UN Envoy
Rips US
Violations
in Iraq,
Guantanamo,
Afghanistan
Rapporteur
condemns
rights
abuses at
home, too
By Thalif
Deen
02/07/08 "Inter
Press
Service"
-- - UNITED
NATIONS:
After a
two-week
fact-finding
tour of US
prison and
detention
facilities,
a UN human
rights
investigator
has blasted
the
administration
of President
George W.
Bush for a
rash of
shortcomings
in the
country's
flawed
justice
system and
continued
violations
of the rule
of law.
Unleashing a
stinging
barrage of
attacks,
Professor
Philip
Alston, the
UN special
rapporteur
on
extra-judicial,
summary and
arbitrary
executions,
singles out
the
existence of
racism in
the
application
of the death
penalty in
the United
States, and
the lack of
transparency
in the
deaths of
prisoners in
the
Guantanamo
Bay
detention
facility
housing
suspected
terrorists.
Alston, a
professor at
the New York
University
School of
Law and an
outspoken
critic of
human rights
abuses
worldwide,
also
complains
about the
non-availability
of
information
on civilian
casualties
in Iraq and
Afghanistan,
and the
refusal of
the US
Justice
Department
to prosecute
private
security
contractors
who commit
unlawful
killings.
During his
14-day tour
of the
United
States at
the
invitation
of the
administration,
he met with
federal and
state
officials,
judges and
civil
society
groups in
New York,
Washington
DC, Alabama
and Texas.
Alston was
particularly
critical of
the state of
Texas which
has refused
to review
the cases of
foreign
nationals on
death row,
most of whom
had been
deprived of
the right to
consular
assistance
from their
home
countries.
He
specifically
chose to
visit
Alabama
"because it
has the
highest per
capita rate
of
executions
in the
United
States, and
Texas
because it
has the
largest
number of
executions
and
prisoners on
death row."
Still, 129
individuals
waiting on
death row
have been
exonerated
across the
United
States,
since 1973,
and the
number
continues to
grow.
"Indeed,
while I was
in Texas,
the
conviction
of yet
another
person on
death row
was
overturned
by the Court
of Criminal
Appeals,"
Alston said.
While in
this case
DNA testing
ultimately
prevented
the
execution of
an innocent
man, Alston
said, others
may have
been less
fortunate.
"In Texas, I
met a range
of officials
and others
who
acknowledged
that
innocent
people might
have been
executed,"
he said,
adding the
problem is
that a
criminal
justice
system with
recognized
flaws that
the
government
refuses to
address will
always be
capable of
mistakes.
In his
report,
Alston
points out
that studies
across the
United
States also
suggest
racial
disparities
in the
application
of the death
penalty. In
particular,
many studies
suggest that
a defendant
is more
likely to
receive the
death
penalty when
the victim
is white,
and some
studies also
suggest that
a defendant
is more
likely to
receive the
death
penalty if
he is
African
American.
"When I
raised this
issue with
federal and
state
government
officials, I
was met with
indifference
or flat
denial,"
said Alston,
who noted
that many
officials
wrote off
the results
of studies
showing
racial
disparity as
being biased
because they
were written
by
researchers
with
anti-death
penalty
views.
"Given what
is at stake,
there is a
need for
governments
at both the
state and
federal
levels to
revisit
systematically
the concerns
about
continuing
racial
disparities,"
he added.
Meanwhile,
to date,
just six of
the "enemy
combatants"
detained at
the US
detention
facility in
Guantanamo
Bay, Cuba
have been
charged with
capital
offenses
under the
Military
Commissions
Act (MCA).
They are
being tried
before
military
commissions
on war
crimes
charges, and
if
convicted,
face the
death
penalty.
According to
Alston, the
United
States has
an
obligation
to provide
fair trials
which afford
all
essential
judicial
guarantees.
