线束是什么意思| vt是什么意思| 不应期是什么意思| 月经为什么来了一点又不来了| 驾驶证和行驶证有什么区别| 男性尿路感染有什么症状| 皮炎是什么原因引起的| 大米为什么会生虫| 凝血常规是查什么的| 男生被口什么感觉| 为什么一进去就想射| 哦吼是什么意思| 脾大是什么原因造成的| 什么血糖仪准确度高| 孕妇吃鸡蛋对胎儿有什么好处| 木姜子什么味道| 势在必得是什么意思| 仓鼠咬笼子是什么原因| 食人鱼长什么样| 镶牙用什么材料好| 空挡是什么意思| 骶椎腰化什么意思| 肌酐高什么原因| 牡丹是什么季节开的| 尿道刺痛吃什么药| 被老鼠咬了打什么疫苗| 黄历是什么意思| 什么叫变应性鼻炎| 平均红细胞体积偏低是什么原因| 哈达是什么意思| 耳耵聍是什么东西| 戾气是什么| 肺寒吃什么药| 背叛什么意思| 咳嗽应该挂什么科| 肚子一按就痛什么原因| 小便黄是什么病症| 中蛊什么意思| 庄周梦蝶是什么意思| 肉鸽是什么意思| 什么动物不睡觉| 葡萄糖什么意思| 二重唱是什么意思| 舌头麻木是什么原因引起| 颈动脉有斑块吃什么药| 眼镜框什么材质的好| 痛风能吃什么鱼| 海参头数是什么意思| 世界第一大运动是什么| 女人下巴有痣代表什么| 赤子是什么意思| 做梦坐飞机是什么意思| 梦见儿子拉屎是什么意思| 锻练与锻炼有什么区别| 寿眉属于什么茶| 伊维菌素是什么药| 外阴长水泡是什么原因| 新生儿老打嗝什么原因| mps是什么意思| 婴儿头发竖起来是什么原因| 属性是什么| 高血压喝什么茶| 骨折什么症状| u是什么意思| 记忆力减退是什么原因造成的| 胃酸是什么| 百分比是什么意思| 嘴巴像什么| 墓志铭什么意思| 生理期提前是什么原因| 神经性头疼是什么原因造成的| 脸痒是什么原因| 胚胎是什么| 白细胞酯酶弱阳性是什么意思| 幽门螺旋杆菌弱阳性是什么意思| 白细胞酯酶阳性是什么| 手脚冰凉吃什么药| 旅游要带什么| 糖尿病患者可以吃什么水果| 一百岁叫什么之年| 念珠菌性阴道炎有什么症状| 炫是什么意思| 眉尾长痘是什么原因| 异位妊娠是什么意思| 董小姐是什么意思| 冬占生男是什么意思| 菠菜什么季节吃| bgb是什么意思| 海尔兄弟叫什么| 五个月宝宝吃什么辅食最好| 吃燕窝有什么功效| 小寨附近有什么好玩的| 子宫形态失常是什么意思| 什么样的头发| 沧州有什么好玩的地方| 为什么吐后反而舒服了| 阴虚内热是什么意思| 失聪是什么原因造成的| s925是什么金| 办理健康证需要什么材料| 红海为什么叫红海| 喝酒为什么会头疼| 公务员五行属什么| 妇科炎症吃什么消炎药效果好| 6月22号是什么星座| 预授权是什么意思| 二十四节气分别是什么| 什么是半月板损伤| 96年属什么的生肖| 血虚是什么意思| 一元硬币是什么材质| 王朔为什么不娶徐静蕾| 美什么美什么| 冠状动脉ct检查什么| 什么叫服务器| prawn是什么意思| 小狗能吃什么| 马蜂窝能治什么病| 检查肺部最好做什么检查| notice是什么意思| 春秋大梦是什么意思| 什么网站可以看毛片| 心肌劳损是什么意思| 胃烧心是什么感觉| 空调不制冷是什么原因| 经费是什么意思| 句加一笔是什么字| 看乙肝挂什么科| 来福是什么意思| 维生素e是什么| 大血小板比率偏高是什么原因| 糖宝是什么虫| 南京立冬吃什么| 