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<a href="http://www.ccr-ny.org/v2/reports/report.asp?ObjID=uyKAxgvOvy&Content=827" eudora="autourl">
http://www.ccr-ny.org/v2/reports/report.asp?ObjID=uyKAxgvOvy&Content=827</a>
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ATTORNEYS ARGUE MILITARY COMMISSIONS BILLS WOULD ALLOW FOR LIFELONG
DETENTION WITHOUT TRIAL, TORTURE WITHOUT ACCOUNTABILITY<br>
'Faces of Guantánamo' By Center for Constitutional Rights Offers Rare
Glimpse Into Lives of Men at Guantanamo <br><br>
Attorneys Demand That Congress Not Suspend Fundamental Right to Challenge
Indefinite Detention<br><br>
Synopsis <br><br>
On September 14, 2006, the Center for Constitutional Rights released
<i>Faces of Guantánamo</i>, a report offering a revealing glimpse of the
lives of men currently detained at Guantánamo. While recent news has
focused on information about the 14 "high-value" detainees
recently transferred from secret CIA prisons abroad to Guantánamo, the
realities for more than 450 detainees already imprisoned at the base have
been pushed to the background. <i>Faces of Guantánamo</i> highlights the
cases of nearly thirty men who have been held in Guantánamo for nearly
five years-despite significant evidence that they are innocent of any
wrongdoing. <br>
Among the men profiled are: <br><br>
<b>Haji Bismullah</b>, an Afghan who fought <i>against</i> the Taliban
and served as a provincial government official during the transitional
Afghan government; <br><br>
<b>Adel Hassan Hamad</b>, a Sudanese relief worker, whose detention was
described as "unconscionable" by a military official at his
Combatant Status Review Tribunal (CSRT); <br><br>
<b>Dr. Hafizullah Shaba Khail</b>, an Afghan who was the victim of a
false arrest while serving on a local commission of elders attempting to
root out government corruption; and <br><br>
<b>Haji Nusrat</b>, an eighty year old Afghan, arrested and transferred
to Guantánamo after he protested his son's arrest. <br><br>
Under two military commission bills currently being considered in the
Senate, all of these men would no longer be able to contest their
detentions in U.S. court. Both bills contain provisions that would
retroactively strip U.S. courts of jurisdiction over the habeas petitions
of the more than 450 men currently imprisoned at Guantánamo Bay. In
addition, the courts would also be barred from hearing the habeas
petitions of any future detainees. A simple determination that
someone-even a U.S. citizen taken into custody abroad-is an 'enemy
combatant' would be enough to detain them indefinitely. <br><br>
The military commissions created by the legislation will try only those
accused of violations of the laws of war; many of the men imprisoned at
Guantánamo have been held for nearly five years without ever having been
charged with a crime. <b>These men depend on the right of <i>habeas
corpus</i> to have their cases heard.</b> By eliminating the power of the
federal courts to hear pending habeas cases, the legislation would
effectively render the McCain Amendment prohibiting cruel, inhumane or
degrading treatment of detainees unenforceable and prevent any
accountability for the torture or abuse of detainees. <br><br>
CCR Staff Attorney <b>Gitanjali Gutierrez</b> said: <i>"These bills
would be a gross miscarriage of justice not only for these men but for
the laws and values American is based upon. How can the President accuse
one man of being a terrorist 'mastermind' and give him a trial while
simultaneously authorizing the United States to lock up a Sudanese relief
worker or a foreigner swept up in the fog of war for the rest of his life
without any trial is incomprehensible. All detainees in U.S. custody must
be able to contest their detention in a U.S. court. Otherwise, these
innocent men may be trapped in Guantánamo, never to be heard from again.
We as a country cannot afford to have this on our conscience."</i>
<br><br>
Complete Report:<br>
<b>
<a href="http://ccr-ny.org/v2/reports/docs/FACES_OF_GUANTANAMO.pdf" eudora="autourl">
http://ccr-ny.org/v2/reports/docs/FACES_OF_GUANTANAMO.pdf</a></b> <br>
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