Friday, August 31, 2018

LGC Newsletter – August 2018


Guantánamo Bay


On 8 August, following strong debate by professionals, the American Psychological Association (APA) voted to reject a proposal to change its policy to allow members to treat prisoners held at sites “that do not comply with international human rights laws”, such as Guantánamo Bay. In 2015, the APA banned members from working at such sites in light of revelations that previous guidelines had allowed members to assist in “enhanced interrogations”. Breaches of the policy could lead to a psychologist having their license to practice revoked for breach of the ethics code.
Following considerable debate and intervention by human rights NGOs, the APA voted 105 to 57 to maintain its ban on military psychologists working at facilities like Guantánamo Bay.

Newly declassified CIA cables from 2002 show current CIA chief Gina Haspel discussing the torture of Guantánamo prisoner Abd Al-Nashiri when he was held at a secret CIA prison Haspel was running in Thailand. While Haspel has since been appointed CIA director following her career as a torturer, Al-Nashiri is facing the death penalty at Guantánamo based on the “evidence” extracted from him through torture during the 4 years he “disappeared” into CIA detention after his 2002 kidnap in UAE and until he reappeared at Guantánamo in 2006. He has prosecuted both Poland and Lithuania at the European Court of Human Rights for their complicity in his torture.
Some of the documents are believed to have been written by Haspel, and mention torture methods such as waterboarding: “Interrogation escalated rapidly from subject being aggressively debriefed by interrogators while standing at the walling wall, to multiple applications of the walling technique, and ultimately, multiple applications of the watering technique.”
Elsewhere, they describe how he was “stripped naked, repeatedly slammed against walls, waterboarded and confined in boxes for hours at a covert detention site that CIA Director Gina Haspel briefly oversaw after 9/11.
In one case: “CIA psychologists initiated one interrogation session at 4:15 a.m. by placing Nashiri against the “walling board” and telling him “they wanted to know who, what, when, where and how ongoing operations would take place and would stop at nothing to get it.”
When Nashiri repeated information he had already provided instead of new information about threats, the psychologists threw him to the floor and a “security team” ripped off his clothes and shaved his head while he “moaned and wailed.” They then locked him in a box.”
 

The military tribunal of Abd Al-Nashiri has been indefinitely suspended by the judge since February this year. With current judge Vince Spath retiring later this year, the case, when it resumes, will be taken over by Air Force Colonel Shelly W. Schools. “Spath drew national attention in November for summarily convicting the chief defense lawyer, Marine Brig. Gen. John Baker, of contempt of court — and then ordering him to serve 21 days confinement in his trailer behind Guantánamo’s war court. Spath then quietly put in for retirement soon after a federal judge overturned Baker’s conviction.”
It is unknown when Judge Schools will head the tribunal for the first time as a number of issues put by Spath are currently being considered by the US Court of Military Commission Review.

Judge Army Col. James Pohl has ruled to prevent the prosecution from using statements given to FBI interrogators in the case of five men accused of involvement in attacks in 2001 in New York. The defence has long argued that this evidence is tainted by the torture these men previously suffered in secret CIA prisons around the world and which provided the basis for these interrogations. The statements were made in 2006 after they were transferred from CIA custody. The evidence they contain provide some of the strongest evidence in the conspiracy case against the men, according to the prosecution.
The ruling, which could see the trial in this case being expedited, is a major setback for the prosecution and the US administration. The prosecution has asked the judge to reconsider this ruling.
In addition, on 27 August, Judge Pohl announced his retirement as of 30 September and has assigned a Marine colonel, Keith A. Parrella, to replace him.
The next pre-trial hearing in the case is scheduled for 10-14 September.

Four Uighur refugees granted asylum in Bermuda in 2009 after having been transferred there from Guantánamo Bay have been naturalised and granted citizenship. Although this does not grant them “Bermudan status”, they will be able to apply for passports and thus leave the island. One of the men has a sick son, who is also currently stateless, and they were unable to travel for his treatment abroad. The men will be recognised as “British Overseas Territory Citizens” following a decision by the British government. The men could not leave the island without passports and risk being sent to internment camps set up by the Chinese government for the Uighur minority if sent there.

Ahmed Ahjam, one of six men, all refugees, resettled in Uruguay in 2014, has opened up his own stall selling Syrian sweets and pastries in Montevideo’s historic Mercado Agricola. With some help from a local development agency, he set up a stall selling sweets from his native Syria, using recipes from his sisters. He had previously made and sold these sweets at events and stalls at various functions. He is the only one of the six – 4 Syrians, one Tunisian and one Palestinian – who is in work in the country. The men receive a small stipend from the government and have their rent paid but are otherwise struggling to adapt to life after Guantánamo and in Uruguay.

Rendition
The Lithuanian government initially stated that it would not appeal the European Court of Human Rights ruling made in May finding it complicit in hosting and facilitating the CIA’s extraordinary rendition programme through the provision of detention sites where suspects were tortured in its territory. The case was brought by Guantánamo prisoner Abu Zubaydah, who has also successfully sued Poland at the court. Lithuania was ordered to pay him €130,000 in damages. The Justice Ministry claimed there were no legal grounds for appeal.
However, days before the 31st August deadline to lodge an appeal the government changed its mind and the prime minister has announced that it will appeal. The Lithuanian authorities maintain that there has been no wrongdoing on their part.

LGC Activities:
The LGC held its monthly Shut Guantánamo! demos outside the US Embassy in Nine Elms on 2 August at 12-2pm. Our next monthly demo for September is on Thursday 6 September at 12-2pm: https://www.facebook.com/events/474337159719373/ All are welcome to join us.

Ahead of the US midterm elections on 6 November, the LGC is asking people to help us boost numbers at our regular monthly demos to remind the US authorities that Guantánamo is still an issue, one that needs a political solution: https://londonguantanamocampaign.blogspot.com/2018/08/time-to-put-guantanamo-back-on-agenda.html

No comments:

Post a Comment