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US judge rejects claim that Guantánamo detainees have
no rights
By John Andrews
11 February 2005
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In a direct rebuke to the Bush administration, a federal district
judge in Washington, DC, has ruled that the US government cannot
deny the approximately 600 prisoners held by the United States
military at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, the constitutional right
to due process of law. The judge also affirmed that those captured
while fighting for the Taliban government of Afghanistan are entitled
to prisoner of war status under the Third Geneva Convention.
In a 75-page decision on 11 consolidated habeas corpus petitions
on January 31, Senior District Judge Joyce Hens Green shot down
the Bush administrations arguments that neither the US Constitution
nor any other domestic or international law limits the governments
power to imprison non-citizens outside the territorial limits
of the United States. The ruling was released in a heavily censored
unclassified version. (To read the complete opinion,
go to: http://host3.uscourts.gov/02-299b.pdf.)
Green was appointed by Jimmy Carter in 1979 and once served
as the chief judge of the United States Foreign Intelligence Surveillance
Court responsible for issuing secret search warrants based on
alleged national security concerns. Her ruling reflects a deepening
concern among elements of the judiciary that the Bush administrations
war on terror is going too far in its assault on the
US Constitution.
Since the September 11 terrorist attacks, the government has
asserted it has the power to label anyone an enemy combatant,
a category invented by Bush administration advisors with no precedent
in US or international law. The Bush administration claims, according
to Greens ruling, that once someone is deemed an enemy
combatant it is legal to hold the detainee in custody
until the war on terrorism has been declared by the President
to have concluded or until the President or his designees have
determined that the detainee is no longer a threat to national
security.
Green added that the US government has been unable to
inform the Court how long it believes the war on terrorism will
last.... Indeed, the government cannot even articulate at this
moment how it will determine when the war on terrorism has ended....
At minimum, the government has conceded that the war could last
several generations, thereby making it possible, if not likely,
that enemy combatants will be subject to terms of
life imprisonment at Guantánamo Bay.
Last June, the US Supreme Court ruled in Rasul v. Bush
that US courts have jurisdiction to decide habeas corpus petitions
filed on behalf of Guantánamo prisoners. It rejected the
Bush administrations claim that non-citizens held outside
the United States have no such right to challenge their confinement.
In a companion habeas case brought by a US citizen captured in
Afghanistan and once imprisoned at Guantánamo Bay, Yassir
Hamdi, the Supreme Court accepted the Bush administrations
premise that people can be declared enemy combatants,
but required that the government give them due process to challenge
the classification. [See The
meaning of the US Supreme Court rulings on enemy combatants]
At the same time, the Supreme Court ducked a third enemy
combatant casebrought on behalf of US citizen Jose
Padilla after he was detained at Chicagos OHare Airporton
the cowardly grounds that it was filed in the wrong district court.
The Padilla habeas petition has been refiled and is presently
working its way back through the court system.
Nine days after the Supreme Court decided Rasul, Deputy
Secretary of State Paul Wolfowitz created the Combat Status
Review Tribunal, or CSRT, supposedly to allow prisoners
to challenge their status as enemy combatants. The
procedures outlined were a sham. Prisoners were denied access
to attorneys and to classified evidence against them,
and were presumed to be enemy combatants unless they
could prove otherwise while locked up incommunicado at Guantánamo
[See Pentagon
plans military tribunals for Guantánamo prisoners].
CSRT proceedings over the last six months have resulted in the
release of a handful of prisoners.
All the pending habeas petitions filed on behalf of Guantánamo
prisoners were transferred to the District of Columbia federal
court, where they were assigned to various judges. Under a coordination
order, all the judges were asked to refer their cases to Judge
Green for a decision on common legal issues. All did so, except
Judge Richard J. Leon, a 2002 Bush appointee. Leons career
as a Republican Party hack dates back to 1988, when he served
as the minority counsel for Senate Republicans during the Iran-Contra
investigations. He issued his own opinion January 21, adopting
all the Bush administrations legal positions.
