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Terry Hicks, father of former Guantánamo prisoner,
speaks with WSWS
People are now waking up...
By Richard Phillips
23 June 2007
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Late last month, 31-year-old
Australian citizen David Hicks was transferred from Guantánamo
Bay prison to the Yatala Labour Prison in South Australia following
a plea-bargain deal in his US military commission trial on March
26. Hicks, who was demonised by Washington and Canberra as a dangerous
terrorist, spent almost five and half years in the US military
jail after being captured in Afghanistan in December 2001.
Hicks was subjected to torture, extended periods of solitary
confinement and countless other violations of his basic rights.
He was eventually railroaded into pleading guilty to a charge
of providing material support for a terrorist group
at the military commission.
The charge against Hicks was completely bogus. It was retrospective,
violated the US Constitution and Australian law and, like his
incarceration in Guantánamo itself, constituted a war crime
under the Geneva Conventions. Under the plea bargain, which was
worked out in a backroom deal between the US and Australian governments,
Hicks was sentenced to seven years imprisonment, of which all
but nine months was suspended.
Hicks has been banned from making any comment to the media
for 12 months. He will be released from Yatala Prison on December
29, but is currently in solitary confinement and only allowed
two non-contact visits per week.
David Hickss 61-year-old father Terry, who courageously
spearheaded the struggle for his sons repatriation, spoke
with the World Socialist Web Site last week. He discussed
the illegal nature of the Guantánamo military commissions,
the Howard governments attack on democratic rights and his
own political development over the past 6 years.
Richard Phillips: How is Davids health?
Terry Hicks: He looks OK, is very chatty, and he seems to know
what he wants to do. He is still being assessed at the moment,
of course, so were all hoping that he will be alright. Hes
getting some exercise and has lost some of the puffy appearance
he had in Guantánamo. Apparently there are drugs they used
in Guantánamo which produce a fat sort of look.
RP: You attended the last military commission hearing. What
was it like?
TH: It was a joke. They asked David a couple of questions and
he said he wanted equality. Id like the same number
of lawyers as the prosecution, he said, and they responded
by sacking two of his lawyers. The whole thing was a farce because
the deal had already been done and the prosecution didnt
even know about it.
RP: Whats your response to government claims that David
is now an admitted terrorist?
TH: This is totally false. David has pleaded guilty to providing
material support for terrorism. There is nothing in the charge
that says that he has admitted to being a terrorist. Of course
they went very quiet when I challenged them to read the charge
sheet and explain where it said he was a terrorist or had carried
out terrorist acts. They are simply playing with words.
David has to spend nine months in an Australian jail, but what
about the people in charge of the Australian Wheat Board? They
supplied millions of dollars in bribes to the Saddam Hussein regime,
but nothing has happened to them. Howard says nothing about that.
RP: And your comment on Davids media gag?
TH: Everything has been worked out according to Howards
election timetable. Theyre denying it, but its obvious.
The elections were coming up, Howard was damaged badly in the
opinion polls and so he had to do something. He thought David
was an easy target, but it had all turned against him.
When Cheney visited Australia, Howard spoke to him to get things
moving and all of a sudden they started heading back into military
commissions again.
As everyone knows, David was put through an illegal system.
He was given the option of pleading not guilty and being in Guantánamo
for at least another three to five years, and probably getting
20 years at the end of the process, or taking a plea bargain and
ending up with five years or something like that.
He was at the end of his tether, which is no surprise. The
option was open and so he took it and I think he did the right
thing. Especially after the most recent cases that were chucked
out because the prisoners were not designated properly. Even though
the military commissions have thrown these cases out, the men
are still locked up.
The US governments attitude iswell change
things around and you can stay there until we do. Its like
trying to build a boat thats full of holes. Whenever they
see a hole they just try and patch it up and carry on as if nothing
happened.
RP: The government hopes now that everyone will forget about
the illegal treatment of David before the elections.
TH: Yes, thats right. But people are not silly. Just
read the letters to the papers.
The Howard government, which has been in power for more than
10 years using all sorts of lies, is now imploding. The spin,
tricks and scare tactics just dont work anymore.
People are now waking up and I hope they stay awake. Everyone
knows about the children overboard issue and the lies about weapons
of mass destruction in Iraq and so for most people David was just
another in the long list of government lies.
RP: Whats your comment on Labors reaction to Davids
return?
TH: The biggest turn of events was here in South Australia
with the state Labor Premier Rann. He went on and on about David
being a terrorist and how he was going to get him monitored. He
was really pumping it up. I told the media that the Labor premier
seemed to be inciting someone to commit an offense against David.
Rann obviously got the message and shut up.
Theyre still working on laws to stop David from making
any money from media interviews or a book. But this is a straight
out attack on free speech and other rights.
Now the Labor premier wants all members of bikie groups under
monitoring laws. But what about due process and legal rights?
Are these people supposed to be guilty in advance just because
they happen to be in a bikie gang? Ive met some bikies who
have got hearts of gold. All this is being used to divert attention
from real issues.
RP: Were you surprised by Labors response?
TH: I was a little bit because Labor had previously said that
theyd do all they could to get David back to Australia.
As soon as David pleaded guilty they turned around completely
and have used this to get back on side with the Liberal Party.
I knew Howard would never come down from the rafters after
David accepted the plea deal. And he didnt, he was gloating.
But my response waskeep going, keep going because people
will get tired of this and it will blow up in his face, and it
will with Labor.
RP: Can you comment on your own political development over
the past few years?
TH: When ASIO knocked on the door and told us about David it
was a big shock. And the media, which camped outside our house
for about a week, was pretty bad. All this went against the grain
and so I decided to speak out and take a stand.
Ive never called myself a radical but when you really
look at whats going onnot just in Australia but around
the worldthen all sorts of illusions start disappearing.
The world was not the place I believed it was, or should be,
and I started to understand how governments manipulate things.
They dupe people with jargon and bull dust and this happens on
a range of issuespetrol, tax, war in the Middle East, terrorism
and anything else you care to think about. You soon begin to develop
a new perspective on thingshuman rights issues, the law
and the human rights situation facing other peopleand looking
at the world in a new light.
RP: Last year senior Australian lawyers accused the Howard
government of war crimes over the treatment of David. Nothing
has been said since his return.
TH: Ive got a feeling that theyre sitting back
waiting. Maybe its difficult when Howard is still prime
minister, but if he gets tossed out in the next election it will
be interesting.
RP: What sustained you during the past five and a half years?
TH: Im a great believer in the philosophy that if youre
straight down the line then people will eventually listen. My
aim was to tell the truth about what was really going on in Guantánamo.
If you tell a lie, and this is something that Howard and Bush
know about, then it is very hard to maintain. When the situation
changes you have to modify your story and tell another lie, then
another and another. It goes on and on. My approach is to try
and tell everything as it is. That way you dont deviate.
I could not have survived or continued this fight, of course,
on my own. But for the first two years, though, we had a hell
of a battle. It was tough and there was virtually no support groupFair
Go For Davidhere in Adelaide and not much else. Eventually
people from Sydney, Queensland, Tasmania and other places made
contact and then Amnesty came on side and it all started to take
off.
At the start Id keep seeing the same faces at meetings
and then it changed about two and a half years ago. Families,
young people started arriving who werent associated with
any particular group, but wanted to assist. This meant wed
reached ordinary people and it was clear that the Howard government
was in deep trouble. It was a good feeling to know we were bringing
this important issue to the forefront.
Once the US Supreme Court ruled against the military commissions
this jolted a lot of people who started to realise it was really
serious. The supposedly strongest country in the world and defender
of democratic rights was starting to fall apart.
Students also took up the issue and by that I mean 14- and
15-year-old kids, who were doing papers on human rights issues
and writing about David.
I still get lots of calls from this age group who want to talk
to me. In fact, Ive just been contacted by a high-school
student who wants to interview me about Davids return to
Australia and how things have fallen into a heap with the military
commissions. It is very important that young people are responding
to these questions.
RP: How would you sum up this whole experience?
Someone said to me a few weeks back that Id probably
only be speaking to two or three people after David returned,
but I havent been able to put my feet up. My diary is full
with speaking engagements and Ive addressed meetings in
Melbourne, Adelaide, Sydney, and will be speaking in Wollongong
in a couple of weeks.
It proves that no matter what the government has done to demonise
David, people are not going to let the legal rights issues be
forgotten. The government tried to use David as an easy target
but people know that it wasnt just about David Hicks. While
there are still places like Guantánamo, Abu Ghraib and
other secret prisons then human rights issues will be upfront
all the time.
See Also:
Guantánamo prisoner David Hicks
incarcerated in high-security Australian jail
[5 June 2007]
Guantánamo Bay
detainee railroaded into guilty plea
The issues of principle in the case of David Hicks
[14 April 2007]
Senior lawyers accuse Australian
government of war crimes over Guantánamo
[27 February 2007]
Australian lawyers
launch court bid to secure David Hickss release from Guantánamo
[15 December 2006]
Father of Australian
Guantánamo prisoner speaks to the WSWS
[25 August 2005]
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