Prohibition on Hooding
Recommendation
The MoD should retain its current absolute prohibition on the use of hoods on Captured Personnel (CPErS).
Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and that the prohibition on hooding had been maintained and reinforced in all relevant doctrine and training (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- Joint Doctrine Publication 1-10 (Captured Persons) was first published on 1 October 2011, shortly after the Baha Mousa Inquiry report (8 September 2011), and has since been updated to a Fourth Edition published 28 September 2020, incorporating lessons from the Baha Mousa and Al-Sweady inquiries as well as Supreme Court judgments (JDP 1-10, Fourth Edition, Ministry of Defence, September 2020).
- The prohibition on the use of hoods on captured persons has been UK military policy since 1972 and was reaffirmed as an absolute prohibition in JDP 1-10 (JDP 1-10, Ministry of Defence).
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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Standard Orders Prohibiting Five Techniques
Recommendation
Joint Doctrine Publication (JDP) 1-10 should include the requirement for standard orders to be issued for each operation prohibiting the use of the five techniques.
Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and that JDP 1-10 had been updated to require standard orders prohibiting the five techniques for each operation (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- Joint Doctrine Publication 1-10 (Captured Persons) was first published on 1 October 2011, shortly after the Baha Mousa Inquiry report (8 September 2011), and has since been updated to a Fourth Edition published 28 September 2020, incorporating lessons from the Baha Mousa and Al-Sweady inquiries as well as Supreme Court judgments (JDP 1-10, Fourth Edition, Ministry of Defence, September 2020).
- The specific content of standard operational orders is contained within classified military documents not publicly available for independent verification.
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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Broaden Stress Position Definition
Recommendation
The definition of stress positions in JDP 1-10 and elsewhere should be broadened so that it is not dependent upon the intention of the person enforcing the position.
Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and stated that the definition had been broadened so that any physical posture which a captured person is deliberately required to maintain will be a stress position if it becomes painful, extremely uncomfortable or exhausting, regardless of the intention of the person enforcing the position (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- Joint Doctrine Publication 1-10 (Captured Persons) was first published on 1 October 2011, shortly after the Baha Mousa Inquiry report (8 September 2011), and has since been updated to a Fourth Edition published 28 September 2020, incorporating lessons from the Baha Mousa and Al-Sweady inquiries as well as Supreme Court judgments (JDP 1-10, Fourth Edition, Ministry of Defence, September 2020).
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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Hooding Guidance
Recommendation
The essence of guidance on hooding should be that it is prohibited at any time for whatever purpose to place a sandbag or other cover over a CPErS' head.
Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and that guidance had been updated to make clear that placing any cover over a captured person's head is prohibited at any time for whatever purpose (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- Joint Doctrine Publication 1-10 (Captured Persons) was first published on 1 October 2011, shortly after the Baha Mousa Inquiry report (8 September 2011), and has since been updated to a Fourth Edition published 28 September 2020, incorporating lessons from the Baha Mousa and Al-Sweady inquiries as well as Supreme Court judgments (JDP 1-10, Fourth Edition, Ministry of Defence, September 2020).
- The absolute prohibition on hooding has been UK military policy since 1972 and was reinforced by the European Court of Human Rights judgment in Ireland v United Kingdom (1978) and reaffirmed in JDP 1-10 (JDP 1-10, Ministry of Defence).
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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Noise Prohibition Definition
Recommendation
The definition of the prohibition on subjecting CPErS to noise should be broadened. It should prohibit subjecting CPErS to any unnecessary excessive noise.
Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and stated that the definition had been broadened to prohibit subjecting captured persons to any unnecessary excessive noise, with guidance on facility design and use of ear defenders (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- Joint Doctrine Publication 1-10 (Captured Persons) was first published on 1 October 2011, shortly after the Baha Mousa Inquiry report (8 September 2011), and has since been updated to a Fourth Edition published 28 September 2020, incorporating lessons from the Baha Mousa and Al-Sweady inquiries as well as Supreme Court judgments (JDP 1-10, Fourth Edition, Ministry of Defence, September 2020).
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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Redacted Recommendation
Recommendation
[REDACTED - This recommendation has been redacted from the public version of the report]
Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- This recommendation was redacted from the public version of the Baha Mousa Inquiry report. No public evidence of implementation is available for assessment.
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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Five Techniques Communication
Recommendation
The MoD should give careful consideration as to whether referring to the five techniques as being prohibited 'as an aid to interrogation' remains the most effective means of communicating the prohibited techniques. Hooding prisoners is prohibited in all circumstances. It …
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The MoD should give careful consideration as to whether referring to the five techniques as being prohibited 'as an aid to interrogation' remains the most effective means of communicating the prohibited techniques. Hooding prisoners is prohibited in all circumstances. It is not permissible to deprive prisoners of food and drink at all. Stress positions properly defined should never be used.
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Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and stated that language had been clarified to ensure the prohibition on the five techniques is understood to apply in all circumstances, not just as an aid to interrogation (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- Joint Doctrine Publication 1-10 (Captured Persons) was first published on 1 October 2011, shortly after the Baha Mousa Inquiry report (8 September 2011), and has since been updated to a Fourth Edition published 28 September 2020, incorporating lessons from the Baha Mousa and Al-Sweady inquiries as well as Supreme Court judgments (JDP 1-10, Fourth Edition, Ministry of Defence, September 2020).
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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Five Techniques Placement in Doctrine
Recommendation
The prohibition on the five techniques should not appear only within the Tactical Questioning and interrogation section of JDP 1-10 since it has a wider application and importance.
Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and stated that the prohibition now appears in multiple relevant sections of JDP 1-10, not only within the tactical questioning and interrogation section (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- Joint Doctrine Publication 1-10 (Captured Persons) was first published on 1 October 2011, shortly after the Baha Mousa Inquiry report (8 September 2011), and has since been updated to a Fourth Edition published 28 September 2020, incorporating lessons from the Baha Mousa and Al-Sweady inquiries as well as Supreme Court judgments (JDP 1-10, Fourth Edition, Ministry of Defence, September 2020).
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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Five Techniques in JTTP
Recommendation
The prohibition on the five techniques should appear in the Joint Tactics, Techniques and Procedures guidance as well as in the main body of JDP 1-10.
Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and stated that the prohibition on the five techniques had been included in Joint Tactics, Techniques and Procedures guidance as well as in the main body of JDP 1-10 (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- Joint Doctrine Publication 1-10 (Captured Persons) was first published on 1 October 2011, shortly after the Baha Mousa Inquiry report (8 September 2011), and has since been updated to a Fourth Edition published 28 September 2020, incorporating lessons from the Baha Mousa and Al-Sweady inquiries as well as Supreme Court judgments (JDP 1-10, Fourth Edition, Ministry of Defence, September 2020).
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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Sight Deprivation Principles
Recommendation
Five principles on permitted sight deprivation should be consistently emphasised in JDP 1-10 and subordinate doctrine and instructions: (1) where practicable the need to deprive CPErS of their sight should be avoided in the first place; (2) there must be …
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Five principles on permitted sight deprivation should be consistently emphasised in JDP 1-10 and subordinate doctrine and instructions: (1) where practicable the need to deprive CPErS of their sight should be avoided in the first place; (2) there must be a genuine sensitivity about the facilities or equipment before sight deprivation can be justified; (3) sight deprivation must only be for as long as is strictly necessary; (4) sight deprivation should not become routine; (5) when sight deprivation is used, it should be noted in a record.
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Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and stated that all five principles on permitted sight deprivation had been incorporated into JDP 1-10 and subordinate doctrine (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- Joint Doctrine Publication 1-10 (Captured Persons) was first published on 1 October 2011, shortly after the Baha Mousa Inquiry report (8 September 2011), and has since been updated to a Fourth Edition published 28 September 2020, incorporating lessons from the Baha Mousa and Al-Sweady inquiries as well as Supreme Court judgments (JDP 1-10, Fourth Edition, Ministry of Defence, September 2020).
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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Sleep Deprivation Prohibition
Recommendation
JDP 1-10 should make clear that it is prohibited deliberately to keep prisoners awake, even for short periods, merely because they may shortly face tactical questioning or interrogation. CPErS may nevertheless be woken up in order to be tactically questioned …
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JDP 1-10 should make clear that it is prohibited deliberately to keep prisoners awake, even for short periods, merely because they may shortly face tactical questioning or interrogation. CPErS may nevertheless be woken up in order to be tactically questioned or interrogated if the questioning is ready to take place, provided that the policy on minimum periods of rest is respected.
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Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and stated that JDP 1-10 had been updated to prohibit deliberate sleep deprivation while allowing necessary waking for questioning (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- Joint Doctrine Publication 1-10 (Captured Persons) was first published on 1 October 2011, shortly after the Baha Mousa Inquiry report (8 September 2011), and has since been updated to a Fourth Edition published 28 September 2020, incorporating lessons from the Baha Mousa and Al-Sweady inquiries as well as Supreme Court judgments (JDP 1-10, Fourth Edition, Ministry of Defence, September 2020).
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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CPErS Meals Guidance
Recommendation
JDP 1-10 should give some guidance in relation to the number of daily meals for CPErS and the timing of them. Such guidance will obviously need to take into account the operational realities, particularly close to the point of capture.
Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and stated that guidance on meal provision for captured persons had been included in doctrine (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- Joint Doctrine Publication 1-10 (Captured Persons) was first published on 1 October 2011, shortly after the Baha Mousa Inquiry report (8 September 2011), and has since been updated to a Fourth Edition published 28 September 2020, incorporating lessons from the Baha Mousa and Al-Sweady inquiries as well as Supreme Court judgments (JDP 1-10, Fourth Edition, Ministry of Defence, September 2020).
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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Redacted Recommendation
Recommendation
[REDACTED - This recommendation has been redacted from the public version of the report]
Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- This recommendation was redacted from the public version of the Baha Mousa Inquiry report. No public evidence of implementation is available for assessment.
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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Communicating Sight Deprivation Reasons
Recommendation
JDP 1-10 should include guidance that where practicable CPErS should be told the reason why sight deprivation is being applied. Suitable simple phrases in relation to sight deprivation should be included in mission specific language training.
Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and stated that guidance on communicating with captured persons about sight deprivation had been added, including language training requirements (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- Joint Doctrine Publication 1-10 (Captured Persons) was first published on 1 October 2011, shortly after the Baha Mousa Inquiry report (8 September 2011), and has since been updated to a Fourth Edition published 28 September 2020, incorporating lessons from the Baha Mousa and Al-Sweady inquiries as well as Supreme Court judgments (JDP 1-10, Fourth Edition, Ministry of Defence, September 2020).
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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Unit Holding Area Checklist
Recommendation
JDP 1-10 should include a simple checklist covering both the principles and practicalities of accommodation for unit holding areas.
Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and stated that a checklist for unit holding area accommodation had been developed and included in JDP 1-10 (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- Joint Doctrine Publication 1-10 (Captured Persons) was first published on 1 October 2011, shortly after the Baha Mousa Inquiry report (8 September 2011), and has since been updated to a Fourth Edition published 28 September 2020, incorporating lessons from the Baha Mousa and Al-Sweady inquiries as well as Supreme Court judgments (JDP 1-10, Fourth Edition, Ministry of Defence, September 2020).
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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Death in Custody Checklist
Recommendation
JDP 1-10 should include a simple checklist for actions on a death in custody. Where there is a death in custody, particularly one that is sudden or unexplained, prompt checks must be made on the welfare of other CPErS. The …
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JDP 1-10 should include a simple checklist for actions on a death in custody. Where there is a death in custody, particularly one that is sudden or unexplained, prompt checks must be made on the welfare of other CPErS. The MoD should consider including guidance that where practicable the scene of the death should be preserved pending the arrival of the Royal Military Police.
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Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and stated that a death in custody checklist had been developed, including scene preservation guidance (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- Joint Doctrine Publication 1-10 (Captured Persons) was first published on 1 October 2011, shortly after the Baha Mousa Inquiry report (8 September 2011), and has since been updated to a Fourth Edition published 28 September 2020, incorporating lessons from the Baha Mousa and Al-Sweady inquiries as well as Supreme Court judgments (JDP 1-10, Fourth Edition, Ministry of Defence, September 2020).
