PHILADELPHIA -- Haitian prisons may be dirty, rat infested and have so little space that prisoners have to sleep standing up, but the mere act of jailing someone in them does not amount to torture, a federal appeals court has ruled.
A three-judge panel of the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled Thursday that the federal government may legally deport a convicted drug dealer to Haiti, even though he is likely to be imprisoned there in jails "notorious for their brutal and deplorable conditions that have been compared to those existing on slave ships."
Napoleon Bonaparte Auguste, who is being thrown out of the United States for selling cocaine, had argued that returning him to Haiti would violate an anti-torture treaty.
By the court's own account, temperatures in the tiny, overcrowded cells can reach 105 degrees, and there are often no washbasins or toilets; prisoners must relieve themselves in buckets or plastic bags, which are often not collected for days.
Little food or water is provided. Tuberculosis, AIDS and malnutrition are rampant.
http://www.newsday.com/news/nationworld/wire/sns-ap-haitian-prisons,0,3054258.story?coll=sns-ap-nationworld-headlinesThere's some interesting precedent as the US debates its own use of torture.