U.S.
Cites Excemption in Torture Ban
By Josh White & Carol D. Leonnig
The Washington Post
March 3, 2006
Bush
administration lawyers, fighting a claim of torture
by a Guantanamo Bay detainee, yesterday argued that
the new law that bans cruel, inhuman or degrading
treatment of detainees in U.S. custody does not apply
to people held at the military prison.
In
federal court yesterday and in legal filings, Justice
Department lawyers contended that a detainee at Guantanamo
Bay, Cuba, cannot use legislation drafted by Sen.
John McCain (R-Ariz.) to challenge treatment that
the detainee's lawyers described as "systematic
torture."
Government
lawyers have argued that another portion of that same
law, the Detainee Treatment Act of 2005, removes general
access to U.S. courts for all Guantanamo Bay captives.
Therefore, they said, Mohammed Bawazir, a Yemeni national
held since May 2002, cannot claim protection under
the anti-torture provisions.
Bawazir's
attorneys contend that "extremely painful"
new tactics used by the government to force-feed him
and end his hunger strike amount to torture.
U.S.
District Judge Gladys Kessler said in a hearing yesterday
that she found allegations of aggressive U.S. military
tactics used to break the detainee hunger strike "extremely
disturbing" and possibly against U.S. and international
law. But Justice Department lawyers argued that even
if the tactics were considered in violation of McCain's
language, detainees at Guantanamo would have no recourse
to challenge them in court.
In
Bawazir's case, the government claims that it had
to forcefully intervene in a hunger strike that was
causing his weight to drop dangerously. In January,
officials strapped Bawazir into a special chair, put
a larger tube than they had previously used through
his nose and kept him restrained for nearly two hours
at a time to make sure he did not purge the food he
was being given, the government and Bawazir's attorneys
said.
Richard
Murphy Jr., Bawazir's attorney, said his client gave
in to the new techniques and began eating solid food
days after the first use of the restraint chair. Murphy
said the military deliberately made the process painful
and embarrassing, noting that Bawazir soiled himself
because of the approach.
Kessler
said getting to the root of the allegations is an
"urgent matter."
"These
allegations . . . describe disgusting treatment, that
if proven, is treatment that is cruel, profoundly
disturbing and violative of" U.S. and foreign
treaties banning torture, Kessler told the government's
lawyers. She said she needs more information, but
made clear she is considering banning the use of larger
nasal-gastric tubes and the restraint chair.
In
court filings, the Justice Department lawyers argued
that language in the law written by Sens. Lindsey
O. Graham (R-S.C.) and Carl M. Levin (D-Mich.) gives
Guantanamo Bay detainees access to the courts only
to appeal their enemy combatant status determinations
and convictions by military commissions.
"Unfortunately,
I think the government's right; it's a correct reading
of the law," said Tom Malinowski, Washington
advocacy director for Human Rights Watch. "The
law says you can't torture detainees at Guantanamo,
but it also says you can't enforce that law in the
courts."
Thomas
Wilner, a lawyer representing several detainees at
Guantanamo, agreed that the law cannot be enforced.
"This is what Guantanamo was about to begin with,
a place to keep detainees out of the U.S. precisely
so they can say they can't go to court," Wilner
said.
A
spokeswoman for McCain's office did not respond to
questions yesterday.
Murphy
told the judge the military's claims that it switched
tactics to protect Bawazir should not be believed.
He noted that on Jan. 11 -- days after the new law
passed -- the Defense Department made the identical
health determination for about 20 other detainees,
all of whom had been engaged in the hunger strike.
Guantanamo
Bay officials deny that the tactics constitute torture.
They wrote in sworn statements that they are necessary
efforts to ensure detainee health. Maj. Gen. Jay W.
Hood, the facility's commander, wrote that Bawazir's
claims of abuse are "patently false."
"In
short, he is a trained al Qaida terrorist, who has
been taught to claim torture, abuse, and medical mistreatment
if captured," Hood wrote. He added that Bawazir
allegedly went to Afghanistan to train for jihad and
ultimately fought with the Taliban against U.S. troops.
Navy
Capt. Stephen G. Hooker, who runs the prison's detention
hospital, noted that the hunger strike began on Aug.
8, reached a peak of 131 participants on Sept. 11,
and dropped to 84 on Christmas Day. After use of the
restraint chair began, only five captives continued
not eating.
Hooker
wrote that he suspected Bawazir was purging his food
after feedings. Bawazir weighed 130 pounds in late
2002, according to Hooker, but 97 pounds on the day
he was first strapped to the chair. As of Sunday,
his weight was back to 137 pounds, the government
said.
Kessler
noted with irritation that Hood and Hooker made largely
general claims about the group of detainees on the
hunger strike in defending the switch to the new force-feeding
procedures used on Bawazir.
"I
know it's a sad day when a federal judge has to ask
a DOJ attorney this, but I'm asking you -- why should
I believe them?" Kessler asked Justice Department
attorney Terry Henry.
Henry
said he would attempt to gather more information from
the officials but said there was no legal basis for
the court to intervene. Bawazir's weight is back to
normal, his health is "robust" and he is
no longer on a hunger strike, Henry said.
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2006 The Washington Post Company |