Endia Vereen at 10:55 AM ET
Sunday, August 25, 2013
UN rights expert urges US to ban use of prolonged or indefinite solitary confinement
UN rights expert urges US to ban use of prolonged or indefinite solitary confinement
Endia Vereen at 10:55 AM ET
[JURIST] The United Nations Special Rapporteur on torture Juan Mendez [official profile] on Friday urged
[news release] the US government to ban the use of prolonged or
indefinite solitary confinement. In several California prisons, hunger
strikes began on July 8, with more than 30,000 inmates refusing food to
protest the allegedly cruel use of solitary confinement as punishment
within the state's system. Mendez asserted that prolonged solitary
confinement is a cruel, inhumane method of punishment stating, "[e]ven
if solitary confinement is applied for short periods of time, it often
causes mental and physical suffering or humiliation, amounting to cruel,
inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment, and if the resulting pain
or sufferings are severe, solitary confinement even amounts to
torture." Mendez also urged the US government to ban the use of solitary
confinement in other situations, including for juveniles, persons with
psychosocial disabilities, pregnant women, those serving a life sentence
and prisoners on death row. Additionally, Mendez stressed that it is
not acceptable to use threats of forced feeding against individuals
undergoing the hunger strike.
California's prison system has been under scrutiny since 2006, when the state's governor proclaimed a prison overcrowding state of emergency [text]. In August, the US Supreme Court [official website] refused to stay an injunction
[JURIST report] that would have allowed for the early release of nearly
10,000 California inmates by the end of the year. In July, Amnesty
International (AI) [advocacy website] called on
[JURIST report] California to end conditions for prisoners in solitary
confinement and order an impartial investigation into the recent death
of a prisoner who had been in solitary confinement for five years. In
May, Governor Jerry Brown [official website] and various state prison officials filed a notice of appeal [JURIST report] to the US Supreme Court [official website] after a panel of federal judges in April refused to vacate or modify their 2010 order [text, PDF] for reduction of the California inmate population. In January of this year, Brown issued a proclamation [text, PDF], in order to effectively terminate the 2006 state of emergency.
Endia Vereen at 10:55 AM ET
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