Showing posts with label Gina Haspel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gina Haspel. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 30, 2019

LGC Newsletter – April 2019

Guantánamo Bay
Majid Khan, who entered a plea bargain in February 2012 before the Guantánamo military commission, in which he agreed to testify against other prisoners, is due to be sentenced later this year, more than 7 years after he pleaded guilty to terrorism offences. In a pre-sentencing hearing in early April, his lawyers argued that his sentence should be reduced to less than the 19 years he agreed to in 2012; they argued that he should serve a shorter sentence in view of his ordeal in CIA custody. Khan, a former US resident who attended school there, was held in secret CIA prisons before being taken to Guantánamo. Part of his torture was outlined in the 2014 US Senate Committee report on extraordinary rendition: “He was sexually assaulted while hanging naked from the ceiling. Interrogators threatened to hammer his head, and threatened to harm his young sister. Majid lived in total darkness for much of 2003, and in solitary confinement from 2004 to 2006.”
The pre-sentencing hearing focused on whether or not the torture he suffered is a mitigating factor in his sentence. Prosecutors argued that he waived his right to the documents and witnesses his defence is now seeking to argue that.
The next pre-sentencing hearing in his case is set for early June.
The periodic review system set up by previous president Barack Obama is continuing to operate for prisoners held indefinitely without charge or trial to determine whether or not they can be released. When Donald Trump became president in early 2017, five prisoners had been cleared for release. They remain at Guantánamo, and only one prisoner, as part of his sentence, has been released under Trump. As a result, prisoners are increasingly boycotting the review system as there is little hope that they will be released. For many prisoners they are currently having their second or third hearing. At the end of March, Yemeni prisoner Suhayl Abdul Anam Al Sharabi did not attend, nor did his lawyer. He was instead represented by a government-appointed personal representative in a hearing that lasted 4 minutes. In recent months, other prisoners have also refused to cooperate with the process.

Pentagon prosecutors are seeking for the third time to charge three Guantánamo prisoners – Indonesian Hambali and two Malaysian prisoners, Mohd Farik Bin Amin and Mohammed Nazir Bin Lep – with murder, terrorism and conspiracy in the 2002 Bali bombings and the 2003 bombing of the Marriott Hotel in Jakarta. Between their kidnapping in 2003 through extraordinary rendition and their arrival at Guantánamo in 2006, the three men were held in secret CIA prisons at various locations around the world and severely tortured. As a result, the three are considered high-value prisoners and have limited access to the outside world. Prosecutors have chosen not to apply the death penalty and the three men could face life sentences if the charges are approved. Indonesia has already prosecuted the Bali bombings and executed three men convicted of carrying it out. The Indonesian prisoner Hambali was not linked to the attacks during this trial. Indonesia has no interest in trying Hambali and is not seeking his return to the country. The Obama administration had tried to have him extradited to Australia or Malaysia to stand trial there but there is a lack of evidence against him, which has seen the charges against him thrown previously. The family of one of the Malaysian men is hoping he is returned to Malaysia, even if he has to serve a life sentence there, rather than remain at Guantánamo.

On 16 April, a US court of appeal threw out all the pre-trial orders made over three and a half years in the case of Abd Al-Nashiri, facing the death penalty for his alleged role in the bombing of the USS Cole in Yemen in 2000, by the judge in the case, Air Force Colonel Vance Spath, as well as every ruling on appeals of his orders, as the judges held that Spath’s impartiality as a judge was questionable, given that he was simultaneously applying for the position of an immigration judge with the Justice Department. Al-Nashiri’s lawyers argued that the undeclared intention to seek work elsewhere – the judge left the case to retire – meant that his impartiality was questionable and the appeal court judges agreed. In their reasoning, the judges pointed out that while Judge Spath did not inform the parties that he was seeking employment elsewhere, the US government too refused to question him on it. The outcome of this decision sets proceedings in Al-Nashiri’s case back to where they were in November 2015, and thus will extend the period by which his case will go to trial, if at all. The ruling is a major blow to the military tribunal process and further undermines its credibility.

The Guantánamo camp commander, Navy Rear Admiral John Ring was abruptly relieved of his duties on 27 April, 7 weeks before he was due to be redeployed. No specific reason has been given but a “statement from US Southern Command said the change in leadership was “due to a loss of confidence in his ability to command”, and would “not interrupt the safe, humane, legal care and custody provided to the detainee population” at Guantánamo.” He had previously expressed his frustration at the lack of resources available to him for prisoner care. He had apparently been subject to an investigation unrelated to comments made to the media. His deputy, Army Brigadier General John Hussey has been made acting commander.
 

