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Use of torture since 1948

This article describes the use of torture since the adoption of the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR), which prohibited it. Torture is prohibited by international law and is illegal in most countries. However, it is still used by many governments.

Torture is widely practiced worldwide: Amnesty International received reports of torture or cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment in more than 150 countries during the four-year period from 1997 to 2001. These accusations concerned acts against political prisoners in 70 countries and other prisoners and detainees in more than 130 countries.[1] State torture has been extensively documented and studied, often as part of efforts at collective memory and reconciliation in societies that have experienced a change in government. Surveys of torture survivors reveal that torture "is not aimed primarily at the extraction of information ... Its real aim is to break down the victim's personality and identity."[2] When applied indiscriminately, torture is used as a tool of repression and deterrence against dissent and community empowerment.

While many states use torture, few wish to be described as doing so, either to their own citizens or to international bodies. So a variety of strategies are used to circumvent their legal and humanitarian duties, including plausible deniability, secret police, "need to know", denial that certain activities constitute torture, appeal to various laws (national or international), use of a jurisdictional argument, claim of "overriding need", the use of torture by proxy, and so on.[3] Almost all regimes and governments engaging in torture (and other crimes against humanity) consistently deny engaging in it, in spite of overwhelming hearsay and physical evidence from the citizens they tortured. Through both denial and avoidance of prosecution, most people ordering or carrying out acts of torture do not face legal consequences for their actions.[3] UN Special Rapporteur for the Commission on Human Rights, Sir Nigel Rodley, believes that "impunity continues to be the principal cause of the perpetuation and encouragement of human rights violations and, in particular, torture."[4]

While states, particularly their prisons, law enforcement, military and intelligence apparatus, are major perpetrators of torture, many non-state actors also engage in it. These include paramilitaries and guerrillas, criminal actors such as organized crime syndicates and kidnappers.

A recent approach to interrogations has been to use techniques such as waterboarding, sexual humiliation and sexual abuse, and dogs to intimidate or pressure prisoners in a manner claimed to be legal under national or international law. Electric shock techniques such as the use of stun belts and tasers have been considered appropriate provided that they are used to "control" prisoners or suspects, even non-violent ones, rather than to extract information. These techniques have been widely criticized as torture.

Technology edit

Methods of torture are often quite crude, a number of new technologies of control have been used by torturers in recent years. The Brazilian government devised a number of new electrical and mechanical means of torture during the military dictatorship from 1964 to 1985, and proceeded to train military officials from other right-wing Latin American countries in their techniques.[5] One is the use of tasers and electro-shock devices now widely sold to prison authorities around the world. Minor refinements of ancient techniques—including tearing out fingernails and toenails with iron tools, burning the soles of the feet with clothes irons, and probing between the toes with electric wood-burning pencils—are also widely applied. Some African nations employ an iron foot-squeezing device patterned after the medieval French boot.

Inter-state collaboration edit

 
A Viet Cong prisoner captured in 1967 by the U.S. Army awaits interrogation. He has been placed in a stress position by tying a board between his arms.

Substantial cooperation between states in the methods and coordination of torture has been documented. Through the Phoenix Program, the United States helped South Vietnam co-ordinate a system of detention, torture and assassination of suspected members of the National Liberation Front, or Viet Cong. During the 1980s wars in Central America, the U.S. government provided manuals and training on interrogation that extended to the use of torture (see U.S. Army and CIA interrogation manuals). The manuals were also distributed by Special Forces Mobile Training teams to military personnel and intelligence schools in Colombia, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, and Peru. The manuals have a chapter devoted to "coercive techniques".

The southern cone governments of South America – Chile, Argentina, Uruguay, Bolivia, Paraguay and Brazil – involved in Operation Condor co-ordinated the disappearance, torture and execution of dissidents in the 1970s. Hundreds were killed in coordinated operations, and the bodies of those recovered were often mutilated and showed signs of torture. This system operated with the knowledge and support of the United States government through the State Department, Central Intelligence Agency and the Defense Department.[6]

The United States government has, at least since the Bush administration, used the tactic of legal rendition in which suspected terrorists were extradited to countries where they were to be prosecuted for crimes allegedly committed. In the "war on terror" this has evolved into extraordinary rendition, the delivery of prisoners or others recently captured, including terrorism suspects, to foreign governments known to practice torture are South Africa,[7][8] Egypt, Jordan, Morocco, and Afghanistan. Human rights activists have alleged that the practice amounts to kidnapping for the purpose of torture, or torture by proxy. A related practice is the operation of facilities for imprisonment, and it is widely believed torture, in foreign countries. In November 2005, the Washington Post reported — citing administration sources — that such facilities are operated by the CIA in Thailand (until 2004), Afghanistan, and several unnamed Eastern European countries.[9] Human Rights Watch reports that planes associated with rendition have landed repeatedly in Poland and Romania.[10]

Recent instances of torture in selected countries edit

 
  The U.S. and suspected CIA's "black sites"
  Extraordinary renditions allegedly have been carried out from these countries
  Detainees have allegedly been transported through these countries
  Detainees have allegedly arrived in these countries
Sources: Amnesty International[11] Human Rights Watch

The use of torture is geographically widespread. A review by Amnesty International, which did not use the United Nations Convention Against Torture as its definition of torture, of its case files found "reports of torture or ill-treatment by state officials in more than 150 countries from 1997 to 2000". These reports described widespread or persistent patterns of abuse in more than 70 countries and torture-related deaths in more than 80.[12]

Afghanistan edit

Torture has been reported in Afghanistan under each of its recent governments. Under Najibullah's Soviet-backed regime, beating and electric shocks were widely reported.[13] After the mujahidin victory, Afghanistan fell into a state of chaos, and, according to Amnesty International, "Torture of civilians in their homes has become endemic ... In almost every jail run by the armed political groups, torture is reported to be a part of the daily routine".[14] The Taliban are likewise reported to have engaged in torture.[15] Since the U.S. overthrow of the Taliban, torture has been reported on several occasions, both by Afghan groups and by U.S. troops. In the Herat region, dominated by the warlord Ismail Khan, Human Rights Watch reported extensive torture in 2002.[16] Torture by US troops has been alleged in news reports by the New York Times.[17] In March 2008 the UK Ministry of Defence claimed that they and the Afghan army had uncovered a Taliban torture chamber where two individuals were believed to have been beaten.[18]

Albania edit

Under Enver Hoxha's People's Socialist Republic of Albania, torture was widely used by police and prison camp guards.[19][20] Since the fall of communism, Amnesty International has reported police abuses amounting to torture;[1] the government says it has "made efforts to punish all acts of torture under the Albanian criminal justice system".[2] In 2020 more than 3000 Albanians signed a petition accusing the government of Edi Rama of torture against the Muslim cleric Genci Balla who was isolated under the article 41-bis prison regime in solitary confinement and deprived of halal food.[21]

Algeria edit

According to Pierre Vidal-Naquet in "Torture; Cancer of Democracy" and "Les Damnees de la Terre" by Franz Fanon, torture was practiced endemically by the French forces, commanded by General Jacques Massu, bringing together the experience of "Les Paras" in the Indo-China War and German troops in the French Foreign Legion. One of the most notorious methods was the gegène, or generator, in which victims were tied down and electrocuted with a primitive device that delivered electric shocks to the genitalia.

Angola edit

In Angola's 27-year civil war, according to Amnesty International, "many were tortured" by both sides.[22][23] Since that time, AI has also reported that "unarmed civilians are being extrajudicially executed and tortured"[24] in Angola's war against Cabindan separatists.

Argentina edit

During the so-called "Dirty War" carried out in the 1970s, in particular, but not only, by the military dictatorship from 1976 to 1983, tens of thousands of Argentines were "disappeared" by the junta, many never to be seen again. The National Commission on the Disappearance of Persons concluded:

In nearly all the cases brought to the attention of the Commission, the victims speak of acts of torture. Torture was an important element in the methodology of repression. Secret torture centres were set up, among other reasons, to enable the carrying out of torture to be carried out undisturbed.[25]

Bahrain edit

Torture has been used frequently by the Bahraini government in the 20th century. Notable cases include that of Ian Henderson, a former colonial officer employed in Bahrain who was accused by multiple witnesses of torturing prisoners.[26] Adel Flaifel, a notorious security officer identified by many detainees as having overseen torture,[27] was given immunity under Royal Decree 56 of 2002. Between 1980 and 1998, nine people died in detention as a result of torture, with five more dying shortly after being released as a result of injuries sustained from torture. Reports released by Amnesty International[28] and Human Rights Watch[29] in the 1990s point to the widespread use of torture in Bahraini prisons.[30]: 35 

During the Bahraini uprising, torture was described by many human rights reports as widespread and systematic. Up to 1866 who make up 64%[31] of detainees reported cases of torture.[30]: 37  Three government agencies, namely the Ministry of Interior, the National Security Agency and the Bahrain Defence Force, were involved in interrogating detainees in relation to the events of the uprising. The NSA and MoI followed a systematic practice of physical and psychological mistreatment, which in many cases amounted to torture.[32]: 298  Only four of the individuals who alleged torture were arrested by the BDF.[32]: 283  The Bahrain Independent Commission of Inquiry have attributed the deaths of five individuals to torture.[32]: 287–288 

Brazil edit

Torture was used regularly by the Brazilian dictatorship regime from 1964 to 1977 against dissidents. It included torturing their children, some of whom were less than 2 years old at the time.[33]

Cameroon edit

Chile edit

The regime of Augusto Pinochet in Chile in the 1970s used torture extensively against political opponents. Chile's National Commission on Political Imprisonment and Torture (Comisión Nacional sobre Prisión Política y Tortura) concluded in 2004 that torture had been a systematically implemented policy of the government, and recommended reparations. The commission heard the testimony of more than 35,000 witnesses, whose testimonies are to be kept secret for fifty years.[34][35] Among those tortured were future president Michelle Bachelet, who was held along with her mother at the notorious Villa Grimaldi detention center in the capital Santiago.

China edit

Although torture was outlawed in China in 1996, a UN investigator found torture to still be widespread in 2005, particularly because the narrow definition of the law, leaving a mark, does not comply with the UN definition.[36]

Torture is reportedly used as part of the indoctrination process at the Xinjiang re-education camps.[37]

Cuba edit

People imprisoned by the communist regime are reportedly tortured.[38][39]

East Germany edit

In the socialist German Democratic Republic of divided Germany, torture and inhumane and degrading treatment were systematically used by security forces, including the Stasi secret police, against suspected opponents of the regime.[40]

France edit

During the Algerian War of Independence (1954–1962), the French military used torture against the National Liberation Front and the civilian population. The French interrogators were notorious for the use of man-powered electrical generators on suspects: this form of torture was called (la) gégène.[citation needed]

That France has provided a pivotal role in the evolution of western torture practices is the central thesis of the French film Death Squadrons: The French School by Monique Robin. The French had themselves developed practices in defence of its declining empire through the 20th century, setting up torture "universities" at Poulo Condor (now Côn Sơn) – an island off Vietnam (then French Indo-China, subsequently taken over by the United States) and at Philippeville (now Skikda) in Algeria.[citation needed]

Police abuse remains a reality in France today, while France has been condemned by the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) for the conditions of detention in prisons, including the use of torture on detainees.[citation needed] Although the law and the Constitution prohibits any kind of torture, such practices happen. In 2004, the Inspector General of the National Police received 469 registered complaints about illegitimate police violence during the first 11 months of the year, down from 500 during the same period in 2003. There were 59 confirmed cases of police violence, compared to 65 in the previous year. In April 2004, the ECHR condemned the government for "inhumane and degrading treatments" in the 1997 case of a teenager beaten while in police custody. The court ordered the government to pay Giovanni Rivas $20,500 (15,000 euros) in damages and $13,500 (10,000 euros) in court costs.[41] The head of the police station in Saint-Denis, near Paris, has been forced to resign after allegations of rape and other violence committed by the police force under his orders. Nine investigations concerning police abuse in this police station were carried out in 2005 by the IGS inspection of police.[42][43] These repeated abuses are said to be one of the causes of the 2005 civil unrest.[44] Conditions in detention centers for illegal aliens have also been widely criticized by human rights NGOs. In 2006 a 20-year-old Serbian woman accused a policeman of attempting to rape her in such a centre in Bobigny, in the suburbs of Paris, the year before.[45]

Guatemala edit

During the Guatemalan civil war and the repression by the army against civilians and suspected opponents of the military dictatorship, murder (even genocide), torture, rape and inhumane and degrading treatment was systematically used by the Guatemalan armed forces and police. There is evidence that the CIA, in anticommunist campaigns during the 1980s, was involved in these tortures (in Latin America the threat of communism was often used as justification for dictatorship during the Cold War). Thousands of victims were tortured and murdered. For example, Dianna Ortiz, an American nun who was teaching poor Mayan children in the Guatemala highlands, claims that U.S. personnel were present in interrogation and torture rooms in Guatemala City in 1989 when she was kidnapped, taken to a secret prison and repeatedly raped and tortured by Guatemalan right-wing forces. Ortiz survived because of her American citizenship. Sister Ortiz chronicled her experiences and recovery in a book, The Blindfold's Eyes.[46] "There were other people in the clandestine cell, the clandestine prison, as well, and I could hear terrible screams. Many were killed. I saw some bodies. There were children, as well", wrote Dianna Ortiz.

