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Britain: Senior politicians condemn internment of foreign
terrorist suspects
By Richard Tyler
27 December 2003
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A committee of senior politicians has called for anti-terror
legislation permitting indefinite detention without trial to be
replaced.
Rushed through parliament in the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks,
the Anti-Terrorism, Crime and Security Act 2001 (ATCSA) permits
the internment of foreign nationals on the word of the home secretary,
without the need to present criminal charges or to follow due
legal process.
This power was granted under Part Four of ATCSA, which rescinds
that section of the European Convention on Human Rights prohibiting
detention without trial. The Privy Counsellor Review Committee
noted, Other countries have not found it necessary to have
any such derogation and we have found no obvious reason why the
UK should be the exception.
The committee, including former government ministers from both
the Conservative and Labour parties, said the shortcomings in
the legislation were sufficiently serious to strongly recommend
that the Part Four powers which allow foreign nationals to be
detained potentially indefinitely should be replaced as a matter
of urgency.
The Privy Counsellors are concerned that the war against
terrorism is undermined in the public eye unless at least
a veneer of democratic rights is maintained. While they object
to the indefinite internment of those accused of terrorism, they
are quite prepared to countenance new laws applicable to all,
which permit evidence previously inadmissible in British courts,
such as material obtained by secret phone taps.
Commission chair Lord Newton said, The terrorist threat
to the United Kingdom is likely to need a body of anti-terrorist
law for some time to come.
Home Secretary David Blunkett, who has certified 17 individuals
as suspected international terrorists under the act,
incarcerating 14 foreign nationals in high security prisons, rejected
the criticisms, saying, I am not convinced that the current
threat leaves us with any option but to continue to use these
powers.
Those detained under ATCSA in Belmarsh and Woodhill prisons
are kept locked up for 23 hours a day in what human rights organisation
Liberty has called Britains very own version of Guantanamo
Bay.
Amnesty International accuses the government of creating a
shadow criminal justice system for non-UK nationals that
fails to meet international standards for a fair trial.
Amnestys UK Director Kate Allen said, The act is discriminatorythere
is one set of rules for British citizens and another for nationals
of other countries.
Those detained under ATCSA enter a Kafkaesque world where they
are imprisonedpotentially indefinitelywithout being
told of any charges against them, based on secret evidence that
they are not permitted to see, without recourse to independent
legal representation or due legal process.
In May ten of the detainees had appeals against their detention
turned down by the Special Immigration Appeals Commission (SIAC).
This body, set up under the act, is not a court where publicly
presented prosecution evidence can be tested by legal counsel
representing the accused. It functions more like a Star Chamber,
conducting parts of its business in camera, with both the detainee
and his government-appointed Special Advocate excluded.
Should the Special Advocate be shown any of the secret evidence,
he or she is prohibited from discussing it with the client without
the express permission of SIAC.
Amnesty International observers who attended the open SIAC
sessions noted that the standard of evidence accepted was even
lower than in civil cases, where a conviction is only possible
when it can be established beyond a reasonable doubt
that a crime has been committee. For SIAC, The standard
of proof is below a balance of probabilities.
Not only were parts of the hearing held in private, but those
parts of the judgement that dealt with the secret evidence were
also delivered in closed session.
According to Amnesty, the Crown repeatedly made it clear that
none of the internees could be convicted of a criminal offence
in a UK court, because the material adduced would not be admissible
in a normal trial, as it would most likely consist of hearsay
evidence or an identified informant and/or intercepted material,
which may have been illegally obtained.
This includes statements that have been extracted under torture
in Afghanistan. In anonymous testimony to SIAC, an MI5 agent said
that evidence obtained using torture could be assessed by MI5
as reliable. SIAC then ruled that such evidence was admissibleit
may well appear that to admit such evidence would result in unfairness.
But it does not in our view justify the conclusion that the information
obtained from a third party by methods which breached Article
3 [of the European Convention on Human Rights, prohibiting torture]
is inadmissible.
Mass arrests
The anti-terror legislation has been used to conduct a police
dragnet, with over 500 arrests of terrorist suspects.
Of these only 77 have ever been charged under the legislation
and only seven convicted in the courts. In all cases those jailed
have not been held for committing or even commissioning acts of
terrorism, but for membership of proscribed organisationssuch
as the Kurdistan Workers Party and the Tamil Tigersor of
fundraising for such organisations.
The overwhelming majority of those swept up in this process
have been Muslims, leading to criticisms from community groups
that a form of racial profiling is in operation.
Of the 14 foreign nationals still interned under ATCSA, six
have now been kept under lock and key for two years. According
to a recent Observer article, at least half of the detainees
are showing signs of serious mental illness and several have been
moved to Broadmoor high security mental institution.
Leading civil rights lawyer Gareth Peirce, whose firm represents
many of the men, said, They have now been pushed beyond
the limits of human endurance. All these men are refugees and
a number are torture victims. It is well-established that victims
of torture should not be confined, because this can trigger former
trauma.
A North African detainee, who has suffered with polio since
childhood, is causing particular concern. His mental health is
said to have deteriorated to such an extent that he is no longer
able to recognise or communicate with his fellow inmates. While
he is unable to walk, the prison authorities have refused to provide
a wheelchair or to accept the inmates offer to carry him
to attend prayers.
Another detainee, Palestinian Abu Rideh, has been transferred
to Broadmoor. He is accused of being a fundraiser for terrorist
purposes and involvement with associates of Osama bin Laden. In
a recent letter to The Guardian newspaper, he denies the
allegations and says that he hates terrorism.
He describes being arrested without warning or explanation
at his home in Surrey in December 2001, two months following the
9/11 attacks. The British security services arrested me
at 5.30 in the morning. They broke the door while I am sleeping
and scared my childrenI have five children between the ages
of three years and nine years.
At 7 oclock in the morning they told me that you
are going to stay all your life in Belmarsh. There is a unit inside
it; it is like a prison in the prison. They put me alone in a
small room where you face bad treatment and racism and humiliation
and biting and swearing.
Matthias Kelly QC, chair of the Bar Council, told the press,
I am completely opposed to the use of internment. If the
Government has the evidence, why does it not have the confidence
to put it up in court?
The Blair government claims that the war against terrorism
is necessary to defend democracy and liberty. In pursuit of this
end, it has abrogated the European Convention on Human Rights,
and locked up men based on evidence extracted in breach of the
Convention against Torture. Gone is the presumption of innocence,
a cornerstone of modern jurisprudence, the right to a public hearing
of the evidence and to independent legal representation. Over
300 years since the Star Chamber was abolished on the eve of the
English Civil War, the Blair government has reinstated the arbitrary
powers and abuse of process that made it the hated symbol of despotic
rule.
* * *
Reference:
Amnesty
International, Justice Perverted, December 2003
See Also:
Britain: Anti-terror legislation
opens up broad attack on civil liberties
8 November 2003
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