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http://thinkprogress.org/2008/06/25/parhat-combatant-solitary/
So, the SCOTUS ruled. Now, these folks get to contest the decision to keep them locked up in Guantanamo, right?
Well...
There is more to the story, and both the video and a transcript of the interview.
I am not surprised. I am, however, appalled.
So, the SCOTUS ruled. Now, these folks get to contest the decision to keep them locked up in Guantanamo, right?
Well...
Gitmo Detainee’s Lawyer ‘Not Allowed To Tell Him’ He’s No Longer An ‘Enemy Combatant’»
Nearly two weeks after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that detainees held at Guantánamo Bay have the right to habeas corpus and can thus challenge their detention in civilian courts, a U.S. Court of Appeals dealt another blow to the Bush administration’s detention policy.
The appeals court ruled that the Pentagon improperly designated Huzaifa Parhat, an ethnic Uighur Chinese national, an “enemy combatant” after being swept up by the U.S. military in Afghanistan in 2001 and then sent to Guantánamo Bay, where he has been held since.
Despite the ruling, Parhat has yet to see any of its benefits. In fact, he doesn’t even know about it. Parhat’s lawyer told CBC radio’s As It Happens last night that Parhat is currently being held in solitary confinement and “has no idea” the appeals court ruled in his favor because, he added, “I’m not allowed to tell him”:
DEREK STOFFEL, CBC HOST: Mr. Willett, what’s your client’s reaction to this ruling?
SABIN WILLETT (PARHAT’S LAWYER): Boy what a great question that is because my client doesn’t know about this ruling because I’m not allowed to tell him. […] He’s sitting in solitary confinement today. He has no idea what’s happened as far as I know.
There is more to the story, and both the video and a transcript of the interview.
I am not surprised. I am, however, appalled.
no subject
Date: 2008-06-26 05:36 pm (UTC)The right to talk to one's lawyer is considered pretty basic. Denying that for no reason other than 'policy' is pure pettiness.
And unjust detention for ONE day is offensive. Somehow the argument of "Well, we have mistreated you for 6 years already, what's another few days?" doesn't strike me as even remotely okay.
On top of that, we have a legal system that is filled with time deadlines. You must appeal within X days, file within X years, etc. Untimely filings can and have been used to deny appeals of all sorts throughout our courts and government.
You can bet that if the military were told that they were being denied something like this, they would be livid.
no subject
Date: 2008-06-26 06:08 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-06-26 06:21 pm (UTC)It's been 6 days. Isn't that long enough to set up a phone call? Evidently not.
There is a pattern of denial of rights and general mistreatment where rights are not involved - not just of this prisoner but of people captured overseas by the U.S. military throughout this period of time. From kidnapping off the streets to torture to release to foreign countries without telling lawyers...
It is part of a whole - and in this case, it is the denial of contact between attorney and client, for no purpose. There is no good reason to deny that telephone call, and every good reason to permit it.
Perhaps if this administration did not have the track record it has one might view it as happenstance, as an unfortunate bit of bureaucracy. It is, instead, systemic routine.
no subject
Date: 2008-06-26 06:51 pm (UTC)The Bush administration has done many egregious things during its tenure. But I don't view this particular instance as incredibly appalling or unjustifiable, either by itself or in conjunction with other things. If, as noted above, they keep him there indefinitely without appealing or changing his status, then yes, at that point I will become outraged. But as it currently stands? No.
no subject
Date: 2008-06-27 03:33 am (UTC)In addition to what he said, apparently the Justice Department has already granted that the prisoner had never attacked the U.S. nor had any intention of so doing.
no subject
Date: 2008-06-27 11:30 am (UTC)Well, yes, by definition - otherwise he would have fit the "enemy combatant" classification.
no subject
Date: 2008-06-27 03:33 pm (UTC)The prosecution says he had done nothing to harm the U.S. and had no intention of doing anything. In other words, questioning him, while it may well be going on, doesn't exactly seem like a worthwhile endeavor.
I guess the thing that astonishes me is your faith that the actions of interrogators and wardens in these military prisons are based on reason.
no subject
Date: 2008-06-27 03:37 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-06-27 03:55 pm (UTC)I am not suggesting that there is a plot against this one fellow or even against all of the remaining detainees of his eth. I am pointing out that the pattern of mistreatment of prisoners at Guantanamo, Abu Ghraib, in Afghanistan, and in "secret locations," by the military, by the CIA, and by "private contractors" whom the U.S. hired to conduct interrogations, has been well established.
no subject
Date: 2008-06-27 04:00 pm (UTC)The Bush administration has without question mistreated detainees. This particular detainee may even have been mistreated. But I don't think that this particular action is a good example of mistreatment.
no subject
Date: 2008-06-27 04:28 pm (UTC)I suggested that I could imagine his inventing an excuse to postpone the election and possibly to declare martial law. Not the same thing.
"This particular action," of putting/keeping this prisoner in solitary is not currently [i]any[/i] example of mistreatment of the same sort to which I referred - but the [i]prior[/i] treatment of prisoners at this and other places gives ample cause to be skeptical of the motivations of his solitary confinement.
"So what if they have mistreated many others. There is no reason to suspect that this [i]particular[/i] treatment is not soundly based!"
That is what I am understanding your position to be.
Mine is "Given how many other mistreatments and unreasonable decisions have been made in this and related settings, I believe I have reason to wonder if their motivations for this treatment are sound."
I am not insisting that they are mistreating him (beyond denying his lawyers the ability to talk to him), nor even presuming that they do not have good reason for it.
I am insisting that your presumption that there is good reason for him to be in solitary is baseless, based on the track record.
no subject
Date: 2008-06-27 04:29 pm (UTC)Ah well.
no subject
Date: 2008-06-27 04:38 pm (UTC)>So what if they have mistreated many others. There is no reason to suspect that this *particular* treatment is not soundly based!"
That is what I am understanding your position to be.<
Past guilt is not proof of current guilt. The fact that someone has previously been convicted of murder does not mean that he guilty every other time he's accused of murder - let alone someone who has been previously convicted of murder and is currently accused of rape. So sure, you look at the evidence, same as you would with any previously-unconvicted, currently-accused person. And, having read the evidence you've provided, I do not see anything to suggest egregious wrong-doing in this particular case.
no subject
Date: 2008-06-27 05:17 pm (UTC)"Past guilt is not proof of current guilt."
And I have not said it is!
I have said "it is cause to be suspicious."
You created the analogy of the murderer. But you err in your analogy in a couple of ways:
1) It is true that the person who has been convicted of murder once is not guilty of every other murder. Since I have not asserted that Parhat is being tortured or even confined in solitary for inappropriate reasons, that comparison has no parallel.
2) You suggest that one looks at the evidence the same as one would with any other "previously-unconvicted, currently-accused person." That is not the practice. A person with a prior record is looked at with more suspicion by investigators than folks with no criminal record. Those with a lengthy criminal history are looked at more closely still.
They are viewed "with suspicion."
You keep arguing that I have no cause to believe they are doing him harm.
I keep telling you that I am not claiming that.
I have presented no evidence that they are mistreating him in his confinement, nor tried to. I have presented evidence that the organization that has put him in solitary have a track record of poor decision-making with regard to its prisoners - and that their poor track record takes away the presumption that they are acting wisely, even if it does not give the presumption that they are acting unwisely.
You presume they are acting reasonably.
I believe there is no cause to presume that they are acting reasonably, and have granted several times that there is no cause to presume they are acting unreasonably, either.
no subject
Date: 2008-06-27 05:18 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-06-27 05:42 pm (UTC)2) You asserted the presumption that they had good reason to have him in solitary. I challenged it, as there is no cause to believe they have good reason.
3) I am upset that you:
a) argue repeatedly against things I have not said - like "Past guilt is not proof of current guilt."
and b) raise unrelated issues to muddy the waters - like the "conspiracy theory" crap.
no subject
Date: 2008-06-27 05:56 pm (UTC)2) I disagree. Given no likely motivation to do so without cause, I presume that, at the very least, they think they have good reason to do so, and neither you nor I has anywhere near enough knowledge to question that.