火气太旺是什么原因| 心脏无力吃什么药最好| 腐女是什么| cu是什么意思| 99年是什么年| 增强免疫力的针叫什么| 为什么叫新四军| kw是什么单位| 林格液又叫什么| pt是什么时间| 牛筋草有什么作用| 经常抠鼻子有什么危害| 健康管理是什么专业| 丹凤眼是什么样的| 吃鸭蛋有什么好处和坏处| 天生丽质难自弃是什么意思| 耳朵烧是什么原因| 怀孕的脉象是什么样的| 晚上吃什么好| 田宅宫是什么意思| 三叉神经痛挂什么科就诊| 泵的扬程什么意思| 昆明有什么特产| 孕吐吃什么| 竹节棉是什么面料| 抑郁是什么意思| 什么叫ins风格| 三句半是什么意思| 做什么事要从头来| pc什么意思| 异地办理护照需要什么材料| doris什么意思| 维生素d什么时候吃最好| 美蛙是什么蛙| 胃胀吃点什么药| 惊天动地是什么生肖| 2017属什么生肖| 默的部首是什么| 孕妇梦见下雪是什么征兆| 线上考试是什么意思| 奇美拉是什么| 胎位 头位是什么意思| 1987年五行属什么| 陌路人是什么意思| 豆角和什么一起炒好吃| 葡萄和提子有什么区别| 1945年属什么生肖| 断奶吃什么| 后羿属什么生肖| 三角梅用什么肥料最好| 骨质增生吃什么药效果好| 女性阴道痒是什么原因| 九死一生是指什么生肖| 凌晨12点是什么时辰| 地藏菩萨求什么最灵| 手机卡顿是什么原因| 手足口是什么| 手淫导致的阳痿早泄吃什么药| triangle是什么意思| 抗hbs阳性是什么意思| 胃溃疡不能吃什么食物| 脑梗长期吃什么药好| 生姜能治什么病| 睡觉趴着睡什么原因| 脂肪肝吃什么食物好| 耳朵痒是什么预兆| 站着说话不腰疼是什么意思| 活动无耐力与什么有关| 头疼喝什么饮料| 金牛座女和什么座最配对| 什么叫伪娘| 少阳病是什么意思| 经常生闷气会得什么病| 老虎属于什么科动物| my什么牌子| 腰突挂什么科| cj什么意思| 牙槽骨吸收是什么意思| 女人胆固醇高什么原因| 非洲是什么人种| 老觉得饿是什么原因| 尿道感染吃什么药好得快| 泌尿感染吃什么药最好| 蛋蛋疼是什么原因| 二月二十是什么星座| 老上火是什么原因造成的| 日逼是什么意思| 脱脂乳是什么意思| 妇科炎症吃什么消炎药效果好| bruce是什么意思| 附件是什么意思| 什么山峻岭| 喝生姜水有什么好处| 女人漏尿是什么原因| 暗里着迷什么意思| 梦见放烟花是什么征兆| 正司级是什么级别| 六月十六是什么星座| 阑尾炎痛起来什么感觉| 子宫下垂吃什么药| 高血压一般在什么年龄| 自作多情是什么意思| 覅什么意思| 临界是什么意思| 自传是什么意思| 梦见孩子结婚什么预兆| 冬至节气的含义是什么| nt是什么检查| 1993年出生的属什么| 无氧运动是什么意思| 孕20周做什么检查| 不全骨折是什么意思| 什么情况下需要会诊| 军校毕业是什么军衔| 一个齿一个禹念什么| 女人在什么时候最容易怀孕| 心脏右束支传导阻滞是什么意思| 右胸是什么器官| 眼睛流水是什么原因| 这是什么品牌| 鲨鱼为什么怕海豚| 肺部炎症用什么药最好| 武则天姓什么| 友人是什么意思| 吸入物变应原筛查是什么| 戒定真香是什么意思| spo2是什么意思| 舟可是什么字| 慢性萎缩性胃炎吃什么药| 传教士是什么姿势| 切除一侧输卵管对女性有什么影响| 百度Jump to content

