I militari giudicano fanno una pausa lo scioglimento de Guantanamo
Un giudice militare ha rifiutato una richiesta di pentagono di riconsiderare il suo scioglimento delle spese contro un detainee della baia de Guantanamo accusato di uccisione del soldato americano nell'Afghanistan.
Il giudice, colonna dell'esercito Peter Brownback, regolato venerdì che la discussione legale rinnovata del governo non ha risolto una mancanza di giurisdizione nel caso di Omar Khadr, un canadese che era 15 quando è stato arrestato su un campo di battaglia afgano in 2002.
Khadr è uno di due detainees di cui le prove militari sono caduto a parte perché non sono state identificate come combattenti nemici “illegali„.
A Pentagon spokesman, Navy Cmdr. Jeffrey Gordon, said Saturday that the military is preparing to file a challenge to the Court of Military Commissions Review, a Washington-based appeals court that was set up within a week of the dismissal of the two detainees’ charges on June 4.
“We’re disappointed with the judge’s decision in this matter,” Gordon said.
Another judge who threw out the case against Yemeni detainee Salim Ahmed Hamdan has not yet ruled on prosecutors’ motion to reconsider, Gordon said.
Meanwhile, the U.S. Supreme Court on Friday agreed to review whether Guantanamo Bay detainees can use federal courts to challenge their confinement, reversing an April decision not to hear arguments on the issue.
Like the rest of the detainee population, Khadr and Hamdan previously were identified by military review panels only as enemy combatants, lacking the “unlawful” designation required by the law that authorized the new trials. Pentagon officials have described the problem as largely semantics.
But the cases have dealt a blow to the Bush administration in its efforts to begin prosecuting dozens at the detention center in southeastern Cuba.
Last year, Republicans and the White House pushed through legislation authorizing the war-crimes trials after the Supreme Court threw out Bush’s previous system as illegal and in violation of international treaties.
Khadr and Hamdan are the only ones currently in the roughly 380-prisoner population at Guantanamo who have been charged with crimes under a reconstituted military trial system.
One other detainee charged under the new system, Australian David Hicks, pleaded guilty in March to providing material support to al-Qaida and is serving a nine-month sentence in Australia.
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