Forward from mart.
PLEASE DISTRIBUTE WIDELY

Interesting that AP claims that ""war crime trials" for prisoners being held
at the Guantanamo Bay torture camp are currently stalled by "constitutional 
challenges" in the U.S courts.  First, the prisoners, all who have been 
kidnapped and are being held illegally and in violation of international law,
(a serious war crime in itself) are not even facing "war crimes" charges. The 
ones that actually are charged with anything at all, are accused  of being 
"illegal enemy combatants" an ambiguous, unilateral, self-declared U.S "law" 
that has no basis whatsoever in international law. Secondly, these are not 
"trials" - they are kangaroo courts, - military tribunals, held in secret and 
where the prisoners do not even have the right to know the evidence being used 
against them and where the so-called "evidence" can be and is by the U.S.'s own 
admission, obtained by torture. Again, mores serious war crimes on the part of 
the U.S. Too bad that AP didn't see fit to ad these small "background" details 
to their so-called "news" article.

mart
=======================================
----- Original Message ----- 
From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "NYTr List" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Friday, December 10, 2004 2:12 PM
Subject:1) Guantanamo: US Plans Long-Term Detentions;  
2) Afadavit - Prisoners Beaten, Abused

Via NY Transfer News Collective  
All the News that Doesn't Fit
 
sent by Simon McGuinness - Dec 10, 2004

1) 
AP via Seattle Times
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/nationworld/2002115211_gitmo10.html

Pentagon plans for long-term 
detention at Guant�namo 

by Carol Rosenberg 
By The Associated Press


MIAMI - Even as federal judges review the Defense Department's power
 to detain and try suspects in the war on terror, the Pentagon is quietly 
planning for permanency at the U.S. detention center at Guant�namo 
Bay, Cuba. 


Pentagon planners are seeking $25 million to build a state-of-the-art
200-cell concrete building meant to eventually replace the rows of
rugged cells fashioned from shipping containers at Camp Delta. 


At the same time, the Army is creating a full-time, professional guard
force - a 324-member Military Police Internment and Resettlement
Battalion that will replace a temporary, mostly reserve force at
Guant�namo. 

Aside from the Marine force that set up the prison nearly three years
ago, many of the troops who guarded captives in Guant�namo have 
been Army reservists mobilized from civilian law-enforcement duties 
in the U.S. Midwest. 


The prison today has about 550 captives from 42 nations who have 
been brought to Cuba from Afghanistan. Only four have been charged 
with crimes, a trial process now stalled in federal courts. 


On Nov. 8, U.S. District Judge James Robertson in Washington, 
D.C., ruled unconstitutional a Military Commission's war crimes trial 
for Osama bin Laden driver Salim Ahmed Hamdan, 34, of Yemen. 
The Pentagon then suspended all war crimes trials while the Justice Department 
appealed his decision. 


"They're betting that the courts are going to, in the end, find for 
the government, that they can keep these enemy combatants, as 
they label them, indefinitely, as long as they have some kind of 
an annual review process," said retired Army Col. Dan Smith, a 
West Point graduate and Vietnam veteran who is now a senior 
military affairs fellow at the Friends Committee on National 
Legislation, a Quaker lobby. 


"So Guant�namo becomes an extra-territorial - I don't want to 
say gulag - a prison for anyone we want to put down there and 
label an unlawful enemy combatant," Smith said. 


Camp Delta was projected to last five years when it opened in 
May 2002. 


Built by Kellogg Brown & Root, a subsidiary of Pentagon contractor
Halliburton, Delta's cells were welded from steel shipping containers 
by laborers brought in from South Asia. 

===================================
 2)              
Prisoners beaten while blindfolded and 
handcuffed: Hicks affidavit


AP via Nashua Telegraph - Dec 10, 2004
http://www.nashuatelegraph.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20041210/NEWS03/112100085/-1/news

Australian detainee alleges abuse

by The Associated Press


SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico - Prisoners at the U.S. detention 
center in Guant�namo Bay, Cuba, have been beaten while 
blindfolded and handcuffed, terrorized by attack dogs and 
forced to take drugs, an Australian detainee said in an 
affidavit released yesterday. 


David Hicks, 29, was one of the first prisoners to arrive at the
camp in eastern Cuba in January 2002. He is one of only four 
terror suspects who have been formally charged among 550 
detainees there accused of links to Afghanistan's ousted 
Taliban regime or the al-Qaida terror network. 


"At one point, a group of detainees, including myself, were 
subjected to being randomly hit over an eight-hour session 
while handcuffed and blindfolded," Hicks said in an affidavit 
sealed in August and released by his attorneys yesterday. 
"I have been struck with hands, fists, and other objects, 
including rifle butts. I have also been kicked." 


Some of the allegations made by Hicks and others would be
 investigated, Pentagon spokesman Maj. Michael Shavers 
said. 


The release of the affidavit comes the same week as the 
publication of several documents that show FBI agents 
sent to Guant�namo Bay warned the government of abuse 
and mistreatment as early as the start of the detention
mission. 
       
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