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Release Hicks, Habib and all Guantanamo Bay detainees!
Australian government aids and abets US torture
By Socialist Equality Party (Australia)
18 June 2004
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After more than two and a half years of detention, during which
he has been tortured and deprived of every basic legal and democratic
right, Australian citizen David Hicks was finally charged by the
US military last week. The weak and self-contradictory nature
of the charges only underscores the illegal character of his detention
and that of the hundreds of other inmates held at Guantanamo Bay,
Cuba following the American-led invasion of Afghanistan in October
2001.
It also exposes the complicity of the Howard government in
supporting the Bush administrations incarceration of Hicks
and another Australian, Mamdouh Habib, in violation of the Geneva
Conventions on the capture of prisoners during armed conflicts.
As soon as the detention of the two men became known publicly
in early 2002, the Howard government openly backed Washingtons
flouting of international law on the grounds that the pair were
among the most dangerous men in the worldthe worst
of the worst terrorists.
The three charges laid against HicksHabib has still not
been chargedshow these claims to be yet another set of fabrications
advanced to help justify Howards unconditional support for
US military aggression in Afghanistan and Iraq. Hicks has been
accused of conspiracy to commit war crimes, attempted
murder by an unprivileged belligerent and aiding the
enemy. None of the charges allege that he actually killed
or injured anyone. As Hickss US military lawyer Major Michael
Mori asked: Where are the worst of the worst?
Conspiracy is a notorious catch-all charge, which
prosecuting authorities dredge up whenever they have no evidence
of any substantive crime. At least two of the allegations under
this charge are demonstrably false. Hicks is supposed to have
conducted surveillance of the US and British embassies in Kabul,
yet the embassies were closed for a number of years under the
Taliban government. According to the charge sheet, he accepted
a request from Osama bin Laden and began translating Al Qaeda
documents from Arabic to English, when his knowledge of Arabic
was minimal.
The other two charges, apart from lacking any detail, depend
entirely on Washingtons illegal classification of Hicks
as an unlawful combatant rather than as a member of
an armed group defending a de facto governmentthe Talibanagainst
an invading force. Fighting in an armed conflict does not constitute
murder, or aiding an enemy.
Aware of a growing public sense that a terrible injustice has
been committed against Hicks and Habib, Howard last month urged
Bush to bring them before military tribunals as soon as possible.
The rigged show trialsfor which no dates have yet been setwill
almost certainly rely on alleged confessions and statements from
other detaineesall obtained under duress. None of this material
would be admissible in an American or Australian court of law.
A month of lies by the Howard government that it had no evidence
of the US militarys torture and abuse of Hicks and Habib,
fell apart on June 3, when Foreign Affairs officials admitted
that both detainees had lodged official complaints about their
maltreatment last year. Under questioning before a Senate committee,
the officials conceded that Hicks told Australian Security Intelligence
Organisation (ASIO) officers in May last year that he had been
beaten in December 2001 when he was taken into custody by Northern
Alliance and US forces in Afghanistan. Habib complained to Australian
consular officials last November that his detention was torture.
Prime Minister John Howard, Foreign Minister Alexander Downer
and Attorney-General Philip Ruddock had repeatedly denied detailed
allegations by former Guantanamo Bay inmates, and their lawyers,
that Hicks and Habib had been subjected to beatings, electrocution,
blindfolding, naked humiliations, solitary confinement and mental
cruelty.
The collapse of the governments cover-up confirms the
mounting evidence that it has long known of, and aided and abetted,
methods of interrogation, humiliation and reprisal similar to
those exposed at Baghdads now notorious Abu Ghraib prison.
The abuses flowed inevitably from the Bush administrations
proclamation, in January 2002, that the Geneva Conventionsadopted
after World War II to protect wartime detainees from the types
of depredations inflicted by the Naziswould not apply to
Guantanamo Bay. US Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld declared:
Unlawful combatants do not have any rights under the Geneva
Convention.
Canberra gave the green light for whatever brutality Washington
saw fit to authorise. Leading ministers described Hicks as a terrorist
who was prepared to kill innocent people. Foreign
Minister Alexander Downer declared: We are an ally of the
United States and we agree with them. Theyre perfectly entitled
to take very tough action. In truth, the evidence against
Hicks and Habib was so shaky that the two men could not be charged
with any offence under Australian law, let alone found guilty
and imprisoned. That is why the Howard government refused a request
from Washington to take custody of the pair and place them on
trial in Australia.
