• Video
  • Radio
  • Mobile
  • U-Report
  • iMag
FOX News.com
            
  • What's Hot
  • Iceberg Spotted Off Australia
  • Girl Sneezes 12,000 Times a Day
  • H1N1 Vaccine Map

  • Watch Live
  • STRATEGY ROOM
  • Bloomberg Wash. Summit
  • State Department Briefing
Breaking News CDC: 22 Million H1N1 Cases in U.S. From April to October

U.S. & World

  • NEWS ARCHIVE
  • HOT TOPICS
    • H1N1
    • Small Business
    • Health Care
FOXNEWS.COM HOME > WORLD > NATIONAL

Red Cross Pressured to Release Abuse Report

Tuesday, May 11, 2004

  • E-Mail
  • Print
  • Share:
    • Digg
    • Facebook
    • StumbleUpon
    • MySpace

GENEVA  —  The international Red Cross has been buffeted by demands that it drop its policy of confidentiality in dealing with prisoners in Iraq, but says its quiet approach is the best protection for victims of war.

"We're getting private e-mails. We're getting comment from journalists. We're seeing reports in media around the world," Antonella Notari, chief spokeswoman of the International Committee of the Red Cross (search), said of the response to the publication of its confidential report on abuse at U.S.-run prisons in Iraq.

The report indicated the abuse went on for more than a year during which the Red Cross repeatedly complained in private, raising the question of whether the agency could have been more effective had it gone public with its findings.

Notari said making violations of international humanitarian law public doesn't necessarily change the situation on the ground. She noted public criticism failed to halt atrocities during the Balkan wars of the 1990s or to prevent the Rwandan genocide in 1994.

Related

  • Stories

    • Bush Views New Abuse Photos With 'Disgust'
    • Church Group Wants U.N. to Take Over Iraq
    • Senate Condemns Iraqi Prisoner Abuse
    • British Politicians Vow to Stay Course
    • Congress Braces for More Iraq Prison Photos
    • Raw Data: Bush Praises Rumsfeld
    • Lawyer: Soldier in Abuse Probe Is a Scapegoat
    • Timeline: Iraq Prison Abuse Scandal

    Video

    • Bush Speaks at Pentagon

    Photo Essays

    • Allegations of Prisoner Abuse at Abu Ghraib

    Links

    • Raw Data: Prison Abuse Report (pdf)

    Background

    Prison Abuse Scandal

    FOXNews.com does not endorse content on external sites

    Charges Against Soldiers

    • Raw Data: Charges Against Spc. Jeremy C. Sivits
    • Raw Data: Charges Against Cpl. Charles Graner
    • Raw Data: Charges Against Sgt. Javal S. Davis
    • Raw Data: Charges Against Staff Sgt. Ivan Frederick

    FOXNews.com does not endorse content on external sites

    Interactives

    • Iraq

    U.S. Military

    • Fast Facts: United States Army
    • Fast Facts: U.S. Navy and Marine Corps
    • Fast Facts: United States Air Force
    • Fast Facts: U.S. Coast Guard
    • U.S. Military Chain of Command

    Iraq

    • Raw Data: Iraqi Constitution
    • Fast Facts: Rights Guaranteed by Iraqi Constitution
    • Fast Facts: Iraq

    Office of Reconstruction and Humanitarian Assistance

    Maps

    Video: America's Armed Forces

    • U.S. Air Force pilot
    • U.S. Army Soldier
    • U.S. Marine
    • U.S. Pararescue

    Premium Content for FOX Fans:

    • Not a FOX Fan? Click here to register

    Fox Fast Links

    FOXNews.com does not endorse content on external sites

"One organization — and that is us — must be able to continue working to address the issues on the spot with the people who are directly affected and with the people who are in charge of their situation and try to work on it in a pragmatic way there and then," she said.

"Our way of working does have an effect, but it doesn't always immediately have an effect," Notari told The Associated Press.

The Red Cross report, published in the Wall Street Journal, was a summary of its various attempts in person and in writing from March to November 2003 to get U.S. officials to stop abuses.

Those earlier interventions by the Red Cross far preceded the Pentagon's decision to investigate after a low-ranking U.S. soldier stepped forward in January.

The Red Cross said it wanted to keep the report confidential because it saw U.S. officials making progress in responding to their complaints.

The Geneva-based organization gave its report to coalition forces in February. The prisoner abuse erupted into an international scandal in recent days after the publication of disturbing photographs from Iraq's Abu Ghraib prison (search).

The ICRC was founded in 1863 to help the wounded and other victims of war. It has been designated by the Geneva Conventions (search) as the world's agency to visit prisoners of war and other conflicts.