兵团公安局民警江红霞谈参加结对认亲活动感受

From Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Detainees at Camp X-Ray, January 2002
百度 尾灯组样式更加新颖,灯腔结构也发生了变化。

The Guantanamo Bay detention camp (which is also called Guantanamo or Gitmo) is a United States concentration camp in Guantanamo Bay Naval Base on the coast of Guantanamo Bay in Cuba. The camp is said to be breaking international human rights laws,[1] as prisoners have been held without trial , and there have been reports of prisoners being tortured.

Bush administration

[change | change source]

The prison was established under the presidency of George W. Bush, in 2002 during the War on Terror. The Secretary of Defense at the time was Donald Rumsfeld, who said that the prison was built to hold dangerous people, question them, and charge them with war crimes: "These men are particularly dangerous... at least one detainee now in Cuba has been threatening to kill Americans. Another has bitten a guard... To stop future terrorist attacks, we have detained these people, and we have and will be questioning them to gather additional intelligence information...The reality is that they have been charged with something. They have been found to be engaging on the behalf of Al-Qaeda or the Taliban and have been captured." [2] Since January 2002, 779 men have been kept in Guantanamo. These men have been from over 50 countries. Nearly 200 were released in mid 2004.[3]
Although the Bush govenrnment said that most of the men had been captured at war,[2] a 2006 report found that over 80% of the prisoners were captured by Pakistanis and Afghans for bounty payments. The US had offered $5,000 for each prisoner.[4]
In 2012, Colonel Lawrence Wilkerson said that US officials (including president Bush, Vice President Dick Cheney and Secretary of Defense Rumsfeld) had known that most of the original prisoners were innocent, but kept them to make themselves look better [5]
A report by the Institute on Medicine as a Profession in 2013 said that health professionals in Guantanamo "designed and participated in cruel, inhumane and degrading treatment and torture of detainees."[6] This involved:

  • Abusive interrogation
  • Creating conditions designed to increase anxiety and confusion in prisoners
  • Using medical information for questioning
  • Force feeding

Morris Davis (former chief prosecutor for the terrorism trials at Guantanamo Bay), began an e-petition to close Guantanamo. The e-petition got over 72,000 signatures, and called attention to the huger strikes that 'involves more than 100 prisoners, including come 21 who are being force-fed to keep them from starving to death." [7][8] On 12 December 2013, retired US marine Major General Micheal R Lehnert (who oversaw the building of the Guantanamo prison camp) published a piece in the Detroit Free Press. He called Guantanamo "out nation's most notorious prison - a prison that should never have been opened", and provided a short description of its history:[9] "Our nation created Guantanamo because we were legitimately angry and frightened by an unprovoked attack on our soil on September 11, 2001. We thought that the detainees would provide would provide a treasure trove of information and intelligence. "I was ordered to construct the first 100 cells at Guantanamo within 96 hours [4 days]. The first group of 20 prisoners arrived 7 days after the order was given. We were told that the prisoners were the 'worst of the worst', a common refrain for every set of detainees sent to Guantanamo. The US has held 779 men there, most of them cleared for transfer, but stuck by politics. "Even in the earliest days of Guantanamo, I became more and more convinced that many of the detainees should never have been sent in the first place. They had little intelligence value, and there was insufficient evidence linking them to war crime [they didn't know anything, and there was little proof they had committed war crimes]. That the remains the case for many, if not most, of the detainees."

Obama administration

[change | change source]

In his 2008 presidential campaign, Barack Obama described Guantanamo bay as a sad chapter in America's history and promised to close the prison in 2009. He changed this statement after he was elected.[10] President Obama was not able to close Guantanamo before he left office, but he did reduce the prison's population to 41.[11]

Trump administration

[change | change source]

President Trump has promised to keep the prison open, and to use it keep "bad dudes". He also wants to bring back waterboarding and "worse".[12] On 31st January 2018, Trump signed an order to keep the prison open.[13]

Torture claims

[change | change source]

In court filings made public in 2007, FBI agents said that they saw prisoners:

  • Chained in the fetal position on the floor
  • Kept in very hot or very cold temperatures
  • Gagged with duct-tape
  • Held in stress positions (uncomfortable, caused joint problems) while shackled
  • shackled in a baseball catcher's position
  • made to listen to loud music with flashing floodlights for over 24 hours
  • kept in bare 6x8 foot cells
  • chained for 18–24 hours in own urine and feces

Other claims include:

  • being sexually degraded
  • forced drugging
  • religious mistreatment [14]
  • pepper spray to the face
  • fingers pushed into eyes [15]
  • repeated beatings
  • sexual assault
  • torture with broken glass
  • torture with barbed wire
  • torture with burning cigarettes [16]
  • Sensory deprivation
  • head slammed into concrete
  • anal penetration
  • routine sleep deprivation
  • forced drug injections [17]
  • sexual assault by female officers
  • smeared with fake menstrual blood [18]
  • releasing medical information including photographs [19]
  • forced to soil (poo) self
  • 12 hour interrogations
  • woken by being doused in water
  • intimated with dogs
  • forced to salute the American National Anthem
  • had pictures of 9/11 victims stuck to body
  • forcibly shaved
  • forced to bark like a dog
  • forcibly stripped
  • made to wear a bra and make up [20]
  • intimidated with semi automatic firearms and power tools
  • given threats to assualt their mothers
  • Waterboarded, up to or more than 100 times [21]

Murder accusations

[change | change source]

On 10 June 2006, three prisoners (Mani al-Utaybi, Yasser al-Zahrani, Ali Abdullah Ahmed) died in Guantanamo Bay.[22] The Pentagon told the media that the prisoners had been hanged with clothing and bedsheets. " [The detainees] were found unresponsive and not breathing in their cells by guards."

Medical teams responded quickly and all three detainees were provided immediate emergency medical treatment in attempts to help them. The three detainees were pronounced dead by a physician after all life saving measures were exhausted." - Statement issued by Joint Task Force Guantanamo [23] Families of all three detainees doubted the post mortems and wanted second post mortems done. Patrice Malign (the pathologist who re-examined al-Zahrani's body) said that the organs of al-Zahrani's throat were missing. His team could not find if al-Zahrani had hanged himself or died of another form of asphyxiation. The team said that there is no reason for there organs to have been removed. The US government has never given the missing organs back to the family.[24][25]

[change | change source]

President Bush's military order

[change | change source]

On 14th September 2001, Congress pushed for the Authorisation for Use of Military Force Against Terrorists, which would have given the President broad powers to start The War on Terror in response to the 9/11 attacks.[26] However, Secretary of State Colin Powell and State Department Legal Advisor William Howard Taft IV said that the president must observe the Geneva conventions.[27] On 13th November 2001, President Bush signed a military order titled Detention, Treatment and Trial of Certain Non-Citizens in the War Against Terrorism.[28]

Rasul v Bush

[change | change source]

On 19th February 2002, Guantanamo detainees petitioned to review their detentions and the reasons for them. US District Judge Collen Kollar-Kotelly rejected the petition, finding that non-US citizens in Cuba could not access or use US courts. On 28th June 2004, the Supreme Court of the United States decided against this in Rasul v Bush (UK prisoner in Guantanamo petitioning against Judge Kollar-Kotelly's decision in 2002). Justice John Paul Stevens said that the prisoners had the right to petition the court to review their cases.[29]

Hamden v Rumsfeld

[change | change source]

The Bush government said that the Geneva Conventions did not apply to the prisoners. Supreme Court decisions since 2004 have said different: it decided in the Hamden v Rumfeld trial [30] that Article 3 of the Geneva Conventions (which sets rules for the treatment of prisoners of war) applies to the prisoners[31] In 2006, Deputy Defense Scretary Paul Wolfowitz created 'Combatant Status Review Tribunals' (CSRTs) to decide if prisoners were war criminals[32] The CSRTs were completed in March 2005. Thirty-eight of the prisoners were found innocent. After the autobiography of Murnat Kurnaz (Turk-German held in Guantanamo 2002-2007) was published, military lawyer Eugene R. Fidell said that the book "suggested the [CSRT] procedure is a sham; if a case like that can get through then the [smallest trace] of evidence against someone would [win over] for the governments, even if there's a mountain [of evidence] on the other side." [33] On 15 July 2005, a panel on the Court of Appeals threw out all of the prisoners' petitions.[34] On 7 November 2005 Supreme Court agreed to review that decision. On 30 December, Supreme Court passed the 'Detainee Treatment Act' which removed the prisoners' right to petition for review.[35]

Boumedine v Bush

[change | change source]

The Military Commissions Act 2006 was passed on 17 October 2006, allowing trial in military court for war criminals.[36] On 12 June 2008, the US Supreme Court decided against the government. Justice Antony Kennedy said that Guantanamo prisoners had the right to petition in federal court.[37][38]

Other court rulings

[change | change source]

On 3 March 2006, on order of US District Judge Jed S. Rakoff, the Department of Defense released the names of 317 of the 500 prisoners being held in Guantanamo Bay. The remaining 183 were held for privacy reasons.[39][40] On 27 September 2007, French Judge put back a conviction of six former Guantanamo prisoners. Defense lawyers for the men (who were all French citizens), accused the French government of working with the US on their detentions.[41] On 21 October 2008, US District Court Judge Richard J. Leon ordered the release of five Algerians and for a sixth to remain in Guantanamo.[42]