India edit

India has not ratified the UN Convention against Torture. Custodial deaths and extrajudicial killings are on the rise. The Asian Centre for Human Rights released its report, Torture in India 2010, at a press conference in New Delhi. The report stated that, taking 2000 as the base year, custodial deaths have decreased by 41.66%[47] government between 2004–2005 to 2007–2008. This includes 70.72% increase of deaths in prison and 12.60% increase while in police custody. The government has stated that it intends to pass the Anti Torture Act 2010 so it can ratify the UN convention against torture. The bill provides up to a 10-year sentence for physical or mental torture by the police.[48]

Iran edit

Article 38 of the constitution of the Islamic Republic forbids "all forms of torture for the purpose of extracting confession or acquiring information" and the "compulsion of individuals to testify, confess, or take an oath." It also states that "any testimony, confession, or oath obtained under duress is devoid of value and credence."[49][50] The Islamic Republic itself vehemently denies the existence of torture by the government.

Nonetheless, human rights groups and observers, such as Amnesty International, the United Nations, and Human Rights Watch, have complained that torture is frequently used on political prisoners in Iran.[51][52][53][54][55]

A substantial number of Iranians have been tortured and imprisoned by the religious police. Arya Aramnejad, a singer, was jailed for his song "Ali Barkhiz" where he denounces the Islamic regime's crimes during the 2009 Ashura protests. During his time in prison, he was reportedly tortured (sexually humiliated – photographed naked, laughed at, obliged to walk barefooted on aids' patients blood).[56] Farzad Kamangar was repeatedly tortured in prison. Amnesty International reports that Kamangar was repeatedly beaten, flogged, and electrocuted, and that he now suffers from spasms in his arms and legs as a result of the torture.[57][58] After she died in the custody of Iranian officials, Zahra "Ziba" Kazemi-Ahmadabadi, an Iranian-Canadian freelance photographer, was found to show obvious signs of torture, including a skull fracture, broken nose, signs of rape and severe abdominal bruising.[59] Ehsan Fatahian, an Iranian Kurdish activist, was tortured for confession before being executed.[60] Zeynab Jalalian, also a Kurdish activist, is currently ill due to prison conditions and torture. She has been sentenced to death.[61] Other notable victims include Behrouz Javid Tehrani,[62] Habibollah Latifi,[63] Houshang Asadi,[64] Saeed Malekpour,[65] Shirkoh (Bahman) Moarefi,[61] Hossein Khezri,[66] and Akbar Mohammadi.[67][68]

In a study of torture in Iran published in 1999, Iranian-born political historian Ervand Abrahamian included Iran along with "Stalinist Russia, Maoist China, and early modern Europe" of the Inquisition and witch hunts, as societies that "can be considered to be in a league of their own" in the systematic use of torture.[69]

Torture techniques used in the Islamic Republic include:

whipping, sometimes of the back but most often of the feet with the body tied on an iron bed; the qapani; deprivation of sleep; suspension from ceiling and high walls; twisting of forearms until they broke; crushing of hands and fingers between metal presses; insertion of sharp instruments under the fingernails; cigarette burns; submersion under water; standing in one place for hours on end; mock executions; and physical threats against family members. Of these, the most prevalent was the whipping of soles, obviously because it was explicitly sanctioned by the sharia.[70]

Chronicle of Higher Education International, reports that the widespread practice of raping women imprisoned for engaging in political protest has been effective in keeping female college students "less outspoken and less likely to take part" in political demonstrations. The journal quotes an Iranian college student as saying, "most of the girls arrested are raped in jail. Families can't cope with that."[71]

Several bills passed the Iranian Parliament that would have had Iran joining the international convention on banning torture in 2003 when reformists controlled Parliament, but were rejected by the Guardian Council.[72][73]

Iraq edit

The government headed by Baathist Saddam Hussein made extensive use of torture, including at the notorious Abu Ghraib prison.

The post-invasion Iraqi government holds thousands of people in prison. After investigating from July to October 2004, Human Rights Watch found that torture was "routine and commonplace." According to their report,

Methods of torture or ill-treatment cited included routine beatings to the body using a variety of implements such as cables, hosepipes and metal rods. Detainees reported kicking, slapping and punching; prolonged suspension from the wrists with the hands tied behind the back; electric shocks to sensitive parts of the body, including the earlobes and genitals; and being kept blindfolded and/or handcuffed continuously for several days. In several cases, the detainees suffered what may be permanent physical disability.

Despite apparently credible claims that people were fed into Saddam Hussein's plastic shredder (most likely within Abu Ghraib) prior to the 2003 invasion of Iraq, no such device was found after the war. In October 1990, it was alleged that Iraqi soldiers had "thrown babies from incubators" during the invasion of Kuwait. This story was supposed to have come from the 'eyewitness testimony' of a 15-year-old Kuwaiti girl, Nurse Nayirah. Years later it emerged that she was the daughter of Saud bin Nasir Al-Sabah, Kuwait's ambassador to the United States, and that the story was the creation of the Hill & Knowlton public relations firm employed by the Kuwaitis.[75]

Israel edit

After investigation of continued allegations of torture, the Supreme Court ruled in 1999[76][77] that all torture – even moderate physical pressure – was illegal. This decision was praised by human-rights organizations. Despite this reform of the law, Amnesty International continued to express concerns to Israel about treatment which amounts to torture, and remained unhappy about the steps taken by Israel to eliminate torture. Amnesty International stated in 2002:

...the Israeli HCJ in September 1999 banned a number of interrogation methods ...However the judgment left ... loopholes by which methods amounting to torture or other ill-treatment in detention may continue.

— Amnesty International, [78]

The human rights group B'Tselem estimated that 85% of all Palestinian detainees suspected of terrorism were subject to prolonged sleep deprivation; prolonged sight deprivation or sensory deprivation; forced, prolonged maintenance of body positions that grow increasingly painful; confinement in tiny, closet-like spaces; exposure to temperature extremes, such as in deliberately overcooled rooms; prolonged toilet and hygiene deprivation; and degrading treatment, such as forcing detainees to eat and use the toilet at the same time. Allegations have been made of frequent beatings. Such acts violate Article 16 of the United Nations Convention Against Torture. In January 2000, B'Tselem claimed that the Israeli General Security Service's (GSS) methods of interrogation amounted to the five techniques: "[The] GSS used methods comparable to those used by the British in 1971, viz. sleep deprivation, infliction of physical suffering, and sensory isolation. But the GSS used them for much longer periods, so the resulting pain and suffering were substantially greater. In addition, the GSS used direct violence... Thus,... in practice, the GSS methods were substantially more severe than those used by the British in 1971..."[79]

Italy edit

Kenya edit

Mau Mau inflicted torture and death on 1,819 Kikuyu during their uprising in the 1950s, along with 58 people of European and Asian descent.

Lebanon edit

Suspected Hezbollah guerrillas, their families and Lebanese civilian internees were previously detained in the South Lebanon Army (SLA) prison at Khiam in the then Israeli-occupied Southern Lebanon. Torture, including electric shock torture, by the SLA was routine. This was detailed after the end of the occupation in 2000, when Lebanese who freed the prisoners found instruments of torture.[80][81]

Nigeria edit

In 2005, Human Rights Watch documented that Nigerian police in the cities of Enugu, Lagos and Kano routinely practice torture. Dozens of witnesses and survivors stepped forward to testify to repeated, severe beatings, abuse of sexual organs, rape, death threats, injury by shooting, and the denial of food and water. These abuses were used in campaigns against common crime.[82]

Systematic torture was used in conjunction with military occupation in an attempt to quell anti-oil protests by the Ogoni people in the Niger Delta, according to a World Council of Churches report.[83]

Christian pastors in Nigeria have been involved in the torturing and killing of children accused of witchcraft. Church pastors, in an effort to distinguish from the competition, establish their credentials by accusing children of witchcraft. When repeatedly asked to comment about the matter, the Church has refused to comment.[84]

North Korea edit

Torture is widespread and used with impunity in North Korea's system of prisons and forced labor camps. Guards have the power to inflict severe beatings, simulated drownings, stress positions, starvation, confinement in small spaces, hanging by the wrists or ankles, electrick shock, and sexual abuse.[85]

North Vietnam edit

From 1961 to 1973, the North Vietnamese and Vietcong held hundreds of Americans captive. Hanoi's Ministry of Public Security's Medical Office (MPSMO) was responsible for "preparing studies and performing research on the most effective Soviet, French, Communist Chinese and other ...techniques..." of extracting information from POWs. The MPSMO "...supervised the use of torture and the use of drugs to induce [American] prisoners to cooperate." Its functions also "...included working with Soviet and Communist Chinese intelligence advisors who were qualified in the use of medical techniques for intelligence purposes."[86]

See Con Son Island for accounts of US torture practices.

Palestinian Territories edit

The Palestinian Authority has reportedly practiced torture in the Palestinian territories over the years. Amnesty International found: "Torture [by the Palestine Authority] of detainees remained widespread. Seven detainees died in custody. Unlawful killings, including possible extrajudicial executions, continued to be reported."[87]

In 1995, Azzam Rahim, a naturalized American citizen, was arrested by the Palestinian Authority in the West Bank. He was subsequently taken to a prison in Jericho where he was tortured and killed.[88] Rahim's family attempted to sue the PA and the Palestinian Liberation Organization, but the Supreme Court ultimately ruled against them.[89]

More than 100 cases of torture by Palestinian security services were reported in 2010. Joe Stork, deputy Middle East director at Human Rights Watch, said: "The reports of torture by Palestinian security services keep rolling in. President Abbas and Prime Minister Fayyad are well aware of the situation. They need to reverse this rampant impunity and make sure that those responsible are prosecuted."[90]

At least six Palestinians died under torture in PA prisons. According to a report by the Arab Organization for Human Rights in Britain, the PA has used torture on a systematic basis for years. Methods include beatings with cables, pulling out nails, suspension from the ceiling, flogging, kicking, cursing, electric shocks, sexual harassment and the threat of rape. The report went on to say "Every one of those detainees has been subject to humiliating and degrading treatment and stayed in cells for more than 10 days. The analysis shows that an astonishing 95 percent of the detainees were subjected to severe torture, others feeling the detrimental effects on their health for varying periods."[91] The shabeh, which involves detainees being handcuffed and bound in stress positions for longs stretches of time, is the most widely used form of torture.[92]

In 2012, after allegedly selling a house in Hebron to a Jewish family, Muhammad Abu Shahala was arrested by the Palestinian Authority, tortured into a confession, and sentenced to death.[93]

Human Rights Watch reported 147 cases of torture by Hamas in the West Bank during 2011 and that none of the perpetrators had been prosecuted "despite consistent allegations of severe abuse." It further stated that "Some men said they had needed medical care due to torture and sought to obtain medical records as evidence that they had been tortured, but that hospital officials refused to provide them. Hamas's rival in the West Bank, the Fatah-dominated Palestinian Authority, arrests and detains Palestinians arbitrarily, including Hamas members or sympathizers, and similarly subjects detainees to torture and abuse."[94]

In another report, Human Rights Watch "documents cases in which [Palestinian] security forces tortured, beat, and arbitrarily detained journalists, confiscated their equipment, and barred them from leaving the West Bank and Gaza." HRW also reported an incident in which "the Hamas Ministry of Interior summoned a journalist who published an article on torture by Hamas authorities in secret detention facilities, threatened to take legal action against him if he did not publish an apology for the article, and warned him to correct his 'biased' reporting."[95]

Papua New Guinea edit

Despite international and national exposure, torture in Papua remains widespread and systematic; it is also surrounded by virtually complete impunity and denial. A study by the International Journal of Conflict and Violence found 431 cases of torture in Papua New Guinea.[96]

Philippines edit

During the rule of Ferdinand Marcos, torture and degrading treatment were routine in police custody. Political prisoners were often beaten, burned with irons, placed in stress positions, sexually abused, and subjected to electric shock, among other severe methods.[97][98]

Portugal edit

During the Estado Novo in Portugal, the secret police is known to have used torture on political prisoners. Detainees were forced to remain standing for hours on end in a method called the "statue" (Portuguese: estátua), were kept in cramped, wet cells with no natural light, were beaten during trials, faced threats against themselves and their family members, or were forced to listen to the same music or sounds for extended periods of time. These practices were revealed in an inquiry and subsequent investigation and trial of secret police practices in 1957.[99]

Romania edit

Under the communist regime of Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej, and later that of Nicolae Ceaușescu, torture was often used against political and religious prisoners, including those incarcerated during the notorious Pitești Experiment.[100][101]

Torture as a penalty was abolished after the fall of the communist regime.

