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Home > About Us > State of the World Report > 2006 > Governments Deny Basic Rights Under Guise of Security
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Annual Report
Governments Denying Their Citizens Basic Human Rights Under the Guise of National Security
- Colombia: The Colombian security forces, heavily funded
by the United States government, conspire with paramilitary forces labeled
as terrorist organizations by the U.S. State Department to commit countless
human rights abuses. The United States justifies its military involvement
as an effort to combat narcoterrorism – linking the war on drugs with
the war on terror.
- Egypt: The Egyptian government increased its crackdown
on NGOs, opposition members and civil society groups in 2005 and extended
the Emergency Law which grants Egyptian security forces sweeping powers to
arrest citizens at will, prohibit strikes and public meetings and close down
newspapers--all in the name of national security. During Egypt's December
2005 election, Amnesty International reported that hundreds of people from
opposition parties were arrested, including an alleged 1500 arrests among
Muslim Brotherhood supporters alone. Egypt's security forces were reported
to have used force against protesters resulting in scores of injuries. Reports
also show that security forces prevented voters from casting their votes in
some places and to have arrested local non-government election monitors or
prevented them from accessing polling stations, despite their official accreditation
from the Ministry of Justice. In addition, Egypt has been involved with "extraordinary
rendition" of terrorist suspects who seem to disappear into a judicial
system and are allegedly subject to torture.
- Iraq: Iraqi authorities have been systematically violating
the rights of detainees in breach of guarantees contained both in Iraqi legislation
and international law and standards. There have been reports of torture and
ill treatment of detainees by the Iraqi Ministry of Interior as profiled in
the Amnesty International report, Beyond Abu Ghraib, March 2006.
- Jordan: Amnesty International continues to receive reports
about the Jordanian security forces arresting Islamists and alleged terrorism
suspects in the name of national security. Often detainees are kept for long
periods without being charged, and some have alleged that Jordan security
forces tortured them while in custody. In addition, two Yemen nationals profiled
in previous Amnesty International reports were held and tortured by the GID,
before being taken to a secret detention center in Eastern Europe or Central
Asia.
- Pakistan: Amnesty International has received reports that
armed forces are attacking the local population in the province of Balochistan,
‘disappearing' people, killing, and torturing men, women and children.
The U.S. State Department recently said that Pakistan had handed over hundreds
of terrorist suspects to the United States.
- Russia: The Russian government has claimed that it is pursuing
terrorists but actually they have been harassing human rights defenders such
as the employees of the Russian-Chechen Friendship Society.
- Syria: The United States has sent detainees to Syria, including
the case of Maher Arar, who was reported to have been repeatedly whipped with
two-inch thick electrical cables by Syrian authorities. In addition, many
members of Syrian civil society--including rights defenders--faced the daily
threat of arbitrary and prolonged incommunicado detention with the attached
risk of torture and ill-treatment because of their alleged support for opposition
against the Syrian government.
- Uzbekistan: Uzbek security forces fired indiscriminately
into crowds of mostly unarmed civilian protesters while they were gathered
in Andizhan last May, killing hundreds of people, including women and children.
They sentenced scores more to long prison terms after mostly closed or secret
trials, justifying the violence as pursuit of terrorists. To date, no one
has been prosecuted or held accountable for the violence.
- Yemen: Yemen has held its own nationals in detention centers
in the country. According to a recent Amnesty International report, Beyond
the Radar, (April 2006), the Yemeni nationals were "disappeared"
into United States custody and spent over 18 months in various CIA "black
sites" before being turned over to the Yemeni government. Yemen continued
to hold these men at the request of the United States government, according
to Yemeni officials. The men were released at the end of March 2006 without
being charged with any terrorism offenses, but they continue to suffer lingering
physical and psychological effects of their detention.
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