European countries involved in business of torture
Despite laws prohibiting their trade, tools used for torture are being exported by some European countries to regimes around the world, with little regard for human rights, Amnesty International claims.
EU law expressly prohibits the export or import of goods that have no practical use other than for the purpose of capital punishment or torture, but the lack of enforcement means countries like Germany, the Czech Republic, Spain and Italy are still selling torture instruments abroad – to countries where there is documented proof of the use of such equipment for torture.
The organization is talking about devices like fixed wall restraints, metal thumb cuffs, spiked batons and sleeves and cuffs that can deliver electric shocks to about 50,000 volts.
Amnesty also says that in the last four years, the Czech Republic issued export permits for foot and hand shackles, electric shock tools and chemical sprays to countries where police and security forces are known to use them for torture. It named the counties such as Senegal, Cameroon, Pakistan, Moldova and Georgia.
Following Amnesty’s reports, the EU parliaments are looking into the allegations and MEPs have issued a strong public statement putting pressure on the EU Commission and member states to enforce the law properly.
“It needs to act on the laws that it already has,” Mike Lewis adds.
When the law against international trade in torture equipment was introduced in 2006, it was a progressive piece of legislation. It seems the time has come to turn words into deeds to ensure that deadly equipment manufactured inside the EU no longer falls into the wrong hands.
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