Iraq: New report says US must clarify fate of prisoners after handover and stop holding 'ghost' detainees
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Posted: 28 June 2004 In a new report, Amnesty International expresses concern that the US has recently said that it intends to hold without charge between 4,000 and 5,000 detainees despite a legal requirement to release them or transfer them to Iraqi custody. The US has recently said that it was holding 6,400 prisoners. Amnesty International UK Director Kate Allen said: "After the scandalous torture of prisoners at Abu Ghraib it is all the more alarming that the Coalition is failing to clarify the basis on which it intends to hold without charge thousands of prisoners. International law states that these prisoners should be transferred to Iraqi control or released. "Prisoner abuse has rocked the credibility of the Coalition in recent months: now it must come clean over what will happen to prisoners at the handover. "There must be an end to holding 'ghost' detainees: no-one must be held in secret in Iraq." Amnesty International is concerned that the resolution for handover of power (United Nations Resolution 1546) is silent on the question of the Coalition's prisoners. In early June Amnesty International wrote to the US Permanent Representative to the United Nations, John Negroponte, expressing serious concern that Resolution 1546 failed to clarify the fate of prisoners held by the occupying powers. Amnesty International has received no reply to this letter. Meanwhile, in comments to international media on 13 June, Lieutenant Colonel Barry Johnson, a US spokesman for detention operations in Iraq, said the US would continue to hold between 4,000 and 5,000 detainees. No legal basis for these detentions was given. Amnesty International's report, Read the report: 'Iraq: Human rights protection and promotion vital in the transitional period' |

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