Since the publication of the incriminating Abu Ghraib photographs,
leaked White House and Pentagon documents have removed any doubt
that, on orders given at the highest levels of the Bush administration,
the Cuban facility became a testing ground for the practices later
implemented in Baghdad. According to documents made public by
the Wall Street Journal and the Washington Post,
during 2002 Pentagon and Justice Department lawyers prepared memos
for Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld arguing that President Bush,
as commander in chief was not bound by international
treaties or US laws banning torture.
One of their arguments was that the Cuban naval base was within
US domestic jurisdiction and therefore not covered by the UN Convention
Against Torture. This directly contradicts the Bush administrations
public insistence, maintained before the US Supreme Court this
year, that Guantanamo is beyond the reach of the US courts.
Rumsfeld specifically authorised 24 interrogation techniques
for Guantanamo that included putting prisoners in stress
positions for four hours, hooding them and subjecting them
to 20-hour interrogations, fear of dogs and mild,
non-injurious physical contact. In April 2003, just after
the invasion of Iraq, Rumsfeld approved a new list, which included
the use of at least six techniquesincluding the use of dogsalso
contained in an October 2003 Abu Ghraib memorandum.
Similar methods were clearly used in both locations, giving
the lie to the Bush administrations claims that detainees
in Iraq were covered by the Geneva Conventions, whereas those
at Guantanamo were not. On Rumsfelds orders, Major General
Geoffrey Miller, then in charge of the Cuban concentration camp,
was flown to Iraq in October 2003 to draw up what became a 72-point
interrogation matrix. According to documents cited by Human Rights
Watch, Miller boasted of Gitmo-ising Abu Ghraibin
other words, creating Guantanamo-Bay-style conditions there.
Given that senior Australian military lawyers were integrally
involved in drafting the interrogation protocols for Abu Ghraib
and in responding to prisoners complaints of abuse relayed
by the international Red Cross, it beggars belief that the Howard
government was not well aware of the practices occurring in both
Cuba and Iraq.
Systematic torture
The first-hand evidence that Hicks and Habib have been tortured
is overwhelming. On May 13, Shafiq Rasul and Asif Iqbal, two British
former prisoners issued an open letter to President Bush detailing
the abuses at Guantanamo Bay and demanding the release of all
the photographs and video footage taken during interrogation sessions.
They listed a litany of barbaric techniques, including savage
beatings; short shackling with chains forcing detainees
to squat for hours; use of dogs to terrify prisoners; naked displays
in front of women; strobe lights; loud music; and freezing conditions.
On May 16, another British victim, Tarek Dergoul, interviewed
by the Observer, confirmed these allegations and said the
methods used at Guantanamo Bay, such as sexual humiliation, mirrored
those exposed in Abu Ghraib. Several days later, Dergoul told
Channel Seven television he had seen Habib being kicked and punched,
and dragged by chains along the ground, while screaming in agony.
Dergoul said the beatings were captured on video.
In an interview published by the Australian on May 21,
Dergoul said Habib had also been given electric shocks, tortured
and continually blindfolded by Egyptian authorities for three
months after being detained in Pakistan in late 2001. Once transferred
to Guantanamo Bay, Habib had been beaten by anti-riot soldiers
and sprayed with mace. He had been shown photographs of his wife,
Maha and their children, with his jailers claiming they had been
killed.
Habibs lawyer, Stephen Hopper, wrote to Howard on May
28 giving details of the abuses committed against his client.
Based on information provided by Dergoul and another released
British detainee, the allegations included that while held in
Egypt, Habib suffered regular physical assaults. Hoppers
letter also alleged that Habibs US interrogators had superimposed
pictures of his childrens heads on the bodies of animals
and put them on the walls of his interrogation room.
As a result of his torture, Habib has refused to answer letters
sent from his family since March 2003, causing them immense stress
and giving rise to fears for his mental health. He reportedly
believes they are dead.
On May 20, Hickss cellmate in an Afghanistan jail, Shah
Mohammed, told the Australian that Hicks had been bashed
by US soldiers in at least three sessions that lasted for several
hours. Before the beatings began, Hickss hands and feet
had been tied up.
Stephen Kenny, Hicks Australian lawyer, said his client
had been subjected to orchestrated abuse at Guantanamo
Bay, and had complained to the Red Cross in 2002. Hicks had told
him of a number of instances of maltreatment, Kenny said, but
he could not reveal any details because of a US military gag order,
imposed as a condition of being granted permission to visit Hicks.