Leon wrote: Due to their status as aliens outside sovereign
United States territory with no connection to the United States,
it was well established prior to Rasul that the [Guantánamo
detainees] possess no cognizable constitutional rights.
In other words, outside the territorial borders of the United
States, Bush has the unrestrained powers of a tyrant, entitled
to kidnap people anywhere in the world and lock them up indefinitely.
The two opinions establish that, contrary to popular belief,
many of the Guantánamo prisoners were not captured on Afghanistan
battlefields during the 2001 US invasion. Among the habeas petitioners
in Greens cases were nine men taken into custody in Gambia,
Zambia or Bosnia, and one, Saifullah Paracha, seized last September
in Thailand. Of the seven petitioners in Leons case, six
were seized in Bosnia and one, a French citizen, in Pakistan.
(The US announced on February 8 that it is releasing all three
French citizens imprisoned at Guantánamo).
Green began by summarizingand rejectingthe Bush
administrations main argument: ...although Rasul
clarified that a detainee has every right to file papers in the
Clerks Office alleging violations of the Constitution, statutes,
treaties and other laws, and although the Court has jurisdiction
to accept the filing and to consider those papers, the Court must
not permit the case to proceed beyond a declaration that no underlying
substantive rights exist. Green noted that, on this basis,
detainees subject to criminal prosecution have been bestowed
with more rights than detainees whom the military did not intend
to prosecute for war crimes.
Last November, US District Judge James Robertson ruled that
the procedures for military commissions trying Guantánamo
prisoners for alleged war crimes were unlawful in that they failed
to comply with the requirements for courts martial set forth in
the Uniform Code of Military Justice. The only prisoner presently
facing war crimes charges is Australian David Hicks.
From the beginning of 2002 through at least June 2004,
the substantial majority of detainees not charged with war crimes
were not informed of the bases upon which they were detained,
were not permitted access to counsel, were not given a formal
opportunity to challenge their enemy combatant status,
and were alleged to be held virtually incommunicado from the outside
world, Green wrote.
After reviewing 100 years of Supreme Court precedent, Green
determined that the US government cannot deny anyone in a place
under its control the guarantees of the Fifth Amendment, which
states, No person shall ... be deprived of life, liberty,
or property, without due process of law. She then demonstrated
how Wolfowitzs CSRT procedures failed to meet minimum due
process standards.
Green began with Wolfowitzs definition of enemy
combatant as an individual who was part of or supporting
Taliban or Al Qaeda forces, or associated forces that are engaged
in hostilities against the United States or its coalition partners.
This includes any person who has committed a belligerent act or
has directly supported hostilities in aid of enemy armed forces.
Green noted that the government began detaining people as enemy
combatants in 2001, but did not publish any definition of
the term until Wolfowitzs July 7, 2004 order. She pointed
out that this orders use of the word includes
authorized the indefinite detention of individuals who never
committed a belligerent act or who never directly supported hostilities
against the US or its allies. Green cited statements by
Bush administration lawyers that they could detain a little
old lady in Switzerland who writes checks to what she thinks is
a charity ... but really is a front to finance Al Qaeda activities,
a person who teaches English to the son of an Al Qaeda member,
or a journalist who knew the location of Osama Bin Laden
but refuses to disclose it to protect her source.
Under this definition, former basketball superstar center Hakeem
Ulajuwon of the Houston Rockets could be locked up for the rest
of his life. The US government recently alleged that the Olajuwon-founded
Islamic DaWah Center in Houston gave more than $60,000 in
2000 and $20,000 in 2002 to the Islamic African Relief Agency,
which Washington shut down for supposedly giving money and other
support to Al Qaeda.
Green went on to demonstrate how prisoners were denied any
meaningful opportunity to respond to evidence against them at
CSRT hearings. She cited the following colloquy between the CSRT
panel and Mustafa Ait Idr, who is accused of associating with
a known Al Qaeda operative while in Bosnia.
