Britain | |
Freed Guantanamo detainees to sue British intelligence | |
2008-04-20 | |
Eight men freed from Guantanamo Bay are looking to sue the British intelligence services for damages, the Daily Mail said on Saturday citing lawyers and one of the former detainees.
Deghayes and el-Banna were released from the US-run facility in Cuba last December. Al Rawi was set free earlier this year. Spain dropped an attempt to extradite them to face terrorism charges in March. The second writ is on behalf of British nationals Moazzam Begg, from Birmingham, west central England, a trio of friends from nearby Tipton, Shafiq Rasul, Asif Iqbal and Ruhal Ahmed, and Londoner Richard Belmar. The three men from Tipton unsuccessfully sued their former captors for alleged human and religious rights violations in US courts. The case is now being taken to the US Supreme Court. Begg was quoted as saying that the case would centre on British intelligences general behaviour and complicity in the abuse of British citizens from their detention, interrogation and transfer to Guantanamo. Lawyer Irene Membhard, from London law firm Birnberg Pierce, confirmed to the newspaper that the writs had been issued. Service is not imminent but watch this space within the next two months, she was quoted as saying. | |
Link |
Britain |
Actress pays £25,000 to free Guantanamo inmate |
2007-12-21 |
Two suspected al-Qa'ida operatives released from Guantanamo Bay walked free from court yesterday although they are still wanted in Spain in connection with terrorism-related offences. One of the men, who is accused of distributing extremist propaganda produced by Osama bin Laden, had half of his £50,000 bail met by the Oscar-winning actress Vanessa Redgrave. Jamil el-Banna (45), who was said during a brief court hearing yesterday to have helped run a cell called the Islamic Alliance, recruiting people to fight jihad in Afghanistan and Indonesia, returned to his London home last night. |
Link |
Home Front: WoT |
Detainees Fear Being Shipped Home |
2007-12-08 |
![]() Ahmed Belbacha isn't happy to be at Guantanamo Bay, but neither is he happy about the alternative he says was chosen for him by the U.S. government, Algeria, where Belbacha says he'll be tortured. Belbacha's lawyer, David Remes, asked a three-judge panel to block any plans the Bush administration might have for moving his client into Algerian custody until the Supreme Court decides a case covering all Guantanamo Bay prisoners. On Wednesday, the Supreme Court debated whether the detainees at the U.S. naval prison in Cuba have the right to take their cases to federal courts. A decision is expected in the spring. There are other Guantanamo Bay cases with similarities to Belbacha's. In October, a federal judge blocked the Pentagon from transferring detainee Mohammed Abdul Rahman to Tunisia. The government has notified the court it intends to appeal the judge's decision in favor of Rahman, who says he would be tortured there. Jamil el-Banna has been facing the possibility of being returned to Jordan, where he says he was tortured in the 1990s and would be again. El-Banna also has lived legally in England, and negotiations between the United States and Britain are under way for his possible return there instead of Jordan. He was taken into custody five years ago. Lawyers for another detainee, Abu Abdul Rauf Zalita, are seeking to block his transfer to Libya, arguing he faces torture if he is returned there. Zalita says he married an Afghan citizen and that after the U.S. invasion of Afghanistan, he and his pregnant wife fled to Pakistan where he was handed over to U.S. authorities for a bounty. Guantanamo Bay isn't the only place where people in custody are resisting being sent somewhere else. Two naturalized U.S. citizens held in Baghdad and an Afghan held at the Bagram military base in Afghanistan are resisting efforts to turn them over to local authorities. On Friday, the Supreme Court will decide whether it will hear the cases of the two naturalized U.S. citizens. In Belbacha's case, the U.S. military has classified him as an enemy combatant, while saying he is eligible for transfer subject to appropriate diplomatic arrangements for another country to take him. Remes, his lawyer, says he went to court after hearing from a confidential source the U.S. government planned to turn him over to Algeria. Belbacha was brought to Guantanamo Bay in 2002 from Pakistan. He had been an accountant at the government-owned oil company Sonatrach. Recalled for a second term of military service in the Algerian army, Belbacha says he was targeted with death threats by terrorists in Groupe Islamique Armee, then at the height of a violent campaign for an Islamic Algeria. Belbacha never reported for duty, but he says the GIA visited his home at least twice and threatened him and his family. He left the