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David Hicks enters his sixth year of detention at Guantánamo
Bay
By Richard Phillips
8 January 2007
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Calls for the immediate release of Australian citizen David
Hicks from Guantánamo Bay intensified over the Christmas
period with concerns increasing about the 31-year-olds deteriorating
psychological health.
Hicks was captured by the Northern Alliance among Taliban forces
in Afghanistan in December 2001, then sold to the US military
which transported him to Guantánamo in early 2002. On January
11, he will enter the sixth year of his detention in the notorious
jail, where he has been subjected to various forms of torture
and long periods of solitary confinement.
Over the past year, Hicks has become increasingly withdrawn
and disoriented. On December 19, he refused to speak with his
parents in a long-planned phone call. His father Terry told the
media that his son was at breaking point and had refused
to come to the phone despite two separate calls made that day
by the family. Applications for the call were made six months
earlier.
We believe hes too emotionally stressed... Hes
really struggling, hes just not coping, Terry Hicks
said. For him to do that shows that hes just not right.
The emotional stress on him must be terrible.
The most recent conversation Terry Hicks had with David was
on July 7, 2006. He said it had been very difficult at that time
and his son was virtually unintelligible for the first 30 minutes
of the 90-minute phone call. The Hicks family has only spoken
with David four times, including during a brief visit to Guantánamo
in 2004, since he was incarcerated.
The deterioration of Hickss mental health, along with
that of hundreds of others still held in the Guantánamo
hellhole, is the direct result of US military policy, which is
aimed at psychologically destroying its prisoners.
More than two years ago, in August 2004, Hicks courageously
pleaded not guilty before the Bush administrations Military
Commissions on charges of attempted murder, conspiracy and aiding
the enemy. The ongoing solitary confinement of Hicks and other
measures are designed to break his will in preparation for the
revamped military commission trial now being organised by the
Pentagon.
Over the past weeks scores of angry letters to newspapers throughout
Australia have been published calling for Hickss immediate
release. The Sydney Morning Herald, the Melbourne-based
Age and several rural dailies have published editorials
and op-ed comments criticising the Howard government over the
issue. More than 6,500 emails have been sent to the Age
in the past month demanding that Hicks be freed immediately.
A recent Newspoll revealed that 91 percent of those surveyed
wanted Hicks tried fairly and quickly. Only one in four believed
that he would receive a fair trial in Cuba. Seventy percent wanted
him repatriated and released as soon as possible.
In another indication of the mounting anger, Peter Vickery,
a senior lawyer and special reporter for the International Commission
of Jurists in Victoria, published a comment in the Age,
pointing out that Canberras abandonment of Hicks and its
endorsement of the US military commissions, both new and old,
were defined as war crimes by the International Criminal Court
(ICC). Vickery said Australia was a signatory to the ICC and therefore
Howard government officials could be prosecuted under the Australian
Criminal Code.
A few days later, the Anglican Archbishop of Perth Roger Herft
used his Christmas message to criticise the Howard government
over the continued detention of Hicks. A group of federal coalition
MPs has belatedly begun voicing concerns about Hickss imprisonment.
On December 31, Brigadier Lyn McDade, director of military
prosecutions, told the Sydney Morning Herald the treatment
of the Australian citizen was abominable. In her first
public comment since being appointed in July, McDade said: I
dont care what hes done or alleged to have done. I
think hes entitled to a trial and a fair one and hes
entitled to be charged and dealt with as quickly as is possible.
As is anybody.
Government isolated
Confronted with this mounting opposition and concerned about
its implications for the federal election this year, Attorney-General
Philip Ruddock and Prime Minister John Howard have suddenly begun
feigning concern about the length of Hickss
incarceration.
Last week Ruddock told the media that the delay in putting
Hicks on trial was unreasonable and inappropriate.
Howard declared that Hicks had been kept far too long
without trial. I am not happy, not happy at all, Howard
said, and that unhappiness has been communicated to the
(Bush) administration.
This concern, of course, is farcical and deserves
to be treated with contempt by all those concerned about the ongoing
detention of Hicks and hundreds more in Guantánamo. Their
detention without charge or trial represents a major assault on
long-standing legal principles and a return to barbaric methods
of mediaeval justice.
As soon as Hicks was captured in late 2001, Howard and his
cabinet ministers made clear to the White House that it could
do whatever it liked with him. The government deliberately prejudiced
any trial, claiming Hicks to be an Al Qaeda member and a dangerous
terrorist. Government ministers, in league with sections of the
media, have spent years demonising the 31-year-old father of two,
while attacking critics for being soft on terrorism.
The Howard government is the only one in the world to have
praised the US military commissions, claiming that such kangaroo
courtswhich allowed hearsay, evidence extracted under torture,
prevented prisoners from cross-examining witness, to name a few
violations of legal rightswould have provided a fair trial.
Canberra still maintains that the new military commissions being
organised by the Bush administration will be fair.
The utter hypocrisy of the governments claims is exposed
by its Catch-22 argument that Hicks cannot be repatriated
from Guantánamo because he hasnt broken any
Australian laws and would therefore have to be released on return.
In other words, Hicks must be railroaded through an American kangaroo
court because he is innocent of any crime under Australian law!
Government assertions that the US will not release prisoners
from Guantánamo because they may represent security risks
is another fraud and exposed by even a perfunctory examination
of what has happened to the Guantánamo detainees repatriated
over the past two years.
On December 16, Associated Press (AP) reported that while the
Pentagon describes Guantánamo prisoners as among
the most dangerous, best-trained, vicious killers on the face
of the earth, hundreds have been transferred to their home
countriesin the Middle East, Europe and South Asiaand
then released.
In fact, of the 245 prisoners repatriated in the past three
years, 205 were released immediately or were cleared of charges
related to their detention at Guantánamo.
An unnamed senior US State Department official told AP that,
contrary to the Howard governments claims, the Pentagon
and the Bush administration do not ask countries to detain
them [repatriated Guantánamo prisoners] on our behalf.
Howards sudden expressions of concern about the length
of Hickss detention without trial are animated by cynical
electoral considerations. With a federal election due later this
year, Howard clearly recognises that his government is isolated
on the issue and is seeking to squirm out of its sordid record
in the ongoing and illegal imprisonment of Hicks.
These considerations were spelt out in an editorial in Saturdays
Australian newspaper. The Murdoch-owned newspaper bluntly
warned Howard that Hickss detention had now become
a lighting rod for discontent ... [with] the potential to backfire
on his Government.
National security, it continued, will undoubtedly
be a major issue in this years election, as it was in 2004,
and it would be unhelpful to say the least if the debate were
skewed by one exceptional case.
But rather than the Hicks case being an exception,
masses of ordinary people rightly regard it as emblematic of the
Howard governments contempt for basic democratic rights.
See Also:
Australian lawyers
launch court bid to secure David Hicks's release from Guantánamo
[15 December 2006]
Australian rallies
demand release of David Hicks from Guantánamo Bay
[12 December 2006]
Australia: Thousands
hear US military lawyer for David Hicks
[5 September 2006]
Following US Supreme
Court ruling
Australian government demands new "kangaroo court" for
David Hicks
[7 July 2006]
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