Photo caption: Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee, D-Texas, pictured at the top right of the video screen asks a question to Murat Kurnaz, left, a former Guantanamo Bay prisoner, during the Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on International Organizations, Human Rights, and Oversight hearings and briefings to examine the prison at Guantanamo Bay, Tuesday, May 20, 2008, on Capitol Hill in Washington. Haraz N. Ghanbari / AP Photo
Testimony to Congress Comes as Report Released About Abuses Witnessed by FBI
By JASON RYAN
Copyright © 2008 ABC News Internet Ventures
May 20, 2008
Murat Kurnaz told members of Congress today he was subjected to "water treatment," electric shocks and other abuse during the almost five years he spent in U.S. custody, putting a face to the Justice Department's inspector general report released today, detailing abuses witnessed by FBI agents overseas at detention facilities run by the military and CIA.
Kurnaz, a Turkish citizen, was arrested in
Speaking to the House Foreign Affairs Committee via video link from Germany with his lawyer at his side, Kurnaz described how he was abused while he was held at a U.S. base in Kandahar, Afghanistan, and described how he was subjected to "water treatment" while in custody.
"They stuck my head into a bucket of water and punched me in the stomach," he said. "I inhaled the water. ... It was a strong punch."
Kurnaz testified that, although he had no links to al Qaeda, and German intelligence services told
While he was detained in
Kurnaz, 26, who was born in
"I didn't think this could happen in the 21st century. ... I could never have imagined that this place was created by the
While the CIA has admitted to waterboarding three al Qaeda detainees, the Justice Department inspector general's report, released today, details other instances of detainees having water forced down their throats.
The report noted an instance from a 2004 interrogation of a detainee in
"[An FBI Agent] recalled that, at some point during the interrogation, the military officer 'put water down' a seated detainee's throat," the report said. "He said he guessed that the purpose of the water was to give the detainee the sensation that he was drowning, so that he would provide the information that the interrogator wanted. [The agent] stated that the detainee was gagging and spitting out water. He said that the detainee appeared to be uncomfortable, and assumed that he had trouble breathing."
The inspector general report notes that this is not "waterboarding," but "this rough technique was part of an effort to intimidate the detainees and increase their feelings of helplessness."
The 370-page report by the Justice Department detailed disagreements at the top levels of the Justice Department and the Pentagon over the effectiveness of using severe interrogation techniques on detainees.
It also included instances of abuse witnessed or documented by FBI agents who were instructed to not participate in the rough interrogations.

1 comment:
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