International Justice Clinic

Do we Americans believe in human rights? Do we believe that “all” are equal and have rights as our Declaration of Independence says we believe - or only citizens of the United States? Wednesday this w

Do we Americans believe in human rights? Do we believe that “all” are equal and have rights as our Declaration of Independence says we believe - or only citizens of the United States? Wednesday this w

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• Topics: USA / Global, People,
Do we Americans believe in human rights? Do we believe that "all" are equal and have rights as our Declaration of Independence says we believe - or only citizens of the United States? Wednesday this was argued before the Supreme Court - and you can read the Seattle Times article here. Below is an article by Ryan Servais on this issue. He is a nephew of mine.
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Another round of Guantanamo cases comes before the Supreme Court on Wednesday as I near the end of a semester representing a prisoner held there for six years. I am a Green Bay native attending law school in New York City. After earning my undergraduate degree at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, I opted to go to Fordham Law because of its first-rate international program. Currently, I am participating in Fordham's International Justice Clinic, which represents several Guantanamo prisoners.

When I describe my work to friends and family, I often hear, "Why would you work to free terrorists?" Well, there are two incorrect assumptions implanted in that question.

First, I am not working to free anybody, but rather to secure a fair trial for my client. Second, few detainees have ties to terrorism.

President Bush has established a pseudo-tribunal to declare prisoners "enemy combatants." During the flawed procedure, prisoners are not told the basis for their detention and are effectively barred from presenting exculpatory evidence. Any evidence against the prisoner is presumed true -- even that obtained through torture! These limitations render it impossible for a prisoner to rebut the justification for imprisonment (if any exists).

Military brass has spoken out against these defective tribunals. Lt. Col. Stephen Abraham of the Air Force, who participated in them, issued a declaration that is widely thought to have swayed the Supreme Court to hear the coming case. He stated that "what were purported to be specific statements of fact lacked even the most fundamental earmarks of objectively credible evidence."

More generally, he characterized the procedure as weighted and inadequate.

Second, let's look at the assumption that Guantanamo Bay is filled with terrorists -- as Donald Rumsfeld put it, "the worst of the worst." An analysis by Seton Hall University researchers of the government's accusations reveals that:

* Only 8 percent of detainees are characterized as al-Qaida fighters.
* Only 5 percent of detainees were captured by U.S. forces.

The vast bulk of the men at Guantanamo, 86 percent, were captured by either Pakistan or the Northern Alliance in Afghanistan and turned over to U.S. custody. Millions of fliers were distributed in Afghanistan and Pakistan offering cash rewards for capturing "terrorists." To quote Rumsfeld again, they dropped "like snowflakes in Chicago in December."

Imagine people who have been scratching an existence out of dirt in a war-torn country for 20 years. Suddenly they have an offer for more money than they've ever seen; all they have to do is point to any man and call him a terrorist.

What we are left with is hundreds of prisoners captured by financially motivated groups, rarely charged with wrongdoing, presumed to be enemy combatants, and not given a chance to rebut the presumption.

The International Justice Clinic is advocating for a fair trial, partially to aid the innocents who are imprisoned, and partially to uphold American traditions of due process.

This is where the Supreme Court comes in.

My client has been held prisoner for nearly six years, repeatedly subjected to physical abuses, and effectively never allowed to disprove the reasons for his imprisonment. He has hinted in the past that he thinks he might die there, and he might be right.

The time that is being robbed from him is irreplaceable. He is missing the events of his close-knit family; births, deaths and marriages are passing him by. Six years is a more than sufficient period for the government to give good reason for our client's imprisonment.

I hope the Supreme Court condemns the sham review process and he gets that to which every human being has a right: a fair trial.

About John Servais

Citizen Journalist and Editor • Fairhaven, Washington USA • Member since Feb 26, 2008

John started Northwest Citizen in 1995 to inform fellow citizens of serious local political issues that the Bellingham Herald was ignoring. With the help of donors from the beginning, he has [...]

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