Russia edit

The Constitution of Russia forbids arbitrary detention, torture and ill-treatment. Part 2 of Article 21 of the Constitution states that "no one may be subjected to torture, violence or any other harsh or humiliating treatment or punishment...".[102] However Russian police are regularly observed practicing torture – including beatings, electric shocks, rape, asphyxiation – in interrogating arrested suspects.[103][104][105]

Torture and humiliation, or dedovshchina, are also widespread in Russian's military, according to Human Rights Watch.[106] This is essentially the Russian version of bullying or hazing that is practiced in the American military, however it is often much more brutal. Many young men are killed or commit suicide every year because of it.[107] Amnesty International reported on allegations of Chechen locals, that Russian military forces in Chechnya rape and torture local women with electric shocks, when electric wires are connected to the straps of their bra on their chest.[102]

In the most extreme cases, hundreds of innocent people from the street were arbitrarily arrested, beaten, tortured, and raped by special police forces ("Red Terror"). Such incidents took place not only in Chechnya, but also in the Russian towns of Blagoveshensk, Bezetsk, and Nefteyugansk.[108][109][110]

Saudi Arabia edit

Saudi Arabia officially considers torture illegal under Islamic Law; however, it is widely practiced, as in the case of William Sampson. According to a 2003 report by Amnesty International, "torture and ill-treatment remained rife."[111] Hanny Megally, executive director of the Middle East and North Africa division of Human Rights Watch, stated in 2002 "The practice of torture in Saudi Arabia is well documented",[112] According to the Human Rights Watch World Report 2003, "Torture under interrogation of political prisoners and criminal suspects continued",[113] and the 2006 report notes that "Arbitrary detention, mistreatment and torture of detainees, restrictions on freedom of movement, and lack of official accountability remain serious concerns".[114]

South Africa edit

According to Amnesty International, torture takes place in police stations, prisons, detention centres and beyond. During 2014/2015, the Independent Police Investigative Directorate (IPID) investigated 145 new reported cases it described as torture, 34 cases listed as rape and 3,711 cases listed as assault by police officers. Of the 145 cases described as torture, only four were referred to the National Prosecuting Authority by IPID for criminal charges during that same time period. This reflects serious problems with accountability.[115]

Soviet Union edit

Torture was widely practiced by the brutal Cheka during the early days of the Red Army, followed by the Soviet NKVD during the early Stalinist era to extract (often false) confessions from suspects often called enemies of the people. One of the most prevalent and effective types of torture was sleep deprivation, nicknamed "conveyor" due to interrogators replacing one another to keep the inmate from sleeping.[116] The use of torture was authorized by the Central Committee of the Communist Party and personally by Joseph Stalin. During the Doctor's Plot, Stalin ordered falsely accused physicians to be tortured "to death".[117] Torture was still used after Stalin by the KGB but not on the same extent and level.

Spain edit

Torture was widespread against dissidents and those associated with them in the years that Francisco Franco ruled Spain.[118] Such abuses continued into the 1970s and included severe beatings and waterboarding.[119]

The Spanish kingdom today categorically denies the existence of torture.[120] However, the Spanish authorities consistently fail to implement recommendations by the Council of Europe's Committee for the Prevention of Torture and the UN Committee Against Torture to combat the use of torture in detention. The UN committee expressed its concern "about the length of judicial procedures and made reference to reports that indicated that five years had sometimes passed between crime and sentence. The Committee warned that this problem reduces the effect of penal action and discourages people to file complaints." It further indicated that "all members of the Committee were also deeply concerned about the legal practice of five days incommunicado detention" (since October 2003, a reform of the Criminal Procedure Code has extended that period to a maximum of 13 days).[121][122]

Syria edit

Torture has reportedly been used in the Adra Prison near Damascus.[123] In 2010, the prison held 7,000 prisoners.[124] The Tadmor Prison in Palmyra was known for harsh conditions, extensive human rights abuse, torture and summary executions. It was closed in 2001 and all remaining political detainees were transferred to other prisons in Syria. However, Tadmor Prison was reopened on 15 June 2011 and 350 individuals arrested for participation in anti-regime demonstrations were transferred there for interrogation and detainment.[125]

A number of captured Israelis have been tortured in Syria. This includes Eli Cohen, who was executed in 1965.[126] In 1955, five Israeli soldiers were captured in a covert operation on the Golan Heights and brutally tortured in a Syrian prison.[127] One of the soldiers, Uri Ilan, committed suicide when falsely informed by his captors that his comrades had been killed.[128] Ilan became a symbol of courage and patriotism in Israel.[129][130] During the Yom Kippur War, many Israeli prisoners said that they had been tortured by Syrians,[131] and one POW, Avraham Lanir, was tortured to death.[132][133]

During the Syrian Civil War, reports have been made of widespread and systematic torture used by Syrian security forces.[134] This includes electrocution, brutal beatings and sexual assault. Amnesty said of the situation : "Torture and other ill-treatment in Syria form part of a widespread and systematic attack against the civilian population, carried out in an organized manner and as part of state policy and therefore amount to crimes against humanity."[135] In February 2019, two Syrians were arrested in Germany on suspicion of having conducted or abetted torture for the regime of Bashar al-Assad during the Syrian Civil War.[136]

Turkey edit

United Arab Emirates edit

In April 2009, a video emerged of a United Arab Emirates Royal Sheik, Sheik Issa bin Zayed Al Nahyan (a son of Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan) directing the torture of Afghan grain dealer Mohammed Shah Poor. The video includes the man being tortured with a cattle prod to his genitals, sand in his mouth and being run over by a Mercedes SUV. A man in a UAE police uniform is seen on the tape tying the victim's arms and legs, and later holding him down. The official response of the UAE government was that Sheik Issa is the man shown in the video but he did nothing wrong. The incidents depicted in the videotapes were not part of a pattern of behaviour, the Ministry of the Interior said.[137][138]

United Kingdom edit

Kenya edit

During the 1950's, a rebellion against British rule in Kenya known as the Mau Mau rebellion broke out, spearheaded by the Kenya Land and Freedom Army (better known as the "Mau Mau"). During their suppression of the rebellion, British security forces routinely used torture on suspected Mau Mau insurgents. Upon discovering that nearly the entire Kikiyu population – numbering over a million – had taken an oath to support the Mau Mau in their struggle, the British colonial authorities imprisoned suspected insurgents in concentration camps in order to try and coerce them into repudiating the Mau Mau oath; hundreds of thousands of Kikuyus were imprisoned in the camps during the rebellion. In these camps, detainees were frequently subject to brutal mistreatment, including torture, by camp wardens and prison guard. These included methods such as rape, mutilation, and stuffing a detainee's mouth with mud and stamping on their throat. Instances of the wardens and guards intentionally denying medical aid to detainees were widespread, which compounded the effects of torture at the camps. A former British prison official in Kenya described a detention camp there in 1954: "Short rations, overwork, brutality, humiliating and disgusting treatment, flogging – all in violation of the UN Declaration of Human Rights." According to Canon Bewes, a British missionary in Kenya, there was a "constant stream of reports of brutalities by police, military and home guards. Some of the people had been using castration instruments and two men had died under castration."[139][140][141]

One of the detainees who was tortured during the Mau Mau rebellion was Hussein Onyango Obama, the grandfather of U.S. President Barack Obama. According to his widow, "British soldiers forced pins into his fingernails and buttocks and squeezed his testicles between metal rods" at the Kamiti Prison.[142] One British settler described an interrogation by the colonial police force:

We knew the slow method of torture [at the Mau Mau Investigation Center] was worse than anything we could do. Special Branch there had a way of slowly electrocuting a Kuke—they'd rough up one for days. Once I went personally to drop off one gang member who needed special treatment. I stayed for a few hours to help the boys out, softening him up. Things got a little out of hand. By the time I cut his balls off, he had no ears, and his eyeball, the right one, I think, was hanging out of its socket. Too bad, he died before we got much out of him.[143]

On 22 November 1954, Colonel Arthur Young sent a letter to Governor Evelyn Baring about the "inhumanity" of various parts of the security forces amid his investigations of wrongdoing:

The other lamentable aspect of this case [i.e. Judgment of the East Africa Court of Appeal, Criminal Appeals 891 and 892 of 1954] is the horror of some of the so called Screening Camps which, in my judgment, now present a state of affairs so deplorable that they should be investigated without delay so that the ever increasing allegations of inhumanity and disregard of the rights of the African citizen are dealt with and so that Government will have no reason either to be embarrassed or ashamed of the acts which are done in its name by its own servants. As things are at present there is no one who can investigate such allegations and no independent authority who is responsible for the conduct at these camps. An African who is unfortunate enough to suffer from the brutalities which are clearly evident has no one to whom he can complain and no one to regard his interests since the local Administrative Officer is, himself, the authority for the camps. Moreover, the injured person is unlikely to appeal to the police for redress if they are to be regarded as subordinate to the Executive...I do not consider that in the present circumstances Government have taken all the necessary steps to ensure that in its Screening Camps the elementary principles of justice and humanity are observed.[144]

In January 1955, Baring sent a telegram to Alan Lennox-Boyd, the Secretary of State for the Colonies and a cabinet minister, and told them that eight white European officers who had been accused of serious crimes, including accessory to murder, would be given immunity from prosecution. One district officer was accused of the "beating up and roasting alive of one African". A Kenyan Regiment Sergeant and a field intelligence assistance had been implicated in the burning of two further suspects "during screening operations". "I had not myself realised until today that the extension of the principle of clemency to all members of the security forces involved so many cases with Europeans as principals," wrote Baring.[145]

In 1956, Baring's administration devised the "dilution technique" – a system of assaults and psychological shocks to detainees, to force the compliance of the toughest Mau Mau supporters. Lennox-Boyd was told that one commander, Terrence Gavaghan, had developed the techniques at the Mwea camps in central Kenya – and he needed permission to treat the worst detainees in a "rough way". Baring telegrammed the Colonial Secretary in London asking for his approval to use "overpowering" force, and the cabinet minister's approval came within weeks. A ministerial delegation saw firsthand prisoners beaten for refusing to don camp clothes. Ringleaders of the "Mau Mau moan" – a chant of defiance – were singled out for special punishment. They were beaten and forced to the ground. Once there, a boot was placed on their throat while mud was forced into their mouths. Gavaghan also explained how difficult detainees would be subjected to the "third degree". "The measures adopted were to be kept awake all night, having water thrown at him and to be beaten up on a variety of pretexts."[145]

One Hanslope Park document is a letter between Kenyan Special Branch police officers about treatment of "fanatical" detainees at the Mwea camps.

