Amnesty bashes Cameroon for war crimes,
horrific torture
-Says suspected supporters of Boko Haram
are subjected to severe beatings, agonising stress positions and
drownings, with some tortured to death
-Highlights widespread torture at 20 sites,
including four military bases, two intelligence services facilities, a private
residence and a school
-Calls for US and other international
partners to investigate their military personnel’s possible knowledge of
torture at one base
Hundreds of people in Cameroon accused of
supporting Boko Haram, often without evidence, are being brutally tortured by
security forces, Amnesty International has said in a new report published on 20
July 2017.
Using
dozens of testimonies, corroborated with satellite imagery, photographic and
video evidence, the report titled: ‘Cameroon’s secret torture chambers: human
rights violations and war crimes in the fight against Boko Haram,’ documents
101 cases of incommunicado detention and torture between 2013 and 2017, at over
20 different sites.
“We
have repeatedly and unequivocally condemned the atrocities and war crimes
committed by Boko Haram in Cameroon. But, nothing could justify the callous and
widespread practice of torture committed by the security forces against
ordinary Cameroonians, who are often arrested without any evidence and forced to endure unimaginable pain,” said
Alioune Tine, Amnesty International’s Regional Director for West and Central
Africa.
“These
horrific violations amount to war crimes. Given the weight of the evidence we
have uncovered, the authorities must initiate independent investigations into
these practices of incommunicado detention and torture, including potential
individual and command responsibility.”
Amnesty
International wrote to the Cameroonian authorities in April 2017 to share the
report’s findings, but no response was provided and all subsequent requests for
meetings were refused.
Amnesty
International estimates that Boko Haram has killed over 1,500 civilians in
Cameroon since 2014, and abducted many others.
“Deciding the life and death of each
detainee"
Victims
described at least 24 torture methods they were subjected to. In one common
stress position, described by detainees as ‘the goat’, their limbs were tied
together behind their back before they were beaten. In another technique,
described by detainees as ‘the swing’, victims were suspended in the air with
their limbs tied behind their back and beaten.
The
overwhelming majority of victims were tortured in two unofficial detention
sites; the headquarters of the Rapid Intervention Batallion (BIR) in Salak,
near the northern city of Maroua, and a facility in the capital, Yaoundé run by
the General Directorate of External Research (DGRE), Cameroon’s intelligence
services, situated close to the country’s Parliament.
Using
architectural modelling, descriptions from former detainees, videos, satellite
images and photos, a team of specialists at Forensic Architecture havecreated a
3D reconstruction of the site in Salak and a school in Fotokol converted into a
military base.
In
Salak, there are two main cells measuring approximately 9 by 5 metres, each
containing up to 70 people. Detainees were usually tortured in an interrogation
room they called “the DGRE Room”, which is located near the office of a senior
officer. The officer was described by victims as providing orders to
interrogators, and by one victim as being able to “decide the life and death of
each detainee".
Samou
(not his real name), who was arrested in March 2016, told Amnesty International
about his interrogation in Salak a few days after his arrest:
“They
asked me to tell them if I knew members of Boko Haram. That’s when the guard
tied my hands and feet behind my back and started to beat me with an electric
cable, while throwing water on me at the same time. They beat me half to
death.”
Mohamed
(not his real name) spent six months in incommunicado detention and was
interrogated and tortured several times in Salak. He told Amnesty
International:
"The
soldiers asked us to confess. They told us that if we did not confess, they
would bring us to Yaoundé to kill us. We replied that we preferred to be killed
rather than to confess something that we didn’t know about. They beat us like
this for four days."
Presence of French and US military
personnel at Salak
The
report also highlights the presence of US and French military personnel at the
BIR base in Salak, and calls for these governments to investigate the extent to
which their personnel stationed at Salak, or regularly visiting, may have been
aware that illegal detention and torture was taking place on site.
Amnesty
International delegates have directly observed French soldiers during one visit
there, while more than a dozen former detainees held there between 2015 and
2016 said they saw and heard white, English-speaking men at the base, including
some in military uniform. This has been confirmed by photographic and video
evidence showing uniformed US personnel, some of whom are stationed there.
“Given the frequent and possibly prolonged
presence of their military personnel, the US government and other international
partners should investigate the degree to which their personnel were aware of
illegal detention and torture at the Salak base, and whether they took any
measures to report it to their hierarchy and the Cameroonian authorities,” said
Alioune Tine.
Amnesty
International wrote to the US and French Embassies in Cameroon on 23 June 2017,
requesting further information about what their personnel knew and what was
reported. The US Embassy responded on 11 July and their letter can be found in
the report. No response was received from the French Embassy.
School used as torture base
Amnesty
International identified a school in the northern town of Fotokol used as a
military base by the BIR since May 2014. Researchers interviewed six men held
and tortured there between December 2015 and March 2016, and analysed a video
showing uniformed BIR soldiers torturing detainees. In one scene, several
soldiers are dragging a man for approximately 50 metres and beating other
blindfolded men with sharp wooden sticks.
The
school reopened for classes in late 2016, but as of June 2017 it was still
being partially used by the BIR, and at least nine detainees were still there.
Using the school as a military base while children are also using, violates
Cameroon’s obligations under international humanitarian law to protect
civilians in armed conflict by putting children at risk.
Mid and high ranking
officers identified
While
torture was usually carried out by low and mid-ranking BIR officers and DGRE
agents, higher-ranking DGRE officers were also identified by multiple victims
as being involved in interrogations. The scale and frequency of the violations,
as well as the locations of rooms used, makes it very likely that other senior
officers at sites like Salak would have known what was happening. They appear
to have taken no measures to prevent or punish these violations.
In
Salak, more than 50 victims identified the same room where they were most
commonly tortured. Satellite imagery shows this room is in the same building as
offices used by senior BIR officers. Cells, where up to 70 people were detained
at a time, and where torture took place, are also just 110 metres away from the
offices of senior BIR officers.
“The
senior officers who were in charge of these detention facilities, must be
investigated for their suspected command responsibility in allegations of
incommunicado detention, torture, death in custody and enforced
disappearances,” said Alioune Tine.
Amnesty
International’s evidence suggests that these military bases and other sites are
still holding dozens of detainees being subjected to horrific acts of torture.
For more information please call Amnesty
International's press office in Dakar, Senegal, +221 77 658 62 27 or +221 33
869 82 31; Email;press@amnesty.org; or sadibou.marong@amnesty.org
Twitter: @AmnestyWaro
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