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UN representative expresses grave concern over
CIA torture, Guantánamo hearings
By Naomi Spencer
19 December 2007
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Following a visit earlier this month to the US military prison
at Guantánamo Bay, a United Nations human rights representative
reported ongoing abuse, drumhead judicial proceedings, and other
violations of international law. The report by the UN official,
charging the US government with widespread criminality, has been
almost entirely ignored by the US media.
In a report to the UN Human Rights Council meeting in Geneva
December 13, Special Rapporteur on human rights and counterterrorism
Martin Scheinin said he believed the CIA continues to engage in
so-called extraordinary rendition, secret detentions
and torture. Scheinin suggested that hundreds of detainees held
at Guantánamo were not being prosecuted to keep revelations
of abuse from emerging. During his visit, he was not allowed to
have unmonitored interaction with detainees.
Of the 305 Guantánamo detainees, about 80 have already
been put through combatant status review tribunals (CSRT) and
declared not to be enemy combatants, although they
have not been released. The military has announced that it plans
to hold these hearings for another 80 detainees, after which they
could ostensibly be convicted by military trial. But for 150 so-called
high value prisoners, Scheinin said, There is
not enough evidence that could be presented, even to a military
commission chaired by a military judge. Partly there may not be
evidence and partly the risk of issues of torture being raised
is too high.
Bringing them to court would bring to the courts
attention the method through which the evidence, including the
confessions, were obtained, Scheinin told the press following
his report.
In addition to the recent revelations that the CIA had destroyed
interrogation tapes, he said the indefinite detention without
trial is one further affirmation of the conclusion that
the CIA or others have been involved in methods of interrogation
that are incompatible with international law. The CIA, Scheinin
stated, has been involved and continues to be involved in
the use of interrogation techniques that violate the absolute
prohibition against torture.
The destruction of the CIA interrogation tapes showing the
torture of at least two prisoners underscores the basic fact that
egregious human rights violations by the US are not isolated events.
On the contrary, torture and illegal detentions have been the
standard operating procedure for the CIA, with the cooperation
of military brass and the support of the entire political establishment.
Scheinin said that in a meeting with representatives of the
CIA during his visit to the United States, the CIA refused
to engage in any meaningful interaction aimed at clarifying the
means of compliance with international standards of methods of
interrogation and accountability in respect of possible abuses.
He also said the CIA refused to meet with him a second time. This
stonewalling is yet further evidence of the lawlessness of the
US government.
Significantly, Scheinin noted that behavior by CIA officials
supports the suspicion that the CIA has been involved and
continues to be involved in the extraordinary rendition of terrorism
suspects and possibly other persons.
Moreover, the report concluded, It is unlikely that the
CIA would be able to run a global programme of rendition and detention
of terrorist suspects without at least logistical support by the
United States military authorities.
Although the Bush administration declared that it held no other
high value detainees in secret detention after transferring
14 to Guantánamo Bay from around the world in 2006, it
reserved the possibility of resuming the practice whenever it
wished, and has rendered at least one other detainee since then.
Other suspected detainees remain missing.
It should not be forgotten that, in addition to those detainees
being held at Guantánamo, the US continues to hold some
700 detainees in Afghanistan and approximately 18,000 detainees
in Iraq. Many of these are classified by the US as unlawful
enemy combatants in order to deny them fundamental legal
rights.
While at the Guantánamo Bay prison, Scheinin observed
the pre-trial military proceedings against Salim Ahmed Hamdan,
the alleged former driver of Osama bin Laden. Hamdan, captured
in Afghanistan in 2001, has been held at Guantánamo since
2002.
The drumhead character Hamdans CSRT was evident. The
hearings provided graphic illustrations of the practical difficulties
in providing fair trials at a distant military base, and confirmed
the difficulties or even impossibility of the defense to provide
evidence, Scheinin told the press. Neither witnesses
from abroad or high-value detainees from the Guantánamo
detention facility next door could be heard, at least on this
particular occasion.
The written report is more specific: These are administrative
processes rather than judicial ones. Detainees are not provided
with a lawyer during the course of hearings. Even if all
charges are dropped, the most that a reviewing court may
do is to order reconsideration of a decision, not release.
This violates international prohibitions on arbitrary detention,
habeas corpus rights, the right to a timely trial, and
other fundamental legal protections.
As could be expected, US media coverage of the report and the
Hamdan CSRT has been nonexistent. Neither the New York Times,
Washington Post, nor Los Angeles Times published
an article on the topic, with the main coverage in the US coming
from brief wire reports from the AP and Reuters.
Also typical, the response of the US government to the report
has consisted largely of the attempt to dismiss and discredit
it. Melanie Khanna, a US legal adviser, was quoted in both the
AP and Reuters articles at some length. Khanna said that sections
of Scheinins report dealing with legal violations by the
US simply catalogue well-known criticisms and fail even
to acknowledge that there are multiple ways of approaching the
difficult issues discussed...
We hope that in future the work of the Special Rapporteur
proceeds differently, Khanna said, claiming Scheinins
description of the combatant status reviews was in part
misleading about the facts of the process, and revisits well-worn,
ill-informed criticisms of military commissions hearings. The
unfortunate fact is that a large part of the report again repeats
unfair and oversimplified criticisms of the United States.
However, the well-worn arguments against the military
tribunals have also been made by the US Supreme Courtspecifically
in regard to the case of Hamdanbefore this decision was
scuttled by Congress in the 2006 Military Commissions Act. In
that case, Hamdan v. Rumsfeld, the court ruled that President
Bush did not have the authority to establish military commissions,
and found them to be illegal under military law and the Geneva
Conventions.
When Hamdan was subject to another military commission in June
2007, charges of conspiracy and supporting terrorism were thrown
out by the military judge, who ruled that the commission lacked
jurisdiction because Hamdan had not been officially classified
as an unlawful enemy combatant.
The government appealed this decision, asking a military court
to declare Hamdan an unlawful enemy combatant so he
can be tried once again. A ruling has not been issued as of this
writing. During the hearing, the defense was denied the request
to call three high value detainees held at Guantánamo
for testimony on the spurious grounds that the request was not
timely because of the clearance required to access such prisoners.
The detainees, Khalid Sheik Mohammed, Ramzi Bin al-Shib and Abu
Faraj al-Libi, have all been subjected to CIA interrogations and
torture.
See Also:
Bush administration moves to block inquiries
into CIAs destruction of torture tapes
[17 December 2007]
CIA director testifies behind closed doors
on destroyed tapes
[12 December 2007]
Attorneys demand preservation of evidence
of detainee torture
[12 December 2007]
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