country, traveling to France, England, Pakistan and Afghanistan before being sent to Guantanamo Bay. Belbacha's lawyer faced a tough reception at the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, where Judge A. Raymond Randolph seemed unwilling to block a possible transfer to Algeria. Randolph, an appointee of President George H.W. Bush, wrote the opinion in February closing the door on the detainees' access to federal courts, prompting prisoners' lawyers to take their cases to the Supreme Court. Another judge on the Belbacha case, Judge Thomas Griffith, expressed doubts about intervening in a possible transfer based on the mere possibility that the Supreme Court will decide in the detainees' favor months down the road. "Are we supposed to divine" how the justices will rule from Wednesday's Supreme Court arguments? said Griffith, who was appointed to the appeals court two years ago by President Bush. The judges questioned the Justice Department lawyer about how imminent Belbacha's departure from Guantanamo Bay might be. "Is there any current plan to transfer this individual?" Randolph asked. "We can't comment," Justice Department lawyer Catherine Hancock replied. The third member of the panel, Chief Judge Douglas Ginsburg, speculated about a possible alternative to Algeria, referring to the cases of five Chinese Muslims given refuge in Albania because they feared being put to death or tortured if returned to China. Picked up during the U.S. invasion of Afghanistan, the Uighur Muslims are suspected by their government of being members of a group waging a violent separatist campaign in China's northwestern Muslim region. |
Link |
Home Front: WoT | |||||
3 British Residents Leaving Guantanamo | |||||
2007-12-08 | |||||
![]()
A fourth British resident, Ethiopian national All five men had been granted refugee status, indefinite leave or exceptional leave to remain in Britain before they were detained, according to Britain's Foreign Office.
El-Banna was arrested by Gambian authorities in November 2002 and transferred to U.S. detention, according to Amnesty International. It said Deghayes and Aamer were captured in Pakistan in 2002. The group Reprieve claims Mohamed was held in Morocco for 18 months after being captured in April 2002 in Pakistan and he was later sent to Guantanamo. Amnesty International said the circumstances of Sameur's detention were not immediately clear.
| |||||
Link |
Terror Networks |
Gitmo's 'Professor' linked to terrorism |
2007-08-14 |
After more than five years, the Pentagon revealed why it is holding a Saudi nicknamed "the Professor" at Guantanamo Bay, saying he once lived with a Sept. 11 conspirator and received a stipend from Osama bin Laden. Shaker Aamer's lawyer denies the allegations, made after British Prime Minister Gordon Brown last week requested the release of the Saudi, who has been an unofficial leader among the detainees, and four other former residents of Britain. The Bush administration, which has been urging other nations to accept Guantanamo prisoners amid international pressure to close the military jail, warned that the five detainees and particularly Aamer are dangerous men. A senior U.S. official said Aamer shared an apartment in London in the late 1990s with Zacarias Moussaoui, a confessed al-Qaida conspirator and the only person in the United States charged in the attacks, and met with Richard Reid, imprisoned in the U.S. for trying to blow up an American passenger jet with explosives hidden in his shoes. Aamer also trained in the use of explosives and surface-to-air missiles and lived on stipends in Afghanistan paid by bin Laden, the official, Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Detainee Affairs Sandra Hodgkinson, told The Associated Press. "He has been involved in a lot of significant terrorist plots," Hodgkinson said Wednesday. ... But Hodgkinson said she was disclosing allegations against Aamer and the four other British residents Jordanian Jamil el-Banna; Libyan-born Omar Deghayes, Ethiopian national Binyam Mohamed and Algerian Abdennour Sameur to underscore "the risk these individuals pose," though the U.S. had no plans to try any of them. Deghayes, she said, has been associated with a militant group in Libya and has "direct connections" to al-Qaida operatives in Europe; Mohamed trained on use of explosives and proposed to al-Qaida leaders that uranium from hospitals be used in terror attacks. Sameur has attended al-Qaida training courses, while el-Banna is suspected of participating in a terrorist organization in Spain, she said. Stafford Smith, who represents all the men, denied the allegations and said he might pursue defamation charges against Hodgkinson in Britain to "stop this verbal torrent of falsehoods." |
Link |
Britain |
England is finished |
2007-08-08 |
