2006年VOA标准英语-US Military Adding New Construction at Gua(在线收听) |
By Al Pessin -------------------------------------------------------- Most of Guantanamo's detainees are in open-air cells made of chain link fence with a metal roof, or simple barracks where up to 10 cooperative men are allowed to live together. But some are in a new, modern facility that cost more than $30 million to build, and looks like it is there for the long term. As in any maximum security facility, the outer steel door must be closed and locked before the inner steel door can be opened.
That is the U.S. Army sergeant who is the senior non-commissioned officer at the new prison building known as Camp Five. He declined to give his name. SERGEANT: "Please don't take any photographs of my control center. My control center is state of the art. My control clerks have a touch-screen computer monitor that controls all the doors and gates within the facility. They also monitor all the security cameras within the camp. This is a climate controlled environment. This facility also meets all U.S. standards and codes." Camp Five is a two-story building surrounded by high fences and barbed wire, with fenced exercise yards nearby. It can house up to 100 detainees. And perhaps more important, there is another similar building under construction right next to it that will be known as Camp Six. The large cranes, hard-hatted construction workers and piles of building material do not look like part of any facility that is going to be abandoned anytime soon. Secretary Rumsfeld hinted as much in an appearance Friday at the Council on Foreign Relations in New York. "Every once in a while someone pops up and gets some press for saying, 'Oh, let's close Guantanamo Bay.' Well, if someone has a better idea, I'd like to hear it," said Mr. Rumsfeld.
However, the military recently decided it can release or turn over to their home countries 127 of the 496 men held at Guantanamo, and the State Department is working on making arrangements for that. In addition, the military has started another round of reviews designed to determine whether any more detainees can be released. Lawyers for the detainees, and human rights activists, say the review process is inadequate and unfair because no lawyers are involved and military officers make the recommendations, rather than civilian judges. U.S. officials have also rejected the United Nations report because the authors never visited Guantanamo. The U.N. investigators decided to decline an invitation to visit the base because the military would not let them interview detainees. In a VOA interview, the commander of the Joint Task Force that holds the detainees, Major General Jay Hood, explained why. "I would have concerns about anybody visiting with the detainees who could then serve as a platform for them to espouse a vile jihadist rhetoric," said Mr. Hood. "In other words, I don't think it's appropriate that we would offer them a platform by which to communicate with other terrorists around the world, provide encouragement to this sort of activity, or for that matter encourage any sort of action against U.S. forces around the world. And there's no question in my mind that some of the men we're holding here would certainly do that if they could." The U.S. military allows representatives of the International Committee of the Red Cross to have private meetings with detainees, but that organization keeps its findings confidential. "The International Committee of the Red Cross has access to every detainee here. They have full access to every one of my camp facilities, all of them," he added. "They have an opportunity to communicate, in private, with the detainees. We have an excellent working relationship with the International Committee of the Red Cross, and I have found them very helpful in providing recommendations to us on how we can improve our operation here, how we can provide for safe, humane custody of the men we are holding." General Hood says the Red Cross has made many recommendations that he has accepted. He said one had to do with the specific location of something, but he stopped himself from providing details. "I'd love to discuss this with you. If I told you, you'd go, 'Of course, that makes perfectly good sense.' But I'm afraid I'm right on the edge of communicating something that is still considered privileged," he explained. "What I can tell you is any allegation of mistreatment or abuse are provided to us rapidly, are thoroughly investigated and if any action is required from those, it is taken." |
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2006/2/31015.html |