时间:2019-02-07 作者:英语课 分类:2007年VOA标准英语(六月)


英语课
By David Gollust
Washington
07 June 2007

Leading human rights groups Thursday called on the U.S. government to account for terrorism suspects they believe were detained by U.S. authorities abroad but whose whereabouts are now unknown. The Bush administration has said it maintained secret overseas detention 1 sites but emptied them last year. VOA's David Gollust reports from the State Department.


In an unusual joint 2 action, six human rights groups including Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch have published a list of 39 terrorism suspects they believe were secretly detained by the United States at one time or another but cannot be accounted for now.


A 21-page report by the rights organizations says the so-called ghost detainees include nationals from several countries including Pakistan, Egypt, Libya and Kenya who were detained in anti-terrorism operations since 2001, and held at least for some time in secret U.S. detention sites.


President Bush acknowledged the existence of secret CIA detention sites abroad in an address last September, but said that the 14 prisoners in them at the time had been transferred to the Guantanamo Bay detention facility.


News reports last year quoted U.S. intelligence officials as saying the secret sites may have held nearly 100 prisoners in the months before the President's disclosure.


The six human rights groups called on the Bush administration to account for the other prisoners, whose cases they said they were able to document from government disclosures and interviews with released detainees, witnesses and relatives.


 


In a talk with VOA, Joanne Mariner 3, Terrorism and Counter-terrorism Coordinator 4 at Human Rights Watch, said the prisoners may have been sent back to their countries of origin or elsewhere for continued detention, and possible mistreatment: "It's possible they were transferred to their home countries, which in the case of several of them is of real concern because their home countries are places like Libya, Egypt and Morocco, places in which the torture of terrorism suspects is commonplace. And we're certainly afraid that they may continue to be held in secret detention in these countries and face abuse there," she said.


In connection with the report, three of the groups including Amnesty International filed a federal lawsuit 5 under the U.S. Freedom of Information Act seeking disclosure of documents and other information on the ghost detainees.


Amnesty Deputy Executive Director Kurt Goering said in a VOA interview the decision to take the issue to the courts came because the CIA, Justice Department and other agencies were unresponsive to information requests made through regular channels. "We've been essentially 6 stonewalled. None of the agencies, the five agencies, have delivered or provided any significant information in response to these requests. The CIA has stonewalled completely, there's been absolutely no response. And so in accordance with the Freedom of Information Act regulations, we are through this lawsuit charging that the U.S. government is violating its own laws," he said.


Both Goering of Amnesty and Mariner of Human Rights Watch said the President's September statement did not preclude 7 the future use of secret detention sites overseas, and that there are reports the practice continues.


At a news briefing however, State Department Deputy Spokesman Tom Casey said there was no reason to believe that the situation has changed since the September speech, suggesting that there were no new secret detainees.


Casey also insisted the detainee issue has not undermined the United States' moral authority to speak out on human rights issues in other countries.


"We recognize that the United States, in our own country, does not always have perfect record and historically has not always done so. That does not lessen 8 the fact that the United States has been and continues to be the world's leading advocate for human rights around the world, and it's a cause that we believe in, that is part of the values of our country and one that we are going to continue to speak about," he said.


In a speech in The Hague late Wednesday, State Department Legal Adviser 9 John Bellinger said the issue of terrorist detainees posed an unprecedented 10 legal challenge for the Bush administration, which he said has not ignored, changed or reinterpreted international law.




n.滞留,停留;拘留,扣留;(教育)留下
  • He was kept in detention by the police.他被警察扣留了。
  • He was in detention in connection with the bribery affair.他因与贿赂事件有牵连而被拘留了。
adj.联合的,共同的;n.关节,接合处;v.连接,贴合
  • I had a bad fall,which put my shoulder out of joint.我重重地摔了一跤,肩膀脫臼了。
  • We wrote a letter in joint names.我们联名写了封信。
n.水手号不载人航天探测器,海员,航海者
  • A smooth sea never made a skillful mariner.平静的大海决不能造就熟练的水手。
  • A mariner must have his eye upon rocks and sands as well as upon the North Star.海员不仅要盯着北极星,还要注意暗礁和险滩。
n.协调人
  • The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, headed by the Emergency Relief Coordinator, coordinates all UN emergency relief. 联合国人道主义事务协调厅在紧急救济协调员领导下,负责协调联合国的所有紧急救济工作。
  • How am I supposed to find the client-relations coordinator? 我怎么才能找到客户关系协调员的办公室?
n.诉讼,控诉
  • They threatened him with a lawsuit.他们以诉讼威逼他。
  • He was perpetually involving himself in this long lawsuit.他使自己无休止地卷入这场长时间的诉讼。
adv.本质上,实质上,基本上
  • Really great men are essentially modest.真正的伟人大都很谦虚。
  • She is an essentially selfish person.她本质上是个自私自利的人。
vt.阻止,排除,防止;妨碍
  • We try to preclude any possibility of misunderstanding.我们努力排除任何误解的可能性。
  • My present finances preclude the possibility of buying a car.按我目前的财务状况我是不可能买车的。
vt.减少,减轻;缩小
  • Regular exercise can help to lessen the pain.经常运动有助于减轻痛感。
  • They've made great effort to lessen the noise of planes.他们尽力减小飞机的噪音。
n.劝告者,顾问
  • They employed me as an adviser.他们聘请我当顾问。
  • Our department has engaged a foreign teacher as phonetic adviser.我们系已经聘请了一位外籍老师作为语音顾问。
adj.无前例的,新奇的
  • The air crash caused an unprecedented number of deaths.这次空难的死亡人数是空前的。
  • A flood of this sort is really unprecedented.这样大的洪水真是十年九不遇。
学英语单词
a reign of terror
adhorted
aloia
anacusia psychica
Ancylastrum
anterolateral central arteries
atytenoidectomy
bear test of time
beet pulp pellets
call word
camel-hairs
carbonium-ion rearrangement
Cathysia old land
charm school
chlorodiella cytherea
civilian clothes
clean up column
combined column
confidential inquiry
crassula arborescens (mill). willd
cultural experience
cutawi machine
decontamination drains tank
dialyzator
Distributed Communication Architecture
doubling and rolling machine
dry reed relay
dry-gulchings
Everbrite
family chlamydiaceaes
fire-woods
firm ground
forward roll
furikake
group demodulation
hair-ribbons
high speed adapter address
hypersynchronizing
in ... thoughts
in absence of
inspection of skin
inter vivos trust
ketocholestrol
keyseated
legal separation
less than carload freight
life insured
luxatio incompleta
mail-coach
maximum value of AC
meteorological reconnaissance flight
mid-engined
model testing
Moscow Mills
nepuite
Netzip
nitroferrocyanic acid
nonzero address
occupation medicine
OKN
ophalotoxin
otostapes (or hoffman)
periodicity of function
phone-numbers
Picinae
pierced earrings
pluvioses
precedence graph
private management domain
puddled iron
Pāliyād
radiolocational
resubmerge
rhopalosiphum rufiabdominalis
Sackville
semiaverage method
semiconductor controlled rectifirer
shuttle race back spring
sketchinesses
snobbiness
sphingidaes
steel trough
striated palmoplantar keratoderma
swelling of the tidal wave
tablet coating
tartine
teacher placement
technology for brightening polyester fibre
tension meter
tricolour with tender yellow
tynt
unified nuclear model
user context
vaizeys
vdamant
Vejstrup
Vena mesenterica inferior
village
Whitty
Wickliffite
wrapped surface
YMV15