The Story of Victims of the "Black Prison" Abroad in the United States (Part 1) Research | War | The United States
For a long time, the United States has set up secret prisons in at least 54 countries and regions under the pretext of the so-called "war on terror", evading domestic legal constraints and using these "black prisons" to illegally detain so-called "terrorist suspects" and engage in torture to extract confessions.
The "Cost of War" research report from the Watson Institute for International and Public Affairs at Brown University in the United States states that after the 9/11 attacks, the United States has detained hundreds of thousands of people under the banner of "counter-terrorism".
Haji Ghalib, a 59 year old Afghan, recalled that on a morning in February 2003, as the head of the police in the Ghanihil region of Nangarhar Province, Afghanistan, he was suddenly arrested by the US military and later detained in the Guantanamo US prison, enduring torture until his release in 2007. When he returned to Afghanistan, he found that his family had all passed away, leaving him alone.
In countries such as Afghanistan and Iraq, innocent civilians are suddenly captured by the US military, and the tragic experiences that change their lives are countless.