USA: Supreme Court's ruling on Guantanamo trials - a victory for human rights

Puck78Puck78 Posts: 737
edited June 2006 in A Moving Train
AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL
PRESS RELEASE

29 June 2006


USA: Supreme Court's ruling - a victory for human rights

Today's Supreme Court ruling blocking the military commissions set up by President George W. Bush is a victory for the rule of law and human rights, said Amnesty International today in reaction to the US Supreme Court's ruling on the case of Salim Ahmed Hamdan.

Amnesty International also said that President Bush should use the ruling as a springboard for ensuring that the USA brings all its 'war on terror' detention policies into full compliance with US and international law. This includes cancelling the trials by military commission, revoking the Military Order that established them, closing the Guantánamo detention camp, and ending all secret and arbitrary detentions.

"The US administration should ensure that those held in Guantánamo should be either released or brought before civilian courts on the US mainland," said Rob Freer, Amnesty International researcher on the US.

In a 5-3 vote, Justice John Paul Stevens, who said the proposed trials were illegal under US law and international Geneva conventions. The decision was based on the case of Salim Ahmed Hamdan, a 36-year-old yemeni national who has spent four years in the US detention centre, but it will directly affect at least another 10 inmates who had been named for trial by Military Commissions.
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Comments

  • AbuskedtiAbuskedti Posts: 1,917
    Human rights needed a victory.
  • Puck78Puck78 Posts: 737
    they indeed needed it long ago: 4 years of Guantanamo is too much. Half a day of Guantanamo would be already too much. Let's hope this is a beginning
    www.amnesty.org
    www.amnesty.org.uk
  • eddies grrleddies grrl Posts: 509
    A Supreme Challenge to Bush's Authority
    By Onnesha Roychoudhuri, AlterNet
    Posted on June 30, 2006, Printed on June 30, 2006
    http://www.alternet.org/story/38326/


    [size=+5]"The game is up."[/size]

    That's how Michael Ratner, president of the Center for Constitutional Rights (CCR), summed up the implications of Thursday's Supreme Court ruling in the case of Guantanamo detainee Salim Hamdan.

    "The Supreme Court has firmly rejected President Bush's attempt to sidestep American courts," Ratner said in a press conference this morning. "Now the president must act: Try our clients in lawful U.S. courts or release them."

    Up to this point, litigation surrounding Guantanamo detainees has been heavily manipulated by the Bush administration, which has sought to find legal loopholes in order to continue to hold hundreds of detained civilians in the "war on terror."

    In Hamdan v. Rumsfeld, the court issued an unmistakably clear rebuke to the president's assertion that he has the authority to violate the Geneva Conventions and the Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ) in the establishment of the Guantanamo tribunals. But today's Supreme Court ruling has implications that stretch far beyond the case of Hamdan -- beyond, even, Guantanamo detainees. Indeed, the Supreme Court ruling marks what may well be the beginning of the end to an unchecked executive power.

    You can only exercise executive powers within the law, not above it

    The language used in the Supreme Court decision clearly states that President Bush cannot violate already existing laws in exercising executive power: "… in undertaking to try Hamdan and subject him to criminal punishment, the Executive is bound to comply with the Rule of Law that prevails in this jurisdiction."

    While the Bush administration asserts that existing laws are neither adequate for protecting the country nor for trying terrorism suspects, the court states, "It is not evident why the danger posed by international terrorism, considerable though it is, should require, in the case of Hamdan's trial, any variance from the courts-martial rules."

    The court affirmed that the Geneva Conventions do apply to everyone in the "war on terror." This goes beyond Guantanamo detainees and includes anyone detained, even in so-called "black sites" run by the CIA. The reaffirmation that the Geneva Conventions are applicable in these "brave new times" sets a critical precedent. As CCR's legal director Barbara Olshansky notes, this means that these established rules of law and protections will be available to everyone, everywhere around the world, regardless of the nature of an armed conflict we may be in.

    Notably, the court contradicted the D.C. Circuit Court's earlier opinion that the Conventions do not apply to Hamdan because he was captured during a war with al Qaida, which is not a signatory of the Conventions. The court made quick work of this opinion:

    The Court need not decide the merits of this argument because there is at least one provision of the Geneva Conventions that applies here even if the relevant conflict is not between signatories. Common Article 3, which appears in all four Conventions, provides that, in a "conflict not of an international character occurring in the territory of one of the High Contracting Parties [ i.e., signatories], each Party to the conflict shall be bound to apply, as a minimum," certain provisions protecting "[p]ersons … placed hors de combat by … detention," including a prohibition on "the passing of sentences … without previous judgment … by a regularly constituted court affording all the judicial guarantees … recognized as indispensable by civilized peoples."

    Yes, torture is illegal

    The explicit mention of the applicability of Common Article 3 goes beyond establishing the right to certain judicial guarantees. It makes quick work of "enhanced interrogation techniques." As Marty Lederman of SCOTUSblog writes,

    Common Article 3 provides that detained persons 'shall in all circumstances be treated humanely,' and that '[t]o this end,' certain specified acts 'are and shall remain prohibited at any time and in any place whatsoever' -- including 'cruel treatment and torture' and 'outrages upon personal dignity, in particular humiliating and degrading treatment.'