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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CPErS Complaints Procedure
Recommendation
JDP 1-10 should incorporate the requirement that on entry to and exit from a theatre level detention facility, CPErS are proactively asked whether or not they have any complaints concerning their treatment. This should not be done in the presence …
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JDP 1-10 should incorporate the requirement that on entry to and exit from a theatre level detention facility, CPErS are proactively asked whether or not they have any complaints concerning their treatment. This should not be done in the presence of the capturing soldiers/unit.
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Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and stated that procedures for proactively seeking captured persons' complaints on entry to and exit from theatre-level detention facilities had been incorporated into doctrine (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- Joint Doctrine Publication 1-10 (Captured Persons) was first published on 1 October 2011, shortly after the Baha Mousa Inquiry report (8 September 2011), and has since been updated to a Fourth Edition published 28 September 2020, incorporating lessons from the Baha Mousa and Al-Sweady inquiries as well as Supreme Court judgments (JDP 1-10, Fourth Edition, Ministry of Defence, September 2020).
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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Whistleblower Protection
Recommendation
JDP 1-10 should address the protection that will be afforded to service personnel who make complaints or allegations in good faith of the mistreatment of CPErS. It should give guidance as to those who can be approached when service personnel …
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JDP 1-10 should address the protection that will be afforded to service personnel who make complaints or allegations in good faith of the mistreatment of CPErS. It should give guidance as to those who can be approached when service personnel have concerns about the treatment of CPErS.
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Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and stated that guidance on protection for those reporting mistreatment and appropriate contacts had been included in JDP 1-10 (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- Joint Doctrine Publication 1-10 (Captured Persons) was first published on 1 October 2011, shortly after the Baha Mousa Inquiry report (8 September 2011), and has since been updated to a Fourth Edition published 28 September 2020, incorporating lessons from the Baha Mousa and Al-Sweady inquiries as well as Supreme Court judgments (JDP 1-10, Fourth Edition, Ministry of Defence, September 2020).
- The Armed Forces Act 2006 (as amended by the Armed Forces Act 2011 and subsequent Armed Forces Acts) provides a statutory framework for service complaints, including protections against victimisation for raising complaints (Armed Forces Act 2006, legislation.gov.uk).
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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Redacted Recommendation
Recommendation
[REDACTED - This recommendation has been redacted from the public version of the report]
Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- This recommendation was redacted from the public version of the Baha Mousa Inquiry report. No public evidence of implementation is available for assessment.
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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Doctrine Usability Review
Recommendation
The MoD should ensure that Development Concepts and Doctrine Centre (DCDC) reviews whether its protocols for layout and pagination of joint doctrine really serve the end user.
Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and stated that the Development Concepts and Doctrine Centre (DCDC) had reviewed and improved the layout and accessibility of joint doctrine publications (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- Joint Doctrine Publication 1-10 (Captured Persons) was first published on 1 October 2011, shortly after the Baha Mousa Inquiry report (8 September 2011), and has since been updated to a Fourth Edition published 28 September 2020, incorporating lessons from the Baha Mousa and Al-Sweady inquiries as well as Supreme Court judgments (JDP 1-10, Fourth Edition, Ministry of Defence, September 2020).
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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Generic CPErS Handling SOI
Recommendation
Permanent Joint Headquarters (PJHQ) should complete work on a generic theatre-level Standard Operating Instruction (SOI) for CPErS handling. This should stand as the starting template for CPErS handling on future operations.
Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and stated that a generic theatre-level Standard Operating Instruction for captured persons handling had been developed (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- Theatre-level SOIs are operational military documents that are not publicly available for independent verification.
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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Tactical Questioning Policy Clarity
Recommendation
Urgent consideration must be given to amending the tactical questioning policy to make clear what approaches are and are not authorised for use in tactical questioning. In future all tactical questioning and interrogational policies should descend to greater detail on …
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Urgent consideration must be given to amending the tactical questioning policy to make clear what approaches are and are not authorised for use in tactical questioning. In future all tactical questioning and interrogational policies should descend to greater detail on approaches, as a minimum making clear which approaches are authorised for use in which discipline.
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Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and stated that the tactical questioning policy had been amended to provide detailed guidance on authorised approaches, descending to the level of detail needed for those directly involved (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- Joint Doctrine Publication 1-10 (Captured Persons) was first published on 1 October 2011, shortly after the Baha Mousa Inquiry report (8 September 2011), and has since been updated to a Fourth Edition published 28 September 2020, incorporating lessons from the Baha Mousa and Al-Sweady inquiries as well as Supreme Court judgments (JDP 1-10, Fourth Edition, Ministry of Defence, September 2020).
- Tactical questioning policies are classified military documents not publicly available for independent verification.
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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Ban Harsh Approach in Tactical Questioning
Recommendation
The harsh approach should no longer have a place in tactical questioning. The MoD should forbid tactical questioners from using what is currently known as the harsh approach and this should be made clear in the tactical questioning policy and …
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The harsh approach should no longer have a place in tactical questioning. The MoD should forbid tactical questioners from using what is currently known as the harsh approach and this should be made clear in the tactical questioning policy and in all relevant training materials.
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Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government did not accept this recommendation. The Defence Secretary decided to retain the ability to use the harsh approach in tactical questioning, subject to strict parameters and safeguards including Ministerial approval (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- No published evidence that this position has been subsequently reversed has been identified to March 2026.
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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Harsh Approach Parameters
Recommendation
To the extent that the MoD considers that the harsh approach can still lawfully be used in interrogation: (1) there is a need for very clear guidance to be given within the interrogation policy; (2) the approach should be given …
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To the extent that the MoD considers that the harsh approach can still lawfully be used in interrogation: (1) there is a need for very clear guidance to be given within the interrogation policy; (2) the approach should be given a label which is less apt to be misinterpreted; (3) the approach should not include an analogy with a military drill sergeant; (4) specific Ministerial approval should be sought before the harsh approach is approved for use in any operational theatre.
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Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and stated that guidance on the harsh approach had been clarified, the approach renamed, and that Ministerial approval was required for operational use (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- The specific content of interrogation policy is contained within classified military documents not publicly available for independent verification.
