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Washington Post Staff Writer
A federal district judge has
ordered the government not to transfer a
Tunisian detainee held at
Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, to his home country,
over fears that he would be tortured or killed.
The move marks the first time a court has
prevented U.S. officials from making such a
transfer and is the first ruling in favor of an
individual detainee's rights at the detention
facility since Congress restricted court
oversight of the detainees.
Judge
Gladys Kessler of the U.S. District Court
for the District of Columbia ruled last week
that Mohammed Abdul Rahman cannot be sent to
Tunisia because he could suffer "irreparable
harm" before the Supreme Court rules in a
landmark case that could give him access to U.S.
courts. Her decision was unsealed yesterday.
Rahman's case underscores the
challenges facing the
Bush administration as it seeks to transfer
alleged enemy combatants out of Guantanamo Bay
and to the custody of their home nations as part
of an effort to close the facility.
Acknowledging the tainted reputation that
Guantanamo
has gained internationally, U.S. officials have
long been seeking to send detainees elsewhere,
relying on diplomatic agreements that the
recipient countries will not mistreat them.
While President Bush and other
officials have publicly stated their desire to
close the facility, the administration has
engaged in heated internal debates and has not
come to a consensus on how to do so, as well as
on the fate of the detainees who would need to
remain in custody. Guantanamo's population has
been slowly dwindling as U.S. officials have
negotiated the transfer of hundreds of detainees
to their home nations.
But some detainees would rather
remain at Guantanamo than face possible torture
or death at home and have begun to challenge
their departures in U.S. courts. Rahman is the
first detainee to succeed in that effort. Two
other detainees recently sent to Tunisia have
reported that the y were abused and tortured
there, according to their attorneys and human
rights groups.
The Rahman decision could lead to
similar requests from detainees facing transfer
to countries with spotty human rights records,
possibly putting the U.S. government in the
difficult position of having to hold people at
Guantanamo indefinitely even after the military
has cleared them for transfer or release. It
also shows the court's willingness to accept
jurisdiction over such claims, at least until
the Supreme Court rules in Boumediene v. Bush,
which could grant detainees habeas corpus
rights, or the right to challenge their
detention in U.S. courts.
"This is the first time the
judicial branch has exercised its inherent power
to control the excesses of the executive as to
treatment of prisoners at Guantanamo Bay," said
Joshua Denbeaux, Rahman's attorney. "The
executive has now been told it cannot bury its
Guantanamo mistakes in Third World prisons."
Another Guantanamo detainee,
Abdul Ra'ouf Omar Mohammed Abu al-Qassim,
publicly fought transfer to his home country of
Libya in June, also fearing torture or
death. Though he exhausted all of his options in
court, members of Congress petitioned the
State Department not to send Qassi m to
Libya, and U.S. officials indefinitely postponed
his transfer.
Jennifer Daskal, senior
counterterrorism counsel at
Human Rights Watch, said the ruling
highlights the need for oversight of the
government's transfer policies. "It's an
important and significant development and
positive step forward," Daskal said. "Having a
court step in and order the administration not
to transfer a detainee to what is likely torture
sets a precedent for other courts and other
judges to do the same thing."
he decision also indicates how
much hangs on the Boumediene case. Kessler on
the same day last week granted similar relief to
a detainee held at Bagram air base in
Afghanistan, saying the government cannot
transfer him until the Supreme Court rules.
"It shows why the stakes are so
high in the Supreme Court case," said David
Remes, who represents detainees at Guantanamo.
"If the Supreme Court rules that Guantanamo
detainees have the right to habeas corpus,
judges will be able to enter this kind of
restraining order against the government to
protect them from being sent to other countries
where they may be tortured or killed."
Erik Ablin, a
Justice Department spokesman, said the
government argued that Kessler's court does not
have jurisdiction in the case. "The court's
order recognizes that the jurisdictional issue
-- which was resolved by the
U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
in favor of the government in Boumediene v.
Bush-- is currently before the Supreme
Court," Ablin said. "The government is now
reviewing the district court order an d
considering its options."
One U.S. official familiar with
the case said the government views Kessler's
decision as an "interim solution" and not a
substantive finding. Cynthia Smith, a Pentagon
spokeswoman, said that "detainees are not
repatriated to countries where it is more likely
than not that they will be tortured" and noted
that the
Defense Department investigates allegations
of mistreatment.
Rahman's attorneys have argued
that their client suffers from serious health
problems and that Tunisia convicted him of
terrorist crimes in absentia, based on laws
created while Rahman was held at Guantanamo Bay.
A 20-year prison sentence awaits Rahman, and his
attorneys have argued that Tunisia's record of
torture and maltreatment could amount to a death
sentence.
"In view of the grave harm Rahman
has alleged he will face if transferred, it
would be a profound miscarriage of justice" if
the court denied Rahman's petition to remain at
Guantanamo, Kessler wrote in an eight-page
order. She added that the upcoming Supreme Court
case could lead to the courts opening up to
detainees such as Rahman. "At that point, the
damage would have been done."
The
U.S. military has transferred or released
approximately 445 detainees from Guantanamo to
other countries. Government officials say they
regularly receive assurances that the detainees
will not be ill-treated. About 330 detainees
remain at Guantanamo.
Denbeaux, who has worked with
Seton Hall University's Law School in studying
the Guantanamo detainees' cases, said that 55
percent have never been accused of committing a
hostile act against the United States or its
allies and that 60 percent were neither fighters
for the
Taliban nor for
al-Qaeda. Denbeaux contends that Rahman is
in both groups.
Staff researcher Julie Tate
contributed to this report.
Source:
« The Washington Post » (Quotidien – USA, le 10
Octobre 2007)
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