    That means no water-boarding, no prisoner pyramids, no sensory deprivation, nor any other linguistic twist on what is otherwise known as torture and abuse.

    In an attempt to prevent Guantanamo detainees from exercising the right to contest their detainment, President Bush signed into law the Detainee Treatment Act of 2005. The administration argued that the act applied retroactively -- wiping out already pending cases. The Supreme Court's decision clearly states that this is not the case.

    Authorization to Use Military Force (AUMF) does not authorize military tribunals

    Congress' passing of AUMF immediately following the 9/11 terrorist attacks has been claimed by members of the Bush administration as the main justification for extra-legal tactics in the war on terrorism. On Thursday the Supreme Court sent a clear message to the administration that this twisting of Congress' intent is more than disingenuous -- it is illegal:

    Neither the AUMF nor the DTA (Detainee Treatment Act) can be read to provide specific, overriding authorization for the commission convened to try Hamdan. Assuming the AUMF activated the President's war powers … and that those powers include authority to convene military commissions in appropriate circumstances … there is nothing in the AUMF's text or legislative history even hinting that Congress intended to expand or alter the authorization set forth in UCMJ (Uniform Code of Military Justice) …Together, the UCMJ, the AUMF, and the DTA at most acknowledge a general Presidential authority to convene military commissions in circumstances where justified under the Constitution and laws, including the law of war …

    Again, the Supreme Court is issuing a clear limit on President Bush's claims to executive power by explicitly stating that the power can only be exercised within existing laws. The limited scope of AUMF dictated by the Supreme Court is a critical precedent. If the Supreme Court does not think the military tribunals are justified by AUMF, it is highly unlikely that NSA wiretaps will pass legal muster.

    Reestablishing American values

    The Court's language in the decision is heartening -- asserting its right to exercise the rule of law, citing, "The public importance of the questions raised, the Court's duty, in both peace and war, to preserve the constitutional safeguards of civil liberty, and the public interest in a decision on those questions without delay."

    There is no doubt that this is a huge victory for the legal values America was founded on. The language throughout the ruling provides a precedent for future cases challenging President Bush's claims to extra-legal executive power.

    But the immediate implications for Guantanamo detainees are more uncertain. While Michael Ratner stated that he believes it likely that Guantanamo will be closed within a year, the critical question is where these detainees will be put. Both Ratner and Olshansky cite an instance in which detainees were released to Yemen, but are now being held indefinitely upon the explicit request of the Bush administration. That means that detainees will likely be shuffled to other countries where they will be held without appropriate legal rights.

    It is clearly within the interests of the Bush administration to close Guantanamo as it has become a monumental embarrassment and source of public scrutiny. It is critical to note, however, that other bases (Kandahar, Bagram, Jalalabad, Asadabad) and "black sites" where detainees are held subjected to the same, and worse abuses, will remain in existence. The closure of Guantanamo will not be the vindication of law and human rights, and it would behoove the press to pay close attention to the bait and switch tactics the administration is bound to use in coming days.

    President Bush has already stated that he intends to seek congressional approval to continue to try detainees in military tribunals. In an impossible assertion, Bush told the press Thursday that he will "protect the [American] people and at the same time conform with the findings of the Supreme Court."

    While today's ruling does not put an end to the president's illegal tactics in the war on terror, it does reveal such assertions to be patently contradictory.

    Onnesha Roychoudhuri is a former assistant editor at AlterNet.
    © 2006 Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved.
    View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/story/38326/
    Life is the riddle
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    A couple of lucky ones
    Tangled up in too much love
    ~cowboy junkies
  • close gitmo
  • hippiemomhippiemom Posts: 3,326
    Abuskedti wrote:
    Human rights needed a victory.
    Human rights, is the underdog, that's for sure.

    How unsurprising that Scalia, Thomas and Alito dissented.
    "Nothing in the world is more dangerous than sincere ignorance and conscientious stupidity." ~ MLK, 1963
  • keeponrockinkeeponrockin Posts: 7,446
    This is good!
    Believe me, when I was growin up, I thought the worst thing you could turn out to be was normal, So I say freaks in the most complementary way. Here's a song by a fellow freak - E.V
  • Eliot RosewaterEliot Rosewater Posts: 2,684
    hippiemom wrote:
    Human rights, is the underdog, that's for sure.

    How unsurprising that Scalia, Thomas and Alito dissented.
    Yeah, this was a pleasant surprise. But I'm afraid that it may be some sort of peace offering that allows for the abuse that is still occurring but saying, "but that's all...you can get away with all this other bullshit, but not this." Hopefully I'm wrong.

    Scalia has such an awful history with executive authority. I wrote and called my senators daily as soon as I read up on him in a failed effort to reject his confirmation. The current supreme court really scares the hell out of me in regards to human rights so while I'm quite skeptical, hopefully the decision yesterday is a step in the right direction and not just some sort of peace offering.
  • my2handsmy2hands Posts: 17,117
    Puck78 wrote:
    Let's hope this is a beginning


    lets MAKE it the beginning...
  • my2hands wrote:
    lets MAKE it the beginning...

    Bravo.....
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