-Caveat Lector-

http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/news/archive/2002/07/31/national1451EDT0715.DTL

Federal court rules foreign nationals held in Cuba have no right to access
U.S. courts

CHRISTOPHER NEWTON, Associated Press Writer     Wednesday, July 31, 2002

----------
(07-31) 12:19 PDT WASHINGTON (AP) --

A federal judge ruled Wednesday that two British citizens and an Australian
captured in Afghanistan and held in Cuba have no right to trial before U.S.
courts.

Britons Shafiq Rasul and Asif Iqbal and Australian David Hicks are being
held at the U.S. Naval Base in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, according to the
government. They were captured while fighting with Taliban and al-Qaida
forces, U.S. officials allege.

The men's families hired lawyers in the United States who sued the Bush
administration, demanding that the men be allowed to argue their case
before a federal judge.

But U.S. District Court Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly ruled that the U.S.
legal system has no jurisdiction over detainees held in Cuba.

In so doing, she rejected plaintiffs argument that "our leased military
bases abroad which continue under the sovereignty of foreign nations,
hostile or friendly, are functionally] equivalent to being land borders or
ports of entry of the United States or otherwise within the United States."

Federal prosecutors had worried that a victory by the foreign nationals
would lead to other lawsuits by detainees held in Cuba.

The judge also struck down arguments that the detained men should have the
same right to U.S. courts as Cuban citizens who have requested political
asylum and gained entry into the United States.

"The crucial distinction in their rights as aliens is that (they) had been
given some form of process by the government of the United States," the
judge wrote in her opinion. "Once the United States made determinations
that the migrants had a credible fear of political persecution and could
claim asylum in the United States, these migrants became vested with a
liberty interest that the government was unable to simply deny without due
process of law."

In November, President Bush and his administration ordered the detainees
held and not accorded protections as prisoners of war on grounds they are
among the most dangerous Taliban and al-Qaida fighters captured during the
U.S.-led battle in Afghanistan.

Hicks, 26, allegedly threatened to kill an American upon his arrival at
Camp X-ray at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, U.S. officials said.

The three prisoners named in the complaint are being held indefinitely with
some 300 others.

No treaty or U.S. law grants prisoners such as those at Camp X-ray the
right to a lawyer. That would change if they were charged with a crime.
Prisoners of war also merit legal protections not being given the
Guantanamo detainees.

The Nov. 13 executive order violates the Constitution's guarantee of due
process, to which any foreign nationals are entitled, according to the
complaint. Among other things, the complaint accuses Bush, Defense
Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld, Brig. Gen. Michael Lehnert and Col. Terry
Carrico of withholding the right to an attorney from the prisoners.

Lehnert is commander of the task force running the detention operation, and
Carrico is commandant of Camp X-ray.

The petition listed numerous efforts by the three men's families to contact
them, which were "either rebuffed or ignored" by U.S. officials. The men
have been allowed to write letters to their families, screened by U.S.
officials, in which they asked for lawyers.

Their attorney has said the situation could lead to the men being denied
representation even as they appear before a military tribunal with
authority to impose the death penalty.

The judge's ruling took issue with the plaintiff's argument that the
detainees would be held indefinitely, stating that global courts and the
United Nations have the power to inquire about where detainees are being
held and for how long.

A half-year after the United States began taking suspected terrorists to
the U.S. base in Cuba, the temporary prison has grown to nearly 600
prisoners from some 36 countries.

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