Monday, April 30, 2018

Photos from Guantanamo and beyond...

From Mother Jones.... "These photos plunge you into the inner Madness of Guantanamo"

h/o to Walt.

The future of Guantanamo...

I guess, in theory, we will know what Trump wants to do with our Gulag by the end of today...

Read more here.

Sunday, April 29, 2018

And this news from Witness Against Torture....






Former detainees in Senegal 

deported to Libya


Charlie Savage writes in the NY Times,

 "...a decision this month by Senegal 
to deport two former detainees to their
chaotic birth country of Libya has
 raised the prospect that the resettlement 
system is starting to collapse 
under President Trump. After a traumatic
 journey, the Libyans apparently 
fell into the hands of a hard-line 
 militia leader who has been accused 
of prisoner abuse — and then they 
 vanished."  Read his article here

WAT states: "The U.S. has the obligation

first and foremost to ensure that former
 prisoners are resettled without fear of 
additional retribution, and the decision 
to deport Khalifa back to Libya
 demonstrates a total and utter lack of
 commitment to prisoners it unjustly 
detained and whose lives remain 
irreparable."

Thursday, April 19, 2018

The day the music died...

In January I posted about an exhibit in NYC at the International Center for Photography. I finally made it to the exhibit this past weekend and I recommend it to anyone finding themselves in Manhattan.

For the specifics, click here. The show ends in a few weeks (May 6)

Tuesday, April 10, 2018

Freedom Highway

Rest in peace Yvonne Staples...





Friday, April 6, 2018

Now we are abandoning the men we transferred to safe countries....

Those of you who have been following this blog over the years understand that I have many complaints regarding the Obama's administration and Guantanamo (other issues too but that is beside the point...). Even though the administration was terribly slow at transferring the men who could not go back to their native countries those men were, for the most part, settled in countries where they could live a semblance of a normal life. It seems that all of that is out the window now too- In the past few weeks I started to hear from other attorneys that their clients were suddenely unaccounted for. Now this story has appeared in the New York Times. By way of background you need to understand that deals were reached to convince these countries to take the men who could not go home. It seems that the Trump administration is not abiding by those deals...and so, these men that we wrongly detained for years are now in harms way once again.

Monday, April 2, 2018

Cancer cluster issue....

You may recall last year several of the attorneys for men being charged at the military commission raised an issue regarding the safety of the area where they were being housed and where they worked- because of an alarming cancer cluster amongst personnel assigned to those areas. When the military refused to take any action the attorneys filed a federal lawsuit.... now the judge in that case has denied a preliminary injunction:
This from the National Law Journal:

The lawyers say the area they are required to live and work in at Guantanamo Bay could be contaminated and unsafe.

By Cogan Schneier | March 30, 2018 at 01:37 PM
A federal judge on Friday refused to force the Defense Department to provide defense attorneys alternative housing at Guantanamo Bay amid fears their current quarters are unsafe.
The four plaintiffs, U.S. Judge Advocate General’s Corps and civilian lawyers who represent detainees before the military commission at Guantanamo, sued the Department of Defense, the U.S. Navy and the director of the Office of Military Commissions and Convening Authority last year, alleging they failed to properly investigate environmental hazards at Camp Justice.
The lawyers, who are assigned to work and sometimes live there, asked U.S. District Judge Rosemary Collyer of the District of Columbia for a preliminary injunction requiring the DOD to further investigate the alleged hazards and offer alternative living and working accommodations.
In denying the preliminary injunction, Collyer wrote that the plaintiffs failed to show a likelihood of success on their arguments because it appeared the department had “examined the relevant data and articulated ‘a rational connection between the facts found and the choice made.’”
Collyer added that the plaintiffs failed to show they would suffer an irreparable injury without the injunction.
“While the alleged harm—risk of cancer—is no doubt ‘great,’ the record does not show that it is currently ‘certain,’ ‘actual,’ or ‘imminent,’” Collyer wrote.
The judge also dismissed the plaintiffs’ claims that the DOD unreasonably delayed the completion of a risk assessment and implementation of controls to address the hazards, as well as their request for a writ of mandamus requiring the department to finish both tasks, for mootness. She said the department fully completed its report, which is now public, as well as completed the appropriate implementations.
“Plaintiffs’ argument does not overcome the fact that the actions sought in their complaint have been undertaken and, to the extent demanded, completed,” the judge wrote.
However, the judge denied the government’s motion to dismiss with respect to the plaintiffs’ allegation that the DOD violated the Administrative Procedures Act by arbitrarily and capriciously deciding Camp Justice is safe.
Lawyers for the plaintiffs, which include Cohen Milstein Sellers & Toll’s Dan Small and Johanna Hickman and Venable‘s Michael Davis and Margaret Fawal, were not available to comment Friday. The DOD did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The Navy assigns housing for military and civilian lawyers, as well as support staff, when they’re working at Camp Justice. The camp is located on an old airfield last used in the 1970s.
In July 2015, a lawyer who worked at Camp Justice asked the DOD’s inspector general to investigate whether conditions there may be linked to seven different cancer diagnoses of former employees. Later that year, the Miami Herald reported nine individuals who had worked there were diagnosed with cancer afterward.