If they deny having taken an oath they are given summary punishment which usually consists of a good beating up. This treatment usually breaks a large proportion. If this treatment does not bear fruit the detainee is taken to the far end of the camp where buckets of stone are waiting. These buckets are placed on the detainee's head and he is made to run around in circles until he agrees to confess the oath.[145]

In June 1957, Eric Griffith-Jones, the attorney general of the British administration in Kenya, wrote to Baring, detailing the way the regime of abuse at the colony's detention camps was being subtly altered. He said that the mistreatment of the detainees is "distressingly reminiscent of conditions in Nazi Germany or Communist Russia". Despite this, he said that in order for abuse to remain legal, Mau Mau suspects must be beaten mainly on their upper body, "vulnerable parts of the body should not be struck, particularly the spleen, liver or kidneys", and it was important that "those who administer violence ... should remain collected, balanced and dispassionate". He also agreed to draft legislation that sanctioned beatings, as long as the abuse was kept secret, and reminded the governor that "If we are going to sin," he wrote, "we must sin quietly."[146][147]

Northern Ireland edit

During the Troubles, an ethno-nationalist conflict in Northern Ireland, there were instances of British security forces, including the British Army and the Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC), using torture on suspected Irish Republican Army (IRA) members. Former RUC interrogators who were active during the Troubles claimed that waterboarding, among other forms of torture, were systematically used against suspected IRA members in police custody.[148]

In 1971, as part of Operation Demetrius, fourteen arrested men were subjected to a programme of "deep interrogation" at a secret interrogation centre. The interrogation methods involved sensory deprivation and were referred to as the "Five Techniques". The European Court of Human Rights defined them as wall-standing, hooding, subjection to noise, deprivation of sleep, and deprivation of food and drink. For seven days, when not being interrogated, the detainees were kept hooded and handcuffed in a cold cell and subjected to a continuous loud hissing noise. Here they were forced to stand in a stress position for many hours and were deprived of sleep, food and drink. They were also repeatedly beaten, and some reported being kicked in the genitals, having their heads banged against walls and being threatened with injections. The effect was severe pain, severe physical and mental exhaustion, severe anxiety, depression, hallucinations, disorientation and repeated loss of consciousness.[149][150]

The fourteen so-called "Hooded Men" were the only detainees subjected to all Five Techniques together. Some other detainees were subjected to at least one of the Five Techniques, along with other interrogation methods.[151] These allegedly included waterboarding,[152] electric shocks, burning with matches and candles, forcing internees to stand over hot electric fires while beating them, beating and squeezing of the genitals, inserting objects into the anus, injections, whipping the soles of the feet, and psychological abuse such as Russian roulette.[151]

Details of the "deep interrogation" programme became known to the public, sparking outrage. In response, the British Government commissioned an inquiry, under Lord Parker, to look into the Five Techniques. In 1972 the Parker Report concluded that the Five Techniques were illegal under domestic law. British Prime Minister Edward Heath, then announced that the Five Techniques would no longer be used under his government. However, he said that if a future British government decided to reintroduce them, it would need to be approved by Parliament.[153]

The Irish Government had begun international legal action against the British Government over the Hooded Men in 1971. In 1976, the European Commission of Human Rights ruled that the programme of deep interrogation, using the Five Techniques, amounted to "torture".[154] The case was then referred to the European Court of Human Rights. In 1978 it ruled that the programme amounted to "inhuman and degrading treatment" which breached the European Convention on Human Rights, but did not amount to torture.[154] In 2014, evidence emerged that the British Government had withheld information from the Court. Following these revelations, the Irish Government announced in December 2014 that it would be asking the Court to review its judgement and acknowledge the Five Techniques as torture.[155]

The Court's ruling, that the Five Techniques did not amount to torture, was later cited by the United States and Israel to justify their own interrogation methods.[156]

21st century edit

On 23 February 2005, British soldiers were found guilty of abuse of Iraqi prisoners arrested for looting at a British Army camp called Bread Basket, in Basra, during May 2003. The judge at the military court, Judge Advocate Michael Hunter, said of photographs and the soldier's behaviour:

Anyone with a shred of human decency would be revolted by what is contained in those pictures. The actions of you and those responsible for these acts have undoubtedly tarnished the international reputation of the British Army and, to some extent, the British nation too, and it will no doubt hamper the efforts of those who are now risking their lives striving to achieve stability in the Gulf region, and it will probably be used by those who are working against such ends.

— Judge Advocate Michael Hunter

At the court martial,[157] the prosecution alleged that in giving the order to "work [the prisoners] hard", Captain Dan Taylor had broken the Geneva Conventions. Neither Taylor, nor his commanding officer Lt-Col Paterson (who was briefed on the operation "Ali Baba" by Taylor), was sanctioned and, indeed, during the period of time between the offence and the trial, both were given promotions. All the leaders of the major British political parties condemned the abuse. Tony Blair, British Prime Minister, declared that the pictures were "shocking and appalling". After sentencing, the Chief of the General Staff, General Sir Mike Jackson, made a statement on television and said that he was "appalled and disappointed" when he first saw photographs of the Iraqi detainees and that[158][159][160][161]

The incidents depicted are in direct contradiction to the core values and standards of the British Army ... Nevertheless, in the light of the evidence from this trial I do apologize on behalf of the army to those Iraqis who were abused and to the people of Iraq as a whole.

— General Sir Mike Jackson

On 7 December 2005, the House of Lords reversed the deportations of Muslims convicted on "evidence procured by torture inflicted by foreign officials", and cited the 1978 case in ruling that centuries of common law and recent international conventions made torture anathema in the country's courts. Lord Bingham said it was "clear that from its very earliest days the common law of England set its face firmly against the use of torture"; Lord Nicholls said "Torture is not acceptable. This is a bedrock moral principle in this country"; Lord Hoffman said "The use of torture is dishonourable. It corrupts and degrades the state which uses it and the legal system which accepts it."; Lord Hope said it was "one of most evil practices known to man"; Lord Rodgers said "the unacceptable nature of torture ... has long been unquestioned in this country."; Lord Carswell referred to the "abhorrence felt by civilised nations for the use of torture"; and Lord Brown said that "torture is an unqualified evil. It can never be justified. Rather it must always be punished.".[162]

On 13 March 2007, the six-month court martial of the seven soldiers – including Colonel Jorge Mendonca and Major Michael Peebles – over the detention of Iraqi prisoners in Basra during May 2003 ended with all but one, Corporal Donald Payne, being acquitted.[163][164] On 30 April 2007, Payne, Britain's first convicted war criminal found guilty under the provisions of the International Criminal Court Act 2001, who had pleaded guilty to mistreating prisoners, was jailed for a year and dishonourably discharged from the army.[165][166][167]

In March 2008, the Ministry of Defence admitted breaching the human rights of Baha Mousa, who died in British custody in Basra, and of eight other Iraqi men held at the same facility, opening the way for a multimillion-pound compensation package for the relatives of Baha Mousa and the other men injured during illegal interrogations.[168] On 14 May 2008, Defence Secretary Des Browne announced in the House of Commons that there would be a public inquiry into the death of Baha Mousa in which "no stone [will be left] unturned in investigating his tragic death."[169]

On 26 July 2008, the Joint Committee on Human Rights accused Armed Forces Minister Adam Ingram in 2004 and Lieutenant-General Robin Brims, Commander Field Army, in 2006 of misleading the committee when they declared that conditioning practices (based on the five techniques, banned since their use in Northern Ireland in the 1970s) were not being used. It has now emerged that such techniques were being used by some troops deployed abroad. The BBC reported that "Labour MP Andrew Dismore, chairman of the committee, said he hoped the public inquiry [into the death of Baha Mousa] would give some indications as to why they were given 'wrong evidence'. Earlier this month, the MoD agreed to pay almost £3m in compensation to Mr Mousa's family and nine Iraqi men after admitting breaching human rights".[170]

United States edit

While the United States is a party to international conventions against torture, a proponent of human rights treaties and a critic of torture by other countries, torture has taken place within its borders and on its government's behalf outside of its borders.

On 13 December 1999, NYPD officer Justin Volpe was sentenced to thirty years in prison for sodomizing detainee Abner Louima with the handle of a bathroom plunger.[171][172]

The Chicago Police Department's Area 2 unit under Commander Jon Burge repeatedly used electroshock, near-suffocation by plastic bags and excessive beating on suspects in the 1970s and 1980s. The City of Chicago's Office of Professional Standards (OPS) concluded that the physical abuse was systematic and, "The type of abuse described was not limited to the usual beating, but went into such esoteric areas as psychological techniques and planned torture."[173] The Supermax facility at the Maine State Prison has been the scene of video-taped forcible extractions that Lance Tapley in the Portland Phoenix wrote "look[ed] like torture."[174]

In 2003 and 2004, there was substantial controversy over the "stress and duress" methods that were used in the U.S. War on Terrorism that had been sanctioned by the U.S. Executive branch of government at Cabinet level.[175][176]

Amnesty International and numerous commentators have accused the Military Commissions Act of 2006 of approving a system that uses torture, destroying the mechanisms for judicial review created by the Supreme Court ruling in Hamdan v. Rumsfeld, and creating a parallel legal system below international standards.[177][178][179]

In an interview with the Washington Post, the convening authority of the Guantanamo military commissions, Susan J. Crawford, a retired judge, who was responsible for reviewing practices at the Guantanamo Bay detention camp, said of one Guantanamo Bay detainee, "his treatment met the legal definition of torture, and that is why I did not refer the case" for prosecution.[180] The U.S. Government denies that torture is being conducted in the detention camps at Guantanamo Bay.[181][182]

It was reported in June 2008 that, according to human rights lawyers, the USA was "operating floating prisons to house those arrested in its war on terror":

"According to research carried out by Reprieve, the US may have used as many as 17 ships as 'floating prisons' since 2001. Detainees are interrogated aboard the vessels and then rendered to other, often undisclosed, locations, it is claimed. Ships that are understood to have held prisoners include the USS Bataan and USS Peleliu. A further 15 ships are suspected of having operated around the British territory of Diego Garcia in the Indian Ocean, which has been used as a military base by the UK and the Americans.
... The Reprieve study includes the account of a prisoner released from Guantánamo Bay, who described a fellow inmate's story of detention on an amphibious assault ship. 'One of my fellow prisoners in Guantánamo was at sea on an American ship with about 50 others before coming to Guantánamo ... he was in the cage next to me. He told me that there were about 50 other people on the ship. They were all closed off in the bottom of the ship. The prisoner commented to me that it was like something you see on TV. The people held on the ship were beaten even more severely than in Guantánamo.'"[183]

Uzbekistan edit

After an investigating visit to Uzbekistan, United Nations Special Rapporteur on Torture Theo van Boven concluded:[184]

Even though only a small number of torture cases can be proved with absolute certainty, the copious testimonies gathered ... are so consistent in their description of torture techniques and the places and circumstances in which torture is perpetrated that the pervasive and persistent nature of torture throughout the investigative process cannot be denied.

— Theo van Boven

Forms of torture frequently cited include immersion in boiling water, exposure to extreme heat and cold, "the use of electric shock, temporary suffocation, hanging by the ankles or wrists, removal of fingernails, punctures with sharp objects, rape, the threat of rape, and the threat of murder of family members."[185] (For example, see Muzafar Avazov.)

In 2003, Britain's Ambassador for Uzbekistan, Craig Murray, said that information was being extracted under extreme torture from dissidents in that country, and that the information was subsequently being used by Britain and other western, democratic countries which disapproved of torture.[186]

Venezuela edit

Under the dictator Marcos Pérez Jiménez, Venezuelan authorities held little regard for the human rights of citizens. Police often raided homes without search warrants and individuals were imprisoned without evidence. While initially detained, individuals faced torture in instances of interrogation.[187] Political police targeted, arrested, tortured and killed his opponents.[188] Those who were attacked include future Venezuelan president Rómulo Betancourt, Jaime Lusinchi and Luis Herrera Campins.[188] Lusinchi was jailed for two months in 1952 and was beaten with a sword.[189] According to Human Rights Watch, the Carlos Andrés Pérez administration also tortured and executed opponents with a judicial branch that largely ignored abuses by his government.[187] The Caracas Metropolitan Police [es] and DISIP were used as tools to persecute dissenters.[187] Following the 1992 Venezuelan coup d'état attempts, a crackdown on alleged plotters resulted in accusations of torture by those arrested.[187] During the Bolivarian Revolution, levels of torture occurred that had not been seen since the dictatorship of Pérez Jiménez.[190] Following the election of Hugo Chávez, human rights in Venezuela deteriorated. By 2009, the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights released a report stating that Venezuela's government practiced "repression and intolerance".[191] In November 2014, Venezuela appeared before the United Nations Committee Against Torture over cases between 2002 and 2014, which criticized the Venezuelan National Commission for the Prevention of Torture for being biased in favor towards the Bolivarian government.[192][193][194] The committee had also expressed concern with "beatings, burnings and electric shocks in efforts to obtain confessions" that occurred during the 2014 Venezuelan protests and that of the 185 investigations for abuses during the protests, only 5 individuals had been charged.[195] United Nations Special Rapporteur on Torture Juan E. Méndez stated on 11 March 2015 that Venezuela had ignored requests for information and that he had made "conclusions based on the lack of response" and "concluded that the government violated the rights of prisoners", further saying that the Maduro government failed "with the obligation to investigate, prosecute and punish all acts of torture and cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment".[196]

During the presidency of Nicolás Maduro, torture in Venezuela increased further. In La Tumba, one of the headquarters and prisons of SEBIN, has been used for white torture and some of its prisoners have attempted suicide.[197][198][199] Conditions in La Tumba have resulted with prisoner illnesses, though Venezuelan authorities refuse to medically treat those imprisoned.[200] Bright lights are continuously left on and prison cells are set at near-freezing temperatures.[201][197][199]