Access to court

[change | change source]

In the summer of 2012, the US government rejected a bid to limit lawyers' access to Guantanamo prisoners. Instead lawyers were required to sign a Memorandum of Understanding, meaning that they agreed to certain restriction when visiting the prisoners, including losing access to some classified information. This gave the Commander of the Joint Task Force of Guantanamo full control over lawyers' contacct with prisoners, including visits and letters.[43] On 6 September, US District Judge Royce. C Lamberth rejected the argument that prison officers to take charge of meetings between lawyers and prisoners[44]

International law

[change | change source]

In April 2004, Cuban diplomats called for a United Nations investigation of Guantanamo Bay[45] In May 2007, the United Nations released a report for the UN Human Rights CouncilThe report said that the US had broken international law, Article 5 of the Geneva conventions,[31] and the Nuremberg principles.[46][47][48][49] In April 2011, a report published in the Public Library of Science Medical Journal looked at nine prisoners for evidence of torture. They found that medical doctors at Guantanamo ignored or hid medical evidence of intentional harm and torture.[50][51]

Guantanamo lease agreement

[change | change source]

The base containing the prison camp is on territory that is recognized as sovereign Cuban territory. It is legally leased (rented) to the American Navy by the Cuban government through the 'Agreement between the United States and Cuba for the Lease of Lands for Coaling and Naval sites'.[52] This suggests it is illegal for the US to hold a prison on the land.[53]

Actions of some released prisoners.

[change | change source]

Abdallah Salih al-Ajmi committed a successful suicide attack in Mosul on 25 March 2008. Al-Ajmi had been released from Guantanamo in 2005 and transferred to Kuwait, where he was from. A Kuwati court later dropped all his terrorism charges.[54][55] Moussa Zenmouri (37, Belgian of Moroccan descent) and Soufiane A (Algerian) were arrested on 24 July 2015 on charges of terrorism. They were release from Guantanamo in April 2005 and had been under police surveillance for suspected robbery.[56] Ibrahim al Qosi was featured in a video for 'Guardians of Shariah'as a religious leader in a high position in Al-Qaeda. Al Qosi was Osama bin Laden's accountant in the early 90's, and moved to Afghanistan with bin Laden in 1996. He was also bin Laden's chauffer. He was in Guantanamo from 2002 to 2012.[57] On 8th March 2016, Reuters reported that 111 of 532 prisoners released by the Bush administration and 7 of 144 released by the Obama administration have returned. So, 118 of 676 (17%) are confirmed to have returned to fighting, and a further 86 (13%) are suspected to have returned to fighting.[58] In March 2016, Paul Lewis (Pentagon employee tasked with closing Guantanamo) said that "Americans have been killed by prisoners released from Guantanamo Bay", He refused to give a total or say when the attacks occurred.[59]

Criticism and condemnation

[change | change source]

Human Rights Watch criticised the Bush administration in its 2003 world report, stating "Washington has ignored human rights standards in its own treatment of terrorist suspects. It has refused to apply the Geneva conventions to prisoners of war from Afghanistan, and has misused the designation of 'illegal combatant' to apply to criminal suspects on U.S. soil." [60] On 25 May 2005, Amnesty International released its annual report calling the prison the "gulag of our times".[61] In November 2005, a group of experts from the United Nations on Human Rights called off their visit to Guantanamo Bay Camp Delta, saying that the US was not allowing them to hold private interviews with the prisoners.[62] The group continued to write a report on the conditions in the prison based on interviews with released prisoners, lawyers, and human rights groups that had already visited. In February 2006, that report was published. The report called on the US to either charge or release all suspected terrorists, and included the US ambassador's reply to the draft versions of the report.[63] On 10 March 2006, a letter in the Lancet (a weekly medical journal) was published, signed by over 250 medical experts, calling for the US to stop force-feeding prisoners and close the prison. Dr David Nicholl (who wrote the letter), said that the definition of torture (that the US was using) as only actions that cause "death or major organ failure" was "not a definition anyone on the planet is using." [64] Polls run by the Program of International Policy (PIP) found that "large majorities in Germany and Great Britain, and pluralities in Poland and India, believe the US has committed violations of international law at its prison on Guantanamo Bay in Cuba, including the use of interrogations." (This means that large amounts of people in Germany, Great Britain, Poland and India thought that the US was breaking international laws at Guantanamo Bay.) PIP found that a lot of the people who filled the polls said that they no longer saw the US as leaders of human rights because of Guantanamo.[65][66]

