Yahoo - AFP, Paul Handley, 9 Dec 2014
The United
Nations and human rights groups called Tuesday for the criminal prosecution of
US officials after a Senate report detailed a brutal CIA torture program.
But the
Justice Department rejected pursuing charges against anyone involved in the
interrogations, saying it had not found anything in the scathing, heavily
detailed report that could lead to a successful conviction.
The rights
groups and the UN's top rights defender said the report shows the Central
Intelligence Agency's secret efforts to extract information from detainees
after the 9/11 attacks repeatedly violated international law and basic human
rights.
The
524-page summary report from the Senate Intelligence Committee details
extensive waterboarding, beatings and other extreme "interrogation
techniques" used on detainees.
The report
"confirms what the international community has long believed -- that there
was a clear policy orchestrated at a high level within the (George W.) Bush
administration, which allowed to commit systematic crimes and gross violations
of international human rights law," said Ben Emmerson, UN special
rapporteur on counter-terrorism and human rights.
"It is
now time to take action. The individuals responsible for the criminal
conspiracy revealed in today's report must be brought to justice, and must face
criminal penalties commensurate with the gravity of their crimes."
Anthony
Romero, executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union, called the
report "shocking," saying: "It is impossible to read it without
feeling immense outrage that our government engaged in these terrible
crimes."
"The
government officials who authorized illegal activity need to be held
accountable," Romero said.
The ACLU
called on President Barack Obama to appoint a special prosecutor to examine
"the role played by the senior officials most responsible for it and by
those who tried to cover up crimes."
"If
there is sufficient evidence of criminal conduct, the offenders should be
prosecuted," it said.
The group
acknowledged that Obama has already ended the torture program, but said the CIA
needs to be forbidden from other activities related to it, including holding
people in custody or operating detention centers like those where the torture
took place.
And it said
that the government should apologize to and compensate victims of US torture
policies, in compliance with international law.
Such moves
would "help ensure that the United States never tortures again," it
said.
'Time for
accountability'
The calls
came after the long-awaited release of the report -- which is actually a
524-page summary of the 6,000-page full report, with numerous details and
especially the names of people involved blacked out.
Amnesty
International said the report makes clear that the CIA was acting unlawfully
"from day one" and its brutal interrogations were not a rogue
operation.
Steven
Hawkins, executive director of Amnesty's US branch, said the program "gave
the green light to commit the crimes under international law of torture and
enforced disappearance -- with impunity. It’s time for accountability,
including a full investigation, prosecutions and remedy for victims."
Human
Rights Watch executive director Kenneth Roth said the report "shows the
repeated claims that harsh measures were needed to protect Americans are
fiction."
He noted
that the Obama administration had ended many of the practices described in
graphic detail in the report.
But Roth
added: "Unless this important truth-telling process leads to prosecution of
the officials responsible, torture will remain a 'policy option' for future
presidents."
Emmerson
said the torture carried out by the CIA could not be defended by the fact that
it was authorized by top officials.
"Indeed,
it reinforces the need for criminal accountability," he said.
"International
law prohibits the granting of immunities to public officials who have engaged
in acts of torture," including senior officials who authorized them, he
added.
But
prosecution of anyone -- which would put the Obama administration against that
of his predecessor, Bush -- appeared doubtful.
The
Department of Justice said that since 2009, it had already pursued two
investigations into mistreatment of detainees and decided the evidence was not
sufficient to obtain a conviction.
The DOJ
said in a statement that investigators had reviewed the Senate report "and
did not find any new information that they had not previously considered in
reaching their determination."
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