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US and Australian governments delay release of Guantánamo
detainee
By Richard Phillips
24 January 2005
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While Australian citizen Mamdouh Habib was officially informed
early last week that he will be freed without charge from Guantánamo
Bay, US and Australian authorities have been involved in a series
of crude manoeuvres designed to delay his repatriation.
Habib has been incarcerated in Guantánamo Bay without
access to an attorney or his family since May 4, 2002. His first
contact with a lawyer was not until late November 2004, three
years after Pakistani police first seized him in October 2001.
He was interrogated at length by Pakistani police and US Special
Forces and then rendered to Egypt, where he was tortured
and abused for six months.
On the basis of statements extracted under torture, he was
moved to a US military prison in Afghanistan and then transported
to Guantánamo Bay. British detainees released from Guantánamo
last year reported that Habib could not see or walk properly when
he first arrived. One of the British detainees said he saw Habib
being dragged around in chains and bashed by army guards. US interrogators
also convinced him that his wife and children had been killed.
While Washington announced on January 11 that it would not
press any charges against Habib, it still maintains that he is
an enemy combatant and will not allow him to return
to Australia via the US or to over-fly American airspace. US State
Department officials have also demanded that he be shackled for
the journey because he still posed a threat.
Likewise, Australian government ministers claim that Habib
is a person of security interest and too dangerous
to return to Sydney on a standard commercial flight. They have
insisted that he must travel in a specially chartered military
or domestic aircraft. The estimated cost for the trip, for which
the US government has taken no financial responsibility, is $A500,000.
Australian Attorney General Phillip Ruddock told the local
media that although shackling Habib was not part of the
plan, he did not rule it out. I simply say any decision
of that sort would be made involving the captain of the aircraft
and would depend on the circumstances. I cant dismiss the
possibility, he said.
Negotiations between Washington and Canberra over these issues
have meant that no official date has been given for Habibs
release. Previous expectations that he would be home in days are
now turning into weeks or even possibly months.
Lawyers for Habib have angrily denounced the delay and demanded
his immediate freedom. Joseph Margulies, Habibs US lawyer,
told the Washington Post that the restrictions were preposterous.
If they believed he were dangerous they would not be sending
him home. There is no risk. He should be home with his family
right now, he said.
Stephen Hopper, Habibs Australian lawyer, told the World
Socialist Web Site that the delays were another example of
the ongoing violations of his basic democratic rights. The
delay and sly insinuations that Mamdouh is a safety threat are
laughable. He is being released because neither the US nor the
Australian government has an atoms weight of evidence against
him. If they had anything on him, he would not be freed,
he said.
The Howard government is trying to stir up political
opposition against Mamdouh and his family, but it is the guilty
party, Hopper said. It has violated the basic rights
of one of its own citizens and we plan to make this clear to as
many people as we can.
There are a number of reasons why the Howard government would
like to delay Habibs release and divert attention from its
political significance.
Washingtons announcement on January 11 was a severe embarrassment
for the Australian government and punctured its claims to have
a special relationship with the Bush administration.
Over the past three years, the US has assured senior Australian
officials that Habib would be charged, put on trial before a military
court and presumably given a lengthy jail term. Instead the US,
apparently without consulting Canberra, decided to release Habib.
Australian officials were informed only a few hours before
Washingtons announcement. In fact, Ruddock had sent a letter
to the Labor Party legal affairs spokeswoman earlier that day
stating that Habib was about to be charged with terrorism crimes.
A few hours later, he was forced to call an evening press conference
to explain that Habib was going to be released.
Ongoing attacks on Habibs basic rights
More importantly, however, the Australian government is deeply
concerned that Habib will not be silent. It is trying to deflect
attention from its involvement in his illegal detention, torture
and abuse, which are crimes under the Geneva Conventions and Australian
law.
After Pakistani police seized Habib in October 2001, Australian
Security Intelligence Organisation officers and Australian Federal
Police were sent to interrogate him. Rather than demand Habibs
release, the Howard government gave Pakistani and American authorities
a blank cheque to do whatever they wanted to the Australian citizen.
As Habibs affidavit to a US court in November 2004 made
clear, Australian officials watched while he was beaten and abused
by US military forces in Pakistan before being sent to Egypt.
It did nothing to secure his release from Egypt and then allowed
his transfer, without charge or any access to a lawyer, to Guantánamo
Bay.
The delay in Habibs release and continuing claims that
he constitutes a security risk are designed to justify a new round
of anti-democratic measures and provocations against the father
of four. Despite the fact that he has been charged with no offence,
the Howard government plans to make his life a misery.
Prime Minister Howard and Ruddock have categorically rejected
any financial compensation for their involvement in his detention.
Nor is it likely that he will receive any government medical assistance
to help him recover from the physical and psychological abuse
he has suffered over the past three years.
Federal and state police agencies are currently discussing
how they will maintain round-the-clock surveillance of Habib.
The Daily Telegraph, Murdochs Sydney tabloid, on
January 17 interviewed the director of private security firm who
suggested that they could maintain surveillance of Habib, using
teams of agents and hidden cameras, for around $30,000 a month.
Ruddock has made clear that Habib will be prevented from renewing
his Australian passport and therefore permanently prevented from
leaving the country. In an attempt to gag Habib, Ruddock has also
hinted that he could be prosecuted under the Proceeds of Crime
Act if he attempts to secure payment from the media for any interviews.
Foreign Minister Alexander Downer told the media that Habib
faced no physical threat. You know what Australians are
like. They might dislike people, but they tend not to take to
them physically, fortunately. We dont want to encourage
that, he said. But with its ongoing insinuations that Habib
is a terrorist and Al Qaeda member, the Howard government has
established the political climate for just such a physical attack.
Canberra will no doubt continue its backroom maneouvres to
delay Habibs release over the next weeks. For all its claims
about Habib, the real criminals in these shameful events are Howard
and his ministers and their blatant violation of basic democratic
rights.
See Also:
US releases Mamdouh Habib and four British
prisoners from Guantánamo Bay
[14 January 2005]
Support for our struggle is growing
Father of Guantánamo Bay prisoner speaks with WSWS
[13 January 2005]
Howard government
complicit in detention of Australian citizen by US military
[26 April 2002]
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