UNITED NATIONS, Jun 30 (IPS) - After a two-week fact-finding tour of
U.S. 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.
Philip Alston, United Nations special rapporteur on extrajudicial, summary, or arbitrary executions, addresses a press conference concerning his findings during a country-wide visit to the United States © UN / Devra Berkowitz
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 U.S. 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 Alabama; New York; Texas; and Washington, DC.
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.
"When I raised this issue [of racial disparities in the application of the death penalty] with federal and state government officials,
I was met with indifference or flat denial."
- UN Special Rapporteur Philip AlstonIn 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 the officials believed 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," Alston said.
Meanwhile, to date, just six of the "enemy combatants" detained at the
U.S. detention facility in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba have been charged with
capital offences 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 that 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 added.
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 U.S. military is considered an
occupying power, Alston points to a string of human rights abuses and
violations of the rule of law. He said the "troublingly opaque
character of the U.S. military justice system is well illustrated by a
case described to me by witnesses and investigators when I visited
Afghanistan."
On Mar. 4, 2007, U.S. 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 U.S. military
released a short statement on this incident indicating that the
commander of U.S. 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 said, 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 U.S. 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 investigation's 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, Alston said: "It's
the (U.S.) Department of Justice's job to prosecute private security
contractors who commit unlawful killings, but it has done next to
nothing."
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