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Former US detainee testifies of abuse



By DESMOND BUTLER, AP
20 May 2008 @ 08:17 pm ET

WASHINGTON - A German-born Turkish citizen told U.S. lawmakers Tuesday of abuses he says he suffered while detained by the United States in Afghanistan and in the Guantanamo Bay prison camp.


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In testimony by satellite link from Germany to a House of Representatives' panel, Murat Kurnaz recounted his five-year detention, alleging a wide range of torture and abuse.

Lawmakers at the hearing on Guantanamo abuses held by a subcommittee of the House Foreign Affairs Committee called for further investigation into Kurnaz's case.

He said that in 2002 in Afghanistan, U.S. interrogators subjected him to beatings, electrical shocks and, on one occasion, a technique he said was referred to as "water treatment." He said his head was held under water in a bucket while he was punched in the stomach, forcing him to inhale. On another occasion, he was hung by his arms for five days, he said.

"The pain from this treatment was beyond belief," he said. "I know that others have died from this treatment."

Kurnaz claims he was also subject to repeated beatings at Guantanamo, as well as forced medication and sexual and religious abuse.

"I told my story over and over," he said. "My name over and over."

Asked about Kurnaz's testimony, State Department spokesman Sean McCormack repeated official U.S. denials of torture by American interrogators. "I can't put it any more plainly than the president of the United States has put it, and he says the United States does not torture," McCormack said.

Kurnaz also alleges abuse by German interrogators. Early this year, German prosecutors closed an investigation for a second time into his allegations that two German special forces soldiers mistreated him in Afghanistan.

Kurnaz traveled in October 2001 to Pakistan and was detained by police there. He believes he was the victim of someone seeking a U.S. bounty for al-Qaida members.

Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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