Alex Emmons
Oct. 3 2016, 2:00 p.m.
TWO FORMER CIA captives recently
described being threatened with a makeshift electric chair — a previously
unreported torture method — while being held in the U.S. government’s infamous
“Salt Pit” prison in Afghanistan.
In independent interviews with Human Rights Watch in August that were
made public on Monday, Ridha al-Najjar, 51, and Lufti al-Arabi al-Gharisi, 52,
described a metal device that had wires with clips that would attach
to the fingers, and a helmet connected to wires.
“I saw an electric box, …
the chair. They said, we will torture you with electricity here,” al-Gharisi
said.
Al-Gharisi said he was
forced into the chair and connected to the machine, but was never actually electrocuted.
Both men also described
various forms of water torture, including having their heads dunked in a bucket
of water until they couldn’t breathe, waterboarding, and being strapped to a
board while submerged face down in a bathtub.
This is the first time
al-Najjar and al-Gharisi, both of who are Tunisian nationals, have spoken out
about their time in CIA custody.
There is no mention of
electric chairs in the unclassified executive summaryof the Senate Intelligence
Committee’s Torture Report that was released in December 2014.
“These terrifying accounts
of previously unreported CIA torture methods show how little the public still
knows about the U.S. torture program,” said Laura Pitter, senior national
security counsel for Human Rights Watch. “The release of these two men without
the U.S. providing any assistance or redress for their torture and suffering
also shows how much the U.S. still needs to do to put the CIA torture program
behind it.”
Both men are Tunisian
citizens, and were released and repatriated to their home country last year.
Neither was ever charged with a crime, and the U.S. government did not
compensate either for their torture or 13 years of detention without charge.
The abuses the two men
describe took place at the Salt Pit — a converted brick factory north of Kabul,
Afghanistan, referred to in the Senate’s Torture Report as “Detention Site
COBALT.” Many of the most sadistic abuses of the CIA program’s history took
place at the facility, which al-Najjar and al-Gharisi refer to only as the
“dark prison.”
CIA interrogators quoted in
the declassified executive summary of the Senate report
describe the prison as “a dungeon,” where detainees “cowered” when
interrogators entered their cells, looking “like a dog that had been kenneled.”
Although the declassified
summary did not mention electric shocks or an electric chair, it is possible
that the full report — which contains a detailed account of each detainee’s
interrogation — does. It remains classified by the Obama administration.
According to the Senate
report’s summary, al-Najjar was the first detainee held in Detention Site
Cobalt.
CIA spokesman Ryan Trapani
told Human Rights Watch that the “CIA reviewed its records and found nothing to
support these new claims.”
Al-Najjar’s Capture and
Interrogation
U.S. and Pakistani forces
captured al-Najjar near Karachi, Pakistan, breaking into his family’s home in May 2002.
According to the Senate torture report, the CIA initially thought he was Osama
bin Laden’s bodyguard, but the U.S. government has never publically presented
evidence for that allegation.
Al-Najjar described the day
he was transferred to the “dark prison” as the “worst experience of his life”:
On that day an Arab interrogator entered his cell, demanding information, and
when al-Najjar could not provide it, the interrogator said “wait until you see
what happens to you where we take you next. At the next place we will hang you
from your anus.”
Najjar’s interrogators then
doubled him over and chained his wrists to his legs. They put a bag over his
head, and inserted something into his rectum, he recalled.
Documents examined by
Senate investigators noted that anal exams at the Salt
Pit were often conducted with “excessive force.”
Two months after al-Najjar
was transferred to the Salt Pit, in November 2002, Afghan detainee Gul Rahman
was tortured to death there. He was dragged outside of his cell, stripped
naked, beaten, and repeatedly immersed in cold water. After being put in an
isolation cell overnight, he died of hypothermia. An internal CIA investigation admits that Rahman
froze to death, but blames it on Rahman for rejecting his last meal, saying he
denied his body “a source of fuel to keep him warm.”
In response to Rahman’s
death, the CIA would release its first formal guidelines for detainee
interrogation. But al-Najjar’s ordeal had begun months earlier.
