Supreme Court Rules in Case of Guantanamo Detainees
By a 6-3 margin, the US Supreme
Court in the case of Rasul v. Bush ruled against the Bush Administration’s
policy of detaining foreign nationals as “enemy combatants” at Guantanamo
Bay Naval Base, Cuba.
Two Australians and twelve
Kuwaitis filed the petition and each declared that he was never involved in
terrorist acts, has not been charged with any violation, and has been denied
access to counsel and the courts.
The Bush administration
asserted that the plaintiffs in this case were not entitled to the usual rights
of prisoners of war set out in the Geneva Conventions.
Government officials also claimed that enemy combatants are not even
allowed the constitutional protections given to ordinary criminal suspects.
The Administration stated that only the president has the authority to
order detention of enemy combatants, and the courts have no business reviewing
President Bush’s decision in this matter.
The main question before the
Supreme Court was whether the habeas corpus right to judicial review of
detention applies in an area over which the United States has complete and
exclusive jurisdiction, but not “ultimate sovereignty.”
Even though the United States
holds foreign prisoners in other lands, this decision applies only to Guantanamo
detainees. In this case, the
Supreme Court held that the Cuban base is not beyond the reach of American
courts even though it is outside the country.
The court also concurred that there is no distinction between U.S.
citizens and non-U.S. citizens in the right to §2241 habeas corpus review.
However, the Supreme Court did
agree with the administration by ruling that Congress gave President Bush the
authority to seize and hold a U.S. citizen, Yaser Esam Hamdi, as an alleged
enemy combatant. The court majority
also agreed that Hamdi was not getting all the protection he would normally
receive in a federal district court hearing.
Justice Sandra Day O’Connor said that Hamdi “unquestionably has the
right to access to counsel” and suggested a military tribunal as a place to
hear Hamdi’s side of the story.
Attorneys from the Center for
Constitutional Rights filed this case on behalf of some of the detainees and
intend to seek access to their clients within the week.
Joseph Margulies, a lawyer with the Center, said the government now has
to provide specific evidence for each detainee.
He added, “You don’t simply hold people in a lawless void based on
nothing more than executive say-so.”
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