|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America
Organization of American States human rights panel opposes
Bush policy on POWs
By Kate Randall
22 March 2002
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
In the last week, new protests have been lodged over Bush administration
policy toward both Afghan War POWs in Cuba and detainees held
in the US since September 11. On March 13, the Inter-American
Commission on Human Rights of the Organization of American States
(OAS) declared that the more than 300 prisoners being held at
Guantanamo Bay should be brought before a formal tribunal to determine
their status. The Bush administration has refused to take such
action, even though it is called for in the Geneva Conventions
on prisoners of war.
The five-member panel of the OAS voted unanimously in support
of the resolution, reflecting widespread international opposition
to American treatment of captured soldiers. It was an embarrassing
diplomatic rebuke for Washington, all the more awkward for having
come from an organization normally subservient to the United States.
The OAS panel said it is well-known that doubt exists
as to the legal status of the detainees and that a
competent court or tribunal, as opposed to a political authority,
must be charged with ensuring respect for their legal
status and rights. The panels American member did
not take part in the decision.
The following day, March 14, Amnesty International (AI) issued
a report exposing the conditions of Arab and Muslim immigrants
imprisoned in the US in the Justice Departments post-September
11 dragnet. The AI document cited widespread violations of the
detainees human rights.
These condemnations of US policy are but the latest in a growing
list of protests against the Bush administrations flouting
of international law and disregard for civil liberties. The International
Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), Human Rights Watch and Amnesty
International have all criticized the refusal of the US to abide
by the Geneva Conventions in relation to the Afghan War prisoners.
The ICRC stated January 21 that those being held by American
forces in Cuba must be classified as prisoners of war under the
Geneva Conventions and are entitled to all the protections stipulated
by the Conventions. In late February, lawyers with the US-based
Center for Constitutional Rights, along with attorneys in Australia
and the Britain, filed a legal challenge to the detention of three
of the prisoners being held in CubaDavid Hicks from Australia
and Shafiq Rasul and Asif Iqbal from Britainclaiming the
men are being held illegally and in violation of US and international
legal conventions.
The latest international protests over US policy toward POWs
and internal detainees were barely reported by the American media.
Brief articles on the March 13 OAS statement were buried on the
inside pages of both the New York Times and Washington
Post, and received no coverage on the evening network news
programs.
Article 5 of the 1949 Geneva Convention Relative to the Treatment
of Prisoners of War states that if there is any doubt that captured
fighters qualify as POWs, such persons shall enjoy the protection
of the present Convention until such time as their status has
been determined by a competent tribunal. But the Bush administration
has consistently defied this provision, and given no indication
that the policy will change in response to the OAS declaration.
The OAS commissions March 13 ruling was in response to
a petition filed by the New York-based Center for Constitutional
Rights (CCR) asking the panel to intervene to protect the Afghan
War prisoners rights. CCR Vice President Michael Ratner
commented that the US failure to abide by the commissions
recommendation would be a lawless act.
The prisoners being held in Guantanamo remain in legal limbo.
The US government has not filed charges against any of them and
has given no indication when their status will change. The men
continue to be held in 8-foot by 8-foot open-air cages, released
only for showers, and two 15-minute exercise periods
per week, during which time they remain shackled. Because the
US refuses to designate them as prisoners of war, they are subject
to unlimited interrogation, without the protection of counsel.
US Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld told the press recently
that the range of options under consideration for
the prisoners include trial by military tribunal, indefinite detention,
or return to their native countries, if these countries guarantee
to prosecute them. President Bush commented March 20 that some
of the prisoners could face the death penalty in either traditional
military court martial proceedings or military tribunals.
The treatment of terrorist suspectsmostly
Middle Eastern and Muslim menrounded up in the US in the
police dragnet in the wake of September 11 has also provoked growing
criticism. Last October, Amnesty International and several other
human rights organizations made a joint formal request to the
US Department of Justice for the release of records on the US
detainees under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA). In January,
the Department of Justice requested a dismissal of the groups
complaint, on the grounds that it was too broad in scope and that
the government had already released what it considered a significant
amount of information on the detainees.
The 44-page report on the US detainees released last week by
Amnesty International details the widespread violation of their
basic democratic and legal rights. Of the more than 1,200 immigrants
rounded up in the US police sweep, about 327 remain in the custody
of the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS). None of these
individuals have been charged in connection with the terror attacks.
Many have been charged with routine visa violations, and the report
raises the concern that the immigration system is being
used to hold non-nationals on flimsy evidence pending broad criminal
probes, without the safeguards which are present in the criminal
justice system. Scores have been held for more than 48 hours
without being charged, and some as long as 50 days, according
to the report.
Violations of the detainees rights cited by Amnesty International
include prolonged solitary confinement, heavy shackling of arms
and legs and physical and verbal abuse. Many of these prisoners
have been held incommunicadounable to contact
their families, legal counsel or their embassies.
Immigration and Naturalization Service regulations explicitly
allow outside groups, including non-governmental organizations,
access to facilities housing INS detainees. Amnesty International
made a formal request to visit the federal Metropolitan Detention
Center (MDC) in New York. AI reports that more than 40 detainees
are still imprisoned in the facility, confined for 23 to 24 hours
a day in sealed, high security cells. Amnesty Internationals
request to visit the MDC was denied by the INS.
See Also:
Australian, British and US lawyers challenge
detention of Guantanamo Bay prisoners
[11 March 2002]
Bush doubletalk on Afghan
POWs: US continues to flout Geneva Conventions
[21 February 2002]
Defending the indefensible:
more US lies on Afghan prisoners and Geneva Convention
[5 February 2002]
Military tribunals,
monitoring of lawyers: Bush announces new police-state measures
[17 November 2001]
Nearly 600 detained
Widespread violations of civil liberties in US dragnet
[6 October 2001]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |