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U.S. Criticized on Guantanamo Prisoners

Associated Press, USA
Jan. 10. 2004
Stevenson Jacobs
www.kansascity.com

ReligionNewsBlog.com • Item 5609 • Posted: Monday January 12, 2004  

Click here... More articles on this topic: USA

GUANTANAMO BAY NAVAL BASE, Cuba - Two years after the first prisoners began arriving at Guantanamo Bay in the wake of Sept. 11, families of detainees are asking how much longer they must wait for their loved ones to be tried or released.

As the prison camp marks its second year anniversary Sunday, the United States also faced criticism from foreign governments and human rights groups, questioning why hundreds of terror suspects have been held for so long without charges or legal representation.

America vs. Human Rights

“The United States has long regarded itself as a beacon of human rights, as evidenced by an enlightened constitution, judicial independence, and a civil society grounded in strong traditions of free speech and press freedom. But the reality is more complex; for decades, civil rights and civil liberties groups have exposed constitutional violations and challenged abusive policies and practices. In recent years, as well, international human rights monitors have documented serious gaps in U.S. protections of the human rights of vulnerable groups. Both federal and state governments have nonetheless resisted applying to the U.S. the standards that, rightly, the U.S. applies elsewhere.”
Human Rights Watch

“It is time to get our children back or for them to be tried in an impartial court,” said Khalid al-Odah, a Kuwaiti whose 26-year-old son Fawzi was one of the first to arrive at the bleak outpost. “But nobody is listening. That is the problem.”

Al-Odah is hanging his hopes on his son’s release or trial on the U.S. Supreme Court, which is to hear the first appeal early this year on whether the prisoners should have access to American courts, something opposed by President Bush.

Over the past two years, U.S. officials have released 88 people held at the detention camp in eastern Cuba - but new ones have regularly been brought in, bringing the current number of detaines to around 660.

While Washington has promised tribunals, it also continues to expand the prison. Eventually it will have 1,100 cells, raising further questions of what the future holds for the mission.

Some U.S. lawmakers also have raised concerns about prolonged delays in the detainees’ cases. Others say holding tribunals outside the jurisdiction of U.S. courts would make trials unfair.

Many critics say the United States has abandoned its judicial principles in its zeal to prevent another terrorist attack on its soil.

“You have people sitting there for two years with rights under international law being utterly ignored by the administration,” said Jamie Fellner, U.S. director of Human Rights Watch.

Since the first prisoners arrived on Jan. 11, 2002, the U.S. government has classified the men as “enemy combatants” and not prisoners of war, which would afford them more legal protection.

They have been held without charge and interrogated repeatedly. Only last month were military defense lawyers assigned - and only to two prisoners.

“We want to do it quickly, but we want to do it right,” said Air Force Maj. John Smith, a lawyer in the office of military commissions at the Pentagon. He said the procedures now need only “tweaks and minor additions.”

A retired U.S. Army general has been appointed to oversee the tribunals, which apply the death penality. A four-member review panel has been chosen. The desks, name plates, closed-circuit television and government seals are already in place at a building in Guantanamo. Yet no order has been given for trials to start.

The first tribunals could begin within 30 days of receiving an order, said Maj. Gen. Geoffrey Miller, commander of the detention operation.

The detainees from 44 countries are being held on suspicion of links to Afghanistan’s ousted Taliban regime or al-Qaida terror network, including three boys ages 13 to 15.

The indefinite detention has drawn concern from several U.S. allies including Britain, which has nine citizens at the base.

Johan Steyn, one of a panel of judges who sit in Britain’s House of Lords, recently said holding the tribunals in Cuba would be a “monstrous failure of justice.”

Twenty-one prisoners have attempted suicide, some multiple times and most by trying to hang themselves, officials say.

The U.S. government has denied mistreatment, noting detainees can exchange censored letters with family, are well fed and receive quality medical care.

Officials began rewarding detainees last year for good behavior - and for providing information about terror cells. Miller says the amount of useful intelligence information has increased, although he has refused to talk about how the information has helped the war on terror.

Inside a medium-security area, detainees deemed cooperative play soccer and talk with other detainees.

But one privilege that has been eliminated is contact with the camp’s Muslim spiritual adviser. Authorities suspended the meetings last year after the arrest of Muslim chaplain Capt. James Yee on accusations of mishandling classified information.

He was one of four arrested by investigators looking into alleged security breaches at the base.

The new Muslim chaplain, Capt. Khallid Shabazz, arrived two weeks ago but said he will only minister to Muslim soldiers - not detainees.


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