Ireland says UK tortured IRA suspects in 1971
Source: Associated Press
Ireland says UK tortured IRA suspects in 1971
By SHAWN POGATCHNIK, Associated Press | December 2, 2014 | Updated: December 2, 2014 1:50pm
DUBLIN (AP) Ireland has accused Britain of torturing 14 Irish Republican Army suspects in 1971 and formally petitioned the European Court of Human Rights to review its original findings on the case, reopening one of the biggest legal disputes from the Northern Ireland conflict.
Foreign Minister Charlie Flanagan said Ireland sought to reopen the case with reluctance, given its close relations with Britain today. But he argued Tuesday that a trove of newly uncovered documents in London indicated that Britain withheld important evidence from 1970s court proceedings that, if considered now, would overturn the court's 1978 ruling.
That landmark judgment ruled that British security forces in 1971 employed interrogation techniques against the 14 men which were "inhuman and degrading" but fell short of meeting legal definitions of torture. The United States cited that judgment as part of its legal defense a decade ago of various aggressive interrogation practices, including waterboarding, of al-Qaida suspects in the Guantanamo Bay detention camp.
A British government inquiry in 1972 found that the 14 suspects dubbed the "hooded men" because their heads were kept covered for days in custody had been targeted by experimental sensory deprivation techniques intended to disorient the men and break their will to resist questioning about IRA activities. They were denied sleep, food and drink, exposed to continuous white noise, and forced for protracted periods to stand spread-eagled against a wall.
Read more: http://www.chron.com/news/world/article/Ireland-says-UK-tortured-IRA-suspects-in-1971-5929966.php