Friday, May 29, 2020

LGC Newsletter – May 2020


Guantánamo Bay
A US appeals court has rejected a habeas corpus petition from Algerian prisoner Abdul Razak Ali and dismissed his lawyers’ argument that due process rights apply to Guantánamo prisoners. Abdul Razak Ali has been held by the US military since 2002 without charge. The judgment shows that the US is still relying on now debunked myths about the apparent risk posed by fellow prisoner Abu Zubaydah, whom the judgment called a “senior terrorist leader”; Ali had spent 18 days in the same Pakistani guesthouse Abu Zubaydah was caught in. In 2018, Ali was one of eleven prisoners who brought a case against their detention as being unconstitutional. The case is ongoing, however Ali’s claim in this case was dismissed and thus he appealed individually.

Due to coronavirus-related lockdowns at Guantánamo, the scheduled trial of five men accused of involvement in attacks on New York City in 2001 is likely to be delayed further. Currently, lawyers are not able to visit their clients or have telephone contact with them. Furthermore, lawyers working remotely do not have access to all of the security-vetted evidence. Pre-trial hearings scheduled for the coming months have also been put back.
Although no recent cases of coronavirus have been reported at Guantánamo since the initial two among military personnel, and none among the prisoner population, the US military remains secretive about the procedures in place and troop rotations have taken place during the lockdown. A group of senators has thus written to the defence secretary expressing concern “about the potential for a “significant outbreak” of the coronavirus at the Pentagon prison at Guantánamo Bay” and seeking “answers to how the military is safeguarding the 40 prisoners there and the American forces responsible for them.”

The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) issued its final report on human rights violations committed by the US government against former Algerian prisoner Djamel Ameziane. The report found the US responsible for his torture and illegal detention without charge. It “is the first decision ever made by a major regional Human Rights body regarding the human rights violations committed at the Guantanamo Bay prison camp and marks a historic victory for  Mr. Ameziane and the rights of others detained at Guantanamo Bay to judicial reparations.” Ameziane said: “I was tortured for more than a decade at Guantanamo, and still suffer from the trauma of my horrible experience.  The Commission’s decision is a significant step towards reparations for me and for other Muslim men and boys who were unjustly detained and abused in Guantanamo Bay during the dark days of the ‘War on Terror’. I urge the United States to honor the Commission's recommendations, acknowledge the serious harms that we suffered, and close the prison camp.  Guantanamo Bay must end.  I am especially concerned about my fellow Algerian, Sufyian Barhoumi, who has been cleared for transfer for many years but continues to be held indefinitely.  Sufyian, we have not forgotten you, and pray for your safe return home”. The report made recommendations including the payment of reparations.

 
LGC Activities:
With the ongoing Covid-19 pandemic, the London Guantánamo Campaign’s monthly Shut Guantánamo! demonstration will be held virtually at 12-2pm on Thursday 4 June. To take part, please email a photo/video of your banner to us at london.gtmo@gmail.com before 12pm on 4 June or share your picture/video to our Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/London-Guantánamo-Campaign-114010671973111/ or via Twitter (or just a message – some possible messages available through the link below) @shutguantanamo between 12 and 2pm on Thursday 4 June. More details here: https://www.facebook.com/events/250151392977927/  

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