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MARY ROBINSON DRAWS
ATTENTION TO HUMAN RIGHTS OF TALIBAN PRISONERS (17
January 2002)
ISLAMABAD, 17 January 2002 (UN Information Centre) -- The United Nations
High Commissioner for Human Rights Mary Robinson issued the following
statement in Geneva on 16 January 2002.
"According to recent reports, 30 Taliban and Al Qaida prisoners
from Afghanistan arrived at the United States Naval Base in Guantanamo
Bay, Cuba, on 14 January, 2002, to join a first group of 20 prisoners
transferred from Afghanistan starting on 11 January. The reports include
allegations about the manner in which the prisoners were transported and
the conditions in which they are being detained.
Detailed information on these specific allegations is not yet available.
I am aware that
there are a number of legal issues and these are under active consideration
by the US authorities. I am also aware that the International Committee
of the Red Cross will have access to the prisoners and that there will
be consular access.
It is appropriate to recall that there are international legal obligations
that should be respected. In particular, I would like to recall that:
- All persons detained in this context are entitled to the protection
of international human rights law and humanitarian law, in particular
the relevant provisions of the International Covenant on Civil and Political
Rights (ICCPR) and the Geneva Conventions of 1949.
- The legal status of the detainees, and their entitlement to prisoner-of-war
(POW) status, if disputed, must be determined by a competent tribunal,
in accordance with the provisions of Article 5 of the Third Geneva Convention.
- All detainees must at all times be treated humanely, consistent with
the provisions of the ICCPR and the Third Geneva Convention.
- Any possible trials should be guided by the principles of fair trial,
including the presumption of innocence, provided for in the ICCPR and
the Third Geneva Convention."
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