Thursday, June 29, 2006
&bull posted by Matt
Wharton @ 8:12 PM
BBC News: US Guantanamo tribunals 'illegal'The US Supreme Court has ruled that the Bush administration does not have the authority to try terrorism suspects by military tribunal.
Justices upheld the challenge by Osama Bin Laden's ex-driver to his trial at Guantanamo, saying the proceedings violated Geneva Conventions.
The ruling is seen as a major blow to President George W Bush - but it does not order the closure of Guantanamo.
So the tribunals are ruled as illegal, doesn't surprise me as they seem as fair as the
trial of General Tomoyuki Yamashita. But having fair and open trials was never the reason for the prison at Guantanamo the prisoners were not there to be tried and punished for their crimes they are there solely for the extraction of intelligence in order for the US to carry out their War on Terror. Any open and fair trials would jeopardisde this and would reveal the true nature of the detainees there including that many of them are probably innocents that were sold to the US by corrupt members of the Northern Alliance in Afghanistan. The fact that children were picked up and held before being released is surely an indication that people were detained without first establishing who they were and what threat they constituted.
I think that the pressure has built to such an extent that the prison will soon close particularly as the Bush administration seem to have finally woken up to the fact that it is a PR disaster. But any such closure will simply be the next step in a PR campaign as it will not mean the closure of those less well-known prisons around the world and the unknowable numbers of secret and hidden US military prisons.
I would be very surprised if we ever see more than a few token open and fair trials conducted under US law occur.
Labels: politics, Terrorism, totalitarian
Monday, June 12, 2006
&bull posted by Matt
Wharton @ 8:49 PM
The Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Public Diplomacy Colleen Graffy has described the suicides of three detainees at the US base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, as a
"good PR move to draw attention".
Colleen Graffy told the BBC the deaths were part of a strategy and "a tactic to further the jihadi cause", but taking their own lives was unnecessary.
But lawyers say the men who hanged themselves had been driven by despair.
A military investigation into the deaths is under way, amid growing calls for the centre to be moved or closed.
The suicides may have brought the Guatnanamo Bay detention camp back into the news but I don't think that any rational person could believe that the suicides were designed to draw attention. It's not like the camp is not an albatross around the neck of the US government in any case.
It has probably been the greatest tool for recruitment to the ranks of Al-Qaeda ever. It undermines the reputation of the US around the world amongst nations friendly to it and feeds it's enemies by giving them a talisman of propoganda about how the US hates Muslims and mistreats and tortures them.
What makes the notion that the suicides were just "a tactic to further the jihadi cause" even more sickening is the news that one of the three detainess was
due to be released but hadn't been informed yet by the American officals.
Seriously if he was considered to be of such a low level of threat that he would be released is he really likely to commit suicide as an "act of asymmetric warfare".
Labels: politics, Terrorism, torture, totalitarian
Wednesday, February 01, 2006
&bull posted by Matt
Wharton @ 6:50 PM
Thanks to
Murky.org for the following quote
"The power of the Executive to cast a man into prison without formulating any charge known to the law, and particularly to deny him the judgement of his peers, is in the highest degree odious and is the foundation of all totalitarian government whether Nazi or Communist."
Winston Churchill, Nov 21, 1943
And for reminding me that
Pledgebank has another pledge for people who wish to
resist the introduction of Identity Cards but cannot directly refuse to register because of professional or family responsibilities.
Labels: politics, totalitarian
Tuesday, August 24, 2004
&bull posted by Matt
Wharton @ 10:20 PM
The panel of the offical inquiry into the scandal of US soldiers' mistreatment of prisoners at the Abu Ghraib prison has issued a report that lays some of the blame at the door of Donald Rumsfeld.
The Reuters news agency reveals that
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld came under fire on Tuesday from a high-level inquiry into the Abu Ghraib prison scandal but a U.S. military judge ruled he did not have to testify at a trial arising from the abuse of Iraqi prisoners.
A four-member panel headed by former Defense Secretary James Schlesinger issued a report accusing the chain of command from Rumsfeld down of leadership failures that created conditions for the abuse late last year that sparked anti-American outrage across the world.
"Military and civilian leaders at the Pentagon share this burden of responsibility."
Labels: politics, totalitarian