Richard Ackland writes in the Sydney Morning Herald…

Innocence ignored at Guantanamo 

By Richard Ackland
February
24, 2006


DONALD Rumsfeld said “they're terrorists, trainers, bombmakers, recruiters,
financiers, [Osama's] bodyguards, and would-be suicide bombers”. The Bush
Administration calls them the “worst of the worst”. The former chairman of the
Joint Chiefs of St! aff, Richard Myers, said they were so vicious that if given
the chance they would gnaw through the hydraulic lines of the aircraft flying
them to Cuba. The Australian Government, apparently, agrees with these sober
assessments.

The references are to US prisoners at Guantanamo Bay. There are more than 400
of them and only 10 have been formally charged with crimes. Many of the
remainder have no idea what they are supposed to have done.

Amnesty International said that Guantanamo was the “gulag of our times”, the
Red Cross said the operations there were “tantamount to torture”, and the United
Nations Commission on Human Rights last week concluded that it was such a
shocking place that “the US Government should close the Guantanamo Bay detention
facilities without further delay”.

Two fascinating studies into the Guantanamo detainees have emerged this month
in the US. Far from being the worst of the worst, it seems that most of these
people should not be there a! t all.

Corine Hegland, in the National Journal, examined the court documents
of 132 prisoners who have filed habeas corpus petitions in the courts. Also, she
has gone through the transcripts of the hearings of 314 prisoners whose “enemy
combatant” status was reviewed by military bodies called combat status review
tribunals.

Professor Mark Denbeaux, at the Seton Hall University Law School in New
Jersey, led a team of his students who investigated the US Government's
documentation against all Guantanamo detainees, including its submissions to the
tribunals. From both these exhaustive reviews there comes the question: apart
from a small handful of hard cases, what does the US think it is achieving by
continuing to hold most of these prisoners?

Hegland found that a majority of the detainees were not Afghans but were
captured in Pakistan. Seventy-five per cent of those who have brought habeas
petitions are not accused of conducting hostilities against the US. The
information points to the fact that about 80 per cent of the ! detainees were
never members of al-Qaeda and many were not Taliban foot soldiers. They were
caught in a dragnet searching for Arabs in Pakistan after September 11, 2001.
Some had loose associations with the Taliban or al-Qaeda.

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