Yvonne Ridley

Former Taliban captive, convert to Islam | Broadcaster, Journalist, Human Rights Activist

Britain must not support US-style justice

There are a number of men being held without charge or trial in Britain’s own version of Guantanamo Bay.

And while David Cameron’s government is willing to condemn the existence of this boil on the face of human rights in occupied Cuba, it remains silent about those being held in Wiltshire’s Long Lartin prison.

Most of them are fighting extradition to the US—a fight that has become even more urgent now that we have all seen US justice in action in recent days.

US justice means extrajudicial killings, targeted assassinations, and doing away with the need for a fair trial, or any trial for that matter.

I would hope, and expect, all of their legal teams now, as a matter of urgency, submit new appeals on behalf of their clients to stop extradition immediately to a country that simply cannot deal justly with those it suspects of terrorism.

Can anyone really give guarantees these men will not be put up against a wall and shot in the back of the head the moment they arrive on US soil?

Some of the men I’m talking about have been held since before 9/11 and one includes Saudi-born Khalid al-Fawwaz who has endured this legal limbo now for more than 12 years.

US intelligence says he is accused of conspiring with Osama bin Laden in the bombings of two US embassies. This may be true; I don’t know and neither do any of us until he is put through a fair trial. One thing is for sure—a key witness is now lying at the bottom of the ocean in a weighted-down body bag.

Prosecutors in New York have now charged Fawwaz with helping al-Qaida to orchestrate the 1998 car bombings of the US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania, which killed 224 people.

A letter from a lawyer seeking to be appointed as Fawwaz’s US defence counsel said: “He [Fawwaz] anticipates extradition from the United Kingdom to the United States within the next few months to face these charges.”

The lawyer, David Kirby, told Reuters that he had been in touch with Fawwaz’s UK lawyers, who he said had told him they had exhausted all efforts to fight his extradition, and he could arrive in the US in the next few weeks.

In a move regarded as sinister by some, Kirby’s request to be appointed as Fawwaz’s US defence lawyer has been denied by New York Judge Lewis Kaplan of Manhattan federal court. He told him to reapply once Fawwaz arrives—so, no guarantees Fawwaz is going to even get legal representation!

If Fawwaz is already being denied a lawyer before he arrives to the US, does this mean they’re going to fast track him Osama-style to execution?

As I say, I’ve no idea if Fawwaz is guilty or not—that should be determined in a fair trial, but the reality is such things do not exist in the current incendiary climate of America.

What I do know is that he was arrested in 1998, after moving to London in the 1990s from Kenya with his family. In the UK, he is alleged to have established an organization called the Advice and Reformation Committee, a political group supposedly headed by Bin Laden that was said to be campaigning for peaceful reform in Saudi Arabia.

US intelligence says Bin Laden, through Fawwaz, published several threats against the US in the 1990s for keeping troops in the Kingdom.

Fawwaz has always denied any involvement with Bin Laden and rejected allegations that the committee was a British arm of al-Qaida.

Now that US Navy Seals have assassinated a potential key witness—on the orders of their Commander in Chief Barack Obama—the defense has been denied amajor opportunity.

Evidence supplied by other witnesses has been done so under torture and is therefore unreliable and inadmissible in most courts of law around the world.

Ahmed Ghailani, a former bodyguard for Bin Laden, was sentenced to life in prison in January over the embassy bombings, following a six-week trial in Manhattan. He was the first former Guantánamo Bay detainee to face a civilian trial in the US and had undoubtedly endured torture en route to the dock.

Of course, before he had his trial, he was captured in 2004 in Pakistan after a battle with government troops and then sold like a commodity to US intelligence to be tortured. Unsurprisingly, he was later found guilty of being part of the plot in which hundreds of were killed in twin bombings in Kenya and Tanzania.

Four co-defendants of Ghailani were convicted of all charges, including joining an al-Qaida conspiracy to kill US nationals, during a 2001 trial in New York. All of this during a period when the use of torture was sanctioned and signed off by the then US President George W Bush and his cabal of neocons like Donald Rumsfeld.

