EMAIL SIGN UP!
Progressive Community
The press releases posted here have been submitted by
America's Progressive Community
For further information or to comment on this press release, please contact the organization directly.
Most Popular This Week
Today's Top News
|
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE |
CONTACT: ACLU Rachel Myers, National ACLU, (212) 549-2689 or 2666; media@aclu.org |
Federal Court Rules Bagram Prisoners Can't Challenge Their Detention In U.S. Courts
Decision Gives Government Unchecked Power To Detain Individuals Indefinitely Without Due Process Or Transparency, Says ACLU
NEW YORK - May 21 - A
federal court of appeals ruled today that three prisoners who are being
held by the United States at Bagram Air Base in Afghanistan cannot
challenge their detention in U.S. courts. The non-Afghan prisoners,
some of whom were captured outside of Afghanistan far from any
battlefield and "rendered" or transferred to Bagram, have been held at
the detention facility for more than seven years without access to a
court or counsel. The American Civil Liberties Union has filed habeas
cases on behalf of several Bagram detainees and a Freedom of
Information Act (FOIA) lawsuit for records relating to the detention,
rendition and treatment of prisoners held there. The ACLU's Bagram
habeas cases were not addressed by the court of appeals ruling today;
the cases at issue were brought by the International Justice Network,
the organization coordinating Bagram habeas litigation.
"Today's decision ratifies the dangerous principle that the U.S. government has unchecked power to capture people anywhere in the world, unilaterally declare them enemy combatants and subject them to indefinite military detention with no judicial review and little to no process for challenging their detention in any forum. The rule embraced by the court of appeals permits the executive branch to manipulate whether its actions will or will not be subject to judicial scrutiny, simply by choosing whether to fly a prisoner to Bagram or Guantánamo," said Melissa Goodman, staff attorney with the ACLU National Security Project. "Locking up people who were picked up far from any battlefield for years without telling them why, without giving them access to lawyers and without giving them a fair chance to contest the evidence against them is unlawful and un-American."
In response to the ACLU's FOIA lawsuit for records related to the detention, rendition and treatment of prisoners at Bagram, the Defense Department in January released for the first time a list of the people imprisoned at the notorious detention facility. The list contains the names of 645 prisoners who were detained there as of September 2009, but other vital information including their citizenship, how long they have been held, in what country they were captured and the circumstances of their capture has been withheld. The ACLU is challenging the withholding of this information in court.
The government also continues to withhold information about the implementation of its new detainee status review procedures as well as information about a separate "secret jail" on the base, reportedly run by either the Joint Special Operations Command or the Defense Intelligence Agency, where detainees maintain they have been abused and guards and interrogators may not be subject to the same rules that apply at the main Bagram detention facility.
"Today's decision makes the need for greater transparency at Bagram all the more pressing. The Obama administration has instituted a new military process for determining whether prisoners should be released but has not disclosed any information about the implementation of the process, such as transcripts of the new Detainee Review Board proceedings," said Goodman. "The military disclosed this kind of information about Guantánamo proceedings and should do the same for the Bagram proceedings. The military should also come clean about the secret 'second' prison at Bagram Air Base the Red Cross confirmed existed last week."
More information about the ACLU's Bagram FOIA lawsuit is available online at: www.aclu.org/national- security/bagram-foia
More information about the ACLU's Bagram habeas cases is at: www.aclu.org/national- security/aclu-files-habeas- corpus-petitions-behalf-four- bagram-detainees
"Today's decision ratifies the dangerous principle that the U.S. government has unchecked power to capture people anywhere in the world, unilaterally declare them enemy combatants and subject them to indefinite military detention with no judicial review and little to no process for challenging their detention in any forum. The rule embraced by the court of appeals permits the executive branch to manipulate whether its actions will or will not be subject to judicial scrutiny, simply by choosing whether to fly a prisoner to Bagram or Guantánamo," said Melissa Goodman, staff attorney with the ACLU National Security Project. "Locking up people who were picked up far from any battlefield for years without telling them why, without giving them access to lawyers and without giving them a fair chance to contest the evidence against them is unlawful and un-American."
In response to the ACLU's FOIA lawsuit for records related to the detention, rendition and treatment of prisoners at Bagram, the Defense Department in January released for the first time a list of the people imprisoned at the notorious detention facility. The list contains the names of 645 prisoners who were detained there as of September 2009, but other vital information including their citizenship, how long they have been held, in what country they were captured and the circumstances of their capture has been withheld. The ACLU is challenging the withholding of this information in court.
The government also continues to withhold information about the implementation of its new detainee status review procedures as well as information about a separate "secret jail" on the base, reportedly run by either the Joint Special Operations Command or the Defense Intelligence Agency, where detainees maintain they have been abused and guards and interrogators may not be subject to the same rules that apply at the main Bagram detention facility.
"Today's decision makes the need for greater transparency at Bagram all the more pressing. The Obama administration has instituted a new military process for determining whether prisoners should be released but has not disclosed any information about the implementation of the process, such as transcripts of the new Detainee Review Board proceedings," said Goodman. "The military disclosed this kind of information about Guantánamo proceedings and should do the same for the Bagram proceedings. The military should also come clean about the secret 'second' prison at Bagram Air Base the Red Cross confirmed existed last week."
More information about the ACLU's Bagram FOIA lawsuit is available online at: www.aclu.org/national-
More information about the ACLU's Bagram habeas cases is at: www.aclu.org/national-
###
Comments are closed
Comments
Note: Disqus 2012 is best viewed on an up to date browser. Click here for information. Instructions for how to sign up to comment can be viewed here. Our Comment Policy can be viewed here. Please follow the guidelines. Note to Readers: Spam Filter May Capture Legitimate Comments...

3 Comments so far
Show AllDo you mean to say that there are no treaty rights that apply to these detainees that the US is bound to follow?
QUESTION? How does the treatment of these people differ from what one might have expected from [a]a Tzar, [b]Stalin, [c]Heinrich Himmler, [d] a bunch of
Barbary pirates on the shores of Tripoli?
Isn't everyone happy we exchanged Bush/Ashcroft
for Obama/Holder.
As one poster already pointed out
Blacks have proved they are able to abuse
civil rights and civil liberties equally as well
as us whiteyeze