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Following US Supreme Court ruling
Australian government demands new kangaroo court
for David Hicks
By Richard Phillips
7 July 2006
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Last week the US Supreme Court found that the Bush admininstrations
military commission trials of Guantánamo inmates were illegal
and that they violated both the Geneva Conventions and the US
constitution. For the Australian government, the ruling has created
a serious political dilemma. From the outset, Canberra has slavishly
backed the kangaroo courts and shamelessly collaborated in Washingtons
four and a half year detention of 31-year-old Australian citizen
David Hicks in Guantánamo Bay.
The Howard government, which has stood alone in the world in
its praise of the infamous military commissions, now faces increasingly
forthright demandsfrom sections of the corporate media,
from Australias peak law bodies and from broad layers of
ordinary peoplefor Hickss immediate release.
Hicks was captured by Northern Alliance forces in Afghanistan
in late 2001 and sold to the US military. The Australian is one
of only 10 people in Guantánamo charged under the military
commissions and was brought before the blatantly undemocratic
process in August 2004. At the time, despite more than two years
of brutal physical and psychological pressure, Hicks pleaded not
guilty to frame-up charges of aiding the enemy, attempted murder
and conspiracy to commit war crimes.
According to Hickss lawyers and a range of legal experts,
these charges have been rendered invalid by the US Supreme Court
ruling.
Prime Minister Howard and senior government ministers, however,
immediately reacted to the American court ruling by urging Washington
not to release Hicks and to instead create a new legal mechanism
to try the Guantánamo prisoners.
In line with his governments standard operating procedure,
Howard sought to blame someone else for his support for the illegal
commissions, telling Macquarie Radio on June 30 that Canberra
had been given bad legal advice about their legality.
[W]e were quite happy to go along with the military commission
procedure, Howard said, because we were told, subject
to the changes to it that we had negotiated with the Americans,
that it was acceptable. Now the American Supreme Court has decided
otherwise... [I]t seems on the face of it [that] I do need a bit
more advice.
These claims are absurd and contemptible.
For the past four and a half years, Howard and his senior ministers
have poured scorn on the United Nations Human Rights Commission,
Amnesty International, the International Red Cross and countless
legal experts, as well as former American military officers and
FBI interrogators, who have warned that the military commissions
were illegal.
According to Canberra, the military commissionswhich
accepted hearsay evidence obtained by torture and barred any civilian
court appeal processwere fair and would follow
due process.
Attorney-General Phillip Ruddock issued a ministerial statement
in November 2003 hailing the courts, claiming they would deliver
a just outcome. Howard, one of 11 trained lawyers
in the Cabinet, even declared that the commissions respect
basic principles of our criminal justice system.
Moreover, while these patent lies were being circulated, Canberra
initiated legal action to prevent any Freedom of Information access
to any of its correspondence with the US concerning Hickss
case. Compelling evidence about the torture and abuse of Hicks,
and fellow Australian prisoner Mamdouh Habib, was arrogantly rejected
by Howard with claims that the psychologically and physically
traumatised men were in good health. Anyone presenting
detailed evidence about the real goings-on in Guantánamo
was simply denounced by Howard government officials as biased
or soft on Islamic terrorism.
Howard, Ruddock and Foreign Minister Alexander Downer have
rejected overtures from Bush administration officials for the
repatriation of Hicks, and continued to insist that he be tried
in the US. Hicks cannot be tried in Australia because he has not
broken any Australian laws.
Canberra has repudiated any defence whatsoever of Hickss
legal and democratic rights. As Foreign Minister Alexander Downer
made clear when Hicks was initially detained in late 2001: We
are an ally of the United State and we agree with them [their
treatment of Hicks]. Theyre perfectly entitled to take tough
action.
The governments central purpose has been to demonstrate
its unwavering loyalty to the Bush administration and thereby
secure Washingtons support for Australias neo-colonial
operations in the Asia-Pacific region. Hicks is regarded, in other
words, as totally expendablea useful tool in the pursuit
of Canberras geo-political interests.