It is worth remembering that both of these remnants of the US Administration, that launched the now discredited War on Terror, have to be careful where theytravel for fear they could end up in a court of law to answer for their sanctioning of torture and crimes against humanity.

In the light of recent events in Abbottabad, Pakistan every civilized country in the world must now suspend extradition proceedings with the USA and look for an alternative—maybe even The Hague.

Britain’s controversial extradition treaty with the US was brokered by a slavish Tony Blair Government and is deeply unpopular with British people, certainly no other country in the world signed such a deal which threatened sovereignty—it now needs to be scrapped by Cameron’s government soonest.

I don’t know the details of the evidence against the men in Long Lartin, men like Khalid al Fawwaz, but I do know every one of them would welcome his day in court—an open court where justice is seen to be done and where they have a right to a defense.

If we start handing over UK citizens and foreign nationals to a country that has no respect for international law, the Geneva and Vienna Conventions, and calls targeted assassination “justice” then we too become lawless by association.


Categorized as Places, U.S.
  • Donna Kennedy

    Another typical Yvonne Ridley islamist rant full of suppositions, half truths and lies.nnThe detainees in Long Lartin didn;t just get their by chance – they have shown themselves to be dangerous murderous criminals who are being held here overlong because the UK gives too much credence to the shackles of the Human Rights Act a law intended to protect decent people not allow sly, devious criminals to play the system. Lets pray we can get shut of all them ASAP. The UK Government must push urgently for their immediate deportation to the US where they are guaranteed a fairer hearing than anyone murdered by their ‘brothers’. Frankly, it’s rich that you preach about fair trials … where was the chance of fairness to the people murdered on 9/11, 7/7 et al? Where was your Human Rights activism and outrage then Yvonne?nnOn the basis that no other detainees have been put up against a wall and shot, and with the eyes of the world looking on, it’s really not likely to happen – just another soundbite, so typical of you. Further, it’s laughable that you suggest any of this lot would actually take part in a trial where they don’t recognise the validity of the court system. Lets all pray they’re packed off to Cuba in a nice orange suit and let the US deal with them as they see fit. nnWhat is very evident in all your commentary is that you clearly don’t much care if any of the detainees are actually guilty – all you want to do is defend them and throw mud at your own Goverment and heritage. Shame on You.nnAs for BL rotting at the bottom of some (hopefully) very dark and dirty water – Hurrah! Well Done US Navy Seals for cutting off the head of the serpent. No amount of your verbage will change the fact that all civilised countries see the War on Terror as just and necessary, and it won’t stop until all islamist/jihadist factions are wiped out. Everyone has the right to believe whatever they want to – islam / jedi new age hocus pocus – but don’t preach to everyone else and don’t try to take the high ground which is a joke, given the people you’re now in bed with.nnNow that you’ve ‘moved house’ so to speak, try spending some time putting your new one in order before constantly carping about the one you left. [Edited by admin]

  • A_constant_adrenaline_rush

    keep on writing Yvonne, u r blessed by Allah, I am 31 Indonesian, US conduct the multiple standard, May I ask some questions about Muhammad SAW? my e mail is a_constant_adrenaline_rush@yahoo.com, I am a brother by Islam, thank for replying

  • Akhun85

    Yvonne Ridley!!!! I AM A FAN OF YOURS..

  • http://islamic-edutribe.blogspot.com ISLAMIC-EDUTRIBE

    Salam, Ridely, really you are a great muslim women, you are the daughter of europe who accepted truth without any pressure, nnow you are telling your nation as the prophets used to say to their nations ” O my Nation, believe in one ALLAH Almighty and do not become transgressor !!! Yvonn, can I share your articles in my blog ISLAMIC-EDUTRIBE? if you do not mind it please? islamic-edutribe.blogspot.com

  • saci

    Refreshing. Thank you Ms Ridley – a much needed voice which can deal with the issues of the Middle East / UK/ USA in a fairer way!! A long time a coming!

  • saci

    sad that nMs Kennedy should devote so much space to such ranting herself.It is a great pity that the luxury of a western education will have resulted in so little.

  • Johnnyroberts

    ’nuff said?….

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