Idr: Give me his name.
CSRT Panel Member: I do not know.
Idr: How can I respond to this?
CSRT Panel Member: Did you know of anybody that was a member
of Al Qaeda?
Idr: No, no...
CSRT Panel Member: No?
Idr: No. This is something the interrogators told me a long
while ago. I asked the interrogators to tell me who this person
was. Then I could tell you if I might have known this person,
but not if this person is a terrorist. Maybe I knew this person
as a friend. Maybe it was a person that worked with me. Maybe
it was a person that was on my team. But I do not know if this
person is Bosnia, Indian or whatever. If you tell me the name,
then I can respond and defend myself against this accusation...
CSRT Panel Member: Mustafa, does that conclude your statement?
Idr: That is it, but I was hoping you had evidence that you
can give me. If I was in your placeand I apologize in advance
for these wordsbut if a supervisor came to me and showed
me accusations like these, I would take these accusations and
I would hit him in the face with them. Sorry about that.
[Laughter]
CSRT Panel Member: We had to laugh, but it is okay.
Idr: Why? Because these are accusations that I cant even
answer. I am not able to answer them. You tell me I am from Al
Qaeda, but I am not an Al Qaeda. I dont have any proof to
give you except to ask you to catch bin Laden and ask him if I
am a part of Al Qaeda. To tell me that I thought, Ill just
tell you that I did not. I dont have proof regarding this.
What should be done is you should get me evidence regarding these
accusations because I am not able to give you any evidence. I
can just tell you no, and that is it.
Green also pointed to the CSRTs reliance on evidence
obtained through torture, such as the confession of
Mamdouh Habib. According to Habibs account, after his arrest
in Pakistan he was sent to Egypt, where he was beaten to
the point of unconsciousness. His captors locked him in
a room that gradually filled with water, and forced him to suspend
himself by his arms over an electrified cylinder, compelling him
to make a Hobsons choice between suffering pain from fatigue
or electric shock.
Corroborating the prisoners claims of mistreatment, Green
cited an FBI report that prisoners were chained hand and
foot in a fetal position to the floor, with no chair, food, or
water. Most times they had urinated or defacated [sic]
on themselves, and had been left there for 18-24 hours or more.
According to the report, an FBI agent saw a pile of hair
because the prisoner had apparently been literally pulling
his own hair out throughout the night. Another time, not
only was the temperature unbearably hot, but extremely loud rap
music was being played in the room, and had been since the day
before.
Citing the Geneva Conventions ban on the mistreatment
of prisoners of war, Green wrote that the Bush administration
argues that notwithstanding the application of the
Third Geneva Convention to Taliban detainees, the treaty does
not protect Taliban detainees because the President has
declared that no Taliban fighter is a prisoner of war
as defined by the Convention (emphasis in original). Green
found the Bush administration to be in violation of the Convention,
because it does not permit the determination of prisoner of war
status in such a conclusory fashion.
Article 5 of the Third Geneva Convention requires that captives
be treated as prisoners of war until such time as their
status has been determined by a competent tribunal. According
to Green, although numerous [prisoners] ... were found by
the CSRT to have been Taliban fighters, nowhere do the CSRT records
for many of those [prisoners] reveal specific findings that they
committed some particular act or failed to satisfy some defined
prerequisite entitling the [US government] to deprive them of
prisoner of war status.
Judge Green certified her ruling for an immediate appeal to
the Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, and
issued a stay until the appeal is resolved.
See Also:
The release of Yaser
Hamdi: legal manipulation of enemy combatant cases
[30 September 2004]
Two appellate courts
rule against Bush administration detentions
[23 December 2003]
WSWS interview: Father
protests indefinite detention of son at Guantanamo Bay
[25 June 2003]
US atrocity against
Taliban POWs: Whatever happened to the Geneva Convention?
[28 November 2001]
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