Growing demands for Hickss release
David Hickss lawyersMajor Michael Mori and David
MacLeodand Terry Hicks, Davids father, have stepped
up their demands for his repatriation. Their calls have been echoed
by Australias legal fraternity, including the Law Council
of Australia, former High Court judges and the New South Wales
Director of Public Prosecutions, as well as sections of the corporate
media, the church and various human rights organisations.
NSW Director of Public Prosecutions Nicholas Cowdrey, for example,
has denounced the Howard government and demanded Hicks be freed.
Likewise, former High Court chief justice Gerard Brennan told
the Australian press that Hicks, who has committed no offence
against Australian law, has been subjected for years to a procedure
that could never be just.... An Australian citizens right
to justice should never be a mere trading item in international
relations.
Fairfax-owned daily newspapersthe Melbourne Age
and the Sydney Morning Heraldhave published comments
and editorials demanding Hickss freedom.
On Sunday, Michelle Grattan, chief political editor of the
Age, bluntly declared that Howard, who had become obsessive
about Hicks, had been hung out to dry by the Supreme
Court.
Hicks did not pose any security threat, she wrote,
and his actions in Afghanistan didnt produce any terrorist
act or plan for one. Canberra should cut its losses and
call for the Australian citizen to be freed, she concluded.
Predictably, Howard, Ruddock and Downer have reacted to these
comments with frenetic denunciations of Hicks, trampling on the
presumption of innocence and regurgitating previous attempts to
paint him as a dangerous Islamic jihadist.
Howard told the media on June 30 that Hicks was a threat
to the United States, was a member of Al Qaeda, and had
committed more serious offences than most in Guantánamo.
This was repeated yesterday by Foreign Minister Downer, following
a heated one-hour meeting with David MacLeod, Hickss Australian
lawyer. Afterwards, Downer told the media that Hicks was a member
of Al Qaeda. He provided no evidence to substantiate the claim
or any detail on what Hickss alleged serious offences
were.
Like Howard, Labor leader Kim Beazley has rejected calls for
Hickss release, instead urging the government to pressure
Washington to put Hicks on trial in an American civilian court.
US civilian court processes, Beazley claimed, were among
the best in the world and that is where justice may be obtained
and that is where the US should try him. He did not oppose
Howards clear violation of presumption of innocence or the
bogus terror allegations.
Labors shadow attorney-general Nicola Roxon has used
the situation to try and outflank Howard from the right, claiming
that any delay in trying Hicks in a US court or military tribunal
would compromise national security.
Notwithstanding Labors craven support, the Howard government
faces major problems. None of its allegations against Hicks can
be substantiated, except on the basis of evidence obtained under
torture. The current charges are therefore likely to be dismissed
in a civilian court hearing.
In addition, US courts martial do not accept conspiracy as
a charge and even if such a trial did proceed, defence lawyers
could introduce damaging and detailed evidence about the torture,
abuse and other illegal methods employed by the US in Guantánamosomething
both Washington and Canberra want to avoid.
On July 4, even as Howard was urging Washington to stand firm
on Hicks, the Pentagon announced that it planned, in the next
two weeks, to release and repatriate, without charge, the last
remaining 59 Afghan nationals in Guantánamo accused of
association with the Taliban or Al Qaeda. It also revealed that
another 60 Afghans would be freed from the US military prison
at Bagram Air Base during the same time.
See Also:
After the Supreme Court ruling
Congressional Democrats join with Republicans to maintain military
commissions at Guantánamo
[1 July 2006]
Another sign of popular disgust
Australian film festival audience invites Mamdouh Habib to speak
about Guantánamo documentary
[1 July 2006]
Supreme Court rules against
Bush administration's military commissions
[30 June 2006]
Release Hicks,
Habib and all Guantanamo Bay detainees!
Australian government aids and abets US torture
[18 June 2004]
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