What does Howard have to hide?
Howard initially denounced the detainees who had been released
in Britain as Taliban supporters whose testimony should
be disregarded, even though they had been freed on the basis that
no charges could be laid against them. He sought to discredit
Hicks and Habib and their lawyers, by falsely accusing them of
saying nothing before the Abu Ghraib abuses were exposed in April.
In fact, both prisoners had complained, but their protests were
officially smothered until the Baghdad prison photographs were
leaked to the media.
Howard and Downer then charged the lawyers with smearing
the US military without supplying any evidence. This charge was
truly Kafkaesque. How could the lawyers produce further evidence,
when the government has suppressed it for months? Last year, Downer
issued a conclusive certificate to stop a Freedom
of Information (FOI) request for 108 pages of internal documents
on Hickss case. The government continues to cover up all
the official records: Hickss reports to the Red Cross, ASIOs
interrogation of Hicks, and Habibs complaint to consular
officials. It is still enforcing the US gag order imposed on Kenny.
To this day, no Australian official has visited the cells in
which Hicks and Habib have been held. When Australias New
York consul-general, Derek Tucker, finally spoke to them in mid-May,
Howard claimed that the diplomat was satisfied that the pair had
not been treated unacceptably. But the media was barred from interviewing
Tucker. The most obvious question is: If the two Australians have
been well treated, what does the Howard government have to hide?
After the June 3 revelations, Howard and his cabinet resorted
to their standard modus operandiutilised repeatedly since
their re-election in 2001 to cover-up their complicity in one
scandal after anotherthe children overboard lies, the SIEV-X
refugee drownings, the campaign of slander against Justice Michael
Kirby, the lies about Iraqi WMD, etc., etc. They claimed that,
inexplicably, they knew nothing of the incriminating information
held by high-ranking government, intelligence and military officials
about torture.
At the same time, Howard rejected calls by the lawyers for
an independent inquiry into their clients treatment. Instead,
he asked Bush to give an assurance that the US militarywhich
administered the sadistic interrogation techniques on Bushs
orderswould investigate the allegations. Only recently,
the Pentagon sent a letter to Canberra insisting that Guantanamo
detainees were treated humanely and the US does not permit,
tolerate or condone any abuse or torture by its personnel under
any circumstances.
True to form, the Labor Party welcomed the laying of charges
against Hicks, after refusing to defend the detainees from the
outset. It also aligned itself with the Greens and Democrats in
calling for Hicks and Habib to be repatriated to Australia to
stand trial for yet-to-be-specified charges, supposedly based
on international law. Because Hicks and Habib have committed no
offences under Australian law, this would amount to retrospective
prosecution, setting a dangerous precedent for future use.
Not one of the parliamentary parties has raised any suggestion
of indicting Howard, Downer and Ruddock for war crimes under the
Geneva Conventions. This is despite the fact that the Australian
Criminal Code also imposes jail terms of up to 17 years for denying,
or assisting to deny, prisoners a fair and regular trial
as required by the Conventions.
The methods being used against Hicks and Habib in Cuba are
not far removed from what is now possible within Australia under
the ASIO Terrorism Act, pushed through parliament last year with
Labors support and the tacit approval of the Greens and
Democrats. For the first time in Australian history, the police
and intelligence agencies have the power to detain, strip-search
and interrogate anyone without charge and hold them incommunicado
for a week, and potentially for longer. Detainees do not have
to be suspected of any terrorist offence, simply of possessing
information relevant to terrorism.
The Howard governments backing for the treatment of Hicks
and Habib is not an aberration. It is based on definite strategic
and political calculations. It flows directly from Canberras
unconditional support for the criminal, neo-colonial agenda of
the Bush administration and from the governments own commitment
to increasingly repressive police-state measures at home.
All those concerned by the assault on basic democratic rights
must oppose the show trials being prepared at Guantanamo Bay,
insist on the immediate and unconditional release of all detainees
and demand that Howard and his colleagues be placed on trial for
war crimes, alongside their counterparts in Washington.
See Also:
Father of Guantanamo Bay prisoner
says son has been abused
[21 May 2004]
Australias first terrorist
charges: timed for Howards election campaign
[4 May 2004]
Letters from our readers
[1 May 2004]
Release David Hicks
and all Guantanamo Bay detainees
[15 July 2003]
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