Breaking news

Over 30 dead, dozens wounded as string of bombings hits Iraq

European MP's suspect Manning is being tortured

Published time: November 29, 2011 19:30
Edited time: November 29, 2011 23:33
United Kingdom, London: Supporters of Wikileaks founder Julian Assange display photographs of Assange and US serviceman Bradley Manning outside the High Court in central London, on July 12, 2011. (AFP Photo / Leon Neal)

Outrage over the treatment of Bradley Manning has peaked nearly two years after he was first put in federal custody. Now 50 members of European parliament are urging the US to allow the UN's special rapporteur on torture access to the soldier.

Less than a month before a pre-trial hearing for Bradley Manning is slated to begin, more than dozens of officials from overseas have sent a letter to Washington regarding the treatment imposed on the alleged whistleblower.

While being detained for nearly a year-and-a-half, Manning has been subjected to what watchdogs and attorneys and advocates alike have called cruel and unusual punishment. At times the military vet has been stripped naked of his clothes, held in solitary confinement for almost all hours of the day and monitored incessantly. He has been under the government’s custody since his arrest in May 2010 for his alleged involvement in leaking classified documents to the whistleblowing site WikiLeaks, the brainchild of Julian Assange.

Activists have repeatedly criticized the US for the treatment of Manning, their own citizen and soldier, long asking for the United Nation’s special rapporteur on torture, Juan Méndez, to be allowed access to the man. Now dozens of leaders from across the pond have sent a letter to US President Barack Obama, the US Congress, Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta, Secretary of the Army John McHugh and US Army Chief Raymond T Odierno.

"In order to uphold the rights guaranteed to Bradley Manning under international human rights law and the US constitution, it is imperative that the United Nations special rapporteur be allowed to properly investigate evidence of rights abuses,” reads the letter. “PFC Manning has a right to be free from cruel and unusual punishment. People accused of crimes must not be subjected to any form of punishment before being brought to trial.”

"We certainly do not understand why an alleged whistleblower is being threatened with the death penalty, or the possibility of life in prison. We also question whether Bradley Manning's right to due process has been upheld, as he has now spent over 17 months in pre-trial confinement."

While the Pentagon might not feel the same way, it seems that as far as the White House is concerned, Manning isn’t in the wrong.

Attorney David E Coombs, a legal representative for 23-year-old Manning, has said that the Obama administration has said the leaked documents in question are of “rather benign nature” and are not “of any real damage to national security.” Coombs filed the documents alleging such in court on Monday.

Coombs adds that a congressional official was told by State Department sources that Manning’s work caused embarrassment but not damage, and Wired.com writes that "One assessment conducted by the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) concluded that all of the information allegedly leaked was dated, represented low-level opinions or was already commonly known due to previous public disclosures."

Despite the assurance that Manning has not caused a threat to national security, the soldier is continuing to be held under strict conditions as he awaits a pre-hearing trial December 16. Mendez has continuously requested access to him, and has been denied every time.

“The defense has repeatedly requested the below discovery in this case, but the government has consistently responded with a blanket denial of the defense request,” says Coombs

Labour MEPs Richard Howitt and Derek Vaughan, Green MEPs Jean Lambert and Keith Taylor and Plaid Cymru MEP Jill Evans are among the dozens who sent the letter to Washington this week.

Comments (7)

jim evans 06.12.2011 16:53

The problem is that no powerful civilisation in history has ever been faced with the problem of answering its critics as the US is having to do.

Before now critics were simply eliminated or disappeared.....but the internet is changing all that.

Observe the unfortunate Zionists ........who run the USA and the rest of the West...... and you find them completely unable to face the truth about their behaviour.They are brainwashed and violently hostile to criticism......and so are their puppets in Washington and at the Pentagon.

Any criticism at all is met with vengeful uncompromising abuse .....not to the idea (which they know very well is often fair criticism) but to the person daring to speak out of turn.

The truth about the so called "free world"is that the media and military and politics and economics are arranged as a sinister dictatorship run with the sole purpose of protecting a largely Zionist elite from ever having to face criticism at all....

...So they are now completely detached from reality or the discomfort of self-criticism.....a s any study of the Likudniks would confirm.

Even warnings about the most obvious dangers they are facing by being where they are in the Middle East  and behaving towards Islam as they do......is viewed as victimisation and hatred ....as Helen Thomas would confirm ....if she dared do it!!


+1

Undo

Tuff guy says; 01.12.2011 20:18

It sounds like he is being made an example of so that other guys and gals in these illegal wars don't do the same sort of things.  The military, the government are not good career paths for idealists.

+2

Undo

mrsdiggs718 01.12.2011 14:15

What's just as appaling, imho, is that most american's don't know and don't care that this, and many other atrocities against human rights are being committed each and every day in a country that they're so [blindly] proud of.

+6

Undo

View all comments (7)
Add comment

By posting your comment, you agree to abide by our Posting rules

Log in to comment in full, or comment anonymously under character-limit restriction.

100 Text

– required fields

Register or

Name

Password

Show password

Register

or Register

Request a new password

Send

or Register

To complete a registration check
your Email:

or Register

A password has been sent to your email address

Edit profile

Name

New password

Retype new password

Current password

Save

Cancel

Follow us