3) a) To me, your argument that because the military at has misbehaved at Guantanamo and elsewhere in the past, one should presume they are doing so again, boils down to much the same thing. And your claim above not to be presuming the military is misbehaving in this instance is crap, because if you eliminate that assumption, there is absolutely nothing to be upset about here.
b) Seeing appalling misbehavior here is, to me, akin to conspiracy theorizing - assuming that the military is acting the way it is out of some ulterior motive rather than that it is simply trying to do its job effectively and with a good-faith effort to follow the rules. Certainly there are other instances where it has not made a good-faith effort, but by and large that's not generally the case.
no subject
Date: 2008-06-27 07:23 pm (UTC)How many instances would it take for you to cease assuming good-faith and grant that you have no basis to presume their actions are reasonable?
by and large that's not generally the case
By and large, when it comes to the Guantanamo prisoners, the U.S. government has not acted with good faith. Repeatedly, it has violated their rights, it has tortured them, it has created systems that deny the prisoners representation, it has subjected them to hearings in which they did not know the charges against them, it has made unsubstantiated allegations against them and used those as the basis for decisions.
This is not my allegations of conspiracy. This is not the liberal media hard at work. This is the record.
Listen to former Chief Prosecutor Air Force Col. Morris Davis. Listen to former prosecutor Lt. Col. Robert Preston. Or read what Captain John Carr had to say. Lt. Col. V. Stuart Couch's words might convince you.
Or try Lieutenant Colonel Stephen Abraham.
no subject
Date: 2008-06-27 07:29 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-06-27 07:46 pm (UTC)You keep arguing that there is reason to presume good faith.
I am arguing that there is no such reason. You claimed Certainly there are other instances where it has not made a good-faith effort, but by and large that's not generally the case.
I have attempted to show you that you are mistaken in your presumption that they have him in solitary for good reasons.
Of course you can't see wrongdoing in this specific case, Rachel! Even if there IS wrongdoing, the man is locked up in solitary with no access to counsel and there would be no way for us to know about it!
And, again, beyond the prevention of contact with counsel, I am not alleging wrong-doing, I am not PRESUMING that they are guilty, I am merely denying your "good faith" claims, because the facts prove that you are mistaken.
So, what is your definition of "significantly longer?" Two weeks more of solitary? A month?
no subject
Date: 2008-06-27 08:29 pm (UTC)By "significantly longer" I mean until the appeals process is done and there is a final verdict.
no subject
Date: 2008-06-27 09:15 pm (UTC)And I find your stance that keeping an uncharged prisoner in solitary confinement for as long as it takes to get a final verdict to be unfathomable. Given that the appeal would be likely to go to the Supreme Court, you are talking about potentially at least a year for further solitary.
Of course, they could just send it back to the group that makes determinations of enemy combatant status and decide that they were wrong to start with 5 years ago, as they have done with others who were captured under identical circumstances.
no subject
Date: 2008-06-27 09:08 pm (UTC)All of the Uighurs are kept in solitary - it's their standard everyday treatment. Roughly 80% of the prisoners are kept that way:
The Red Cross, the only independent monitoring organisation allowed to inspect the detention facilities at Guantánamo, has described conditions at Camp Echo as 'extremely harsh'. Prisoners are kept in their windowless cells for 23 or 24 hours a day, and - in the absence of any natural light whatsoever - fluorescent lighting is kept on 24 hours a day.
Or, conversely, Guantánamo, a military spokeswoman said, does not have solitary confinement, only "single-occupancy cells."
A six foot by 8 foot cell, but not solitary at all. And I am sure that the lack of sun and leaving the lights on almost all the time are merely happenstance.
The Bush administration has repeatedly described these men as "the worst of the worst."
Your arguments about "this case" remind me of nothing more than the arguments made by schools insisting that there was nothing wrong with how they were dealing with special education classes.
no subject
Date: 2008-06-27 09:48 pm (UTC)classesstudentsno subject
Date: 2008-06-27 08:19 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-06-27 11:28 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-06-27 10:48 pm (UTC)Similarly, they can get back to punishing him for his bad behavior after he talks to his lawyer.
no subject
Date: 2008-06-28 12:52 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-06-28 04:25 am (UTC)If, instead, he is in solitary confinement, and has been for 6 years, not for behavior, but because that's how they treat their prisoners, then there is a problem with their behavior.
And either way, they are contradicting themselves.