References

[change | change source]
  1. [1] National Security & Human Rights - Amnesty International USA.
  2. 2.0 2.1 [2] Archived 2025-08-06 at the Wayback Machine, Department of Defense News Briefing - Secretary Rumsfeld and General Pace, 2 January 2002.
  3. [3][permanent dead link], Between Collaboration and Disobedience: the behaviour of Guantanamo detainees and its consequences.
  4. [4] Archived 2025-08-06 at the Wayback Machine Seton Hall University School of Law Center for Policy & Research, Death in Camp Delta.
  5. [5] Archived 2025-08-06 at the Wayback Machine Wilferson pdf
  6. [6] Archived 2025-08-06 at the Wayback Machine Medical professionalism: Interrogation, torture and dual loyalty.
  7. [7] Petition by former prosecutor to close Guantanamo Bay tops 75,000 signatures.
  8. [8][permanent dead link] Former Guantanamo chief prosecutor petitions Obama to close prison camp.
  9. [9], Micheal Lahnert: It's long past time that we close Guantanamo.
  10. [10], Obama: Gitmo likely won't close in first 100 days.
  11. [11], Obama to leave office with 41 captives still at Guantanamo, blames politic.
  12. [12] Documentary: forever prison.
  13. [13], Trump signs executive order to keep Guantanamo Bay military prison open for business.
  14. [14][permanent dead link], Britons release devastating account of torture and abuse bu US forces at Guantanamo
  15. [15], Amnesty International Press Release: Northern Ireland: doctor leads medic's condemnation of government over Guantanamo Bay.
  16. [16][permanent dead link], Interview with Juma Al Dossary.
  17. [17], First statement of David Hicks- The Center for the Study of Human Rights in the Americas
  18. [18] Sex used to break Muslim prisoners, book says. Book: Inside The Wire, Arm Sgt. Erik. R Saar.
  19. [19] Red cross finds detainee abuse in Guantanamo
  20. McColgin, David L. (2001). "Chapter 12: The Theotorture of Guantanamo". In Greenlee, Edwin J.; Walker, Nathan C. (eds.). Whose God Rules? Is the United States a Secular Nation or a Theolegal Democracy?. Palgrave MacMillan. pp. 202–203.
  21. [20] Jimmy Carter
  22. [21] BBC: Triple suicide at Guantanamo camp.
  23. [22][permanent dead link], Admiral: Gitmo suicides a 'planned event'.
  24. [23] Archived 2025-08-06 at the Wayback Machine Deconstructing the Campaign to Malign.
  25. [24] Gitmo detainee buried after body cross-examined.
  26. [25][permanent dead link] Authorization for Use of Military Force.
  27. [26][permanent dead link], Hamdan v Rumsfeld: the legal academy goes to practice.
  28. [27] Military Order: Detention, Treatment and Trial of Certain Non-Citizens in the War Against Terrorism.
  29. [28] Rasul v Bush, 215 F. Supp. 2d55- District Court, District of Columbia 2002.
  30. [29] Archived 2025-08-06 at the Wayback Machine Supreme Court of the United States Hamden v Rumsfeld Secretary of Defense et al.
  31. 31.0 31.1 [30] Archived 2025-08-06 at the Wayback Machine American Red Cross, Summary of Geneva Conventions of 1949 and Their Additional Protocols.
  32. [31][permanent dead link], Habeas corpus juristiction, substantive rights, and the war on terror.
  33. [32] Panel ignored evidence on detainee.
  34. [33] Salim Ahmed HAMDAN, Appeellee v Donald H. RUMSFELD.
  35. [34] Detainee Tratment Act 2006.
  36. [35] Military Commissions Act of 2006.
  37. [36] Why it was a great victory.
  38. [37] Body politic; Boumediene v Bush.
