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from
the World Socialist Website
US military lawyer denounces Guantanamo
Bay trials
Major Michael Mori, the US military lawyer appointed to defend
Australian citizen David
Hicks, the first of six Guantanamo Bay prisoners scheduled
to face a US military court,
has bluntly denounced the planned tribunals. In his first public
statement on the
hearings, Mori told a Washington press conference on January
21 that the military
commissions were 'created by those only with a vested
interest in conviction' and would 'not
provide a full and fair trial'.
'The commission process,' he said, 'just creates
an unfair system that threatens to
convict the innocent and provides the guilty justifiable complaints
as to their convictions.' Notwithstanding
the limited character of his criticisms, Mori's
comments constitute a
damning indictment of the impending hearings.
Twenty-eight-year-old Hicks, who was captured by the Northern
Alliance in Afghanistan
in December 2001, has been imprisoned in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba,
for almost two
years without access to a lawyer or family members. Mamdouh
Habib, a 48-year-old
Australian citizen, is also being held in the US concentration
camp. Like the more than
660 prisoners in Guantanamo Bay they have been regularly interrogated
by American
military and intelligence officers.
Hicks was only given the right to a lawyer and allowed to
speak by phone to his parents
two months ago, after the US announced he would be brought
before a military tribunal.
Washington has yet to formally lay charges against Hicks and
is currently trying to
secure an admission of guilt from the Australian before any
military hearing.
The tribunals violate the most basic tenets of international
law, the US constitution and
established procedures of the American military justice system.
A seven-member panel
of military officers appointed by the Bush administration
runs the trials and determines
the innocence or guilt of prisoners on the basis of a majority
vote.
The military can monitor private conversations between defence
counsel and their
clients. Hearsay and information gathered in interrogation
and without the presence of a
defence lawyer can be used as evidence. The Pentagon can also
deny civilian defence
lawyers access to any evidence and stop them attending any
closed court proceedings
on vague security grounds.
The accused have no right of appeal to a civilian court with
the final decision on their fate
determined by the US president through his appointees. Even
if prisoners are found not
guilty, the US government is not obliged to release and repatriate
them.
Mori said the most 'striking injustice' was that
military tribunal commissioners had no
authority to rule on defence motions which could dismiss any
charges or invalidate any
part of the commission process. These decisions were made by
the appointing authority (the legal advisers
to US Secretary of Defence Donald Rumsfeld and Paul Wolfowitz)
that laid the charges and approved the prosecutions in the
first
place.
The military lawyer also raised a number of key questions
about his ability to prepare a
legal defence for Hicks: 'Are we going to be given the
time to prepare? Don't forget, the
government's had this for two years. Who knows how many
investigative agencies have
been working on this ... but what assets will the defence get?
What resources? What
experts will be allowed? How freely are we going to be able
to move and obtain evidence
?'
While critical of the planned tribunals, Major Mori insists
that Hicks be brought before a
court martial, arguing that it would afford the accused greater
legal rights, including to
make civil court appeals. Hicks, however, has to date not been
charged with any crime
nor has he been classified as a prisoner of war. He is being
held illegally and should be
immediately released.
Mori's criticisms reflect concern amongst sections of
the US military that the Bush
administration's treatment of war prisoners will have
serious repercussions for captured
American military personnel who could be subjected to same
treatment. They also
express broader domestic and international unease about the
Bush administration's
tearing up of long-established legal principles.
The trials, Mori said, would have an 'international impact'
and warned that other nations
might use similar legal methods against American citizens in
the future. 'The reality is,
we wouldn't tolerate these rules if they were applied
to US citizens.'
Asked about Hicks's health, Mori said: 'Physically,
he's as fair as can be expected when
you're in the conditions he's being held. Mentally,
he probably degenerated to the point
where his main concerns are the basic human instincts. He desires
what he needs - food, shelter. Remember
two years, without touch, without outside world
communication, it kind of creates a disorientation.'
These comments are somewhat understated because under tribunal
rules Mori is not
allowed to provide any detailed information on prisoners' health
or jail conditions. They
are, however, a disturbing reminder of the conditions inside
the American military prison
and make clear that the young Australian has been seriously
affected by his illegal
imprisonment and the stress of regular interrogations. They
confirm warnings from
various international human rights organisations that Guantanamo
Bay is a hellhole
where prisoners are psychologically tortured and have no rights
whatsoever.
Speaking later to a Sydney radio station, Mori criticised
the Howard government and said
it should not have signed any agreement with the US on how
Hicks and Habib would be
treated before meeting with defence lawyers.
'I have not seen the official agreement between the
US and Australia and I wasn't privy
to any of the discussions,' he added. 'It would have
been helpful for the Australian
government to have heard from the defence counsel that would
have been representing
David Hicks or had served in that role prior to agreeing to
anything.' Mori has officially
requested copies of the agreement but has only been given news
releases.
Australian Attorney General Phillip Ruddock dismissed the
military lawyer's comments
claiming they were not unusual and constituted no more than
'a vigorous defence' of
Hicks.
Mori's statements, however, are simply not 'defence
arguments' in a current hearing
but an indictment of the military tribunal system per se. Moreover,
his remarks highlight
the criminal nature of the Australian government's refusal
to defend the basic rights of
Hicks and Habib and demand their immediate release from Guantanamo
Bay.
From the outset the Howard government has used Hicks and Habib's
detention to
cement its political and military ties with the White House
and its so-called 'war on terror'
and has brushed aside criticism, claiming that the men were
being treated 'fairly' and
endorsing every violation of the prisoners' basic democratic
rights.
In breach of their basic responsibility to defend the rights
of Australian citizens, the
Howard overnment conducted secret negotiations with the White
House, culminating in
an official agreement with the Bush administration supporting
the treatment of Hicks and
Habib and the impending military trials. Canberra is currently
blocking a Freedom of
Information request for the release of all correspondence with
the White House on the
issue and refused to provide Hicks's defence team with
transcripts of interrogations
conducted by Australian Federal Police and intelligence officers.
The Howard government has publicly admitted that Hicks and
Habib have not broken any
Australian laws and could not be prosecuted in any Australian
court. But instead of
utilising this undisputed fact to demand their immediate release,
the government has
used it to justify their support for the illegal US detention
of the men. Moreover, Prime
Minister Howard and other government ministers have regularly
used the mass media to
publicly brand Hicks and Habib as terrorists or members of
Al Qaeda. No evidence has
ever been released supporting these allegations.
The detention of Hicks and Habib and more than 660 prisoners
in Guantanamo Bay is a
violation of international law and constitutes a war crime
under the Geneva Conventions.
This cannot be reversed through demands for a 'fairer' military
court procedure but only
through the development of a broad-based political movement
to demand their
immediate and unconditional release and repatriation, along
with the rest of the
Guantanamo Bay prisoners.
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