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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Redacted Recommendation
Recommendation
[REDACTED - This recommendation has been redacted from the public version of the report]
Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- This recommendation was redacted from the public version of the Baha Mousa Inquiry report. No public evidence of implementation is available for assessment.
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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Guidance on Exploiting Pressures
Recommendation
The tactical questioning and interrogation policies should give more detailed guidance on the extent to which tactical questioners and interrogators may seek to exploit self and system induced pressures.
Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and stated that more detailed guidance on self and system induced pressures had been provided in tactical questioning and interrogation policies (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- Tactical questioning and interrogation policies are classified military documents not publicly available for independent verification.
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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Interrogation Video Audit
Recommendation
The interrogation policy should require, as part of the auditing process, a review of a selection of video recordings of interrogations of the inspector's choosing. Interrogators should know that the recordings of their interrogations may be inspected in this way.
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The interrogation policy should require, as part of the auditing process, a review of a selection of video recordings of interrogations of the inspector's choosing. Interrogators should know that the recordings of their interrogations may be inspected in this way.
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Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and stated that video recording review had been incorporated into the interrogation auditing process (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- Interrogation auditing procedures are internal military documents not publicly available for independent verification.
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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Tactical Questioning Audit Procedure
Recommendation
The tactical questioning policy should be amended to include a clear and simple auditing procedure.
Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and stated that a clear auditing procedure for tactical questioning had been implemented (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- Tactical questioning auditing procedures are internal military documents not publicly available for independent verification.
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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Medical Personnel Role
Recommendation
Armed Forces medical personnel can and should be involved in providing advice that a CPErS is not fit for detention or questioning. Alternatively, the medic may validly advise that no specific intervention different from the normal process is required. Medics …
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Armed Forces medical personnel can and should be involved in providing advice that a CPErS is not fit for detention or questioning. Alternatively, the medic may validly advise that no specific intervention different from the normal process is required. Medics should not advise that a CPErS is fit for detention or fit for questioning.
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Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and stated that the role of medical personnel had been clarified to focus on identifying unfitness for detention or questioning rather than certifying fitness (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- Joint Doctrine Publication 1-10 (Captured Persons) was first published on 1 October 2011, shortly after the Baha Mousa Inquiry report (8 September 2011), and has since been updated to a Fourth Edition published 28 September 2020, incorporating lessons from the Baha Mousa and Al-Sweady inquiries as well as Supreme Court judgments (JDP 1-10, Fourth Edition, Ministry of Defence, September 2020).
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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CPErS Medical Examination Policy
Recommendation
The medical policy for CPErS should include: (1) CPErS must undergo a medical examination within four hours of capture, unless there are compelling circumstances; (2) CPErS should be examined by a qualified doctor as soon as reasonably practicable; (3) the …
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The medical policy for CPErS should include: (1) CPErS must undergo a medical examination within four hours of capture, unless there are compelling circumstances; (2) CPErS should be examined by a qualified doctor as soon as reasonably practicable; (3) the non-medical chain of command should be prohibited from allowing interrogation until the CPErS has been medically examined; (4) an electronic or written record of the examination should be made and preserved.
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Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and stated that medical examination requirements had been updated in line with the recommendation, including the four-hour examination requirement and the requirement for examination by a qualified doctor as soon as reasonably practicable (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- Joint Doctrine Publication 1-10 (Captured Persons) was first published on 1 October 2011, shortly after the Baha Mousa Inquiry report (8 September 2011), and has since been updated to a Fourth Edition published 28 September 2020, incorporating lessons from the Baha Mousa and Al-Sweady inquiries as well as Supreme Court judgments (JDP 1-10, Fourth Edition, Ministry of Defence, September 2020).
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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Update SOI J3-9 Definitions
Recommendation
The definitions of the prohibited techniques contained in SOI J3-9 should be updated to reflect the recommendations made in respect of JDP 1-10.
Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and stated that SOI J3-9 had been updated to reflect the revised definitions from JDP 1-10 (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- SOI J3-9 is an operational military document not publicly available for independent verification.
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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SOI J3-9 Sight Deprivation
Recommendation
SOI J3-9 should reflect the greater emphasis that is given in the latest draft of JDP 1-10 to avoiding in the first place, where practicable, circumstances in which sight deprivation may be necessary. More generally, it should reflect the five …
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SOI J3-9 should reflect the greater emphasis that is given in the latest draft of JDP 1-10 to avoiding in the first place, where practicable, circumstances in which sight deprivation may be necessary. More generally, it should reflect the five principles in recommendation 10.
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Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and stated that SOI J3-9 had been updated to emphasise avoiding sight deprivation where practicable and to reflect the five principles on permitted sight deprivation (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- SOI J3-9 is an operational military document not publicly available for independent verification.
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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Communicating Deprivation Reasons
Recommendation
Where practicable CPErS who are subjected to sight deprivation or hearing deprivation should be told the reason for it. If being deprived of their sight for some or part of a journey by road or air, CPErS should be told …
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Where practicable CPErS who are subjected to sight deprivation or hearing deprivation should be told the reason for it. If being deprived of their sight for some or part of a journey by road or air, CPErS should be told in general terms where they are being taken.
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Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and stated that requirements to communicate with captured persons about sensory deprivation had been implemented in doctrine (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- Joint Doctrine Publication 1-10 (Captured Persons) was first published on 1 October 2011, shortly after the Baha Mousa Inquiry report (8 September 2011), and has since been updated to a Fourth Edition published 28 September 2020, incorporating lessons from the Baha Mousa and Al-Sweady inquiries as well as Supreme Court judgments (JDP 1-10, Fourth Edition, Ministry of Defence, September 2020).
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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Consistent Sight Deprivation Terminology
Recommendation
Theatre level detention instructions and guidance should be reviewed to ensure that references to the means of permissible sight deprivation are consistent. The clearest wording is likely to be 'sight deprivation by blacked-out goggles'.
Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and stated that terminology had been standardised to 'sight deprivation by blacked-out goggles' across theatre-level detention instructions (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- Theatre-level detention instructions are operational military documents not publicly available for independent verification.
