Stress position

Position that puts the human body in a great amount of pain From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A stress position, also known as a submission position, is a form of punishment that places the human body in such a way that a great amount of weight is placed on very few muscles. For example, a subject may be forced to stand on the balls of their feet, then squat so that their thighs are parallel to the ground. This creates an intense amount of pressure on the legs, leading first to pain and then rapid onset of muscle fatigue and tear.

Captured Viet Cong soldier, tied and blindfolded in a stress position at Thường Ðức Camp during the Vietnam War, 1967

Forcing prisoners to adopt such positions is a torture technique that proponents claim leads to extracting information from the person being tortured.[1]

Positions

Murga punishment

A boy undergoing standing murga punishment

Murga (also spelled murgha) is a stress position used as a corporal punishment mainly in parts of the Indian subcontinent (specifically Northern India, Pakistan and Bangladesh) where the punished person must squat, loop their arms behind their knees, and hold their earlobes.[2] The word murga means "chicken" or "rooster."[3] One of the murga punishment types is the sitting murga pose. Sometimes to add a bit more humiliation, the punished person is made to make 'kuk ruk koo' noises to completely keep him in his place.

A harsher version requires keeping the bottom fully raised, which means working against gravity and puts very severe pressure on the glutes. Sometimes this raised position is also combined with spanking on the bottom, which is well-exposed on account of being raised. Yet another version is to require walking in the murga position. This cannot be done without lifting the bottom, and is therefore even harsher than raised murga as it combines keeping the bottom high along with walking in this very awkward and uncomfortable position. In other instances, the punishee is beaten on the back while in murga without necessarily making them raise their bottom. One other version is to put a weight on the back while in murga for added severity, but without requiring the bottom to be lifted.

Murga is used primarily as discipline within educational institutions. The punishment also sees usage by the police, as an informal punishment for petty crime, sometimes in combination with spanking on the bare bottom.[4] The punishment is sometimes administered in public as a type of public humiliation.

Helicopter position

In 21st century Eritrea, several different stress-position torture methods are used.[5] In the "helicopter position", the victim's arms and feet are tied behind their back. Their upper torso is bare, and they lie prone on the ground. They are typically kept in the position for one or two weeks, through all weather conditions, non-stop except for brief food and toilet breaks. In a variant of the method, the cord tying the arms and feet together is tied to a tree branch, suspending the victim from the ground.[5]:20[6] One Eritrean prisoner survived 55 days in the helicopter position, at temperatures of up to 50 °C (122 °F), after which his skin peeled off, and he was held for eight months with one hand and arm tied behind his back. The prisoner escaped from Eritrea and studied law in Canada.[7]

Jesus Christ position

In the "Jesus Christ position", known to have been used since 2003 in Adi-Abeto Prison in Eritrea, the victim's upper torso is bare, the victim stands on a block, their arms are tied to branches of a tree, and the block is removed, leaving them in a similar position to that of crucifixion. The victim is then beaten on the back. The duration of this torture position is normally limited to about ten to fifteen minutes to allow the victim to survive.[5]:21

See also

References

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