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US high court to hear Guantanamo appeal
By Bill Vann
12 November 2003
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The US Supreme Court announced November 10 that it will hear
a case challenging the Bush administrations indefinite detention
without charges and in violation of US constitutional protection
and international law of nearly 700 prisoners held at the US naval
base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
The high court has made it clear it will limit its decision
to the narrow but key legal question of whether the Guantanamo
detaineesall of them non-US citizens and mostly Muslims
seized in Afghanistan nearly two years agohave a right to
seek redress in US courts to their being held incommunicado by
the US government.
The Bush administration has claimed that by labeling the prisoners
as enemy combatants and holding them on an overseas
US military base it may deny them both the rights they would be
entitled to as prisoners of war under the Geneva Conventions and
the constitutional rights afforded criminal defendants in the
US courts.
The Supreme Court is considering two appeals that have been
joined together in the case. The first was filed on behalf of
two AustralianDavid Hicks and Mamdouh Habiband two
British detaineesSafiq Rasul and Asif Iqbalby attorneys
from the New York City-based Center for Constitutional Rights.
The second appeal was filed on behalf of 12 Kuwaiti citizens held
at the Guantanamo prison camp.
The US government has based its argument in both cases on the
claim that US courts have no jurisdiction over Guantanamo because
it remains technically sovereign Cuban territory. The US seized
the territory during the Spanish-American War and has occupied
the base for a century under a lease that specifically grants
Washington complete jurisdiction and control.
A federal District Court and the US Court of Appeals for the
District of Columbia ruled that the courts lack jurisdiction over
the military detention of non-citizens outside US territory. It
accepted the governments hyper-technical argument that because
Guantanamo is not recognized as sovereign US territory, even though
Washington exercises de facto sovereignty there, the US Constitution
does not apply to the detainees.
The government has attempted to rest its argument on a 1950
case that stems from wildly different circumstances, involving
convicted German war criminals captured in wartime China and held
at a prison in Germany.
The detainees at Guantanamo have been neither charged with
nor convicted of any crimes. Those whom the appeals cover have
emphatically denied that they were either combatants in Afghanistan
or had any ties whatsoever to Al Qaeda.
Both released detainees and lawyers representing some of those
still held at Guantanamo have accused the US of subjecting the
prisoners there to intense interrogation and torture. They, together
with the International Committee of the Red Cross, have also charged
that the conditions of prolonged solitary confinement have led
to mental health problems among many of the detainees, reflected
in a growing number of suicide attempts. US authorities have reported
32 such attempts, but the number is believed to be significantly
higher.
Prisoners are held in 6-by-8-foot cells 24 hours a day with
the exception of three weekly half-hour exercise periods in which
they are led out of the cells in shackles to a 25-by-30-foot concrete
slab cage.
The brief filed on behalf of the two British and two Australian
citizens charges that the US military has initiated plans to expand
the camp and build a more permanent facility capable of housing
over 1,100 detainees as part of the US governments global
war on terrorism, a war that the Bush administration has
vowed will last for decades.
Both the case involving the British and Australian detainees
and that dealing with the Kuwaitis began in early 2002 with the
filing of petitions of habeas corpus in federal court challenging
the claim by the administration that Bushs status as commander-in-chief
gave him the power to hold prisoners without regard to constitutional
rights or international law.
In their petition to the Supreme Court, attorneys from the
Center for Constitutional Rights charged that the Bush administration
has created a prison ... that operates entirely outside
the law. Within the walls of this prison, foreign nationals may
be held indefinitely, without charges or evidence of wrongdoing,
without access to family, friends or legal counsel, and with no
opportunity to establish their innocence.
The legal document argues that the central issue in the case
is whether the United States Government is constrained by
the Constitution and international law in its treatment of foreign
nationals imprisoned outside the ultimate sovereignty of the United
States, and if so, whether the nationals may enforce those constraints
in a federal court.
Michael Ratner, president of the center, commented that the
issues in the case go well beyond the immediate fate of the detainees
at Guantanamo: One of the most fundamental democratic principles
is at stake in this case: whether the government may detain people
without charge and deny them the right to test the legality of
their detention in open court.... If the government is permitted
to evade all scrutiny by the federal courts, then the most arbitrary
type of executive detention has been sanctioned.
The Bush administration has declared two US citizens enemy
combatants Jose Padilla and Yaser Esam Hamdiand
is holding them incommunicado in a Navy brig without charges,
hearings or access to legal counsel. The administration has fought
a ferocious legal battle to prevent the courts from reviewing
either case and to assert the presidents right to invoke
the war on terrorism to effectively strip US citizens
of their constitutional rights as well.
A decision by the US Supreme Court is not expected until next
June. If it were to overturn the federal appellate panels
decision, the cases would be sent back to the federal district
court to rule on the legality of the Guantanamo detentions.
See Also:
Guantanamo Bay detainees
family speaks with WSWS
Why isnt the US military up on trial for terrorism?
[8 October 2003]
Families of Guantanamo Bay
prisoners launch US Supreme Court appeal
[19 September 2003]
New revelations about Guantanamo
Bay prisoners
[3 January 2003]
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