Rights Watch: Ashcroft Attacks Human Rights Law: Justice Dept. Undermining Key Precedent
BBSNews - 2003-05-19 -- New York, May 15, 2003 - A new legal brief filed by the
U.S. Justice Department would roll back twenty years of
judicial rulings for victims of human rights abuse, Human
Rights Watch warned today.
On May 8, Attorney General John Ashcroft filed an amicus
curiae ("friend of the court") brief for the defense in a
civil case alleging that the oil company Unocal was
complicit in forced labor and other abuses committed by the
Burmese military during the construction of the Yadana gas
pipeline. The case, John Doe I, et al. v. Unocal
Corporation, et al., was originally filed in 1996 and is
currently being reheard by the U.S. Ninth Circuit Court of
Appeals.
The Justice Department brief went well beyond the scope of
the Unocal case, however, and argued for a radical re-
interpretation of the 1789 Alien Tort Claims Act (ATCA). For
over 20 years, courts have held that the ATCA permits
victims of serious violations of international law abroad to
seek civil damages in U.S. courts against their alleged
abusers who are found in the United States. The Justice
Department would deny victims the right to sue under the
ATCA for abuses committed abroad.
"This is a craven attempt to protect human rights abusers at
the expense of victims," said Kenneth Roth, executive
director of Human Rights Watch. "The Bush administration is
trying to overturn a longstanding judicial precedent that
has been very important in the protection of human rights."
Courts have upheld human rights suits under the ATCA since
1980, in a case brought by the father and sister of Joel
Filartiga, a seventeen-year-old Paraguayan. Filartiga was
kidnapped and tortured to death by a Paraguayan police
official who subsequently emigrated to the United States. In
that case, the Second Circuit Court of Appeals held that the
ATCA permitted victims to pursue claims based on serious
violations of international human rights law. Victims have
also been awarded damages against other perpetrators,
including Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadic and former
Philippine president Ferdinand Marcos. However, because the
defendants have traditionally been non-residents without
assets in the U.S., it has been difficult to collect the
awards.
The Justice Department argued that the ATCA could not be
used as a basis to file civil cases and that victims should
sue under other laws; that the "law of nations" covered by
the ATCA did not include international human rights
treaties; and that abuses committed outside of the United
States would not be covered under the law. No previous
administration has challenged the legitimacy of ATCA cases
against gross human rights abusers.
If the Administration's argument were upheld, some of the
cases that would not have gone forward include:
* The 1996-97 Holocaust Litigation cases against Swiss
banks, which led to a U.S. government-negotiated settlement
to pay Holocaust survivors approximately $1.25 billion. The
cases were brought under several laws, including the ATCA.
* Presbyterian Church of Sudan, et al. v. Talisman
Energy Inc., a 2001 suit filed in New York federal district
court alleging that Talisman Energy was complicit in human
rights abuses committed by the government of Sudan in oil-
producing areas where Talisman operated. The court denied
the company's motion to dismiss the case on March 19, 2003.
* Raymonde Abrams v. Societe Nationale Des Chemins De
Fer Francais, a case filed in 2000 in which Holocaust
survivors alleged that the National French Railroad Company
deported Jews and others to Nazi death camps. A New York
district court dismissed the case on November 7, 2001; it is
currently on appeal to the Second Circuit Court of Appeal.
"The Justice Department brief could do a lot of damage to
this important legal precedent," said Roth. "Supporters of
human rights should tell the Bush administration to leave
the Alien Tort Claims Act alone."
The Alien Tort Claims Act was adopted as part of the
original Judiciary Act in 1789 and states that "[t]he
district courts shall have original jurisdiction of any
civil action by an alien for a tort [personal injury] only,
committed in violation of the law of nations or a treaty of
the United States."
In 1993, lawsuits were brought against multinational
companies for alleged complicity in human rights violations
abroad. There have been at least twenty-five such cases
against companies over the last ten years; the courts have
dismissed most of these cases and have not rendered any
judgments against companies.
The Doe v. Unocal case was originally filed in 1996. In
1997, a U.S. federal district court in California ruled that
the company could be held liable for the alleged abuses, but
subsequently dismissed the case in 2000. Two years later,
the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals overturned the ruling and
allowed the case to proceed. However in February 2003, the
Ninth Circuit agreed to rehear the case en banc. The
Justice Department brief was filed for this rehearing.
Human Rights Watch is not a party to any lawsuit filed under
the ATCA, nor does it take a position on the merits of any
particular case. However, Human Rights Watch believes that
victims should have the option to file such suits.
Read HRW's background on the ATCA at:
http://hrw.org/campaigns/atca/
Read the U.S. Justice Department's amicus curae brief at:
http://www.hrw.org/press/2003/05/doj050803.pdf
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Michael Hess is the Editor of BBSNews in Charlotte, NC. Write to the editor here. Not all submissions are published. Or visit the completely new BBSNews Blog and Forum on our front page - Please Participate in BBSNews!
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