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Saturday, 8 January 2011

UN probes Manning's jail treatment

Special rapporteur on torture looking into claims that US soldier suspected of feeding WikiLeaks is being mistreated.

US Army Private Bradley Manning is being held at Quantico Marine Corps Base in Quantico Town, Virginia [AFP]

The United Nations is looking into a complaint on behalf of a US soldier who is said to have been mistreated while held since May in US army custody pending trial.

Bradley Manning, an army private suspected of giving classified documents to WikiLeaks, the whistleblower website, is being held in solitary confinement at a Marine Corps base in Quantico, Virginia, and faces a court martial sometime in 2011.

The office of Manfred Nowak, the UN special rapporteur on torture in Geneva, received a complaint from one of Manning's supporters alleging conditions amount to torture. Visitors say he spends at least 23 hours a day alone in a cell.

The UN could ask the US to stop any violations it finds. However, the Pentagon has denied mistreating Manning.

A Marine Corps spokesman says the military is keeping Manning safe, secure and ready for trial.


Political prisoner?

Manning was charged in July with leaking classified material, including a video posted by WikiLeaks of a 2007 US Apache helicopter attack in Baghdad that killed a Reuters news photographer and his driver.

He is suspected of leaking troves of other material to the government secret-spilling site, which is in the process of posting more than 250,000 secret US State Department cables.

Manning has not commented publicly on whether he is the source of the leaks.

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange said the organisation's "technology is set up so we don't know" the sources of the material it gets.

Nowak is the special investigator on torture, working for the UN Human Rights Council. Rapporteurs regularly assess complaints from alleged victims of human rights violations.

If a complaint is verified as legitimate, the investigator sends an urgent letter or appeal to the government that it believes has committed the violation.

In an interview with MSNBC on Wednesday, Assange called Manning a political prisoner and said he believes the US is trying to get the soldier to testify against him. He called on human-rights organisations to investigate.

"If we are to believe the allegations, then this man acted for political reasons. He has been a political prisoner without trial in the United States for some six or seven months," Assange said.

"His conditions have been getting worse and worse and worse in his cell as they attempt to pressure him into testifying against me. That's a serious problem."


Assange's fate

Assange has not been charged in connection with leaked documents but was jailed in England this month after two women in Sweden accused him of sex crimes, including rape.

He was freed on bail last week and confined to a supporter's country estate while he fights extradition to Sweden, where authorities want to question him.

Assange said it would be "absolute nonsense" for the US to try to make Manning a witness in a conspiracy case against him.

"I never heard of the name Bradley Manning before it appeared in the media," he said.


Source: Agencies

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