State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said nobody is being tortured at the U.S. detention center for terrorist suspects at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
He also criticized Amnesty International, accusing the human rights group of doing nothing to help Iraqis prosecute former dictator Saddam Hussein.
In its annual report released on May 23, Amnesty International accused the United States of disregarding basic human rights principles and international legal obligations. It cited reports that the United States continues to hold thousands of detainees without charge in Iraq, Afghanistan, Guantanamo Bay, and in secret detention centers believed to exist in Europe, North Africa, and elsewhere.
(compiled from agency reports)
U.S. Report On Global Human Rights
Police in Moscow arrest human rights demonstrators on February 1 (courtesy photo)
THE RECORD ON RIGHTS: On March 8, the U.S. State Department issued its global report on human rights. According to the report, 15 years after the breakup of the Soviet Union, human rights are improving in many post-communist countries. But problems persist in others, it says, despite the worldwide explosion of information and Western efforts to spread democracy. (more)
For more detailed information, see:
Azerbaijan Cited For Political Harassment, Police Brutality
Child Labor, Human Trafficking Cited In U.S. Report On Afghanistan
U.S. Says China, Iran 'Most Systematic' Rights Violators
Human Rights Not A Priority In Central Asia, U.S. Report Says
U.S. Report Points To Serious Abuses In Iraq
Abuses In Chechnya, Centralized Power Cited In U.S Report On Russia
U.S. Says Serious Human Rights Violations Occurring In Iran