Quotes by Amnesty International

the blockade violates international law

The policy of blockade, punishing the entire civilian population of Gaza for the acts of a few, is a collective punishment, which is unacceptable and violates international law. The blockade is also in breach of UN Security Council Resolution 1860, and of the Agreement on Movement and Access signed by Israel and the Palestinian Authority in 2005.

I was forced to leave Iraq

The truth is, I am someone who loves his country. I was forced to leave Iraq because of the bad security situation. In addition, there are no services, no electricity, no water, no security. I and my family and many other families were forced to leave. However, if the situation became only 50 per cent better tomorrow I would return.
Interview with an Iraqi survivor of an abduction and torture, interviewed by Amnesty International in June 2007 in Syria.

special interrogation plan

"Military necessity" was used to justify the "special interrogation plan" authorized by Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld for use on Guantánamo detainee Mohamed al-Qahtani, considered to have high intelligence value but to be resistant to standard US army interrogation techniques. Mohamed al-Qahtani was subjected to extreme isolation for three months in late 2002 and early 2003. He was variously forced to wear women’s underwear; was tied by a leash and led around the room while being forced to perform a number of dog tricks; was forced to dance with a male interrogator while made to wear a towel on his head "like a burka"; was subjected to forcible shaving of his head and beard during interrogation, stripping and strip-searching in the presence of women, sexual humiliation, culturally inappropriate use of female interrogators, and to sexual insults about his female relatives; was subjected to hooding, loud music, white noise, sleep deprivation, and to extremes of heat and cold; was made to stand for long periods; and was forced to urinate in his clothing when interrogators refused to allow him to go to the toilet.
Mohamed al-Qahtani was interrogated for 18 to 20 hours per day for 48 out of 54 consecutive days.

the extreme response force

"Two or three guards immediately entered the cell while he was lying on the floor. One forced Mr Ait Idir’s body onto the steel floor of the cell and jumped on his back, using his knees to pound Mr Ait Idir’s body into the floor."
This testimony, contained in a lawsuit filed in a US court in April 2005 on behalf of Mustafa Ait Idir, is one of many allegations of beatings and other violence by the Initial or Extreme Response Force, groups of around five Guantánamo guards sent to detainees’ cells to punish them for minor or imagined disciplinary infractions of prison rules.
On 24 January 2003, a man in an orange jumpsuit was brutally treated at Guantánamo and reportedly suffered a brain injury as a result. He was not a detainee, but a US military guard who had volunteered to pose as an unco-operative detainee in a training exercise. However, the five-man team sent in to extract him from his cell was not told it was an exercise. The guard says that they slammed him to the floor, put him in a painful chokehold, and pounded his head at least three times against the steel floor.

you'll be here all your life

"We made this camp for people who would be here forever. You should never think about going home. You’ll be here all your life… Don’t worry. We’ll keep you alive so you can suffer more." Alleged statement of a US interrogator to Mohamed al-Gharani, a Chadian national held in Camp V
In May 2006, the UN Committee against Torture told the USA that indefinite detention without charge constitutes per se a violation of the Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment. This expert body urged the USA to close the Guantánamo detention camp.

the soldiers mocked and cursed them

"When they vomited up blood, the soldiers mocked and cursed them, and taunted them with statements like ‘look what your religion has brought you’." Saudi Arabian detainee Yousef al-Shehri
During 2005 over 200 detainees participated in a hunger strike at Guantánamo to protest against conditions of detention and their long-term indefinite detention without trial. Hunger strikers were reportedly placed in isolation cells, strapped into restraint chairs, subjected to painful force feeding methods and deprived of "comfort items" such as blankets and books. Lawyers said that some hunger strikers were moved into isolation in cold rooms and strapped into restraint chairs. Guards allegedly taunted these detainees by rattling the doors of their cells, interrupting their prayers and disrupting their sleep.

not prisoners of war

In January 2002, White House Counsel Alberto Gonzales advised President Bush that a benefit of not applying the Geneva Conventions to detainees picked up in the Afghanistan conflict would be that prosecutions of US personnel under the US War Crimes Act would be more difficult. Two weeks later, on 7 February 2002, the President signed a memorandum confirming that no Taleban or al-Qa’ida detainees would qualify as prisoners of war, and that Article 3 common to the Geneva Conventions would not apply to them either.
Common Article 3 guarantees minimum standards of fair trial. It also prohibits torture, cruel treatment and "outrages upon personal dignity, in particular humiliating and degrading treatment".