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Anti-Terror War Cover Rights Abuses in U.S. & Worldwide

A detainee led by his U.S. captors in Guantanamo, Cuba

NEW YORK, September 4 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) – The moves taken by the U.S. authorities after September11 attacks are causing serious concerns among civil libertarians. Whatever successes it might claim, the nearly year-old U.S.-led war on terrorism has produced significant collateral damage in eroding civil liberties worldwide, human rights groups say, Agence France-Presse (AFP) reported.   

They say governments, often taking their cue from U.S. practices after September 11, have used the war to justify abuses ranging from the detention of suspects without charge to crackdowns on dissent and immigration.    

"Virtually every dictator around the world has tried to jump on the bandwagon with varying degrees of success," said Tom Malinowksi, advocacy director for Human Rights Watch in Washington, AFP reported.

Most worrying to rights activists is the trend in the United States, with up to 1,200 non-Americans rousted since last year's attacks -- on top of some 598 prisoners held in Cuba -- and authorities looking at military trials.

Barely weeks after the attacks, the Bush administration began to implement emergency measures to change the legal system.     

Attorney General John Ashcroft promised to use "every available statute" to hunt down "the terrorists among us."     

The changes have affected the judicial system, the rights of federal investigators, as well as regulations regarding immigration.     

A few weeks after the attacks, Congress overwhelmingly adopted the Patriot Act, which, according to President George W. Bush, was designed "to punish terrorists before they strike ... while protecting the constitutional rights of all Americans."   

But the promise to defend people's rights did not reassure defenders of individual freedoms.   

Particularly given the fact that these regulations, granting authorities exceptional rights to search, detain and question individuals as well as monitor their activities without sanction from a judge, remain in force.   

The Federal Bureau of Investigation saw its powers increased, particularly in monitoring suspects and listening in to their conversations, including those with lawyers.   

A data bank with some 100,000 names has been set up. Stored there is information on immigrants, potential terrorists and foreign students.   

All of that happened without triggering massive protests.         

"There are growing voices of concern in the media, in the general public, in the Congress about the way in which some of these policies are being pursued by the Bush administration and are affecting the basic constitutional rights of individuals," said Wendy Patten of Human Rights Watch (HRW).   

Last month, HRW denounced some of the practices of U.S. law enforcement, such as arbitrary detentions, violations of procedural rules and secret arrests.   

"We are talking about very important rights that were abused in pursuit of the investigation of the events of September 11," said Patten.   

Most of the 1,200 arrested people, according to HRW, were either held in secret, without being able to meet with lawyers, or expelled.   

More than 8,000 people, mostly Muslims, have been questioned by the FBI over the past year, without any charges but being Muslims.    

Meanwhile, members of Congress have started expressing doubts about the real intentions of the very conservative attorney general.      

One of them in New York ruled that proceedings leading to the expulsion of an undesirable immigrant could not be held in secret. Another judge from Washington said the identities of detained immigrants had to be made public.   

"Secrets arrests are a concept odious to a democratic society," wrote this judge, Gladys Kessler.  

Such measures from a country regarded as a paragon of freedom send the wrong signal to less-democratic regimes and give them a freer hand to deal harshly with their own people, rights watchdogs say.   

Moreover, they fear, the United States has been turning a blind eye to rights transgressions in various parts of the world in return for support in its battle against Osama bin Laden's al-Qaeda.   

Whether they have been adopting new laws or stepping up enforcement of old ones, countries have not surprisingly taken to cloaking their actions in the banner of anti-terrorism.   

In Zimbabwe, President Robert Mugabe branded six journalists working for foreign-based media as "terrorists." Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon likes to refer to the  Palestinian president Yasser Arafat as "our bin Laden" to falsely justify his attacks and give the Americans the sense that they are facing the same enemy, that is terrorism.   

Even countries such as Britain, with a cherished democratic tradition, got in hot water with a law allowing foreign terror suspects to be detained without charge that was ruled discriminatory by a tribunal, AFP added.  

"We do not see such a state of imminent and extreme national emergency as to justify locking people up without charge or trial, not for anything they have done but for something someone thinks they might do," said John Wadham, head of the British rights group Liberty.   

Rights advocates in Pakistan, which has allied itself firmly with the United States, are alarmed at sweeping arrests of suspected people without proof or warrants, and their imprisonment without charges.   

Afrasiab Khattak, chairman of the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan, said a major concern was the transfer of 400-500 mainly Arab foreigners to the custody of the United States and other countries.   

"All were handed to the U.S. without legal process. There has not been a single case where the due process of courts has been observed," Khattak said, AFP reported.  

Meanwhile, European Union governments are secretly drawing up a treaty with the United States on issues ranging from extradition to undercover police operations in a move which has huge implications for individual rights and liberties, the British based daily The Guardian reported.  

Shortly after the September 11 attacks on the U.S. last year, the EU suggested negotiating an agreement with Washington on joint measures to combat terrorism.

The U.S. said the agreement should go beyond the fight against terrorism and cover what it called general "criminal matters", the daily added.

Documents leaked to Statewatch, an independent group monitoring threats to civil liberties in the EU, show the planned treaty will include joint police operations, intercepting communications and the search and seizure of bank accounts.

They also show that the U.S. wants to make it easier for European governments to extradite EU and non-EU citizens by making it harder for individuals to plead political immunity and by fast-tracking judicial procedures, the paper said.

EU governments have said they are prepared to adopt what they call a "modern approach" to the issue, the documents show. The implication is that they are willing to abandon existing obstacles to extradition.

The documents also show that, under the heading "guarantees and safeguards", the EU's negotiating position with the U.S. makes no mention of principles enshrined in the European human rights convention, including the right to a fair trial and to privacy, or traditional protection against double jeopardy.

The U.S. Attorney-General, John Ashworth, is to discuss the proposed treaty - drawn up without reference to national parliaments or the European parliament - at a meeting of EU home affairs and justice ministers in Copenhagen on September 13.

On the other hand, in a poll released Wednesday, September 4, 2002, a majority of Europeans believe that U.S. foreign policy is partly to blame for last year's terrorist attacks on New York and Washington DC, AFP said.  

All told, 55% of Europeans believe the attacks by al-Qaeda group on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon were a product of U.S. policy overseas to some degree, AFP reported.  

And many Europeans are still critical of President George W. Bush's handling of foreign policy issues, according to Worldviews 2002, a survey of more than 9,000 Europeans and Americans, the AFP added.

Only a fifth of the respondents thought Bush was doing a good job handling the Arab-Israeli conflict and/or the standoff with Iraq over weapons inspections, when they were canvassed in June and July this year, for example.

 

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