Let’s End Torture in U.S. Prisons
Survivors call solitary confinement
“living death.”
By John Kiriakou
February 03, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
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"OtherWords"
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Solitary confinement is exactly what it
sounds like.
A
prisoner is kept in a small cell —
usually 6 feet by 10 — alone, for 23
hours a day.
For one hour a day, he or she may be
taken into a small cage outside, with
the opportunity to walk in circles
before being taken back in. Even the
outdoor cage can usually be opened and
closed remotely.
The idea is to keep the prisoner from
having any human interaction. Those
who’ve been through it call it a “living
death.” The United Nations
calls it torture.
The practice is widespread in the United
States. And until recently, it was
applied even to juveniles in the federal
prison.
In
January, President Barack Obama
banned solitary confinement for
federal inmates under the age of 18. He
also ordered new limits on the amount of
time prisoners of any age can be caged
up alone.
These are great steps forward for human
rights in the federal prison system. But
they won’t help most of the prisoners
currently in solitary, who languish in
lower jurisdictions.
State prison systems across the country
use solitary confinement as a way to
destroy people. These prisoners
routinely experience “intense anxiety,
paranoia, depression, memory loss,
hallucinations, and other perceptual
distortions,” philosophy professor Lisa
Guenther
noted in The New York Times.
Many Americans think that solitary is
reserved for the worst and most
dangerous criminals. In most cases,
that’s simply not true. Solitary is used
not for the safety of inmates or prison
guards, but as a punishment and as an
expression of power by guards.
For example, a prisoner can be sent to
solitary for “insolence” or for
“investigation.” What does that mean?
Anything the guard wants it to.
Talk back to an officer? Solitary! Take
more than 15 minutes to eat your meal?
Solitary! An anonymous source accuses
you of gambling? Straight to solitary.
When an inmate is sent to solitary, the
prison’s internal investigators are
supposed to begin an inquiry into his or
her behavior. They’re given 90 days to
do it, after which the prisoner should
be released back to the prison’s general
population.
But in fact, the investigators can renew
the 90-day solitary period for a full
year. That’s an entire year living in a
small gray room the size of a walk-in
closet with no human contact. It would
make just about anybody crazy.
Even when prisoners are fortunate enough
to have an attorney or family members
who can press prison authorities on
their behalf, the prison can simply
transfer them to another facility —
where the whole solitary count starts
over again.
That really is torture.
Obama’s policy change is a great start.
But most prisoners will get no benefit
from it unless state prison systems
follow suit.
Ohio recently banned
solitary for juveniles.
That’s terrific. But until each and
every state addresses this human rights
issue, ours will be a nation that
officially practices torture.