Extraordinary Rendition
The US revoked the entry visa for International Criminal Court (ICC) prosecutor Fatou Bensouda. The decision is thought to be in response to the Court’s investigation of the US and CIA’s potential war crimes in Afghanistan. The US has also threatened that other ICC staff working on this investigation and an investigation into Israel’s actions in the Occupied Palestinian Territories could be denied visas and entry to the US. The US is not a party to the ICC having not signed or ratified the Rome Statute.
A week later, judges at the ICC rejected Ms Bensouda’s request to open an investigation into war crimes in Afghanistan which would cover both offences by Afghan parties and the US and its allies. Judges cited the fact that it was unlikely that either the US or Afghan authorities and parties would cooperate.

In a rare public appearance at Auburn University, CIA director Gina Haspel, whose career has recently been the subject of a whitewashing campaign by the US media, was reminded of her role in torturing prisoners kidnapped by the CIA under the extraordinary rendition programme. She was talking about her career when a man in audience shouted “Tell these young children, tell them who you tortured. You know their names — they’re still in Guantánamo Bay”.
“You’re a decrepit human being,” he continued before being removed by security. “The only people you should be talking to is a prison guard in a jail cell.”

LGC Activities:
The April Shut Guantánamo! demo took place on 4 April. The May demonstration will be at 12-2pm on Thursday 2 May outside the US Embassy, 33 Nine Elms Lane, SW11 7US. Further details here: https://www.facebook.com/events/2694567797281798/ 

Thursday, March 29, 2018

LGC Newsletter – March 2018

Guantánamo Bay
The UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention has declared that the US’ detention of Pakistani national Ammar Al-Baluchi, one of five defendants accused of involvement in the September 2001 attacks in New York, is “arbitrary, breaches international human rights law and has no legal basis”. In a written statement by five independent experts, his detention was called “discriminatory” and the legal process he and his four co-defendants are subject to before the military commission system was slammed for not granting the defendants the same facilities to prepare their case as the prosecution, denying them a fair trial on the basis of nationality and religion. The experts stated that his detention “contravened at least 13 articles of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights”. The Working Group further stated that “systematic imprisonment in violation of the rules of international law may constitute crimes against humanity”.

The reason that led three civilians lawyers to leave the USS Cole bombing case at Guantánamo in October last year, throwing the military commission system into further disarray, was disclosed in a 15-page prosecution file to the court obtained by the Miami Herald newspaper in early March, which stated that the lawyers discovered “a microphone in their special client meeting room and were denied the opportunity to either talk about or investigate it”. The court filing to the US Court of Military Commissions Review was signed by the chief prosecutor, with the prosecution claiming that the microphone had been placed there previously but was not in use. The case is aimed at getting a review panel to order the resumption of the case and was brought by the defendant Abd Al-Nashiri’s sole remaining defence lawyer at the end of last month. The case was adjourned in February when the judge asked for a higher court “to clarify his authority as a judge in the Guantánamo war court.” The resignation of the lawyers left Yemeni Abd Al-Nashiri without a capital defender in a case where he faces the death penalty for his alleged involvement in the death of 17 US soldiers in a suicide bomb attack in 2000 off the Gulf of Aden. However, lawyers and NGOs have questioned that if the issue was simply an error, then why has it been kept as a national security secret for months, and has prompted them to ask what else is being kept secret. The resigning lawyers were not allowed to reveal why they had resigned, and they claim that there is more to the issue than has been revealed.
Two of the defence lawyers have stated that several important details were missing from the account given in the court filing. They said that there was no sign that the microphone was no longer connected and contended that the government has never previously provided that explanation in the five months since they resigned. One of the lawyer, death penalty-specialist Richard Kammen stated, “This was the first we heard the claim, and that’s part of the reason we don’t believe it’s true”. He also stated that the defence team was already suspicious that its communication with its client was being monitored following a previous incident, which is also classified. At one stage, the judge dismissed the lawyers’ concerns about monitoring and snooping into their communications as “fake news”.

In the case involving five men accused of involvement in the 2001 attacks in New York, the judge in the case said that he would “order Secretary of Defense Jim Mattis to explain in writing why he suddenly fired the top official overseeing the war court”. The reasons for the 5 February dismissal of Harvey Rishikof, the Convening Authority for Military Commissions, and his legal advisor Gary Brown were not disclosed. The judge stated that “We simply need to know why they were terminated”. There is concern that Rishikof was fired for attempting to negotiate a deal for the five defendants.
http://www.miamiherald.com/news/nation-world/world/americas/guantanamo/article202166964.html