Pierre Kraehenbuehl, ICRC director of operations, said last Friday that the neutral agency almost always uses confidential discussions because they achieve results and allow the ICRC to maintain access where it feels most needed — to the prisoners in warfare.

"It is important that someone comes into these places of detention and tries to work concretely on improving their situation and not leaving them to face such a situation alone," he added.

Notari said that all the focus on Iraq has diverted attention from the ICRC's visits to 460,000 detainees in more than 70 countries last year, and they wouldn't be possible without confidentiality.

She said she was reminded of the importance of those visits last week by Souha Bechara, a Lebanese women who was imprisoned for 10 years in southern Lebanon and regarded Red Cross visits as a lifeline.

Bechara was detained starting in 1988 after attempting to kill Gen. Antoine Lahd, commander of Israeli-backed militia in southern Lebanon. She was freed under a deal in which France gave her residency.

Bechara, 37 and now living in Geneva, told the AP that she spent six years in solitary confinement before the Red Cross gained access to her camp.

"In our cells we didn't have water, we didn't have toilets, we just had buckets for our needs," she said. "There were no beds. There were mattresses on the floor, but they were always damp. There was no contact with your family. You were completely cut off from the outside."

That changed when the ICRC came in and financed improvements to the camp, Bechara said.

She and the other women used to joke that the agency's arrival turned the squalid prison "into a five-star hotel," and it was based on confidential talks with the Israelis, not public denunciations.

Most important, she said, was that the Red Cross reestablished contact between the women and their families after years.

"You can imagine what it's like after 10 or 15 years of detention to get a letter from your family," Bechara said.

  • See Next Story in U.S. & World
  • E-Mail
  • Print
  • Share:
    • Digg
    • Facebook
    • StumbleUpon
    • MySpace

FOX NEWS VIDEOS



TOP VIDEOS

Afghan ambassador pushing back on Obama

Mistakes in counting of stimulus jobs

Shortfalls leave states in fiscal crisis

Politics

  • Can Bill Clinton help health care push?
  • Obama makes remarks on economy
  • Tea Party Express finishes 20-day tour
  • Malkin: Numerous red flags overlooked
ADVERTISEMENT

most active

Articles

  • Most Read
  • Most Emailed
  • More News
  • 1

    Maclaren Recalls One Million Strollers After Kids Lose Fingertips in Hinges

    »

  • 2

    Framed for Child Porn by a PC Virus

    »

  • 3

    Cord Blood Reverses Cerebral Palsy in Colorado Girl

    »

  • 4

    Tequila: 5 Things You Didn't Know

    »

  • 5

    Legendary Lost Persian Army Found in Sahara

    »

  • 6

    Fort Hood Suspect Warned of Muslim Threat Within Military

    »

  • 7

    Massachusetts Man Says He Was Fired for Telling Colleague Her Gay Marriage Is Wrong

    »

  • 8

    Muggers Return Wallet After Seeing Army ID

    »

  • 9

    New York-Based Radical Muslim Hails Fort Hood Massacre

    »

  • 10

    Vatican Seeks Signs of Alien Life

    »

  • More News

ADVERTISEMENT

SOLDIER'S DIARY

  • Truth Is Perception

    Soldier's Diary: What you think of the war depends on where you are
    • Dear Captain Dan

VIDEO

  • Soft on Crime?

    Inmates in Oregon get to play video games in exchange for good behavior
  • Getting the Boot

    Why was a Junior ROTC class eliminated at a California school?
  • Human Smuggling

    Crashes involving illegal immigrants get Colorado lawmakers' attention
  • Cyberbullying

    Can schools punish students for off-campus bullying?
  • Warning Signs?

    Why are so many Somalis attending truck-driving school in Midwest?
  • Make Room for Baby

    Should pregnant women be able to park in spaces for the disabled?

Marketplace

  • Autos
  • Mortgages
Find a Car
Find a Mortgage
Get Voicemail
See Your Score $0
Fox News Shop
Celebrity News
Lifestyle Magazine
Nationwide Insurance Save up to $500
iPhone FOX Business Download the App

  • Home
  • U.S.
  • World
  • Politics
  • Health
  • Business
  • SciTech
  • Entertainment
  • Video
  • Opinion
  • Sports
  • Leisure
  • Careers
  • Internships - FNCU
  • Fox Around the World
  • RSS Feeds

  • Advertise With Us
  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact Us
  • Email FOXNews.com Newsroom

This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. © 2009 FOX News Network, LLC. All rights reserved. All market data delayed 20 minutes.