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Australian government continues to back discredited US military
tribunals
By Richard Phillips
25 August 2005
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The release on July 31 of emails written by two senior US military
prosecutors denouncing the Guantánamo Bay military tribunals
has intensified the opposition facing the Howard government over
its stance on the only remaining Australian detainee, David Hicks.
In messages written in March 2004, the military commission
officers declared that the trials were rigged, with
handpicked tribunal members and evidence lost to ensure
that guilty verdicts were found against the defendants, which
they described as low-level participants in military
operations in Afghanistan.
Captain John Carr, one of the prosecutors, wrote: An
environment of secrecy, deceit and dishonesty exists within our
office... I cannot morally, ethically, or professionally continue
to be part of this process. Carr and two other military
prosecutors quit in protest before the trials began last year.
(See Military commissions
prosecutors charge: trials rigged against Guantánamo detainees.)
Under tribunal rules the guilt or innocence of those on trial
is determined on the basis of a two-thirds majority vote by a
panel of military officers. There is no civil court appeal and
evidence like anonymous hearsay and information extracted under
torture is allowed. US President Bush makes the final decision
on any sentencing, including the death penalty.
The British and other European governments have publicly criticised
these procedures and secured the repatriation of their own citizens
from Guantánamo. But the Howard government has slavishly
endorsed the trials and the illegal detention of Hicks, a 30-year-old
Australian citizen incarcerated for more than three and a half
years.
Canberra dismissed the US prosecutors emails, claiming
that the tribunals, which were specifically designed to circumvent
US civilian and military law and the Geneva Conventions, would
provide a fair trial for Hicks.
Prime Minister John Howard, Foreign Minister Alexander Downer
and Attorney-General Phillip Ruddock insisted that the emails
had already been investigated by US authorities and
that their claims were the result of personality clashes
and therefore of little consequence.
The following day, however, Australias top military lawyer
and Queens Counsel, Navy Captain Paul Willee, contradicted the
government, declaring that the tribunals were fundamentally
flawed.
Can [Hicks] get a fair trial? Personally, Id say
absolutely not. It just doesnt lend itself to being open
and fair and reasonable in its whole process... It is patently
obvious that this is wrong, he said. And even if the allegations
in the prosecutors emails were not true, he added, the very
structure of the military trials was faulty.
The process is very much akin to the process we, Australia,
abandoned after World War II because it denied people access to
evidence, denied them the ability to cross-examine those who made
the statements used against them and generally flies in the face
of all of the rules of fairness that weve developed over
the last 50 or 60 years, he said.
Asked on ABC televisions 7.30 Report about
Willees remarks, a visibly nervous Foreign Minister Downer
refused to comment and alleged that the shows anchor was
pursuing a political agenda and trivialising the American
military.
Prime Minister Howard also refused to address Willees
remarks. He claimed that his government had secured changes in
the Military Commission procedure 18 months ago and said he remained
satisfied that the tribunals would produce a fair
outcome.
Speaking on Melbourne radio on August 2, Howard said the prosecutors
emails had already been investigated. When he asked who had conducted
the inquiries, he blithely replied: By the people against
whom the allegations were made.
Mounting opposition
The emails and Willees remarks provoked a round of op-ed
articles and public statements condemning the military trials
as star-chamber hearings.
Former High Court judge Mary Gaudron told ABC radio that Hickss
basic rights had been infringed and that the Australian government
should have intervened. It is just an extraordinary procedure
and extraordinary process. One in which rights are put at risk,
in which the truth is put at risk, she said.
The Sydney Morning Herald published an editorial headlined
Guantánamo: Americas shame on August
2 criticising the government for not defending Hickss basic
rights. The next day a Melbourne Age editorial declared
that the government had surrendered the right to a fair
trial. It warned that Canberras attitude to Hicks
provided a disturbing insight into the vulnerability of
our own democratic values.
An op-ed comment in the Sydney Morning Herald entitled,
No justice as Hicks is thrown to the wolves, declared:
Everyone but the most gormless knows that Hicks wont
receive a fair trial... [B]y selling out Hicks to this process
and the ultimate dictates of George Bush, Howard and Ruddock have
sold us all out. Another columnist in the newspaper lambasted
the government for being shamelessly eager to crawl to the
White House and the Pentagon.
The comments reflect a concern in ruling circles that the blatantly
unjust treatment of Hicks, along with revelations about the abuse
of prisoners in the Guantánamo jail, is helping to fuel
growing popular opposition. Broad layers of people are deeply
opposed to the illegal US-led occupation of Iraq, as well as the
Howard governments slavish support for the Bush administration
and its war on terrorism.
Hicks, who was captured in Afghanistan in December 2001, was
charged in 2004 with conspiracy, attempted murder and aiding the
enemy. If convicted, he could face life imprisonment. He has pleaded
not guilty to all charges.
Howards claims that he will receive a fair trial and
that Canberra has persuaded the Bush administration to reform
the military tribunals are absurd. The government has specifically
refused to call for Hickss repatriation as he could not
be charged under Australian law.
The only modifications to the tribunals came late last year,
following challenges by defence lawyers against particular members
of the tribunal panel. These changes, however, have only worsened
the position of those on trial. The military panels have been
reduced from five to three officers, which means that the two-thirds
majority required for a guilty verdict is easier to obtain.
Lex Lasry QC, an official observer to Hickss initial
hearings, noted in his second report to the Law Council of Australia
last month that the circumstances facing Hicks were worse than
in August 2004.
The report explained that prosecution evidence will probably
have been extracted through the physical or psychological torture
of detainees. But Hickss ability to defend himself is limited
by the repatriation of those who provided this information, making
it virtually impossible to cross-examine them.
Hicks faced a trial, Lasry said, in which prosecution evidence
will not come out of the mouth of the witness of the fact
but from someone else who was told about it or from an un-cross-examinable
piece of paper.
In the past three years the US military has released over 200
prisoners from Guantánamo Bay. The British and other European
governments have secured the release of all their citizens, leaving
Australia as the only country in the world to have not demanded
repatriation of its citizens from the US military prison.
The Howard governments complicity in this violation of
long-established legal rights is mirrored in the series of repressive
anti-terror laws introduced in Australia, with Labor Party support.
That the US military tribunals are establishing precedents for
the further erosion of democratic rights within Australia was
made explicit by Attorney-General Ruddock.
In a chilling off-the-cuff remark, Ruddock told the Murdoch-owned
Herald Sun in Melbourne on August 6, that Australia had
used military commissions during World War II and that although
this is not a matter that is particularly germane at the
moment... were not ruling anything in or out.
See Also:
Father of Australian Guantánamo
prisoner speaks to the WSWS
[25 August 2005]
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