Military Commission Judge Rebuffs Bush Administration and Applies Geneva Conventions to Guantánamo Detainee (12/18/2007)
Decision Comes Six Years Late, Says
ACLU
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: media@aclu.org; (212)
549-2666
NEW YORK – In a
rebuke to Bush administration policy, a military commission judge found Monday
that Guantánamo
Bay detainee Salim Ahmed Hamdan is
entitled to a determination of whether he is a prisoner of war protected by the
Geneva Conventions, which govern the rights and treatment of captives in
wartime.
“It’s always a positive step when the military commissions
proceed in accordance with the United
States’ international law obligations. However, the judge’s decision doesn’t
resolve the flaws inherent to the makeshift commissions system – it’s like
sticking a band-aid on a broken leg,” said Hina Shamsi, a staff attorney with
the ACLU’s National Security Project who attended Hamdan’s hearing earlier this
month. “Under the Geneva Conventions, Mr. Hamdan should have received this
hearing six years ago, when he was first captured by
U.S. forces
instead of now, as an add-on to an entirely new and procedurally flawed process.
That we are still stuck on such preliminary, yet fundamental, issues is a stark
reminder of just how far astray we’ve traveled because of the Bush
administration’s policies.”
At a hearing at Guantánamo earlier this month, attorneys for
Hamdan, who is accused of having been Osama bin Laden’s bodyguard, asked the
military judge to grant their client a status hearing under Article 5 of the
Geneva Conventions. Military Judge Keith J. Allred
decided in Hamdan’s favor in a ruling that became public today. If the judge now determines – as his
attorneys argue – that Hamdan is a prisoner of war, he will be entitled to trial
in a court martial proceeding under
U.S. military
law.
Hamdan is charged with conspiracy and providing terrorism
support. It was in a challenge to his detention that the Supreme Court ruled in
2006 that the then-existing military commissions system violated the Uniform
Code of Military Justice and the Geneva Conventions. In response, Congress
passed the Military Commissions Act under which Hamdan is currently being
prosecuted. His case was originally thrown out in June when Judge Allred found
the government failed to show he was an “unlawful enemy combatant” as the law
required. Monday’s ruling comes after the case was reinstated following the
government’s appeal.
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