The Government called on America yesterday to release five foreign nationals from Guantanamo Bay detention centre who were formerly British residents. Profiles of the five Guantanamo detainees The request by David Miliband, the Foreign Secretary, to Condoleezza Rice, the Secretary of State, represented a U-turn by the Government, which had previously resisted moves to force it to take responsibility for the men. The move also raised concerns over security. The Government had won cases in the High Court and Court of Appeal after claiming that it had no responsibility to negotiate for the men's release and any attempt to force it to do so would be counter-productive because the US would not negotiate with third countries. But yesterday the Foreign and Commonwealth Office said that it had "requested the release" of five men who were not nationals but were "legally resident" in Britain prior to their detention. Jacqui Smith, the Home Secretary, had been given until Aug 9 by the High Court to decide whether one of the men, Jamil el-Banna, 45, would be allowed to return to live in Britain following his release but the Foreign Office insisted it had not been forced into the move. Sources said the Government was keen to encourage President George W Bush to close the controversial prison camp in Cuba. Officials said they wanted to "embolden" the US in its approach. Another consideration was the campaign by the families of the men, who say they should not be separated from their loved ones when the men cannot be brought to trial. Following a decision by the US Supreme Court last year which halted the military -tribunals at Guantanamo, President Bush said he wanted to see the camp closed. In June Robert Gates, the US Defence Secretary, said his government was working on getting past the "legal obstacle" to try to find a solution for those it still wished to detain. Robert Tuttle, the US ambassador to London, said the request would be considered very seriously. "We will get back with all due, deliberate speed," he told the BBC. The US had insisted that if the former residents were returned to Britain they should be kept under 24-hour surveillance, a move resisted by the Government. The Foreign Office statement said: "Discussions with the US government about the release and return of these five men may take some time. The Government will of course continue to take all necessary measures to maintain national security." But the Tories demanded assurances that the public would not be put at risk. Damian Green, the shadow immigration minister, said: "I want to hear from the Home Secretary that there will be no extra danger for the British people if these five men choose to come back to Britain." The men - Shaker Aamer from Saudi Arabia, Jamil el-Banna from Jordan, Omar Deghayes from Libya, Binyam Mohamed from Ethiopia, and Abdennour Sameur from Algeria - had all been granted refugee status, indefinite leave or exceptional leave to remain in Britain before they were detained. Last night Mr Aamer's wife Zinnira was away on a pilgrimage in Saudi Arabia but her father, Saeed Ahmed Siddique, said: "Today is a day of celebration." Abubaker Deghayes, Omar's brother, said: "Justice is a -pillar of British values and I'm grateful to whoever made the decision in the British Government to take this step. I am delighted the British public sincerely stood by us." |
Link |
Britain | |
UK families' Guantánamo appeal fails | |
2006-10-13 | |
![]() All the British citizens who were detained at Guantánamo have already been returned to the UK. Mr al-Rawi is an Iraqi national and long-term UK resident, Mr el-Banna a Jordanian national with refugee status in the UK and Mr Deghayes a Libyan national, also with refugee status in the UK. Rabinder Singh QC, acting for the families of the men, told a hearing in July that the men's detention was unlawful. He said there was
Announcing that the court of appeal had dismissed the three appeals, Lord Justice Laws said the refusal to request their return did not contravene human rights or race relations laws. | |
Link |
Britain | ||||||
Abu Qatada may take a trip | ||||||
2006-05-10 | ||||||
![]() Qatada, who began an appeal Tuesday against a British government decision to return him to Jordan, is said to have widespread connections to Al Qaeda and other extremist Islamist groups and people in Algeria, Egypt and Pakistan. Britain claims the 44-year-old, who was born Omar Mahmud Mohammed Othman, is a risk to national security and his continuing presence is not conducive to the public good.
Burnett admitted that the memorandum, which has been criticised as incompatible with international human rights law, was not, strictly speaking, a document that is legally binding in international law. But he insisted its letter and its spirit will be given effect, saying it would be extraordinary if the Jordanian government did not keep its pledge to uphold Qatadas human rights.