  39. [38] List of individuals detained by the Department of Defense at Guantanamo Bay.
  40. [39][permanent dead link] Pentagon reveals Guantanamo names.
  41. [40] France: judge postpones terrorism verdict for former Guantanamo detainees.
  42. [41] Judge declares five detainees held illegally.
  43. [42], In re. Guantananmo bay detainee continued access to counsel.
  44. [htpps://www.csmonitor.com/USA/Justice/2012/0906/Guantanamo-Judge-rejects-US-bid-to-limit-lawyers-access-to-detainees], Guantanmo: Judge rejects US bid to limit lawyers' access to detainees.
  45. [43][permanent dead link], Castro blasts Guantanamo 'concentration camp'.
  46. [44][permanent dead link], Washington Post: Judge says Detainees' trails are unlawful.
  47. [45][permanent dead link] U.S. officials misstate Geneva convention requirements.
  48. [46][permanent dead link], Nuremberg prosecutor says Guantanamo trials unfair.
  49. [47], Principles of International Law recognized in the Charter of the Nurnberg Tribunal and in the Judgement of the Tribunal, with commentaries.
  50. [48][permanent dead link] CIA doctors face human experimentaion claims.
  51. [49][permanent dead link] Neglect of medicl evidence of torture in Guantanamo Bay: A Case Series.
  52. [50] Agreement between the United States and Cuba for the Lease of Lands for Coaling and Naval sites.
  53. [51] Archived 2025-08-06 at the Wayback Machine, American bar association task force on terrorism and the law report and recommendations on military commissions.
  54. [52][permanent dead link], Ex-Guantanamo inmate in Iraq suicide bombing.
  55. [53], Ex-Gitmo prisoner carries out suicide attack.
  56. arrests two-ex-guantanamo-inmates-on-terrorism-charges-idUSKCN0PY27H20150724[permanent dead link], Belgium arrests two ex-Guantanamo inmates on terrorism charges.
  57. [54], Freed Guantanamo convict returns to the fight.
  58. [55][permanent dead link], Ex-Guantanamo prisoners suspected of rejoining militants increases.
  59. [56], Officials say Guantanamo Bay transfers have killed Americans.
  60. [57] Archived 2025-08-06 at the Wayback Machine Human Rights Watch World Report 2003: United States.
  61. [58], Amnesty Internation Report 2005 speech by Irene Khan at the Foreign Press Association.
  62. [59][permanent dead link] UN experts "deeply regret" US failure to allow Guantanamo visit on torture report.
  63. [60] United Nations Economic and Social Council 2006.
  64. [61][permanent dead link] The Lancet: Forcefeeding and restraint of Guantanamo Bay hungerstrikes.
  65. [62], Publics in Europe and India see U.U. as Violating International Law at Guantanamo.
  66. [63][permanent dead link] US faces sceptical world over Iraq.
慢性浅表性胃炎伴糜烂吃什么药 颈椎生理曲度变直是什么意思 mdzz是什么意思 白带发黄有异味用什么药 动脉夹层什么意思
辰字五行属什么 长乘宽乘高算的是什么 吃黄体酮有什么副作用 牙齿突然酸痛什么原因 现是什么生肖
太极是什么 吃百香果有什么好处 胃发热是什么原因 为什么会起湿疹 左手臂有痣代表什么
河字五行属什么 为什么一进去就想射 乳粉是什么 鹿茸和什么泡酒壮阳 破处是什么感觉
什么路不能走hcv9jop0ns7r.cn 酸奶能做什么美食hcv9jop1ns9r.cn freeze是什么意思hcv8jop6ns7r.cn 10月16日是什么星座cl108k.com 美国现在什么季节hcv9jop2ns3r.cn
婴儿黄疸高有什么影响hcv9jop2ns4r.cn 乙肝没有抗体是什么意思beikeqingting.com 殆什么意思hcv8jop5ns0r.cn 身份证后面有个x是什么意思hcv9jop0ns4r.cn 看花灯是什么节日hcv9jop8ns1r.cn
退行性变是什么意思wuhaiwuya.com 自恋什么意思hcv8jop0ns2r.cn 见红的血是什么颜色hcv8jop5ns5r.cn 什么是盗汗hcv9jop4ns0r.cn 拉肚子吃什么食物比较好hcv7jop9ns0r.cn
心脏反流吃什么药hcv8jop7ns4r.cn 什么是手足口病hcv8jop7ns1r.cn 吃了就吐是什么原因hcv7jop5ns2r.cn 蹲不下去是什么原因shenchushe.com 玉米不能和什么食物一起吃hcv7jop7ns4r.cn
百度