During the 2017 Venezuelan protests, more than 290 cases of torture were documented by the Organization of American States.[202] Human Rights Watch has documented over 350 cases of torture and abuse. Methods include severe beatings, cutting the soles of the feet with razors, partial asphyxiation, withholding food and medication, and electric shock.[203]

Zimbabwe edit

The government of Robert Mugabe, in power from 1980 to 2017, has been accused of torturing protestors and members of the political opposition.[204][205]

See also edit

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External links edit

  • The short film I Am Not Alone (1956) is available for free viewing and download at the Internet Archive.

torture, since, 1948, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, 2009,. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Use of torture since 1948 news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2009 Learn how and when to remove this message This article describes the use of torture since the adoption of the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights UDHR which prohibited it Torture is prohibited by international law and is illegal in most countries However it is still used by many governments Torture is widely practiced worldwide Amnesty International received reports of torture or cruel inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment in more than 150 countries during the four year period from 1997 to 2001 These accusations concerned acts against political prisoners in 70 countries and other prisoners and detainees in more than 130 countries 1 State torture has been extensively documented and studied often as part of efforts at collective memory and reconciliation in societies that have experienced a change in government Surveys of torture survivors reveal that torture is not aimed primarily at the extraction of information Its real aim is to break down the victim s personality and identity 2 When applied indiscriminately torture is used as a tool of repression and deterrence against dissent and community empowerment While many states use torture few wish to be described as doing so either to their own citizens or to international bodies So a variety of strategies are used to circumvent their legal and humanitarian duties including plausible deniability secret police need to know denial that certain activities constitute torture appeal to various laws national or international use of a jurisdictional argument claim of overriding need the use of torture by proxy and so on 3 Almost all regimes and governments engaging in torture and other crimes against humanity consistently deny engaging in it in spite of overwhelming hearsay and physical evidence from the citizens they tortured Through both denial and avoidance of prosecution most people ordering or carrying out acts of torture do not face legal consequences for their actions 3 UN Special Rapporteur for the Commission on Human Rights Sir Nigel Rodley believes that impunity continues to be the principal cause of the perpetuation and encouragement of human rights violations and in particular torture 4 While states particularly their prisons law enforcement military and intelligence apparatus are major perpetrators of torture many non state actors also engage in it These include paramilitaries and guerrillas criminal actors such as organized crime syndicates and kidnappers A recent approach to interrogations has been to use techniques such as waterboarding sexual humiliation and sexual abuse and dogs to intimidate or pressure prisoners in a manner claimed to be legal under national or international law Electric shock techniques such as the use of stun belts and tasers have been considered appropriate provided that they are used to control prisoners or suspects even non violent ones rather than to extract information These techniques have been widely criticized as torture Further information Military Commissions Act of 2006 Alberto Gonzales and Abu Ghraib torture and prisoner abuse Contents 1 Technology 2 Inter state collaboration 3 Recent instances of torture in selected countries 3 1 Afghanistan 3 2 Albania 3 3 Algeria 3 4 Angola 3 5 Argentina 3 6 Bahrain 3 7 Brazil 3 8 Cameroon 3 9 Chile 3 10 China 3 11 Cuba 3 12 East Germany 3 13 France 3 14 Guatemala 3 15 India 3 16 Iran 3 17 Iraq 3 18 Israel 3 19 Italy 3 20 Kenya 3 21 Lebanon 3 22 Nigeria 3 23 North Korea 3 24 North Vietnam 3 25 Palestinian Territories 3 26 Papua New Guinea 3 27 Philippines 3 28 Portugal 3 29 Romania 3 30 Russia 3 31 Saudi Arabia 3 32 South Africa 3 33 Soviet Union 3 34 Spain 3 35 Syria 3 36 Turkey 3 37 United Arab Emirates 3 38 United Kingdom 3 38 1 Kenya 3 38 2 Northern Ireland 3 38 3 21st century 3 39 United States 3 40 Uzbekistan 3 41 Venezuela 3 42 Zimbabwe 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksTechnology editMethods of torture are often quite crude a number of new technologies of control have been used by torturers in recent years The Brazilian government devised a number of new electrical and mechanical means of torture during the military dictatorship from 1964 to 1985 and proceeded to train military officials from other right wing Latin American countries in their techniques 5 One is the use of tasers and electro shock devices now widely sold to prison authorities around the world Minor refinements of ancient techniques including tearing out fingernails and toenails with iron tools burning the soles of the feet with clothes irons and probing between the toes with electric wood burning pencils are also widely applied Some African nations employ an iron foot squeezing device patterned after the medieval French boot Inter state collaboration editThe examples and perspective in this article may not represent a worldwide view of the subject You may improve this article discuss the issue on the talk page or create a new article as appropriate December 2010 Learn how and when to remove this message This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2009 Learn how and when to remove this message nbsp A Viet Cong prisoner captured in 1967 by the U S Army awaits interrogation He has been placed in a stress position by tying a board between his arms Substantial cooperation between states in the methods and coordination of torture has been documented Through the Phoenix Program the United States helped South Vietnam co ordinate a system of detention torture and assassination of suspected members of the National Liberation Front or Viet Cong During the 1980s wars in Central America the U S government provided manuals and training on interrogation that extended to the use of torture see U S Army and CIA interrogation manuals The manuals were also distributed by Special Forces Mobile Training teams to military personnel and intelligence schools in Colombia Ecuador El Salvador Guatemala and Peru The manuals have a chapter devoted to coercive techniques The southern cone governments of South America Chile Argentina Uruguay Bolivia Paraguay and Brazil involved in Operation Condor co ordinated the disappearance torture and execution of dissidents in the 1970s Hundreds were killed in coordinated operations and the bodies of those recovered were often mutilated and showed signs of torture This system operated with the knowledge and support of the United States government through the State Department Central Intelligence Agency and the Defense Department 6 The United States government has at least since the Bush administration used the tactic of legal rendition in which suspected terrorists were extradited to countries where they were to be prosecuted for crimes allegedly committed In the war on terror this has evolved into extraordinary rendition the delivery of prisoners or others recently captured including terrorism suspects to foreign governments known to practice torture are South Africa 7 8 Egypt Jordan Morocco and Afghanistan Human rights activists have alleged that the practice amounts to kidnapping for the purpose of torture or torture by proxy A related practice is the operation of facilities for imprisonment and it is widely believed torture in foreign countries In November 2005 the Washington Post reported citing administration sources that such facilities are operated by the CIA in Thailand until 2004 Afghanistan and several unnamed Eastern European countries 9 Human Rights Watch reports that planes associated with rendition have landed repeatedly in Poland and Romania 10 Recent instances of torture in selected countries editThis list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items August 2008 nbsp The U S and suspected CIA s black sites Extraordinary renditions allegedly have been carried out from these countries Detainees have allegedly been transported through these countries Detainees have allegedly arrived in these countries Sources Amnesty International 11 Human Rights Watch The use of torture is geographically widespread A review by Amnesty International which did not use the United Nations Convention Against Torture as its definition of torture of its case files found reports of torture or ill treatment by state officials in more than 150 countries from 1997 to 2000 These reports described widespread or persistent patterns of abuse in more than 70 countries and torture related deaths in more than 80 12 Afghanistan edit See also Bagram torture and prisoner abuse Torture has been reported in Afghanistan under each of its recent governments Under Najibullah s Soviet backed regime beating and electric shocks were widely reported 13 After the mujahidin victory Afghanistan fell into a state of chaos and according to Amnesty International Torture of civilians in their homes has become endemic In almost every jail run by the armed political groups torture is reported to be a part of the daily routine 14 The Taliban are likewise reported to have engaged in torture 15 Since the U S overthrow of the Taliban torture has been reported on several occasions both by Afghan groups and by U S troops In the Herat region dominated by the warlord Ismail Khan Human Rights Watch reported extensive torture in 2002 16 Torture by US troops has been alleged in news reports by the New York Times 17 In March 2008 the UK Ministry of Defence claimed that they and the Afghan army had uncovered a Taliban torture chamber where two individuals were believed to have been beaten 18 Albania edit Under Enver Hoxha s People s Socialist Republic of Albania torture was widely used by police and prison camp guards 19 20 Since the fall of communism Amnesty International has reported police abuses amounting to torture 1 the government says it has made efforts to punish all acts of torture under the Albanian criminal justice system 2 In 2020 more than 3000 Albanians signed a petition accusing the government of Edi Rama of torture against the Muslim cleric Genci Balla who was isolated under the article 41 bis prison regime in solitary confinement and deprived of halal food 21 Algeria edit According to Pierre Vidal Naquet in Torture Cancer of Democracy and Les Damnees de la Terre by Franz Fanon torture was practiced endemically by the French forces commanded by General Jacques Massu bringing together the experience of Les Paras in the Indo China War and German troops in the French Foreign Legion One of the most notorious methods was the gegene or generator in which victims were tied down and electrocuted with a primitive device that delivered electric shocks to the genitalia Angola edit In Angola s 27 year civil war according to Amnesty International many were tortured by both sides 22 23 Since that time AI has also reported that unarmed civilians are being extrajudicially executed and tortured 24 in Angola s war against Cabindan separatists Argentina edit Further information Dirty War During the so called Dirty War carried out in the 1970s in particular but not only by the military dictatorship from 1976 to 1983 tens of thousands of Argentines were disappeared by the junta many never to be seen again The National Commission on the Disappearance of Persons concluded In nearly all the cases brought to the attention of the Commission the victims speak of acts of torture Torture was an important element in the methodology of repression Secret torture centres were set up among other reasons to enable the carrying out of torture to be carried out undisturbed 25 Bahrain edit Further information Torture in Bahrain and Torture during the Bahraini uprising 2011 present Torture has been used frequently by the Bahraini government in the 20th century Notable cases include that of Ian Henderson a former colonial officer employed in Bahrain who was accused by multiple witnesses of torturing prisoners 26 Adel Flaifel a notorious security officer identified by many detainees as having overseen torture 27 was given immunity under Royal Decree 56 of 2002 Between 1980 and 1998 nine people died in detention as a result of torture with five more dying shortly after being released as a result of injuries sustained from torture Reports released by Amnesty International 28 and Human Rights Watch 29 in the 1990s point to the widespread use of torture in Bahraini prisons 30 35 During the Bahraini uprising torture was described by many human rights reports as widespread and systematic Up to 1866 who make up 64 31 of detainees reported cases of torture 30 37 Three government agencies namely the Ministry of Interior the National Security Agency and the Bahrain Defence Force were involved in interrogating detainees in relation to the events of the uprising The NSA and MoI followed a systematic practice of physical and psychological mistreatment which in many cases amounted to torture 32 298 Only four of the individuals who alleged torture were arrested by the BDF 32 283 The Bahrain Independent Commission of Inquiry have attributed the deaths of five individuals to torture 32 287 288 Brazil edit Torture was used regularly by the Brazilian dictatorship regime from 1964 to 1977 against dissidents It included torturing their children some of whom were less than 2 years old at the time 33 Cameroon edit Main article Torture in Cameroon Chile edit Further information Military dictatorship of Chile 1973 90 The regime of Augusto Pinochet in Chile in the 1970s used torture extensively against political opponents Chile s National Commission on Political Imprisonment and Torture Comision Nacional sobre Prision Politica y Tortura concluded in 2004 that torture had been a systematically implemented policy of the government and recommended reparations The commission heard the testimony of more than 35 000 witnesses whose testimonies are to be kept secret for fifty years 34 35 Among those tortured were future president Michelle Bachelet who was held along with her mother at the notorious Villa Grimaldi detention center in the capital Santiago China edit Further information Human rights in the People s Republic of China Torture Although torture was outlawed in China in 1996 a UN investigator found torture to still be widespread in 2005 particularly because the narrow definition of the law leaving a mark does not comply with the UN definition 36 Torture is reportedly used as part of the indoctrination process at the Xinjiang re education camps 37 Cuba edit Main article Torture in Cuba People imprisoned by the communist regime are reportedly tortured 38 39 East Germany edit In the socialist German Democratic Republic of divided Germany torture and inhumane and degrading treatment were systematically used by security forces including the Stasi secret police against suspected opponents of the regime 40 France edit Further information Torture during the Algerian War and Human rights in France During the Algerian War of Independence 1954 1962 the French military used torture against the National Liberation Front and the civilian population The French interrogators were notorious for the use of man powered electrical generators on suspects this form of torture was called la gegene citation needed That France has provided a pivotal role in the evolution of western torture practices is the central thesis of the French film Death Squadrons The French School by Monique Robin The French