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Pentagon institutionalises indefinite detention without trial
at Guantanamo Bay
By Richard Phillips
23 February 2004
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Notwithstanding the impending repatriation of five British
detainees and one Danish prisoner incarcerated in Guantanamo Bay,
the Bush administration has further undermined the basic legal
and democratic rights of those held in the infamous military prison
with the announcement of a new measure that will institutionalise
the illegal detentions.
On February 13, the Pentagon announced that it would establish
administrative review panels to determine the future
of the hundreds held in Guantanamo Bay. Pentagon spokesmen claimed
that the three-member panels would act like a quasi-parole
board and allow prisoners to plea their case for release.
The status of the prisoners would be reviewed annually, spokesmen
said.
The so-called review panels have nothing to do
with granting any rights to detainees, most of whom have been
held for more than two years without charge or access to lawyers
or their families. To compare them to parole boards established
to review the prison terms for convicted criminals is simply absurd.
Rather, the new panels will simply make permanent the present
arbitrary procedures under which hundreds of prisoners seized
in Afghanistan, Pakistan and elsewhere are being held indefinitely
in breach of international law.
As US Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld told the Miami Chamber
of Commerce on February 13, the Bush administration regards the
ongoing detentions in Guantanamo Bay as a security necessity
and some detainees might never be released. Rumsfeld said that
although it was unusual to detain people without trial
or lawyers America was a nation at war and different
rules [now] applied. Criminal law was not appropriate to
those jailed who were involved in acts of terror against America
and could therefore be held for as long as necessary.
The review panels, which will be appointed by Rumsfeld
and other senior Pentagon officials, are internal bodies with
no independence whatsoever. They will include the same intelligence
operatives and military interrogators, who grilled the prisoners.
There is no right of appeal or guaranteed legal representations
for prisoners brought before the panels. Nor are those charged
and found not guilty of any alleged crimes by a US military tribunal,
guaranteed release or repatriation.
As an unnamed senior Pentagon spokesman told the New York
Times on February 13: [W]hether a person is to be charged
before a military commission is not the reason were holding
them. It was possible, the official continued, that
an individual could be convicted by a tribunal and serve a five-year
sentence and then not be released if he were judged to be a danger.
Center for Constitutional Rights president Michael Ratner,
who is leading a US Supreme Court appeal for the Guantanamo Bay
prisoners to be given legal hearings in American courts, immediately
denounced the review panels and said he was stunned by Rumsfelds
brazen defence of the illegal detentions.
The idea that you could theoretically keep someone locked
up forever under these circumstances is reprehensible, he
said. Its nothing to do with law as any person should
understand it, at least since the Magna Carta, he said.
How do you know without a trial that these people are even
dangerous? It all depends on the militarys word.
Amnesty International rejected White House claims that the
panels constituted fair treatment for the detainees. That
is a sham, William Schulz, Amnesty International US executive
director, said. Its not justice to jail a man without
charge for years, then offer him a chance to protest his innocence
tarred by a presumption of guilt.
Stephen Kenny, lawyer for David Hicks, one of the two Australians
held in Guantanamo Bay and due to face a military trial on as
yet unspecified charges, said the review panels were a pitiful
effort to give some show of a process in the face of growing
international criticism.
He called for Hickss immediate release and said there
should have been independent hearings to determine whether detainees
were prisoners of war or criminals. If they were POWs they should
be treated under international conventions while criminals should
be tried. Two years after being placed in Guantanamo Bay, Hicks
had still not been formally charged with anything, he said.
Guantanamo Bay breaches the Geneva Conventions on the rights
of POWs and is an international human rights scandal. Prisoners
have no basic rights, no contact with the outside world, apart
from heavily censored letters, and are subjected to interrogation
by military and intelligence officers.
Over the last two years the Pentagon has increased the number
of those held from just over 100 to approximately 660 prisoners.
As well as hundreds of small metal cages and shipping containers
used as cells, other jails have been built, including Camp Iguana,
which is used to hold at least 10 prisoners under the age of 18.
Another jail, Camp Echo, is currently being built which will
contain permanent interrogation rooms and cells for those defined
as pre-commission detaineesthose selected to
face military tribunals. This solid-wall prison, which will be
finished in the next five months, will hold at least 100 detainees.
When questioned at a Washington press briefing, Paul Butler,
US deputy assistant secretary of defence for special operations,
refused to provide any details on the most basic issues. He would
not say if detainees brought before the new panels would have
the right to a lawyer or to any form of legal appeal. When pressed
he made clear that the final say would rest where it does at presentwith
the military and the Bush administration.
Like the new buildings being erected at Guantanamo Bay, the
proposed panels simply confirm that what was initially established
as a temporary measure following the US military intervention
in Afghanistan is being transformed into a permanent concentration
camp. The Bush administration is creating its own American gulag
for arbitrary and indefinite incarceration not only of the existing
detainees but those seized in any future wars of aggression.
See Also:
US military lawyer denounces
Guantanamo Bay trials
[29 Jan 2004]
Friend of court
applications denounce Guantanamo Bay detentions as illegal
[18 Jan 2004]
Guantanamo Bay, habeas
corpus and the Texan who would be king: Some legal observations
[5 Jan 2004]
Australian detainee
at Guantanamo Bay pressured to plead guilty
[3 Jan 2004]
New
revelations about Guantanamo Bay prisoners
[3 Jan 2003]
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