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Amnesty International Charges U.S. with Human Rights Violations
By Ann L. Kim
WASHINGTON-Spurred in part by a Long Beach, California, judge's
controversial use of a stun belt last June, Amnesty International
on Tuesday (October 6th), unveiled a year-long campaign
targeting the use of "high-tech repression tools" by
U.S. law enforcement officials. The human rights organization
is calling for a ban on the use of electroshock devices and chemical
sprays by law enforcement personnel until the physical consequences
of their use is more fully examined. (Recently, a federal court
upheld a decision that allowed police in northern California to
apply "pepper spray" directly to the eyes of environmental
protestors, using Q-tips. If that isn't "cruel and unusual,"
then NOTHING is. WFI Editor)
"Law enforcement officials
from police to prison staff,
have a huge array of equipment at their disposal which at times
is contributing to human rights violations," said Pierre
Sane, Amnesty International's secretary general. Other aspects
of the U.S. criminal justice system that the organization criticized
in a 153-page report include the growing use of the death penalty
and what it termed "endemic physical and sexual violence
against prisoners" committed both by fellow inmates and correctional
officers.
Founded in 1961, Amnesty International is known for spotlighting
human rights abuses in other countries - most recently China,
Turkey and Indonesia. The new campaign represents its first focus
on the United States. (Amnesty International always had a credibility
problem when it accused foreign countries of human rights violations,
while refusing to acknowledge that the Federal Government was
culpable for the same crimes. WFI Editor)
"The U.S. prides itself on being a human rights leader around
the world," said William F. Schulz, the group's executive
director. And that is one reason why Amnesty International has
chosen to highlight what it sees as abuses in this country. "If
our own house is not in order, [our] voice is diminished, less
effective, less powerful," Schulz said. (American Indians
have been trying to get their case heard by the United Nations,
but the U.S. Government blocked every attempt made by the native
Americans to get justice. WFI Editor)
Responding to the report, a State Department official said the
United States welcomed scrutiny by the group but believed that
its political and judicial systems were "the envy of the
world." (Of course, the guards at the California state prison
at Corcoran who were caught setting up difficult inmates to be
raped, would not be so welcoming of scrutiny. WFI Editor)
Christine DiBartolo, a Justice Department spokeswoman, noted
that "many of the issues [Amnesty International] raised have
been the focus of this [the Clinton] administration for the past
five years." She said the department has brought brutality
cases against more than 300 police officers in five years with
"a very high success rate." In addition, the department
has prosecuted about 200 correctional facilities for violating
the civil rights of prisoners. (The Justice Dept. wants us to
be impressed that they have prosecuted 300 police, and 200 prison/jail
facilities for human rights violations, but it is disconcerting
that abuse of human rights occurred in so many cases, regardless
if the Government prosecuted them. WFI Editor)
According to Amnesty International, the use of stun weapons too
often results in accidental deaths and the impact of their use
- particularly on people with heart conditions and asthma - is
not known. The group's report cited the Long Beach, California,
incident, in which a defendant, Ronnie Hawkins, 48, received a
50,000-volt current of electricity for eight seconds when Municipal
Judge Joan Comparet-Cassani ordered the courtroom's bailiff to
reprimand the man for continually speaking out of turn. It was
the first time a stun belt has been activated on a defendant in
Los Angeles County, although the devices have been worn in courtrooms
for over two years. The judge removed herself from the case after
the defendant filed a $50-million class-action lawsuit against
her that alleged violation of his constitutional and human rights
and sought a halt to the use of the tools. The battery operated
belts are worn beneath jail uniforms, and juries are not aware
of their presence. The electric shock can be delivered from as
far as 300 feet via remote control. Amnesty International officials
said stun belts are often activated accidentally and may not leave
noticeable marks on the skin, making overuse of the tools more
difficult to trace. SOURCE: Excerpted from the 7 October, 1998, issue of the Los Angeles Times, Orange County Edition, an article entitled, "Amnesty International Targets 'Repression' in U.S." Excerpted in the public service of the national interest of the American people. |
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