UN rapporteur on human rights calls for end to indefinite detentions
The United Nation's independent investigator on human rights in the fight against terrorism on Dec. 12 urged the United States to release all people detained as "enemy combatants," close the detention center at Guantánamo Bay and abolish military commissions.
In his report to the UN Human Rights Council on his official visit to the United States in May, Martin Scheinin, the Special Rapporteur on the Protection of Human Rights While Countering Terrorism, also recommended the Military Commissions Act of 2006 be amended to grant Guantánamo Bay detainees habeas corpus rights and the ability to seek full judicial review of their combatant status, and that the interrogation techniques of US officials comply with international standards.
In a statement that will be formally delivered to the UN Human Rights Council tomorrow, Jamil Dakwar, Advocacy Director of the ACLU's Human Rights Program, said Scheinin's assessment came as no surprise.
"Over the past six years, we have witnessed the US government abandon the bedrock principle of respect for the rule of law," Dakwar said.
Dakwar decried the fact that US officials have not been held accountable for carrying out torture and abuse against prisoners held in their custody and called on the American government to commit itself to abiding by the US Constitution and international law.
"Based on official government documents, it is quite clear that senior US officials have been directly and indirectly involved in the widespread systemic abuse and torture of prisoners. Yet not a single high-ranking military or civilian leader has been criminally investigated and charged for these crimes," Dakwar said. "We urge the US government to implement the recommendations made by the Special Rapporteur and bring an end to indefinite and secret detention, torture and abuse, unfair trials and the unlawful practice of renditions."
Scheinin was appointed in 2005 by the UN Commission on Human Rights, which has since been subsumed by the Human Rights Council. He is charged with working with all relevant parties, including governments, to exchange information and promote the best counterterrorism practices that respect human rights and fundamental freedoms.