A United Nations investigator has accused the U.S. of blocking access to prisons—including state and federal facilities where an estimated
80,000 people are in solitary confinement
and the military prison at Guantánamo Bay in Cuba—leading civil liberties experts to wonder, “Is the United States hiding something?”
Juan Méndez, the UN Special Rapporteur on Torture, told reporters in Geneva on Wednesday that for two years he has asked to visit federal prisons in New York and Colorado and state prisons in New York, California, and Louisiana, among others.
“It’s simply outrageous that it’s taking such a long time to provide access to American detention facilities.”
—Jamil Dakwar, ACLU
Meanwhile,
UN human rights experts have asked to visit Guantanamo since 2004.
But responses from the U.S. have been unsatisfactory,
Méndez said Wednesday.
He rejected the terms offered by U.S. authorities to visit Guantánamo, which he described thusly: “The invitation is to get a briefing from the authorities and to visit some parts of the prison, but not all, and specifically I am not allowed to have unmonitored or even monitored conversations with any inmate in Guantanamo Bay.”