had themselves developed practices in defence of its declining empire through the 20th century setting up torture universities at Poulo Condor now Con Sơn an island off Vietnam then French Indo China subsequently taken over by the United States and at Philippeville now Skikda in Algeria citation needed Police abuse remains a reality in France today while France has been condemned by the European Court of Human Rights ECHR for the conditions of detention in prisons including the use of torture on detainees citation needed Although the law and the Constitution prohibits any kind of torture such practices happen In 2004 the Inspector General of the National Police received 469 registered complaints about illegitimate police violence during the first 11 months of the year down from 500 during the same period in 2003 There were 59 confirmed cases of police violence compared to 65 in the previous year In April 2004 the ECHR condemned the government for inhumane and degrading treatments in the 1997 case of a teenager beaten while in police custody The court ordered the government to pay Giovanni Rivas 20 500 15 000 euros in damages and 13 500 10 000 euros in court costs 41 The head of the police station in Saint Denis near Paris has been forced to resign after allegations of rape and other violence committed by the police force under his orders Nine investigations concerning police abuse in this police station were carried out in 2005 by the IGS inspection of police 42 43 These repeated abuses are said to be one of the causes of the 2005 civil unrest 44 Conditions in detention centers for illegal aliens have also been widely criticized by human rights NGOs In 2006 a 20 year old Serbian woman accused a policeman of attempting to rape her in such a centre in Bobigny in the suburbs of Paris the year before 45 Guatemala edit During the Guatemalan civil war and the repression by the army against civilians and suspected opponents of the military dictatorship murder even genocide torture rape and inhumane and degrading treatment was systematically used by the Guatemalan armed forces and police There is evidence that the CIA in anticommunist campaigns during the 1980s was involved in these tortures in Latin America the threat of communism was often used as justification for dictatorship during the Cold War Thousands of victims were tortured and murdered For example Dianna Ortiz an American nun who was teaching poor Mayan children in the Guatemala highlands claims that U S personnel were present in interrogation and torture rooms in Guatemala City in 1989 when she was kidnapped taken to a secret prison and repeatedly raped and tortured by Guatemalan right wing forces Ortiz survived because of her American citizenship Sister Ortiz chronicled her experiences and recovery in a book The Blindfold s Eyes 46 There were other people in the clandestine cell the clandestine prison as well and I could hear terrible screams Many were killed I saw some bodies There were children as well wrote Dianna Ortiz India edit India has not ratified the UN Convention against Torture Custodial deaths and extrajudicial killings are on the rise The Asian Centre for Human Rights released its report Torture in India 2010 at a press conference in New Delhi The report stated that taking 2000 as the base year custodial deaths have decreased by 41 66 47 government between 2004 2005 to 2007 2008 This includes 70 72 increase of deaths in prison and 12 60 increase while in police custody The government has stated that it intends to pass the Anti Torture Act 2010 so it can ratify the UN convention against torture The bill provides up to a 10 year sentence for physical or mental torture by the police 48 Iran edit Main article Human rights in Iran Article 38 of the constitution of the Islamic Republic forbids all forms of torture for the purpose of extracting confession or acquiring information and the compulsion of individuals to testify confess or take an oath It also states that any testimony confession or oath obtained under duress is devoid of value and credence 49 50 The Islamic Republic itself vehemently denies the existence of torture by the government Nonetheless human rights groups and observers such as Amnesty International the United Nations and Human Rights Watch have complained that torture is frequently used on political prisoners in Iran 51 52 53 54 55 A substantial number of Iranians have been tortured and imprisoned by the religious police Arya Aramnejad a singer was jailed for his song Ali Barkhiz where he denounces the Islamic regime s crimes during the 2009 Ashura protests During his time in prison he was reportedly tortured sexually humiliated photographed naked laughed at obliged to walk barefooted on aids patients blood 56 Farzad Kamangar was repeatedly tortured in prison Amnesty International reports that Kamangar was repeatedly beaten flogged and electrocuted and that he now suffers from spasms in his arms and legs as a result of the torture 57 58 After she died in the custody of Iranian officials Zahra Ziba Kazemi Ahmadabadi an Iranian Canadian freelance photographer was found to show obvious signs of torture including a skull fracture broken nose signs of rape and severe abdominal bruising 59 Ehsan Fatahian an Iranian Kurdish activist was tortured for confession before being executed 60 Zeynab Jalalian also a Kurdish activist is currently ill due to prison conditions and torture She has been sentenced to death 61 Other notable victims include Behrouz Javid Tehrani 62 Habibollah Latifi 63 Houshang Asadi 64 Saeed Malekpour 65 Shirkoh Bahman Moarefi 61 Hossein Khezri 66 and Akbar Mohammadi 67 68 In a study of torture in Iran published in 1999 Iranian born political historian Ervand Abrahamian included Iran along with Stalinist Russia Maoist China and early modern Europe of the Inquisition and witch hunts as societies that can be considered to be in a league of their own in the systematic use of torture 69 Torture techniques used in the Islamic Republic include whipping sometimes of the back but most often of the feet with the body tied on an iron bed the qapani deprivation of sleep suspension from ceiling and high walls twisting of forearms until they broke crushing of hands and fingers between metal presses insertion of sharp instruments under the fingernails cigarette burns submersion under water standing in one place for hours on end mock executions and physical threats against family members Of these the most prevalent was the whipping of soles obviously because it was explicitly sanctioned by the sharia 70 Chronicle of Higher Education International reports that the widespread practice of raping women imprisoned for engaging in political protest has been effective in keeping female college students less outspoken and less likely to take part in political demonstrations The journal quotes an Iranian college student as saying most of the girls arrested are raped in jail Families can t cope with that 71 Several bills passed the Iranian Parliament that would have had Iran joining the international convention on banning torture in 2003 when reformists controlled Parliament but were rejected by the Guardian Council 72 73 Iraq edit The government headed by Baathist Saddam Hussein made extensive use of torture including at the notorious Abu Ghraib prison The post invasion Iraqi government holds thousands of people in prison After investigating from July to October 2004 Human Rights Watch found that torture was routine and commonplace According to their report Methods of torture or ill treatment cited included routine beatings to the body using a variety of implements such as cables hosepipes and metal rods Detainees reported kicking slapping and punching prolonged suspension from the wrists with the hands tied behind the back electric shocks to sensitive parts of the body including the earlobes and genitals and being kept blindfolded and or handcuffed continuously for several days In several cases the detainees suffered what may be permanent physical disability Human Rights Watch 74 Despite apparently credible claims that people were fed into Saddam Hussein s plastic shredder most likely within Abu Ghraib prior to the 2003 invasion of Iraq no such device was found after the war In October 1990 it was alleged that Iraqi soldiers had thrown babies from incubators during the invasion of Kuwait This story was supposed to have come from the eyewitness testimony of a 15 year old Kuwaiti girl Nurse Nayirah Years later it emerged that she was the daughter of Saud bin Nasir Al Sabah Kuwait s ambassador to the United States and that the story was the creation of the Hill amp Knowlton public relations firm employed by the Kuwaitis 75 Israel edit After investigation of continued allegations of torture the Supreme Court ruled in 1999 76 77 that all torture even moderate physical pressure was illegal This decision was praised by human rights organizations Despite this reform of the law Amnesty International continued to express concerns to Israel about treatment which amounts to torture and remained unhappy about the steps taken by Israel to eliminate torture Amnesty International stated in 2002 the Israeli HCJ in September 1999 banned a number of interrogation methods However the judgment left loopholes by which methods amounting to torture or other ill treatment in detention may continue Amnesty International 78 The human rights group B Tselem estimated that 85 of all Palestinian detainees suspected of terrorism were subject to prolonged sleep deprivation prolonged sight deprivation or sensory deprivation forced prolonged maintenance of body positions that grow increasingly painful confinement in tiny closet like spaces exposure to temperature extremes such as in deliberately overcooled rooms prolonged toilet and hygiene deprivation and degrading treatment such as forcing detainees to eat and use the toilet at the same time Allegations have been made of frequent beatings Such acts violate Article 16 of the United Nations Convention Against Torture In January 2000 B Tselem claimed that the Israeli General Security Service s GSS methods of interrogation amounted to the five techniques The GSS used methods comparable to those used by the British in 1971 viz sleep deprivation infliction of physical suffering and sensory isolation But the GSS used them for much longer periods so the resulting pain and suffering were substantially greater In addition the GSS used direct violence Thus in practice the GSS methods were substantially more severe than those used by the British in 1971 79 Italy edit Main article Torture in Italy Kenya edit Main article Mau Mau Uprising Mau Mau war crimes Mau Mau inflicted torture and death on 1 819 Kikuyu during their uprising in the 1950s along with 58 people of European and Asian descent Lebanon edit Suspected Hezbollah guerrillas their families and Lebanese civilian internees were previously detained in the South Lebanon Army SLA prison at Khiam in the then Israeli occupied Southern Lebanon Torture including electric shock torture by the SLA was routine This was detailed after the end of the occupation in 2000 when Lebanese who freed the prisoners found instruments of torture 80 81 Nigeria edit In 2005 Human Rights Watch documented that Nigerian police in the cities of Enugu Lagos and Kano routinely practice torture Dozens of witnesses and survivors stepped forward to testify to repeated severe beatings abuse of sexual organs rape death threats injury by shooting and the denial of food and water These abuses were used in campaigns against common crime 82 Systematic torture was used in conjunction with military occupation in an attempt to quell anti oil protests by the Ogoni people in the Niger Delta according to a World Council of Churches report 83 Christian pastors in Nigeria have been involved in the torturing and killing of children accused of witchcraft Church pastors in an effort to distinguish from the competition establish their credentials by accusing children of witchcraft When repeatedly asked to comment about the matter the Church has refused to comment 84 North Korea edit Torture is widespread and used with impunity in North Korea s system of prisons and forced labor camps Guards have the power to inflict severe beatings simulated drownings stress positions starvation confinement in small spaces hanging by the wrists or ankles electrick shock and sexual abuse 85 North Vietnam edit From 1961 to 1973 the North Vietnamese and Vietcong held hundreds of Americans captive Hanoi s Ministry of Public Security s Medical Office MPSMO was responsible for preparing studies and performing research on the most effective Soviet French Communist Chinese and other techniques of extracting information from POWs The MPSMO supervised the use of torture and the use of drugs to induce American prisoners to cooperate Its functions also included working with Soviet and Communist Chinese intelligence advisors who were qualified in the use of medical techniques for intelligence purposes 86 See Con Son Island for accounts of US torture practices Palestinian Territories edit See also Torture in the State of Palestine The Palestinian Authority has reportedly practiced torture in the Palestinian territories over the years Amnesty International found Torture by the Palestine Authority of detainees remained widespread Seven detainees died in custody Unlawful killings including possible extrajudicial executions continued to be reported 87 In 1995 Azzam Rahim a naturalized American citizen was arrested by the Palestinian Authority in the West Bank He was subsequently taken to a prison in Jericho where he was tortured and killed 88 Rahim s family attempted to sue the PA and the Palestinian Liberation Organization but the Supreme Court ultimately ruled against them 89 More than 100 cases of torture by Palestinian security services were reported in 2010 Joe Stork deputy Middle East director at Human Rights Watch said The reports of torture by Palestinian security services keep rolling in President Abbas and Prime Minister Fayyad are well aware of the situation They need to reverse this rampant impunity and make sure that those responsible are prosecuted 90 At least six Palestinians died under torture in PA prisons According to a report by the Arab Organization for Human Rights in Britain the PA has used torture on a systematic basis for years Methods include beatings with cables pulling out nails suspension from the ceiling flogging kicking cursing electric shocks sexual harassment and the threat of rape The report went on to say Every one of those detainees has been subject to humiliating and degrading treatment and stayed in cells for more than 10 days The analysis shows that an astonishing 95 percent of the detainees were subjected to severe torture others feeling the detrimental effects on their health for varying periods 91 The shabeh which involves detainees being handcuffed and bound in stress positions for longs stretches of time is the most widely used form of torture 92 In 2012 after allegedly selling a house in Hebron to a Jewish family Muhammad Abu Shahala was arrested by the Palestinian Authority tortured into a confession and sentenced to death 93 Human Rights Watch reported 147 cases of torture by Hamas in the West Bank during 2011 and that none of the perpetrators had been prosecuted despite consistent allegations of severe abuse It further stated that Some men said they had needed medical care due to torture and sought to obtain medical records as evidence that they had been tortured but that hospital officials refused to provide them Hamas s rival in the West Bank the Fatah dominated Palestinian Authority arrests and detains Palestinians arbitrarily including Hamas members or sympathizers and similarly subjects detainees to torture and abuse 94 In another report Human Rights Watch documents cases in which Palestinian security forces tortured beat and arbitrarily detained journalists confiscated their equipment and barred them from leaving the West Bank and Gaza HRW also reported an incident in which the Hamas Ministry of Interior summoned a journalist who published an article on torture by Hamas authorities in secret detention