The Pentagon is planning to demolish Camp X-Ray, the long emptied notorious camp from which images of prisoners kneeling and behind fences in orange jumpsuits emerged in the early days of Guantánamo. Controversy has arisen over this move with some claiming it should remain open as a testimony to this sinister chapter of US history. The Justice Department, however, claimed in a letter to Guantánamo lawyers that “the FBI has created an interactive, simulated three-dimensional, digital virtual tour of Camp X-Ray that shows all areas of the camp where detainees were held, interrogated, or otherwise present."
The prison opened on 11 January 2002 with the arrival of the first 20 prisoners and was declared closed in late April 2002, however since then several prisoners have since reported being abused there after that date. One prisoner, Saudi Mohammed Al-Qahtani, who could not be prosecuted because of the torture he was subjected to said “he was tortured at Camp X-Ray with sleep deprivation, growling dogs, sexual abuse, forced nudity, harsh shackling and beatings”.
Saudi prisoner Ahmed Al-Darbi who pleaded guilty to war crimes in a secret plea deal following years of torture, and more recently provided recorded evidence in two cases against other prisoners, was due to be returned to Saudi Arabia by 20 February under the terms of the plea deal, however he remains at Guantánamo to date. In a letter, he hit out at the Saudi government for delaying his release, claiming that it has never done anything to help him and did not even provide him with a lawyer. He stated, “And now my own government is an obstacle to my repatriation. What kind of country abandons its citizens in the custody of another government for 16 years? My country won’t take a step that was agreed on four years ago so that I can finally go home. It’s been my daily dream for four years to see my wife and children”. According to his lawyer, Al-Darbi submitted his transfer request shortly after he was sentenced in August 2017 and the terms for his repatriation had been negotiated after he pleaded guilty in 2014.
Following a visit to Washington by Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman, the Pentagon announced that the repatriation process was on track, yet he remains at Guantánamo.

In 2014, Al-Darbi, following years of physical, sexual and psychological torture at Guantánamo and elsewhere pleaded guilty to a small role in a 2002 attack against a French-flagged oil tanker of the coast of Yemen. He agreed to cooperate with the US authorities on the basis he would be repatriated after 4 years. In 2017, he was sentenced to 13 years in jail, the remainder of which he is due to serve in Saudi Arabia.

Lawyers for Yemeni prisoner Moath Al-Alwi were at a federal appeals court on 20 March to deal with the issue of the indefinite detention of prisoners at Guantánamo Bay, more than 15 years after the war in Afghanistan began. Al-Alwi previously posed the question to the courts under the Obama administration where the judge responded that the question of when the war ends, or has ended, is at the discretion of the president; in 2014, Obama had declared the end of hostilities in Afghanistan, although the warfare continued. With Trump’s stated plans to keep Guantánamo open and possibly expand it, the case has new importance.
The arguments in the case hinged on whether the conflict in Afghanistan now is still the same one Al-Alwi was captured in over 16 years ago and whether the US government can still hold him legally.
The arguments in the case can be read and listened to here: https://lawfareblog.com/summary-courtroom-al-alwi-v-trump-oral-argument

The Ghanaian Parliament has ratified the signing of a Memorandum of Understanding between the Ghanaian and US government on defence cooperation which will allow the US military to open a military base in the country and operate on a tax-free basis. The Ghanaian government claims the deal is beneficial for the country and has denied that it is in any way linked to the agreement made with the US to accept two former Guantánamo prisoners, although it is not unknown for the US to offer trade deals and funds to poorer countries that agree to host Guantánamo prisoners who have no safe country to return to. In January, the Ghanaian government granted the two Yemeni prisoners it accepted in 2016 refugee status.

LGC at the March Against Racism, 17 March
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Extraordinary Rendition
In a case that will have serious repercussions for the prosecution of European states for the use of torture, and possibly their involvement in extraordinary rendition, in a review of the key 1978 case UK v Ireland, in which the European Court of Human Rights deemed detention practices, such as hooding, stress positions, sleep deprivation, etc. carried out by the British military against Irish republicans in Northern Ireland were inhuman and degrading treatment but not torture, the Court once again upheld this decision. It decided that new evidence presented by the Irish government was not tantamount to torture. These torture techniques have since been used by the US and British armies in Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere. They were later banned in the UK. The decision was a blow for survivors, many of whom continue to suffer as a result of the treatment they received when detained without trial by the British army in the 1960s and 1970s.

Confirmation of the nomination of Gina Haspel as head of the CIA has raised a lot of controversy, given her past involvement in running secret CIA prisons, in particular the first black site in Thailand, and thus she oversaw the use of torture at such sites. As much about the extraordinary rendition programme remains obscure, the extent of her involvement is unknown. An arrest warrant was put out for her by a German NGO due to her involvement in war crimes and crimes against humanity and she is thus unable to travel to the EU. Human rights NGOs have asked for her to be prosecuted instead and politicians in the US have asked for full disclosure of her role.