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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Detention Timescales Consistency
Recommendation
Theatre level detention instructions and guidance should be reviewed to ensure that references to timescales for detention are clear and consistent. Timescales for detention are an important aspect of managing the risk of abuse.
Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and stated that detention timescales had been reviewed and made consistent across instructions and guidance (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- Theatre-level detention instructions are operational military documents not publicly available for independent verification.
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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CPErS Documentation
Recommendation
CPErS documents should be as few in number as possible but they require amendment to ensure that those involved in detention are guided more accurately on what to record. Current CPERS documents have no obvious place for soldiers to record …
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CPErS documents should be as few in number as possible but they require amendment to ensure that those involved in detention are guided more accurately on what to record. Current CPERS documents have no obvious place for soldiers to record the use of sensory deprivation.
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Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and stated that captured persons documentation had been amended to include recording of sensory deprivation use (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- Captured persons documentation formats are internal military documents not publicly available for independent verification.
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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Occurrence Book Requirement
Recommendation
A suitable occurrence book must be maintained at all times whenever CPErS are being held at a unit or sub-unit holding facility.
Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and stated that occurrence book requirements had been mandated for all captured persons holding facilities (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- Joint Doctrine Publication 1-10 (Captured Persons) was first published on 1 October 2011, shortly after the Baha Mousa Inquiry report (8 September 2011), and has since been updated to a Fourth Edition published 28 September 2020, incorporating lessons from the Baha Mousa and Al-Sweady inquiries as well as Supreme Court judgments (JDP 1-10, Fourth Edition, Ministry of Defence, September 2020).
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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Single Comprehensive CPErS Order
Recommendation
The MoD should continue its recent practice of ensuring that theatre level instructions and procedures for CPErS are contained within a single comprehensive order that is kept up to date and which can be easily handed over to incoming formations …
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The MoD should continue its recent practice of ensuring that theatre level instructions and procedures for CPErS are contained within a single comprehensive order that is kept up to date and which can be easily handed over to incoming formations in enduring operations.
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Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and stated that the practice of maintaining a single comprehensive captured persons order had been continued and reinforced (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- Joint Doctrine Publication 1-10 (Captured Persons) was first published on 1 October 2011, shortly after the Baha Mousa Inquiry report (8 September 2011), and has since been updated to a Fourth Edition published 28 September 2020, incorporating lessons from the Baha Mousa and Al-Sweady inquiries as well as Supreme Court judgments (JDP 1-10, Fourth Edition, Ministry of Defence, September 2020).
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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Review Goggles Use in THF
Recommendation
The Provost Marshal (Army) should formally review whether the current practice of using blacked out goggles for all movement of CPErS within Temporary Holding Facilities is strictly necessary and ensure that it is not being used in circumstances that are …
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The Provost Marshal (Army) should formally review whether the current practice of using blacked out goggles for all movement of CPErS within Temporary Holding Facilities is strictly necessary and ensure that it is not being used in circumstances that are not clearly justified.
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Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and stated that the Provost Marshal (Army) had reviewed the use of blacked-out goggles in Temporary Holding Facilities and updated guidance accordingly (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- Provost Marshal guidance is an internal military document not publicly available for independent verification.
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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Battlegroup Detention Officer
Recommendation
Each Battlegroup should have a 'Detention Officer' being a commissioned officer within Battlegroup Headquarters. The role should encompass coordination and management of CPErS; acting as a focus on CPErS matters during mission specific training; ensuring correct handling of CPErS; assisting …
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Each Battlegroup should have a 'Detention Officer' being a commissioned officer within Battlegroup Headquarters. The role should encompass coordination and management of CPErS; acting as a focus on CPErS matters during mission specific training; ensuring correct handling of CPErS; assisting the Commanding Officer during operations.
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Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and stated that the role of Battlegroup Detention Officer had been established as a commissioned officer within Battlegroup Headquarters responsible for coordination of captured persons matters (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- Joint Doctrine Publication 1-10 (Captured Persons) was first published on 1 October 2011, shortly after the Baha Mousa Inquiry report (8 September 2011), and has since been updated to a Fourth Edition published 28 September 2020, incorporating lessons from the Baha Mousa and Al-Sweady inquiries as well as Supreme Court judgments (JDP 1-10, Fourth Edition, Ministry of Defence, September 2020).
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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Detention Sergeant Role
Recommendation
On operations where CPErS may be taken there should be a Senior Non-Commissioned Officer (NCO) who acts as the 'Detention Sergeant' who has responsibility for the administrative aspects of CPErS handling. In most cases, it would be appropriate for the …
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On operations where CPErS may be taken there should be a Senior Non-Commissioned Officer (NCO) who acts as the 'Detention Sergeant' who has responsibility for the administrative aspects of CPErS handling. In most cases, it would be appropriate for the regimental Provost Sergeant to fulfil this role.
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Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and stated that the Detention Sergeant role had been established for operations involving captured persons, with responsibility for administrative aspects of handling (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- Joint Doctrine Publication 1-10 (Captured Persons) was first published on 1 October 2011, shortly after the Baha Mousa Inquiry report (8 September 2011), and has since been updated to a Fourth Edition published 28 September 2020, incorporating lessons from the Baha Mousa and Al-Sweady inquiries as well as Supreme Court judgments (JDP 1-10, Fourth Edition, Ministry of Defence, September 2020).
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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Written CPErS Responsibilities
Recommendation
Before any deployed operation, the Commanding Officer must ensure that there is a clear written explanation of unit level responsibilities for CPErS. If responsibilities are changed during an enduring operation this should be recorded.
Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and stated that requirements for written captured persons responsibilities and recording of any changes during operations had been implemented (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- Joint Doctrine Publication 1-10 (Captured Persons) was first published on 1 October 2011, shortly after the Baha Mousa Inquiry report (8 September 2011), and has since been updated to a Fourth Edition published 28 September 2020, incorporating lessons from the Baha Mousa and Al-Sweady inquiries as well as Supreme Court judgments (JDP 1-10, Fourth Edition, Ministry of Defence, September 2020).
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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PM(A) Inspection Authority
Recommendation
The PM(A) and those who in his name carry out inspections of the main operational detention facilities should be expressly recognised as having the right and duty to inspect CPErS handling throughout the detention process including during interrogation.
