http://snipurl.com/7fha

The European Parliament has asked the EU's highest court to annul a treaty
between the EU and the United States that would allow authorities to share
data about airline passengers, writes Denis Staunton in Brussels.  MEPs
voted against the agreement earlier this year, citing concerns about
privacy and data protection, but the Council of Ministers, where national
governments meet, pressed ahead with the treaty regardless.  The agreement
will allow US authorities to obtain information such as credit-card
details, telephone numbers, addresses and travel itineraries on all
transatlantic passengers...

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http://www.truthout.org/docs_04/062904D.shtml

Justices: Detainees Can Have Court Hearings
    The Associated Press

    Monday 28 June 2004

    Washington - The Supreme Court dealt a setback to the Bush
administration's war against terrorism today, ruling that both U.S.
citizens and foreign nationals seized as potential terrorists can
challenge their treatment in U.S. courts.

    The court refused to endorse a central claim of the White House since
the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11 2001: That the government has
authority to seize and detain suspected terrorists or their protectors
and indefinitely deny access to courts or lawyers while interrogating
them.

    The court did back the administration in one important respect, ruling
that Congress gave President Bush the authority to seize and hold a
U.S. citizen, in this case Louisiana-born Yaser Esam Hamdi, as an
alleged enemy combatant.

    That bright spot for the administration was almost eclipsed, however,
by the court's ruling that Hamdi can use American courts to argue that
he is being held illegally. Foreign-born men held at a Navy prison
camp at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, can also have their day in U.S. courts,
the justices said.

    Ruling in the Hamdi case, Justice Sandra Day O'Connor said the court
has "made clear that a state of war is not a blank check for the
president when it comes to the rights of the nation's citizens."

    Steven R. Shapiro, legal director of the ACLU, called the rulings "a
strong repudiation of the administration's argument that its actions
in the war on terrorism are beyond the rule of law and unreviewable by
American courts."

    The court sidestepped a third major terrorism case, ruling that a
lawsuit filed on behalf of detainee Jose Padilla improperly named
Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld instead of the much lower-level
military officer in charge of the Navy brig in South Carolina where
Padilla has been held for more than two years.

    Padilla must refile a lawsuit challenging his detention in a lower court.

    The court left hard questions unanswered in all three cases.

    The administration had fought any suggestion that Hamdi or another
U.S.-born terrorism suspect could go to court, saying that such a
legal fight posed a threat to the president's power to wage war as he
sees fit.

    "We have no reason to doubt that courts, faced with these sensitive
matters, will pay proper heed both to the matters of national security
that might arise in an individual case and to the constitutional
limitations safeguarding essential liberties that remain vibrant even
in times of security concerns," Justice Sandra Day O'Connor wrote in
the Hamdi case.

    O'Connor said that Hamdi "unquestionably has the right to access to
counsel."

    The court threw out a lower court ruling that supported the
government's position fully, and Hamdi's case now returns to a lower
court.

    O'Connor was joined by Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist and Justices
Anthony M. Kennedy and Stephen Breyer in her view that Congress had
authorized detentions such as Hamdi's in what she called very limited
circumstances,

    Congress voted shortly after the Sept. 11 attacks to give the
president significant authority to pursue terrorists, but Hamdi's
lawyers said that authority did not extend to the indefinite detention
of an American citizen without charges or trial.

    Two other justices, David H. Souter and Ruth Bader Ginsburg, would
have gone further and declared Hamdi's detention improper. Still, they
joined O'Connor and the others to say that Hamdi, and by extension
others who may be in his position, are entitled to their day in court.

    Hamdi and Padilla are in military custody at a Navy brig in South
Carolina. They have been interrogated repeatedly without lawyers
present.

    In the Guantánamo case, the court said the Cuban base is not beyond
the reach of American courts even though it is outside the country.
Lawyers for the detainees there had said to rule otherwise would be to
declare the Cuban base a legal no-man's land.

    The high court's ruling applies only to Guantánamo detainees, although
the United States holds foreign prisoners elsewhere.

    The Bush administration contends that as "enemy combatants," the men
are not entitled to the usual rights of prisoners of war set out in
the Geneva Conventions. Enemy combatants are also outside the
constitutional protections for ordinary criminal suspects, the
government has claimed.

    The administration argued that the president alone has authority to
order their detention, and that courts have no business
second-guessing that decision.

    The case has additional resonance because of recent revelations that
U.S. soldiers abused Iraqi prisoners and used harsh interrogation
methods at a prison outside Baghdad. For some critics of the
administration's security measures, the pictures of abuse at Abu
Ghraib prison illustrated what might go wrong if the military and
White House have unchecked authority over prisoners.

    At oral arguments in the Padilla case in April, an administration
lawyer assured the court that Americans abide by international
treaties against torture, and that the president or the military would
not allow even mild torture as a means to get information.

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