Al-Najjar told Human Rights
Watch that when he first arrived at the facility, he was stripped naked, thrown
on a concrete floor, and doused with cold water. The same Arab
interrogator that had threatened to hang him “from his anus” cocked a gun
and held it to the back of his head, saying that if al-Najjar did not talk, he
would kill him.
His interrogators would
hang him from the ceiling for 24-hour periods, his wrists strapped to a metal
bar over his head and his toes barely able to touch the ground. Often,
according to al-Najjar, while he was in this position, guards would beat his
legs and back with a baton, or punch him in the kidneys.
While in CIA custody,
al-Najjar was kept in a dark room, and could only see when his
interrogators shined a light in his face. He was fed every third day and forced
to wear a diaper that was only changed every four days.
According to
the Senate report, CIA officials initially recommended that interrogators
utilize “Najjar’s fear for the well-being of his family to our benefit,” and
said that interrogators should use “vague threats” to produce a “mind virus”
that would cause al-Najjar to believe abuses would worsen until he
cooperated. In August 2002, the CIA authorized an interrogation plan for
al-Najjar that consisted of loud music, purposefully bad food, sleep
deprivation, and hooding. But his mistreatment seems to have gone far beyond
that.
On Sept. 21, 2002, less
than a month into his time at the Salt Pit, CIA cables described al-Najjar as
“clearly a broken man” and “on the verge of complete breakdown.” But his
torture continued, and he was not transferred out of CIA custody until 2004.
Al-Gharisi’s Interrogation
U.S. and Pakistani forces
captured al-Gharisi near Peshawar in Northern Pakistan in May 2002. His
interrogators repeatedly accused him of having ties to al Qaeda — ties which he
says he repeatedly denied to his interrogators. He would eventually be rendered
to the Salt Pit and tortured for hundreds of days.
The declassified summary of
the Senate’s report only says al-Gharisi was tortured without authorization
from CIA headquarters and underwent at least two 48-hour stretches of sleep
deprivation.
But al-Gharisi told Human
Right Watch he suffered many of the same abuses as al-Najjar, including sleep
deprivation, water torture, being threatened with an electric chair, and being
hung from a rod while beaten with batons. During his interview, al-Gharisi
pointed to spots where his teeth had been knocked out.
Al-Gharisi was transferred
into military custody sometime in late 2003.
During the more than 10
years that the two men were in military custody, the International Justice Network filed a petition of
habeas corpus in a U.S. court, requesting information on why they had been
detained. The Justice Department argued that the U.S. military prison in Bagram
was beyond the court’s jurisdiction, and the petition was ultimately denied.
Aftermath of Torture,
Detention
During his time in CIA
custody, al-Najjar claims to have suffered broken bones, broken hips, a broken
ankle, damaged knees and a damaged jaw. He received treatment after being
transferred into U.S. military custody, but declined to have arthroscopic
surgery on his knee, worried that it would make it worse. A medical
adviser for Physicians for Human Rights examined x-rays of al-Najjar’s leg,
taken after he was released last year and confirmed that his ankle had been
broken and that he had experience knee trauma.
Today, al-Najjar and
al-Gharisi are dependent on their families, unable to find work due to
lingering physical and psychological trauma, Human Right Watch said. Al-Najjar
says he lives with chronic pain in his ankle, hips, and backbone, and that he
has kidney pain, a hernia, and blood in his stool. Al-Gharisi says he has
chronic pain, and blurred vision. He says he does not see a doctor, because he
cannot afford one.
The U.S. has not compensated any of the 119
detainees held in CIA custody for mistreatment.
The full Senate torture
report — reading in at over 6,000 pages — remains the most authoritative
history of the CIA torture program to date. The executive summary was
declassified over a year ago, but the CIA is still fighting to bury the full
report. Apparently averse to learning lessons from the past, the Obama
administration refuses to open any of the copies in
its possession.
Last year, Congress passed
a law requiring CIA
interrogations to comply with the Army Field Manual, effectively prohibiting
torture in the future.
But anti-torture laws did not stop the Bush
administration. And following the Obama administration’s failure to prosecute
any officials responsible for their crimes, torture remains an applause
line for one of the U.S.’s major political parties.
Illustration based on
statements by the two former detainees.
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