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The detainees recalled torturous treatment at Guantanamo
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CAIRO,
August 2 (IslamOnline.net) – Two French men released from Guantanamo
Bay said they had been physically and sexually abused in the notorious
American prison, their lawyers told a leading French paper.
Nizar
Sassi and Mourad Benchellali said they were badly treated at the camp
the same way Iraqi detainees were treated at Abu Ghraib prison in
southern Baghdad, the lawyers were quoted by Liberation as
saying on Monday, August 2.
The
two lawyers, named by the French daily as Jacques Derbray and William
Boudon, said naked women were taken to cells of their two clients to
"grip them with shock".
The
two 22- and 24- years old also told their attorneys that half naked
women interrogated detainees from Middle Eastern origins who were also
forced to watch pornographic movies, a practice deemed offensive to
Arabs and Muslims.
The
former detainees also complained their jailers used Dogs during
interrogations conducted under the threat of arms as well, the lawyers
said.
The
Frenchmen had been detained on arrival in France for questioning by
the domestic intelligence service.
Hell
Derbay
said both men described their time in Guantanamo as hell.
The
two detainees said there were denied access to drugs for treatment
from dangerous epidemics as a mean of pressure during investigations.
"If
we cooperated with the investigators, drugs are offered as a reward,
and if not they were withheld as a punishment," the lawyers
quoted their clients as saying.
Furthermore,
the two men said they were even forced to take anonymous drugs, which
they said caused them suffering from postulates.
They
had been also exposed to light all the day, with two 15-minute rest
times in a solitary confinement every week, a violent and abuse
behavior which "drove some detainees to the verge of
madness".
"The
American guards were also swearing bad names at us," they said.
Before
moving to Guantanamo, the two detainees said they were harshly beaten
in Qandahar province in Afghanistan.
Still
wearing the white T-shirts, jeans and trainers provided by U.S.
authorities on their release, the two were transferred to prisons near
Paris after another judge confirmed their detention early Sunday.
Their lawyers said the detention was unjustified.
Three
other Frenchmen remain in Guantanamo.
Five
Britons were released from Guantanamo in March 2003 and freed within a
day by British police without charge. A Danish citizen released this
year now also lives as a free man.
Amnesty
International condemned
in May 2004 the US breaches of international law in Guantanamo under
the cloak of its so-called global war on terror.
The
New York-based Human Rights Watch had further said that US President
George W. Bush must promptly investigate and address charges
of torture of the Guantanamo detainees or risk criminal
prosecution
On
December 22, Los Angeles Times reported the US is
holding dozens of prisoners at Guantanamo Bay who have no meaningful
connection to Al-Qaeda or the Taliban, much to refute claims by the
Bush administration.