LGC Activities:
The LGC held its first monthly Shut Guantánamo! demos outside the new Nine Elms US Embassy in March. It was well attended in spite of the features of the new embassy that are intended to deter protest. Our second protest there will be in solidarity with the Iraqi people 15 years after the war started there with the US invasion, backed by its allies, including the UK. Please join us on Thursday 5 April at 12-2pm The address is 33 Nine Elms Ln, London SW11 7US, nearest underground: Vauxhall. More details available at: https://www.facebook.com/events/157022028258385/ All are welcome to join us.

Wednesday, March 01, 2017

LGC Newsletter – February 2017



NEWS:


Guantánamo Bay:
The first periodic review board hearing under President Trump was held on 9 February with a hearing for Yemeni prisoner Omar Mohammed Ali Al-Rammah. The procedure was conducted in the same manner as it was under President Obama. Al-Rammah has been held at Guantánamo since 2003 and is alleged to have fought in Bosnia and Chechnya; he was kidnapped in Georgia in 2001 and handed over to the US military. His lawyer claims he had low-level involvement in militancy and was not involved in combat against the US.
A second review was held on 28 February for Yemeni Sharqawi Al Hajj who was held in secret prisons and tortured for two years before being taken to Guantánamo. https://ccrjustice.org/home/press-center/press-releases/new-release-hearing-held-cia-tortured-gitmo-forever-prisoner
At the same time, three prisoners who had their review board hearings under Obama had their pleas for release rejected: Yemenis Moath Hamza Ahmed Al-Alwi, Said Salih Said Nashir and Uthman Abd al-Rahim Muhammad Uthman.
It is unknown whether five prisoners who have been cleared for release by the board will be released at any time soon or if the two prisoners heard this month will be released if their reviews are successful.
More than one month after becoming President, in spite of various comments made about Guantánamo, the facility is still running as it was under Barack Obama and there is no prospective date for the issue of Trump’s order on the future of Guantánamo and its prisoners.

The Trump administration has handed over a copy of the 2014 Senate Intelligence Committee report into CIA torture to a federal court following an order in cases brought by current Guantánamo prisoners. The Obama administration had previously refused to comply with the order.
A lawyer of one of the litigants, Abd Al-Nashiri, stated that it is “a big deal because we know that at least one copy will be preserved for future litigation.”

Germany’s new president Frank-Walter Steinmeier has entered his new post with controversy over his failure in 2002, as the politician responsible, to press for the release of Murat Kurnaz from Guantánamo even though the German and US authorities both knew he was an innocent man and Germany knew he had been tortured. Instead, the government initiated measures to prevent Kurnaz from returning to the country. Kurnaz did not return to Germany until 2006 and Steinmeier has never apologised for his role.

 

Extraordinary rendition:
Portugal jailed former CIA agent Sabrina de Sousa on 20 February pending extradition to Italy to serve a 4-year sentence for the 2003 kidnap and rendition to torture in Egypt of Milan imam Abu Omar. She is one of 26 CIA agents convicted in Italy in relation to the case, the only successful criminal case brought against renditions anywhere in the world.
On 28 February, Italy granted her clemency and reduced her sentence to 3 years. This means she can now consider alternative penalties to imprisonment. It is not clear if she has been released in Portugal.
De Sousa, 61, has fought extradition for two years and the victim Abu Omar himself has asked for her not to be extradited or to serve her sentence. He has never received an apology for official acknowledgement of his ordeal.

In a case brought by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) against two CIA-contracted psychologists James Mitchell and Bruce Jessen, considered to be the architects of the rendition torture programme, the Trump administration has said that it will act like its predecessor by invoking the state secrets privilege to prevent two CIA witnesses from testifying in the case. One of the witnesses, Gina Haspel, was briefly involved in running a secret prison in Thailand where Abd Al-Nashiri and Abu Zubaydah were waterboarded. The government has until 8 March to file a declaration invoking the privilege. A hearing is scheduled in the case for June.

LGC Activities:
The LGC’s February Shut Guantánamo! demo marked 10 years of this regular protest outside the US Embassy. With 41 prisoners remaining at Guantánamo, the LGC remains committed to fighting for justice. The March demo is on 2 March at 12-1pm outside the US Embassy and 1.15-2.15pm outside Speaker’s Corner, Hyde Park: https://www.facebook.com/events/181069765719469/
 
The LGC joined the Stop The War Coalition’s 4 February Stop Trump’s Muslim Ban demo and march to highlight the fact that there has been a travel ban on Muslims at Guantánamo for over 15 years preventing the prisoners from leaving and if there is any place that needs a Muslim ban, it is Guantánamo Bay.