facilities threatened to take legal action against him if he did not publish an apology for the article and warned him to correct his biased reporting 95 Papua New Guinea edit Despite international and national exposure torture in Papua remains widespread and systematic it is also surrounded by virtually complete impunity and denial A study by the International Journal of Conflict and Violence found 431 cases of torture in Papua New Guinea 96 Philippines edit During the rule of Ferdinand Marcos torture and degrading treatment were routine in police custody Political prisoners were often beaten burned with irons placed in stress positions sexually abused and subjected to electric shock among other severe methods 97 98 Portugal edit During the Estado Novo in Portugal the secret police is known to have used torture on political prisoners Detainees were forced to remain standing for hours on end in a method called the statue Portuguese estatua were kept in cramped wet cells with no natural light were beaten during trials faced threats against themselves and their family members or were forced to listen to the same music or sounds for extended periods of time These practices were revealed in an inquiry and subsequent investigation and trial of secret police practices in 1957 99 Romania edit Under the communist regime of Gheorghe Gheorghiu Dej and later that of Nicolae Ceaușescu torture was often used against political and religious prisoners including those incarcerated during the notorious Pitești Experiment 100 101 Torture as a penalty was abolished after the fall of the communist regime Russia edit The Constitution of Russia forbids arbitrary detention torture and ill treatment Part 2 of Article 21 of the Constitution states that no one may be subjected to torture violence or any other harsh or humiliating treatment or punishment 102 However Russian police are regularly observed practicing torture including beatings electric shocks rape asphyxiation in interrogating arrested suspects 103 104 105 Torture and humiliation or dedovshchina are also widespread in Russian s military according to Human Rights Watch 106 This is essentially the Russian version of bullying or hazing that is practiced in the American military however it is often much more brutal Many young men are killed or commit suicide every year because of it 107 Amnesty International reported on allegations of Chechen locals that Russian military forces in Chechnya rape and torture local women with electric shocks when electric wires are connected to the straps of their bra on their chest 102 In the most extreme cases hundreds of innocent people from the street were arbitrarily arrested beaten tortured and raped by special police forces Red Terror Such incidents took place not only in Chechnya but also in the Russian towns of Blagoveshensk Bezetsk and Nefteyugansk 108 109 110 Saudi Arabia edit Saudi Arabia officially considers torture illegal under Islamic Law however it is widely practiced as in the case of William Sampson According to a 2003 report by Amnesty International torture and ill treatment remained rife 111 Hanny Megally executive director of the Middle East and North Africa division of Human Rights Watch stated in 2002 The practice of torture in Saudi Arabia is well documented 112 According to the Human Rights Watch World Report 2003 Torture under interrogation of political prisoners and criminal suspects continued 113 and the 2006 report notes that Arbitrary detention mistreatment and torture of detainees restrictions on freedom of movement and lack of official accountability remain serious concerns 114 South Africa edit According to Amnesty International torture takes place in police stations prisons detention centres and beyond During 2014 2015 the Independent Police Investigative Directorate IPID investigated 145 new reported cases it described as torture 34 cases listed as rape and 3 711 cases listed as assault by police officers Of the 145 cases described as torture only four were referred to the National Prosecuting Authority by IPID for criminal charges during that same time period This reflects serious problems with accountability 115 Soviet Union edit Torture was widely practiced by the brutal Cheka during the early days of the Red Army followed by the Soviet NKVD during the early Stalinist era to extract often false confessions from suspects often called enemies of the people One of the most prevalent and effective types of torture was sleep deprivation nicknamed conveyor due to interrogators replacing one another to keep the inmate from sleeping 116 The use of torture was authorized by the Central Committee of the Communist Party and personally by Joseph Stalin During the Doctor s Plot Stalin ordered falsely accused physicians to be tortured to death 117 Torture was still used after Stalin by the KGB but not on the same extent and level Spain edit Torture was widespread against dissidents and those associated with them in the years that Francisco Franco ruled Spain 118 Such abuses continued into the 1970s and included severe beatings and waterboarding 119 The Spanish kingdom today categorically denies the existence of torture 120 However the Spanish authorities consistently fail to implement recommendations by the Council of Europe s Committee for the Prevention of Torture and the UN Committee Against Torture to combat the use of torture in detention The UN committee expressed its concern about the length of judicial procedures and made reference to reports that indicated that five years had sometimes passed between crime and sentence The Committee warned that this problem reduces the effect of penal action and discourages people to file complaints It further indicated that all members of the Committee were also deeply concerned about the legal practice of five days incommunicado detention since October 2003 a reform of the Criminal Procedure Code has extended that period to a maximum of 13 days 121 122 Syria edit Torture has reportedly been used in the Adra Prison near Damascus 123 In 2010 the prison held 7 000 prisoners 124 The Tadmor Prison in Palmyra was known for harsh conditions extensive human rights abuse torture and summary executions It was closed in 2001 and all remaining political detainees were transferred to other prisons in Syria However Tadmor Prison was reopened on 15 June 2011 and 350 individuals arrested for participation in anti regime demonstrations were transferred there for interrogation and detainment 125 A number of captured Israelis have been tortured in Syria This includes Eli Cohen who was executed in 1965 126 In 1955 five Israeli soldiers were captured in a covert operation on the Golan Heights and brutally tortured in a Syrian prison 127 One of the soldiers Uri Ilan committed suicide when falsely informed by his captors that his comrades had been killed 128 Ilan became a symbol of courage and patriotism in Israel 129 130 During the Yom Kippur War many Israeli prisoners said that they had been tortured by Syrians 131 and one POW Avraham Lanir was tortured to death 132 133 During the Syrian Civil War reports have been made of widespread and systematic torture used by Syrian security forces 134 This includes electrocution brutal beatings and sexual assault Amnesty said of the situation Torture and other ill treatment in Syria form part of a widespread and systematic attack against the civilian population carried out in an organized manner and as part of state policy and therefore amount to crimes against humanity 135 In February 2019 two Syrians were arrested in Germany on suspicion of having conducted or abetted torture for the regime of Bashar al Assad during the Syrian Civil War 136 Turkey edit Further information Torture in Turkey Torture after March 12 United Arab Emirates edit In April 2009 a video emerged of a United Arab Emirates Royal Sheik Sheik Issa bin Zayed Al Nahyan a son of Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan directing the torture of Afghan grain dealer Mohammed Shah Poor The video includes the man being tortured with a cattle prod to his genitals sand in his mouth and being run over by a Mercedes SUV A man in a UAE police uniform is seen on the tape tying the victim s arms and legs and later holding him down The official response of the UAE government was that Sheik Issa is the man shown in the video but he did nothing wrong The incidents depicted in the videotapes were not part of a pattern of behaviour the Ministry of the Interior said 137 138 United Kingdom edit Kenya edit During the 1950 s a rebellion against British rule in Kenya known as the Mau Mau rebellion broke out spearheaded by the Kenya Land and Freedom Army better known as the Mau Mau During their suppression of the rebellion British security forces routinely used torture on suspected Mau Mau insurgents Upon discovering that nearly the entire Kikiyu population numbering over a million had taken an oath to support the Mau Mau in their struggle the British colonial authorities imprisoned suspected insurgents in concentration camps in order to try and coerce them into repudiating the Mau Mau oath hundreds of thousands of Kikuyus were imprisoned in the camps during the rebellion In these camps detainees were frequently subject to brutal mistreatment including torture by camp wardens and prison guard These included methods such as rape mutilation and stuffing a detainee s mouth with mud and stamping on their throat Instances of the wardens and guards intentionally denying medical aid to detainees were widespread which compounded the effects of torture at the camps A former British prison official in Kenya described a detention camp there in 1954 Short rations overwork brutality humiliating and disgusting treatment flogging all in violation of the UN Declaration of Human Rights According to Canon Bewes a British missionary in Kenya there was a constant stream of reports of brutalities by police military and home guards Some of the people had been using castration instruments and two men had died under castration 139 140 141 One of the detainees who was tortured during the Mau Mau rebellion was Hussein Onyango Obama the grandfather of U S President Barack Obama According to his widow British soldiers forced pins into his fingernails and buttocks and squeezed his testicles between metal rods at the Kamiti Prison 142 One British settler described an interrogation by the colonial police force We knew the slow method of torture at the Mau Mau Investigation Center was worse than anything we could do Special Branch there had a way of slowly electrocuting a Kuke they d rough up one for days Once I went personally to drop off one gang member who needed special treatment I stayed for a few hours to help the boys out softening him up Things got a little out of hand By the time I cut his balls off he had no ears and his eyeball the right one I think was hanging out of its socket Too bad he died before we got much out of him 143 On 22 November 1954 Colonel Arthur Young sent a letter to Governor Evelyn Baring about the inhumanity of various parts of the security forces amid his investigations of wrongdoing The other lamentable aspect of this case i e Judgment of the East Africa Court of Appeal Criminal Appeals 891 and 892 of 1954 is the horror of some of the so called Screening Camps which in my judgment now present a state of affairs so deplorable that they should be investigated without delay so that the ever increasing allegations of inhumanity and disregard of the rights of the African citizen are dealt with and so that Government will have no reason either to be embarrassed or ashamed of the acts which are done in its name by its own servants As things are at present there is no one who can investigate such allegations and no independent authority who is responsible for the conduct at these camps An African who is unfortunate enough to suffer from the brutalities which are clearly evident has no one to whom he can complain and no one to regard his interests since the local Administrative Officer is himself the authority for the camps Moreover the injured person is unlikely to appeal to the police for redress if they are to be regarded as subordinate to the Executive I do not consider that in the present circumstances Government have taken all the necessary steps to ensure that in its Screening Camps the elementary principles of justice and humanity are observed 144 In January 1955 Baring sent a telegram to Alan Lennox Boyd the Secretary of State for the Colonies and a cabinet minister and told them that eight white European officers who had been accused of serious crimes including accessory to murder would be given immunity from prosecution One district officer was accused of the beating up and roasting alive of one African A Kenyan Regiment Sergeant and a field intelligence assistance had been implicated in the burning of two further suspects during screening operations I had not myself realised until today that the extension of the principle of clemency to all members of the security forces involved so many cases with Europeans as principals wrote Baring 145 In 1956 Baring s administration devised the dilution technique a system of assaults and psychological shocks to detainees to force the compliance of the toughest Mau Mau supporters Lennox Boyd was told that one commander Terrence Gavaghan had developed the techniques at the Mwea camps in central Kenya and he needed permission to treat the worst detainees in a rough way Baring telegrammed the Colonial Secretary in London asking for his approval to use overpowering force and the cabinet minister s approval came within weeks A ministerial delegation saw firsthand prisoners beaten for refusing to don camp clothes Ringleaders of the Mau Mau moan a chant of defiance were singled out for special punishment They were beaten and forced to the ground Once there a boot was placed on their throat while mud was forced into their mouths Gavaghan also explained how difficult detainees would be subjected to the third degree The measures adopted were to be kept awake all night having water thrown at him and to be beaten up on a variety of pretexts 145 One Hanslope Park document is a letter between Kenyan Special Branch police officers about treatment of fanatical detainees at the Mwea camps If they deny having taken an oath they are given summary punishment which usually consists of a good beating up This treatment usually breaks a large proportion If this treatment does not bear fruit the detainee is taken to the far end of the camp where buckets of stone are waiting These buckets are placed on the detainee s head and he is made to run around in circles until he agrees to confess the oath 145 In June 1957 Eric Griffith Jones the attorney general of the British administration in Kenya wrote to Baring detailing the way the regime of abuse at the colony s detention camps was being subtly altered He said that the mistreatment of the detainees is distressingly reminiscent of conditions in Nazi Germany or Communist Russia Despite this he said that in order for abuse to remain legal Mau Mau suspects must be beaten mainly on their upper body vulnerable parts of the body should not be struck particularly the spleen liver or kidneys and it was important that those who administer violence should remain collected balanced and dispassionate He also agreed to draft legislation that sanctioned beatings as long as the abuse was kept secret and reminded the governor that If we are going to sin he wrote we must sin quietly 146 147 Northern Ireland edit During the Troubles an ethno nationalist conflict in Northern Ireland there were instances of British security forces including the British Army and the Royal Ulster Constabulary RUC using torture on suspected Irish Republican Army IRA members Former RUC interrogators who were active during the Troubles claimed that waterboarding among other forms of torture were systematically used against suspected IRA members in police custody 148 In 1971 as part of Operation Demetrius fourteen arrested men were subjected to a programme of deep interrogation at a secret interrogation centre The interrogation methods involved sensory deprivation and