Amman also confirmed Qatada would not face the death penalty if convicted at any retrial, which would be fair, he added. The hearing was told that Qatada, who was not present, had long-established connections with Al Qaedas spiritual head Osama bin Laden, its number two, Ayman Al Zawarhiri, and Abu Musab Al Zarqawi, the networks leader in Iraq. Videos of Qatadas sermons were also found in the Hamburg flat of Mohammed Atta, the presumed ringleader of the September 11, 2001 attacks on the United States. He was also said to be involved in fundraising and providing spiritual advice and religious legitimacy for terrorist activity by individuals and terrorist groups both in Britain and abroad. Lawyer Edward Fitzgerald, for Qatada, argued it was strongly suspected that evidence the government relied upon was extracted under torture.
| ||||||
Link |
Britain |
Gitmo Brit says hes MI5 |
2006-03-24 |
![]() Bisher al-Rawi, 37, who has lived in Britain for more than 20 years, says that he was working for British Intelligence when he was picked up by the CIA during a trip to Africa. Lawyers for Mr al-Rawi and two other long-term British residents held at Guantanamo claim that they are all being tortured and want the High Court to order Jack Straw, the Foreign Secretary, to lobby the US authorities for their release. The Government has said that as foreign nationals the men have no legal right to the assistance they are demanding. But the Foreign Office said yesterday that Mr al-Rawis case was now regarded as different. "The Foreign Secretary considered it appropriate to reconsider Mr al-Rawis request that he make representations to the US," it said. Mr al-Rawi, an Iraqi national, and his Jordanian business partner, Jamil el-Banna, who was granted refugee status in 2000, were picked up in Gambia three years ago and accused of trying to set up an al-Qaeda terrorist training camp. Both men claim that they were asked by British Intelligence to infiltrate an organisation run by a London-based radical cleric, Abu Qatada. Timothy Otty, who is appearing for the detainees, said that documents from a security service agent, "Witness A", established that there were "communications" relating to the two men before their arrest in November 2002, between the British and US security services. The third man, Libyan-born Omar Deghayes, 36, had also been held at Guantanamo for three years and was now on a hunger strike, Mr Otty said.The hearing is expected to last for two more days. |
Link |
Home Front: WoT | |||||||
Hunger strikers pledge to die in Guantánamo | |||||||
2005-09-09 | |||||||
Send the food to Biloxi. Statements from prisoners in the camp which were declassified by the US government on Wednesday reveal that the men are starving themselves in protest at the conditions in the camp and at their alleged maltreatment - including desecration of the Qur'an - by American guards. The statements, written on August 11, have just been given to the British human rights lawyer Clive Stafford Smith. They show that prisoners are determined to starve them selves to death. In one, Binyam Mohammed, a former London schoolboy, said: "I do not plan to stop until I either die or we are respected. I'll go with option "A."
I'm cheering you on. Yesterday, Mr Stafford Smith, who represents 40 detainees at Guantánamo Bay, eight of whom are British residents, said many men had been starving themselves for more than four weeks and the situation was becoming desperate. Unlike that of the people trapped on top of the World Trade Center... He said: "I am worried about the lives of my guys because they are a pretty obstinate lot and they are going to go through with this and I think they are going to end up killing themselves. The American military doesn't want anyone to know about this." He pointed to an American army claim that only 76 prisoners at the base were refusing food, saying that they were attempting to play down what could be a political scandal if a prisoner were to die.
In his statement, Mr Mohammed described how during the first strike men were placed on intravenous drips after refusing food for 20 days. He said: "The administration promised that if we gave them 10 days, they would bring the prison into compliance with the Geneva conventions. They said this had been approved by Donald Rumsfeld himself in Washington DC. As a result of these promises, we agreed to end the strike on July 28. OK. We'll go in compliance with the convention, sure. Lessee, [flip][flip], ah! Unlawful combatants. Sez here we can give you a summary court and execute you. Well, that's what you wanted, so...
Five hours of sexual humiliation? That would run into some serious money in Nevada.
"In the end the military agreed to negotiate. We came off the strike [on July 28 2005], but we gave them two weeks, and if the changes were not implemented we would go back on strike."
Well, we can, as long as they are infidels or women. Another prisoner, Jamal Kiyemba, from Battersea, south London, said in an account of the July hunger strike: "Many of the prisoners collapsed, as they would not drink water. More than 30 were hospitalised. I am in Camp IV and we joined in." He added: "Eventually, because people were near death, the military caved and let us set up a prisoner welfare council of six prisoners." Jamil el Banna, another British resident, described how the guards were again searching the Qur'an by hand, which they had agreed to stop.
But do you believe the Pentagon or a lawyer for terrorists? "They are listed as being in a stable condition and they are recieving nutrition." Asked if they were being force fed, he said: "They are being held in the same standards as US prison standards... they don't allow people to kill themselves via starvation." | |||||||
Link |