HRW: U.S. Again Uses Enemy Combatant Label to Deny Basic Rights
BBSNews - 2003-06-24 -- HRW: Washington, June 23, 2003 - The Bush Administration's
designation of Ali Saleh Kahlah al-Marri, a Qatari national
living in the United States, as an "enemy combatant"
threatens basic rights safeguards, Human Rights Watch said
today. The U.S. Justice Department announced today that it
was dropping criminal charges against al-Marri and that he
would instead be held without charge by the U.S. military.
"The Bush Administration has once again done an end run
around the criminal justice system," said Wendy Patten, U.S.
advocacy director at Human Rights Watch. "It is invoking the
laws of war in the United States to justify locking people
up without charge and without access to a lawyer. This kind
of military detention has no place in a country committed to
the rule of law."
Al-Marri is the third person held in the United States under
military authority as an "enemy combatant." Human Rights
Watch maintains that there should be a strong presumption
that anyone arrested in the United States, far from any
battlefield, be granted the full legal protections of the
criminal justice system - including the right to counsel and
not to be held without charge.
Human Rights Watch disputes the government's contention that
international humanitarian law, commonly referred to as the
laws of war, permits the president to unilaterally designate
al-Marri an "enemy combatant." The United States cannot
declare a criminal suspect, including a suspected member of
al-Qaeda, an enemy combatant, except where there has been
direct participation in an international armed conflict.
International humanitarian law is inapplicable outside areas
of armed conflict and where there is no direct connection to
an armed conflict. Instead, the protections of international
human rights law apply. In the case of a person detained in
the United States, the protections of U.S. constitutional
law apply as well. These protections include the rights to
be formally charged and permitted access to counsel.
"Rather than afford al-Marri basic due process and other
constitutional guarantees, the Bush administration has
circumvented these rights by unilaterally designating him an
enemy combatant," said Patten. "The government is claiming a
virtually unlimited power to deprive people of their liberty
and hold them incommunicado based only on the president's
say-so."
According to news reports, al-Marri, who lived in Peoria,
Illinois, has been in U.S. custody since December 2001. He was
first held as a material witness and then later charged with
lying to the FBI and credit card fraud.
To read more on human rights issues in the United States, please
see:
http://www.hrw.org/us/usdom.php
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The preceding report was provided to BBSNews by the Human Rights Watch International (HRW).
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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