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The PM(A) and those who in his name carry out inspections of the main operational detention facilities should be expressly recognised as having the right and duty to inspect CPErS handling throughout the detention process including during interrogation.
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Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and stated that the Provost Marshal (Army) inspection authority had been formally recognised and extended to cover captured persons handling throughout the detention process including during interrogation (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- Joint Doctrine Publication 1-10 (Captured Persons) was first published on 1 October 2011, shortly after the Baha Mousa Inquiry report (8 September 2011), and has since been updated to a Fourth Edition published 28 September 2020, incorporating lessons from the Baha Mousa and Al-Sweady inquiries as well as Supreme Court judgments (JDP 1-10, Fourth Edition, Ministry of Defence, September 2020).
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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Redacted Recommendation
Recommendation
[REDACTED - This recommendation has been redacted from the public version of the report]
Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- This recommendation was redacted from the public version of the Baha Mousa Inquiry report. No public evidence of implementation is available for assessment.
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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Unannounced Inspections
Recommendation
The PM(A) and the in theatre Force Provost Marshal should take account of the in theatre situation in assessing whether any unannounced MPS inspections of forward detention facilities would be feasible and beneficial. The unit detention officer should be able …
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The PM(A) and the in theatre Force Provost Marshal should take account of the in theatre situation in assessing whether any unannounced MPS inspections of forward detention facilities would be feasible and beneficial. The unit detention officer should be able to carry out less formal checks at unit and sub-unit level.
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Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and stated that procedures for unannounced inspections of forward detention facilities by the Provost Marshal (Army) and in-theatre Force Provost Marshal had been developed (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- Inspection procedures and records are internal military documents not publicly available for independent verification.
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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Lessons Learned Process
Recommendation
The MoD should consider whether the lessons learned procedures need to be adjusted or supplemented so that the clearer and more urgent lessons and changes to previous practice are fed back far more quickly both to the operational theatre and …
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The MoD should consider whether the lessons learned procedures need to be adjusted or supplemented so that the clearer and more urgent lessons and changes to previous practice are fed back far more quickly both to the operational theatre and into the pre-deployment training cycle.
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Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and stated that lessons learned processes had been improved for faster dissemination both to the operational theatre and into the training cycle (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- Joint Doctrine Publication 1-10 (Captured Persons) was first published on 1 October 2011, shortly after the Baha Mousa Inquiry report (8 September 2011), and has since been updated to a Fourth Edition published 28 September 2020, incorporating lessons from the Baha Mousa and Al-Sweady inquiries as well as Supreme Court judgments (JDP 1-10, Fourth Edition, Ministry of Defence, September 2020).
- The Al-Sweady Inquiry report (December 2014) noted that improvements had been made to detention practices since the Baha Mousa case, though it identified further areas for improvement (Al-Sweady Inquiry Report, December 2014).
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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CPErS Training Content
Recommendation
CPErS training should include both theoretical and practical training in what Forces personnel can and should do when handling CPErS. It is important that training is not limited to prohibitions but conveys good practice.
Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and stated that captured persons training had been expanded to include positive guidance on good practice, not limited to prohibitions (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- Joint Doctrine Publication 1-10 (Captured Persons) was first published on 1 October 2011, shortly after the Baha Mousa Inquiry report (8 September 2011), and has since been updated to a Fourth Edition published 28 September 2020, incorporating lessons from the Baha Mousa and Al-Sweady inquiries as well as Supreme Court judgments (JDP 1-10, Fourth Edition, Ministry of Defence, September 2020).
- Military training curricula and materials are internal documents not publicly available for independent verification.
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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End-to-End CPErS Training
Recommendation
CPErS training should be woven into the full range of military exercises and training. Such training should be 'end to end', not just focused on planning and the actual combat side of the operation, but including what happens after a …
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CPErS training should be woven into the full range of military exercises and training. Such training should be 'end to end', not just focused on planning and the actual combat side of the operation, but including what happens after a CPErS is captured. Exercises for commanders need to test and train them in CPErS handling issues.
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Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and stated that captured persons handling had been incorporated throughout the exercise and training cycle as end-to-end training (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- Military exercise and training programmes are internal documents not publicly available for independent verification.
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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Consistent Training Materials
Recommendation
Training materials across the Services need to be reviewed to ensure that the messages about all aspects of CPErS handling are clear and consistent. The arrangement whereby the PM(A) will act as a coordinator and validator of prisoner handling training …
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Training materials across the Services need to be reviewed to ensure that the messages about all aspects of CPErS handling are clear and consistent. The arrangement whereby the PM(A) will act as a coordinator and validator of prisoner handling training should assist in bringing greater consistency.
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Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and stated that training materials had been reviewed and made consistent across the Services, with the Provost Marshal (Army) acting as coordinator and validator of prisoner handling training (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- Military training materials are internal documents not publicly available for independent verification.
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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MATT 7 Presentation Update
Recommendation
The MATT 7 PowerPoint presentation on the five techniques should be amended to ensure that the definitions of the techniques are consistent with amendments to JDP 1-10; that it is clear that the techniques are not only prohibited as aids …
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The MATT 7 PowerPoint presentation on the five techniques should be amended to ensure that the definitions of the techniques are consistent with amendments to JDP 1-10; that it is clear that the techniques are not only prohibited as aids to interrogation; and so that the background information section is fully accurate.
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Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and stated that the MATT 7 PowerPoint presentation on the five techniques had been updated to reflect current definitions and prohibitions (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- MATT 7 training materials are internal military documents not publicly available for independent verification.
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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Prisoner Handling DVD Update
Recommendation
The 2005 prisoner handling DVD should be amended to avoid misleading messages about sight deprivation in the context of interrogation, and the inappropriate presentation of the interrogation facility. 'Bagged and tagged' is an ambiguous phrase which should not be used.
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The 2005 prisoner handling DVD should be amended to avoid misleading messages about sight deprivation in the context of interrogation, and the inappropriate presentation of the interrogation facility. 'Bagged and tagged' is an ambiguous phrase which should not be used.
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Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and stated that the prisoner handling DVD had been reviewed and updated to avoid misleading messages about sight deprivation and interrogation (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- Military training DVDs and materials are internal documents not publicly available for independent verification.
