close_game
close_game

UN anti-torture panel demands US, Britain explain abuse in Iraqi jails

PTI | ByAFP, Geneva
May 25, 2004 08:01 PM IST

The UN's top anti-torture panel on Friday demanded a formal explanation from the United States and Britain about the mistreatment of Iraqi detainees in jails run by coalition forces in Iraq, the panel's head said.

The UN's top anti-torture panel on Friday demanded a formal explanation from the United States and Britain about the mistreatment of Iraqi detainees in jails run by coalition forces in Iraq, the panel's head said.

HT Image
HT Image

The chairman of the UN Committee against Torture, Fernando Marino Menendez, revealed that Washington was three years late in submitting to compulsory international scrutiny measures taken to prevent torture and mistreatment in the United States.

We're now on WhatsApp. Click to join.

The 135 countries that have ratified the International Convention Against Torture are obliged to report to the United Nations committee every four years. It then holds public hearings cross-examining officials from the country.

The panel of 10 experts oversees the treaty, which outlaws torture or cruel humane and degrading treatment.

The United States last appeared before the committee in 1999, and had failed to submit a report due in 2001, Marino Menendez told journalists.

In a letter to the US ambassador to the United Nations in Geneva, Kevin Moley, the committee demanded that Washington submit its periodic report by October 1.

"This report must contain up to date information on the situation on places of detention in Iraq," the letter read out in Spanish by Marino Menendez said.

"We are asking for this information based on the Committee's great concern about the events which happened in Iraqi prisons under the control of the forces of the occupying powers," it added.

Marino Menendez said the panel had also asked Britain to complete its report, which it had submitted on time, by adding details about what had happened in Iraq.

The committee pointed out that countries which have signed the convention are obliged to prevent torture "in territories under their jurisdiction".

Get Latest India News along with Latest News and Top Headlines from India and around the world
SHARE THIS ARTICLE ON
SHARE
Story Saved
Live Score
OPEN APP
Saved Articles
Following
My Reads
Sign out
New Delhi 0C
Thursday, November 30, 2023
Start 14 Days Free Trial Subscribe Now
Register Free and get Exciting Deals