Water torture explained
Water torture encompasses a variety of techniques using water to inflict physical or psychological harm on a victim as a form of torture or execution.
Forced ingestion
See main article: Water cure (torture). In this form of water torture, water is forced down the throat and into the stomach. It was used as a legal torture and execution method by the courts in France in the 17th and 18th centuries. At the end of the 19th century and beginning of the 20th century it was used against Filipinos by American Forces during the Philippine–American War and was employed against British Commonwealth, American and Chinese prisoners of war during World War II by the Japanese.[1] The Human Rights Watch organization reports that in the 2000s, security forces in Uganda sometimes forced a detainee to lie face up under an open water spigot.[2]
Water intoxication can result from drinking too much water. This has caused some fatalities over the years in fraternities in North America during initiation week. For example, a person was hazed to death by Chi Tau (local) of Chico State (California) in 2005 via the forcing of pushups and the drinking of water from a bottle.[3]
Other forms
- Supposedly, the Rasphuis in Amsterdam, a 17th-century institution that attempted to rehabilitate young male criminals through labor, contained a "water dungeon", the so-called Waterhuis.[4] If prisoners refused to work, they were placed in a cellar that quickly filled with water after a sluice was opened and were handed a pump that enabled them to keep from drowning. Geert Mak and other authors, however, point out that there is no evidence for the existence of this room.[5]
- In the 1970s at Bautzen Prison in the German Democratic Republic there was a punishment cell that filled up with water up to a red light which a large prisoner described as at nose level if he is on tip toes. [6]
- In the 20th century, various U.S. newspapers published details of "water torture" (or the "torture of thirst") in Japan which involved subjecting the victim to a high salt diet for several days, without rice or water, and then offering them water in exchange for a confession: "it is difficult to imagine a more cruel device."[7]
Sources
- Cox . Rory . Historicizing waterboarding as a severe torture norm . International Relations . 2018 . 32 . 4 . 488–512 . 10.1177/0047117818774396. 10023/16068 . 150350366 . free .
Notes and References
- The Knights of Bushido: A Short History of Japanese War Crimes by Edward Frederick Langley Russell, Baron Russell of Liverpool (1958)
- [Human Rights Watch]
- Web site: A Fraternity Hazing Gone Wrong. Korry. Elaine. November 14, 2005. NPR. 2009-01-18.
- Book: Pol, Lotte van der. Het Amsterdams hoerdom: prostitutie in de zeventiende en achttiende eeuw. 1996. Wereldbibliotheek. 192. Het rasphuis had opvallend genoeg ook een hardnekkige mythe. In dit tuchthuis voor mannen zou een 'waterhuis' of verdrinkingscel zijn waarin gevangenen werden gezet die niet wilden werken..
- Book: Mak, Geert. Een kleine geschiedenis van Amsterdam. 1994. Atlas. 978-90-254-0416-1. 180. Jacob Bicker Raye en enkele anderen melden zelfs het - overigens onbevestigde - bestaan van een 'waterhuis'..
- Inside the World's Toughest Prisons "Germany: The Therapy Prison"
- News: 31 May 1879, Page 4 - The Newton Enterprise at Newspapers.com. Newspapers.com. 2018-05-10. en.