as found on Michael Moore's website:
http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/mike-friends-blog/guantanamos-dark-10th-anniversary
If you are in the DC area I hope to see you out there protesting this ominous anniversary in front of the white house tomorrow (january 11)....but wherever you are- raise your voice and tell Obama to follow through...at least on this one promise... to close Guantanamo.
Tuesday, January 10, 2012
Thank you U.S. Supreme Court (sigh...)
For confirming that the men at Guantanamo do not have the right to participate in their appeals... Sorry I can't post to the decision but it was just a one liner anyway....DENIED.
This was in response to the Writ of Mandamus that I filed in the U. S. Supreme Court asking them to Order the DC Circuit Court to provide an unclassified version of the documents that I filed on behalf of my client in his habeas hearing so that he could participate in his appeal.
Now it is clear- all the way up to the Supreme Court- that the men at Guantanamo cannot even help with their cases in any meaningful way....
This was in response to the Writ of Mandamus that I filed in the U. S. Supreme Court asking them to Order the DC Circuit Court to provide an unclassified version of the documents that I filed on behalf of my client in his habeas hearing so that he could participate in his appeal.
Now it is clear- all the way up to the Supreme Court- that the men at Guantanamo cannot even help with their cases in any meaningful way....
Guantanamo lawyers statement on this 10th anniversary
This statement is made by over
100 lawyers who have represented or currently represent men imprisoned at
Guantánamo Bay in federal habeas corpus proceedings. We are solo practitioners,
partners and associates in law firms, federal public defenders and former
prosecutors, law professors and human rights activists who practice in nearly
every area of the law. We hail from nearly every state in the Union. We stand
here together on this, the tenth anniversary of the opening of the prison at
Guantánamo, to call on our government to provide meaningful justice for the 171
men still held there.
Ten years ago, the first men
and boys were shipped secretly from different parts of the world to Guantánamo,
and ultimately the number grew to nearly 800. The government called these
individuals “enemy combatants,” a term without legal meaning, in order to evade
established rules of international law, to impose indefinite imprisonment
without any legal process whatsoever and to employ unlawful interrogation
techniques and even torture. It tried to
make the prison camp a “legal black hole” where the sanitizing light of due
process and the rule of law would not penetrate. It said that all the Guantánamo
prisoners were “terrorists” and even “the worst of the worst,” in order to
justify their unjust incarceration.
As attorneys for the prisoners,
we have worked hard to show that these government claims are wrong. We have
litigated dozens of cases, filed thousands of legal briefs, fought all the way
to the U.S. Supreme Court — three times so far — to establish that these men
cannot be indefinitely imprisoned without due process of law and that this
prison is not outside the law. We continue to fight for these fundamental
principles enshrined by the U.S. Constitution and international human rights
law.
These same principles animate
our demands now. Every one of the 171 men remaining at Guantánamo deserves the
due process of law. First, every one whom the government still holds captive
should be charged criminally, and provided a fair trial, or released. The
Constitution, as well as international human rights law, require no less.
Second, over half of these men were cleared for repatriation to their home
countries, some years ago, and they should be repatriated or resettled promptly.
No law, no logic, can allow a government to continue to imprison individuals
whom that government itself has said pose no threat.
We have shown why these men are
not “the worst of the worst.” In court filings and in news articles, the
evidence shows that many of them were sold for bounties, or falsely accused by
those who were being tortured, or simply captured in the fog of war because they
were at the wrong place at the wrong time. The fact that 600 of the nearly 800
men once imprisoned at Guantánamo were
unilaterally released by the government proves that the rhetoric was false,
base fear mongering. In any case, the important point is this — a court should
determine each man’s guilt or innocence after a fair criminal trial, and a
decade is too long to wait for such a trial.
We have learned and wish to
remind the world of the human dignity of our clients, based on countless hours
we have spent in conversation with them. They are not nameless, faceless “terrorists.”
They are fathers, brothers, and sons to family members who have not seen them
in a decade, and they feel the deepest pain from missing their loved ones back
home. They have endured an unthinkable ordeal including, in a great many cases,
torture and other cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment. They have also
endured prolonged isolation and other brutal conditions of imprisonment,
causing many to deteriorate physically and psychologically. In addition, they
face the most profound uncertainty about their futures and experience the daily
grinding weight of the hopelessness that pervades Guantánamo. Yet they manage
to preserve their humanity and dignity against all odds, in the most surprising
and inspiring ways. We ask the world to remember our clients on this day and
the remaining days of their imprisonment.
As Americans we know that the
rule of law is one of the greatest accomplishments of our nation. We call on
the government to respect the rule of law and end our disastrous and shameful
legacy in Guantánamo Bay. We call on President Obama and our government to promptly
repatriate or resettle the prisoners
who have already been approved for release, and to provide prompt and fair criminal
trials for those whom the government still holds. Our fundamental
Constitutional principles require no less. Ten years is too long. We hope that
this tenth anniversary of the Guantánamo Bay prison will be its last.
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