security Reporter and author of Guantanamo’s Child: The Untold Story of Omar Khadr, which was published this spring. Discuss this report in the RINF forums > Have Your Say: Khadr interrogation raises troubling questions One Response to “Khadr interrogation raises troubling questions”
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Lt.C. Ralph Peters on Omar Khadr Gitmo Tape: “We Should Have Killed That Punk on a Battlefield where it was legal to do so!”
Watch video at http://muslimsagainstsharia.blogspot.com/2008/07/ltc-ralph-peters-on-omar-khadr-gitmo.html