"The
fundamental
principles
of a fair
trial may
never be
derogated
from. But
the text of
the MCA,
which
provides the
rules which
govern the
trials, and
the
experiences
of those
with whom I
met during
my mission
involved in
the trial
process to
date,
indicate
clearly that
these trials
utterly fail
to meet the
basic due
process
standards
required for
a fair trial
under
international
humanitarian
and human
rights law,"
he said.
There have
been five
reported
deaths of
detainees at
Guantanamo
Bay in
2006-07.
Four were
classified
as suicides,
and one was
attributed
to cancer.
In the
custodial
environment,
Alston said,
a state has
a heightened
duty and
capacity to
ensure and
respect the
right to
life. As a
result,
there is a
rebuttable
presumption
of state
responsibility
whether
through acts
of
commission
or omission
in cases of
custodial
death. The
state has an
obligation
to
investigate
the deaths,
and publicly
report on
the findings
and the
evidence
upon which
the findings
are based.
"But the
Department
of Defense
has provided
little
public
information
about the
causes or
circumstance
of any of
these
deaths," he
said.
While it has
been
reported
that
autopsies
were
conducted in
each case,
the results
have not
been made
public or
even
provided to
the families
of the
deceased
men, he
added. It
was also
reported
that the
Naval
Criminal
Investigative
Services is
conducting
investigations
into each of
the deaths.
But over two
years since
the first
deaths, no
results of
investigations
have been
released.
In Iraq and
Afghanistan,
where the US
military is
considered
an occupying
power,
Alston
points to a
string of
human rights
abuses and
violations
of the rule
of law.
The
"troublingly
opaque
character of
the US
military
justice
system is
well
illustrated
by a case
described to
me by
witnesses
and
investigators
when I
visited
Afghanistan,"
he said. On
March 4,
2007, he
recalled, US
Marines
responded to
a suicide
attack on
their
convoy, in
which one
soldier was
wounded, by
killing 19
people and
wounding
many others
in the space
of a 10-mile
retreat.
"I asked the
regional
commander in
Afghanistan
what
follow-up
had
occurred. He
could not
tell me and
explained
that his
unit had
just arrived
in
Afghanistan
and that
accountability
for
incidents
involving
the previous
unit was its
responsibility
and that it
had taken
all the
relevant
files when
it left the
country,"
Alston said.
In fact, a
Court of
Inquiry into
the incident
proceeded in
North
Carolina:
"Shortly
after I
returned
from
Afghanistan,
the US
military
released a
short
statement on
this
incident
indicating
that the
commander of
US Marine
Corps Forces
Central
Command had
conducted a
thorough
review of
the report
of a Court
of Inquiry
and had
determined
that the
soldiers had
acted
appropriately
and in
accordance
with the
rules of
engagement
and tactics,
techniques
and
procedures
in place at
the time in
response to
a complex
attack."
Unsurprisingly,
he added,
this
conclusive
and
unsubstantiated
response to
such a
serious
incident was
met with
dismay in
Afghanistan.
"Afghans and
Americans
have a right
to ask on
what basis
this
conclusion
was
reached,"
Alston said.
"But all of
the
documents
produced by
the Court of
Inquiry have
remained
classified.
The record
of
proceedings
has not been
released.
The 12,000
page report
of the Court
of Inquiry
including
recommendations
and factual
findings has
not been
released."
The US
government
has even
disregarded
the existing
regulation
stating that
the
convening
authority
should
ensure that
an executive
summary of
the report
be made
public in
order to
inform
government
officials,
the
legislative
branch, the
media, and
the next of
kin of the
victims of
the
investigations
findings and
recommendations.
"Whether or
not the
decision not
to initiate
courts-martial
was
justified,
the manner
in which the
military
justice
system has
operated in
this case is
entirely
inconsistent
with
principles
of public
accountability
and
transparency,"
Alston
declared.
Regarding
killings by
private
security
contractors,
he said:
"It's the
[US]
Department
of Justice's
job to
prosecute
private
security
contractors
who commit
unlawful
killings,
but it has
done next to
nothing."
