US denies terror suspect torture
The US says any mistakes
made had been corrected
5 May 2006
BBC News
US Assistant Secretary of State for Human Rights Barry Lowenkron told the Committee Against Torture in Geneva that US law prohibited such practices.
Senior US officials are testifying before the committee for the first time since the 11 September 2001 attacks.
Rights groups accuse the US of flouting the UN Convention against Torture.
They say the US allows the torture and inhumane treatment of foreign terror suspects at their detention centres around the word, including Afghanistan, Iraq and Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
'Inexcusable acts'
In his opening statement, Mr Lowenkron stressed that the US government rejected the use of torture.
"My government's position is clear: US criminal law and treaty obligations prohibit torture. Torture is wrong," he said.
Mr Lowenkron said abuses carried out by US soldiers at Iraq's Abu Ghraib jail had been "inexcusable, they were indefensible".
But he noted that more than 250 people had been held accountable.
State department legal adviser John Bellinger told the committee the US would answer its questions, but he urged its members "not to believe every allegation".
"When we make mistakes we take corrective measures. Our system is designed to do just that," he said.
US Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense Charles Stimson said 120 detainees had died in Iraq and Afghanistan, 29 of whom might have been abused.
He said suspected cases were investigated and "appropriate action taken".
The BBC's defence and security correspondent Rob Watson says the size of the delegation - nearly 30-strong - indicates the determination of the Bush administration to fight back against the numerous allegations over its treatment of terrorism suspects.
But he says it also seems to be an acknowledgement of the damage done to America's standing in the world.
Names and numbers
The committee has 59 questions for the US, 53 of which relate to the war on terror.
Officials will be asked to provide a list of all secret detention centres, nationalities and numbers of those being held and the reasons for their detention.
The vast majority who are being held could hold information crucial to the war
Mookie Fallah, London
The committee will also ask for details of detainees taken abroad to third countries, in a process known as extraordinary rendition.
It wants to know what measures the US has taken in the wake of the Abu Ghraib scandal to ensure that such abuse does not happen again.
They may also want to know if there has been an independent inquiry into the possibility that high-ranking government officials authorised torture.
Human rights campaigners say the hearings have huge significance.
"What makes this so remarkable is that this is the first time the United States is accountable for its record on torture with regard to some of the practices implemented after 9/11," said Jennifer Daskal of Human Rights Watch.
Ten legal experts will cross-examine the US team until Monday and will publish its recommendations at a later date.
The US is obliged by the UN convention to implement the recommendations, although there is no enforcement mechanism.
But a damning report from the committee would clearly add to the administration's difficulties in defending its approach to terrorism suspects, our correspondent says.
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