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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Restraint Positions Guidance
Recommendation
Greater clarity and guidance should be given in training in relation to the concept of 'restraint positions'. More must be done to give practical guidance to help service personnel distinguish between unlawful stress positions and the legitimate use of force.
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Greater clarity and guidance should be given in training in relation to the concept of 'restraint positions'. More must be done to give practical guidance to help service personnel distinguish between unlawful stress positions and the legitimate use of force.
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Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and stated that clearer guidance on distinguishing unlawful stress positions from the legitimate use of restraint had been developed (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- Joint Doctrine Publication 1-10 (Captured Persons) was first published on 1 October 2011, shortly after the Baha Mousa Inquiry report (8 September 2011), and has since been updated to a Fourth Edition published 28 September 2020, incorporating lessons from the Baha Mousa and Al-Sweady inquiries as well as Supreme Court judgments (JDP 1-10, Fourth Edition, Ministry of Defence, September 2020).
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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Positional Asphyxia Training
Recommendation
MATT 7 and mission specific training for CPErS handling should incorporate suitably pitched training on the risks of positional asphyxia/death by struggle against restraint.
Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and stated that training on positional asphyxia risks had been incorporated into MATT 7 and mission-specific training (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- MATT 7 and mission-specific training materials are internal military documents not publicly available for independent verification.
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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MATT 7 Take-up Recording
Recommendation
There needs to be better recording of the take-up of MATT 7 (and equivalent training) to avoid the need to rely upon Reception Staging and Onward Integration (RSOI) training in CPErS handling.
Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and stated that better systems for recording MATT 7 completion had been implemented to avoid reliance on Reception Staging and Onward Integration training (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- Training record systems are internal military documents not publicly available for independent verification.
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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Operational Law Training Currency
Recommendation
Those responsible for designing the mandatory operational law and values and standards training must keep the training relevant and up-to-date both in its content and in the style and means of delivery.
Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and stated that processes for keeping operational law training current in content and delivery style had been strengthened (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- Operational law training materials are internal military documents not publicly available for independent verification.
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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Operational Law Training Quality
Recommendation
Unit commanders should ensure that the annual operational law training is delivered to the highest standards, so as to avoid it becoming stale or routine. Different media should be used to keep the materials fresh and up-to-date.
Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and stated that guidance on maintaining high standards in operational law training, including use of different media to keep materials fresh, had been provided to unit commanders (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- Unit-level training delivery standards are internal military matters not publicly available for independent verification.
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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Remove Shock of Capture Language
Recommendation
Training soldiers to maintain or prolong the shock of capture is apt to be misunderstood and should not feature in general training. Phrases such as 'calm, neutral and professional' and 'firm, fair and efficient' can properly be used as shorthand …
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Training soldiers to maintain or prolong the shock of capture is apt to be misunderstood and should not feature in general training. Phrases such as 'calm, neutral and professional' and 'firm, fair and efficient' can properly be used as shorthand for those involved in CPErS handling.
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Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and stated that references to training soldiers to maintain or prolong the shock of capture had been removed from general training materials, replaced by guidance to be 'calm, neutral and professional' and 'firm, fair and efficient' (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- Military training materials are internal documents not publicly available for independent verification.
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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Moral Courage Training
Recommendation
MATT 6 training should include discussion and role play scenarios relevant to moral courage. Training materials should include reference to occasions when UK troops have breached the Law of Armed Conflict to avoid any risk of complacency about the conduct …
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MATT 6 training should include discussion and role play scenarios relevant to moral courage. Training materials should include reference to occasions when UK troops have breached the Law of Armed Conflict to avoid any risk of complacency about the conduct of UK Forces.
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Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and stated that MATT 6 training had been enhanced to include moral courage scenarios and discussion of historical instances where UK troops breached the Law of Armed Conflict (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- MATT 6 training materials are internal military documents not publicly available for independent verification.
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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TQ Training Audit
Recommendation
Enhanced auditing of tactical questioning and interrogation training should be introduced to ensure that the interrogation branch at Chicksands adequately trains students including in the proper limits of approaches.
Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and stated that enhanced auditing of tactical questioning and interrogation training at Chicksands had been implemented to ensure students are properly trained in the limits of approaches (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- Training audit results are internal military documents not publicly available for independent verification.
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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Annual Legal Review of TQ Training
Recommendation
The annual legal review of training materials planned by Defence Intelligence and Security Centre (DISC) is a necessary step. It must include a rigorous scrutiny of the detail of the presentations and speaking notes used on the tactical questioning and …
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The annual legal review of training materials planned by Defence Intelligence and Security Centre (DISC) is a necessary step. It must include a rigorous scrutiny of the detail of the presentations and speaking notes used on the tactical questioning and interrogation courses.
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Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and stated that annual legal reviews of tactical questioning training materials at the Defence Intelligence and Security Centre had been implemented (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- Legal review outcomes are internal military documents not publicly available for independent verification.
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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Triennial Legal Review
Recommendation
A more senior and more independent legal review of the kind now being conducted as a one off ad hoc review is also required. Such a review should not be necessary on an annual basis but should provide a suitable …
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A more senior and more independent legal review of the kind now being conducted as a one off ad hoc review is also required. Such a review should not be necessary on an annual basis but should provide a suitable measure of further assurance if conducted every three years.
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Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and stated that a triennial independent legal review of tactical questioning and interrogation training had been established in addition to the annual review (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- Independent review reports are internal military documents not publicly available for independent verification.
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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DISC Materials Management
Recommendation
DISC should take immediate remedial action to ensure that: (1) old versions of interrogation branch teaching materials are retained but archived separately; (2) interrogation branch teaching materials are always dated; (3) when legal advice or policy changes require changes to …
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DISC should take immediate remedial action to ensure that: (1) old versions of interrogation branch teaching materials are retained but archived separately; (2) interrogation branch teaching materials are always dated; (3) when legal advice or policy changes require changes to materials, the changes are checked for accuracy and made consistently.
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Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and stated that DISC had implemented improved version control and archiving for teaching materials, including dating of materials and proper recording of legal advice and policy changes (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- DISC internal processes are not publicly available for independent verification.