were referred to as the Five Techniques The European Court of Human Rights defined them as wall standing hooding subjection to noise deprivation of sleep and deprivation of food and drink For seven days when not being interrogated the detainees were kept hooded and handcuffed in a cold cell and subjected to a continuous loud hissing noise Here they were forced to stand in a stress position for many hours and were deprived of sleep food and drink They were also repeatedly beaten and some reported being kicked in the genitals having their heads banged against walls and being threatened with injections The effect was severe pain severe physical and mental exhaustion severe anxiety depression hallucinations disorientation and repeated loss of consciousness 149 150 The fourteen so called Hooded Men were the only detainees subjected to all Five Techniques together Some other detainees were subjected to at least one of the Five Techniques along with other interrogation methods 151 These allegedly included waterboarding 152 electric shocks burning with matches and candles forcing internees to stand over hot electric fires while beating them beating and squeezing of the genitals inserting objects into the anus injections whipping the soles of the feet and psychological abuse such as Russian roulette 151 Details of the deep interrogation programme became known to the public sparking outrage In response the British Government commissioned an inquiry under Lord Parker to look into the Five Techniques In 1972 the Parker Report concluded that the Five Techniques were illegal under domestic law British Prime Minister Edward Heath then announced that the Five Techniques would no longer be used under his government However he said that if a future British government decided to reintroduce them it would need to be approved by Parliament 153 The Irish Government had begun international legal action against the British Government over the Hooded Men in 1971 In 1976 the European Commission of Human Rights ruled that the programme of deep interrogation using the Five Techniques amounted to torture 154 The case was then referred to the European Court of Human Rights In 1978 it ruled that the programme amounted to inhuman and degrading treatment which breached the European Convention on Human Rights but did not amount to torture 154 In 2014 evidence emerged that the British Government had withheld information from the Court Following these revelations the Irish Government announced in December 2014 that it would be asking the Court to review its judgement and acknowledge the Five Techniques as torture 155 The Court s ruling that the Five Techniques did not amount to torture was later cited by the United States and Israel to justify their own interrogation methods 156 21st century edit On 23 February 2005 British soldiers were found guilty of abuse of Iraqi prisoners arrested for looting at a British Army camp called Bread Basket in Basra during May 2003 The judge at the military court Judge Advocate Michael Hunter said of photographs and the soldier s behaviour Anyone with a shred of human decency would be revolted by what is contained in those pictures The actions of you and those responsible for these acts have undoubtedly tarnished the international reputation of the British Army and to some extent the British nation too and it will no doubt hamper the efforts of those who are now risking their lives striving to achieve stability in the Gulf region and it will probably be used by those who are working against such ends Judge Advocate Michael Hunter At the court martial 157 the prosecution alleged that in giving the order to work the prisoners hard Captain Dan Taylor had broken the Geneva Conventions Neither Taylor nor his commanding officer Lt Col Paterson who was briefed on the operation Ali Baba by Taylor was sanctioned and indeed during the period of time between the offence and the trial both were given promotions All the leaders of the major British political parties condemned the abuse Tony Blair British Prime Minister declared that the pictures were shocking and appalling After sentencing the Chief of the General Staff General Sir Mike Jackson made a statement on television and said that he was appalled and disappointed when he first saw photographs of the Iraqi detainees and that 158 159 160 161 The incidents depicted are in direct contradiction to the core values and standards of the British Army Nevertheless in the light of the evidence from this trial I do apologize on behalf of the army to those Iraqis who were abused and to the people of Iraq as a whole General Sir Mike Jackson On 7 December 2005 the House of Lords reversed the deportations of Muslims convicted on evidence procured by torture inflicted by foreign officials and cited the 1978 case in ruling that centuries of common law and recent international conventions made torture anathema in the country s courts Lord Bingham said it was clear that from its very earliest days the common law of England set its face firmly against the use of torture Lord Nicholls said Torture is not acceptable This is a bedrock moral principle in this country Lord Hoffman said The use of torture is dishonourable It corrupts and degrades the state which uses it and the legal system which accepts it Lord Hope said it was one of most evil practices known to man Lord Rodgers said the unacceptable nature of torture has long been unquestioned in this country Lord Carswell referred to the abhorrence felt by civilised nations for the use of torture and Lord Brown said that torture is an unqualified evil It can never be justified Rather it must always be punished 162 On 13 March 2007 the six month court martial of the seven soldiers including Colonel Jorge Mendonca and Major Michael Peebles over the detention of Iraqi prisoners in Basra during May 2003 ended with all but one Corporal Donald Payne being acquitted 163 164 On 30 April 2007 Payne Britain s first convicted war criminal found guilty under the provisions of the International Criminal Court Act 2001 who had pleaded guilty to mistreating prisoners was jailed for a year and dishonourably discharged from the army 165 166 167 In March 2008 the Ministry of Defence admitted breaching the human rights of Baha Mousa who died in British custody in Basra and of eight other Iraqi men held at the same facility opening the way for a multimillion pound compensation package for the relatives of Baha Mousa and the other men injured during illegal interrogations 168 On 14 May 2008 Defence Secretary Des Browne announced in the House of Commons that there would be a public inquiry into the death of Baha Mousa in which no stone will be left unturned in investigating his tragic death 169 On 26 July 2008 the Joint Committee on Human Rights accused Armed Forces Minister Adam Ingram in 2004 and Lieutenant General Robin Brims Commander Field Army in 2006 of misleading the committee when they declared that conditioning practices based on the five techniques banned since their use in Northern Ireland in the 1970s were not being used It has now emerged that such techniques were being used by some troops deployed abroad The BBC reported that Labour MP Andrew Dismore chairman of the committee said he hoped the public inquiry into the death of Baha Mousa would give some indications as to why they were given wrong evidence Earlier this month the MoD agreed to pay almost 3m in compensation to Mr Mousa s family and nine Iraqi men after admitting breaching human rights 170 United States edit Main article Torture and the United States See also Abu Ghraib torture and prisoner abuse Bagram torture and prisoner abuse Enhanced interrogation techniques and Criticisms of the War on Terrorism While the United States is a party to international conventions against torture a proponent of human rights treaties and a critic of torture by other countries torture has taken place within its borders and on its government s behalf outside of its borders On 13 December 1999 NYPD officer Justin Volpe was sentenced to thirty years in prison for sodomizing detainee Abner Louima with the handle of a bathroom plunger 171 172 The Chicago Police Department s Area 2 unit under Commander Jon Burge repeatedly used electroshock near suffocation by plastic bags and excessive beating on suspects in the 1970s and 1980s The City of Chicago s Office of Professional Standards OPS concluded that the physical abuse was systematic and The type of abuse described was not limited to the usual beating but went into such esoteric areas as psychological techniques and planned torture 173 The Supermax facility at the Maine State Prison has been the scene of video taped forcible extractions that Lance Tapley in the Portland Phoenix wrote look ed like torture 174 In 2003 and 2004 there was substantial controversy over the stress and duress methods that were used in the U S War on Terrorism that had been sanctioned by the U S Executive branch of government at Cabinet level 175 176 Amnesty International and numerous commentators have accused the Military Commissions Act of 2006 of approving a system that uses torture destroying the mechanisms for judicial review created by the Supreme Court ruling in Hamdan v Rumsfeld and creating a parallel legal system below international standards 177 178 179 In an interview with the Washington Post the convening authority of the Guantanamo military commissions Susan J Crawford a retired judge who was responsible for reviewing practices at the Guantanamo Bay detention camp said of one Guantanamo Bay detainee his treatment met the legal definition of torture and that is why I did not refer the case for prosecution 180 The U S Government denies that torture is being conducted in the detention camps at Guantanamo Bay 181 182 It was reported in June 2008 that according to human rights lawyers the USA was operating floating prisons to house those arrested in its war on terror According to research carried out by Reprieve the US may have used as many as 17 ships as floating prisons since 2001 Detainees are interrogated aboard the vessels and then rendered to other often undisclosed locations it is claimed Ships that are understood to have held prisoners include the USS Bataan and USS Peleliu A further 15 ships are suspected of having operated around the British territory of Diego Garcia in the Indian Ocean which has been used as a military base by the UK and the Americans The Reprieve study includes the account of a prisoner released from Guantanamo Bay who described a fellow inmate s story of detention on an amphibious assault ship One of my fellow prisoners in Guantanamo was at sea on an American ship with about 50 others before coming to Guantanamo he was in the cage next to me He told me that there were about 50 other people on the ship They were all closed off in the bottom of the ship The prisoner commented to me that it was like something you see on TV The people held on the ship were beaten even more severely than in Guantanamo 183 Uzbekistan edit After an investigating visit to Uzbekistan United Nations Special Rapporteur on Torture Theo van Boven concluded 184 Even though only a small number of torture cases can be proved with absolute certainty the copious testimonies gathered are so consistent in their description of torture techniques and the places and circumstances in which torture is perpetrated that the pervasive and persistent nature of torture throughout the investigative process cannot be denied Theo van Boven Forms of torture frequently cited include immersion in boiling water exposure to extreme heat and cold the use of electric shock temporary suffocation hanging by the ankles or wrists removal of fingernails punctures with sharp objects rape the threat of rape and the threat of murder of family members 185 For example see Muzafar Avazov In 2003 Britain s Ambassador for Uzbekistan Craig Murray said that information was being extracted under extreme torture from dissidents in that country and that the information was subsequently being used by Britain and other western democratic countries which disapproved of torture 186 Venezuela edit Main article Torture in Venezuela Under the dictator Marcos Perez Jimenez Venezuelan authorities held little regard for the human rights of citizens Police often raided homes without search warrants and individuals were imprisoned without evidence While initially detained individuals faced torture in instances of interrogation 187 Political police targeted arrested tortured and killed his opponents 188 Those who were attacked include future Venezuelan president Romulo Betancourt Jaime Lusinchi and Luis Herrera Campins 188 Lusinchi was jailed for two months in 1952 and was beaten with a sword 189 According to Human Rights Watch the Carlos Andres Perez administration also tortured and executed opponents with a judicial branch that largely ignored abuses by his government 187 The Caracas Metropolitan Police es and DISIP were used as tools to persecute dissenters 187 Following the 1992 Venezuelan coup d etat attempts a crackdown on alleged plotters resulted in accusations of torture by those arrested 187 During the Bolivarian Revolution levels of torture occurred that had not been seen since the dictatorship of Perez Jimenez 190 Following the election of Hugo Chavez human rights in Venezuela deteriorated By 2009 the Inter American Commission on Human Rights released a report stating that Venezuela s government practiced repression and intolerance 191 In November 2014 Venezuela appeared before the United Nations Committee Against Torture over cases between 2002 and 2014 which criticized the Venezuelan National Commission for the Prevention of Torture for being biased in favor towards the Bolivarian government 192 193 194 The committee had also expressed concern with beatings burnings and electric shocks in efforts to obtain confessions that occurred during the 2014 Venezuelan protests and that of the 185 investigations for abuses during the protests only 5 individuals had been charged 195 United Nations Special Rapporteur on Torture Juan E Mendez stated on 11 March 2015 that Venezuela had ignored requests for information and that he had made conclusions based on the lack of response and concluded that the government violated the rights of prisoners further saying that the Maduro government failed with the obligation to investigate prosecute and punish all acts of torture and cruel inhuman or degrading treatment 196 During the presidency of Nicolas Maduro torture in Venezuela increased further In La Tumba one of the headquarters and prisons of SEBIN has been used for white torture and some of its prisoners have attempted suicide 197 198 199 Conditions in La Tumba have resulted with prisoner illnesses though Venezuelan authorities refuse to medically treat those imprisoned 200 Bright lights are continuously left on and prison cells are set at near freezing temperatures 201 197 199 During the 2017 Venezuelan protests more than 290 cases of torture were documented by the Organization of American States 202 Human Rights Watch has documented over 350 cases of torture and abuse Methods include severe beatings cutting the soles of the feet with razors partial asphyxiation withholding food and medication and electric shock 203 Zimbabwe edit The government of Robert Mugabe in power from 1980 to 2017 has been accused of torturing protestors and members of the political opposition 204 205 See also 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2018 Venezuela Suspected Plotters Tortured Human Rights Watch 9 January 2019 Retrieved 16 June 2019 Allison Simon 28 October 2016 Record levels of assault abduction and torture reported in Zimbabwe The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 8 June 2019 Inside Zimbabwe s secret torture camps The Daily Telegraph 10 May 2008 ISSN 0307 1235 Retrieved 8 June 2019 External links editThe short film I Am Not Alone 1956 is available for free viewing and download at the Internet Archive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Use of torture since 1948 amp oldid 1221127012, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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