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The hungarian state radio reported this morning that overall 25 (twenty
five) iraqi and afghani prisoners were tortured to death by US personnel since late 2001 and there is irrefutable proof of torture in at least 35 cases. http://www.radio.hu/index.php?cikk_id=87785 http://www.mti.hu/cikk/19936/ (This is no communist joke, Hungary is a member of NATO and the EU). Regards, Tamas Feher. |
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![]() "Tamas Feher" wrote in message ... The hungarian state radio reported this morning that overall 25 (twenty five) iraqi and afghani prisoners were tortured to death by US personnel since late 2001 and there is irrefutable proof of torture in at least 35 cases. http://www.radio.hu/index.php?cikk_id=87785 http://www.mti.hu/cikk/19936/ (This is no communist joke, Hungary is a member of NATO and the EU). Any proof of those allegations provided for us poor English-only readers other than what you say Hungarian State Radio said? George Z. Regards, Tamas Feher. |
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![]() "George Z. Bush" wrote in message ... (This is no communist joke, Hungary is a member of NATO and the EU). Any proof of those allegations provided for us poor English-only readers other than what you say Hungarian State Radio said? George Z. I doubt it since the actual story was that 25 prisoners had died in custody, hardly a surprising number given the total numbers involved and thus far 2 deaths were confirmed as unlawful, proceedings against those concerned were under way. Of course the Hungarians never had this problem under communist rule as by definition such deaths were considered 'lawful' Keith |
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On Wed, 5 May 2004 13:31:37 +0100, "Keith Willshaw"
wrote: I doubt it since the actual story was that 25 prisoners had died in custody, hardly a surprising number given the total numbers involved and thus far 2 deaths were confirmed as unlawful, proceedings against those concerned were under way. Keith The convolutions of language make it critical to understand what has been said. Keith, very correctly, points out the distinction between "tortured to death" and "died in custody." Individuals captured in ground combat quite often can be wounded in the process or even have been wounded in battles prior to the capture. They can be suffering malnutrition, exposure, disease, etc, not caused by the battle. Of the thousands of Iraqis captured, more than half have been released to return to their homes. Moreover, if only 25 died in captivity this speaks more of humane treatment and superior medical attention than it does of torture. Ed Rasimus Fighter Pilot (USAF-Ret) "When Thunder Rolled" Smithsonian Institution Press ISBN #1-58834-103-8 |
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![]() "Tamas Feher" wrote in message ... The hungarian state radio reported this morning that overall 25 (twenty five) iraqi and afghani prisoners were tortured to death by US personnel Amazing that Hungarian radio is so sloppy with the facts. Bet a statistic survey of the situation would demonstrate this number is well within expectations given the enormous numbers of prisoners that have been in US costody over the period. I also wonder how many Hungarian prisoners died in the last year! |
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ONLY 25? :-(
We demand more. The Durango 95 purred away real horrorshow. A nice warm vibratey feeling all through your guttiwuts. |
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"Keith Willshaw" wrote:
I doubt it since the actual story was that 25 prisoners had died in custody... As of yesterday, at http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/ssistory.mpl/world/2551262 "Associated Press WASHINGTON -- The number of prisoner deaths in Iraq and Afghanistan known to be under U.S. investigation or already blamed on Americans rose to 14 today, including two additional deaths being scrutinized by the CIA's inspector general. .... Senior military officials braced for broader investigations. "I expect that as these investigations track down all the possible leads that there will be more things that will need to be looked at very, very carefully," Gen. Peter Pace, vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said today in an appearance on CBS' "The Early Show." "As they chase the various elements, more people come forward with bits and pieces they think they might have and that leads you to look at other things," Pace said. "So there will be more investigations. Where that will lead I don't know....." Scott |
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On Thu, 06 May 2004 19:08:17 -0700, Steve Hix
wrote: Still, nothing there about torture, is there? These 14 cases are ones where deaths were deemed sufficiently suspicious to warrant an investigation. Here's one such case, just off CNN now... dunno if it's one of the 14 or not: "An Iraqi prisoner who died in November while being interrogated by a CIA officer and contract translator arrived at Abu Ghraib prison with "broken ribs and breathing difficulties" after being arrested by Navy SEALs, U.S. officials said Thursday. Unnamed Pentagon officials were quoted Wednesday saying the man had been delivered to the prison in "good health." They're separate from the torture cases. This may turn out to be a serious problem, it may turn out to be not unexpected mortality rates. Well, General Pace seems to be taking it pretty seriously. Scott |
#10
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In article ,
Scott MacEachern wrote: On Thu, 06 May 2004 19:08:17 -0700, Steve Hix wrote: Still, nothing there about torture, is there? These 14 cases are ones where deaths were deemed sufficiently suspicious to warrant an investigation. Here's one such case, just off CNN now... dunno if it's one of the 14 or not: "An Iraqi prisoner who died in November while being interrogated by a CIA officer and contract translator arrived at Abu Ghraib prison with "broken ribs and breathing difficulties" after being arrested by Navy SEALs, U.S. officials said Thursday. Unnamed Pentagon officials were quoted Wednesday saying the man had been delivered to the prison in "good health." They're separate from the torture cases. This may turn out to be a serious problem, it may turn out to be not unexpected mortality rates. Well, General Pace seems to be taking it pretty seriously. He would be derelict in his duty to do otherwise. |
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