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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Complete TQ Training in Approaches
Recommendation
The tactical questioning and interrogation courses must train students adequately in all approaches that they may be required to use operationally. The current compromise whereby tactical questioning students are given an idea of the harsh approach but not trained fully …
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The tactical questioning and interrogation courses must train students adequately in all approaches that they may be required to use operationally. The current compromise whereby tactical questioning students are given an idea of the harsh approach but not trained fully in it should cease.
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Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and stated that tactical questioning courses now provide complete training in all authorised approaches, addressing the previous compromise whereby students were given only an outline of the harsh approach (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- Tactical questioning course content is classified and not publicly available for independent verification.
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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Geneva Convention Compliance in Training
Recommendation
The MoD should give further careful consideration to the examples used in training for bridging between questioning sessions to ensure that they comply with the Geneva Conventions.
Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and stated that training examples for bridging between questioning sessions had been reviewed for Geneva Convention compliance (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- Training materials are internal military documents not publicly available for independent verification.
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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Remove Conditioning Terminology
Recommendation
'Conditioning' should cease to be used as an approved Chicksands or HUMINT term. The term is dangerously ambiguous since it can be used to refer to unlawful means of putting pressure on a prisoner as well the intended meaning of …
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'Conditioning' should cease to be used as an approved Chicksands or HUMINT term. The term is dangerously ambiguous since it can be used to refer to unlawful means of putting pressure on a prisoner as well the intended meaning of the legitimate use of existing pressures.
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Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and stated that the term 'conditioning' had been removed from approved Chicksands and HUMINT terminology due to its dangerous ambiguity (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- Military terminology standards are internal documents not publicly available for independent verification.
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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Remove Shock of Capture from DISC
Recommendation
DISC should give consideration to avoiding the terminology 'maintain the shock of capture' and 'prolong the shock of capture' even in their own courses. As a minimum, students on the TQ and interrogation courses should be expressly warned of the …
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DISC should give consideration to avoiding the terminology 'maintain the shock of capture' and 'prolong the shock of capture' even in their own courses. As a minimum, students on the TQ and interrogation courses should be expressly warned of the dangers of unqualified personnel misunderstanding these phrases.
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Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and stated that DISC courses now warn students against misuse of 'shock of capture' terminology and the risks of its misapplication (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- DISC course materials are internal military documents not publicly available for independent verification.
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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Resistance Training Warning
Recommendation
All theoretical and practical resistance training must include a warning which explains in terms that the training is to show conduct that can be expected of a non-Geneva Conventions compliant enemy and does not reflect the standards required of British …
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All theoretical and practical resistance training must include a warning which explains in terms that the training is to show conduct that can be expected of a non-Geneva Conventions compliant enemy and does not reflect the standards required of British and NATO forces.
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Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and stated that all resistance training now includes clear warnings that the training demonstrates conduct expected from non-Geneva Conventions compliant adversaries and does not reflect standards required of British forces (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- Resistance training materials are internal military documents not publicly available for independent verification.
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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SERE DVD Review
Recommendation
When reviewing the current Survive, Evade, Resist and Extract (SERE) DVD, Defence Survival Training Organisation (DSTO) should take into account the latest developments in tactical questioning and interrogation policy. DSTO should seek to ensure that ambiguity of terms is avoided …
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When reviewing the current Survive, Evade, Resist and Extract (SERE) DVD, Defence Survival Training Organisation (DSTO) should take into account the latest developments in tactical questioning and interrogation policy. DSTO should seek to ensure that ambiguity of terms is avoided as far as possible.
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Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and stated that the SERE DVD had been reviewed and updated to account for latest developments in tactical questioning and interrogation policy and to avoid terminology confusion (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- SERE training materials are internal military documents not publicly available for independent verification.
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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DSTO Sole Provider of Resistance Training
Recommendation
The MoD must make all units aware that, not only is DSTO the only body trained to provide resistance training, but that if any escape and evasion training is carried out it must under no circumstances involve the use of …
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The MoD must make all units aware that, not only is DSTO the only body trained to provide resistance training, but that if any escape and evasion training is carried out it must under no circumstances involve the use of any of the prohibited five techniques nor any element of conduct after capture or resistance to interrogation training.
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Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and stated that units had been informed that only the Defence Survival Training Organisation may provide resistance training and that escape and evasion training must not involve the five prohibited techniques (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- Unit-level training directives are internal military documents not publicly available for independent verification.
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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MCTC Control and Restraint Monitoring
Recommendation
The Military Correction Training Centre (MCTC) should continue to monitor that breakaway, personal protection and control and restraint techniques taught on the All Arms Unit Custody Staff Course (AAUCSC) are appropriate having regard to a realistic assessment of the number …
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The Military Correction Training Centre (MCTC) should continue to monitor that breakaway, personal protection and control and restraint techniques taught on the All Arms Unit Custody Staff Course (AAUCSC) are appropriate having regard to a realistic assessment of the number of unit custody staff likely to be on duty.
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Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and stated that the Military Correction Training Centre continues to monitor that breakaway, personal protection and control and restraint techniques taught on the All Arms Unit Custody Staff Course are appropriate (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- MCTC monitoring reports are internal military documents not publicly available for independent verification.
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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Redacted Recommendation
Recommendation
[REDACTED - This recommendation has been redacted from the public version of the report]
Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- This recommendation was redacted from the public version of the Baha Mousa Inquiry report. No public evidence of implementation is available for assessment.
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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Detention Sergeant Training
Recommendation
Unit Detention Sergeants (see recommendation 41) should be properly trained in CPErS handling practices.
Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation and stated that training requirements for Detention Sergeants (as established under recommendation 41) in captured persons handling practices had been established (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- Training requirements and course content are internal military documents not publicly available for independent verification.
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
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Redacted Recommendation
Recommendation
[REDACTED - This recommendation has been redacted from the public version of the report]
Published evidence summary
- The Defence Secretary stated on 8 September 2011 that the government accepted this recommendation (Government Response to the Baha Mousa Inquiry, Ministry of Defence, September 2011).
- This recommendation was redacted from the public version of the Baha Mousa Inquiry report. No public evidence of implementation is available for assessment.
Ministry of Defence
(Primary)
View Details