TPR Contributor Andy Worthington
Visits The US To Discuss Guantanamo
Details of events are below, and for further information, or to
interview Andy or to ask him to take part in further events, please
contact
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of The World Can’t Wait or
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.
Sadly, two years into Barack Obama’s Presidency, and a year after the failure of his promise to close Guantánamo within a year,
the outlook for the remaining 174 prisoners in Guantánamo is bleaker
than it has been at any time since June 27, 2004, the day before the Supreme Court ruled that the prisoners had habeas corpus rights.
Although 90 of the remaining 174 prisoners have been
“approved for transfer” for at least a year
by the Guantánamo Review Task Force, established by President Obama to
review the cases of the remaining prisoners, 58 of these men are
Yemenis, whose release is prevented by
a moratorium on the release of any Yemeni prisoners,
which was issued by the President last January, in response to
hysterical overreaction to the news that the failed Christmas Day plane
bomber, Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, had been recruited in Yemen.
The remaining 32 men “approved for transfer” are mostly still held
because of fears that they will face torture or other ill-treatment in
their home countries, and because no third countries have been found
that will accept them. They should, therefore, be offered new homes in
the United States, but the Obama administration, the courts and Congress
have all acted to prevent the relocation of a single cleared Guantánamo prisoner to the US mainland.
Of the remaining 84 prisoners, three are imprisoned after trials by Military Commission,
33 were recommended for trials by the Task Force, and 48 others were
recommended for indefinite detention without charge or trial. Congress
recently passed legislation preventing the transfer of any of these men
to the US mainland to face trials, and also preventing the
administration from buying a US prison to rehouse them, but this is not the only stumbling block to attempts to secure justice for any of these men.
Although the adminstration has been prevented from proceeding with the planned federal court trials
for Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and four other men accused of involvement in
the 9/11 attacks, officials have also shown little appetite for trials
by Military Commission either, especially after the negative publicity
that greeted the plea deal negotiated in October with the former child
prisoner Omar Khadr, who was obliged to plead guilty to war crimes invented by Congress and endorsed by the administration.
In addition, it was recently announced that President Obama is set to sign an executive order formalizing the indefinite detention
of the 48 men designated for indefinite detention by the Task Force.
This will allow them a periodic review of their cases, but it remains an
unjustifiable position for the administration to maintain (and is
symptomatic of the administration’s disregard for the US courts and the prisoners’ ongoing habeas petitions),
and the combination of factors in play as Guantánamo begins the 10th
year of its lawless business — the executive order regarding indefinite
detention, the unwillingness to proceed with any trials, and the
self-imposed obstacles preventing the release of 90 men whose release
was recommended by the Task Force — means that, on this particular
anniversary, there is a very real possibility, without concerted effort
by Americans opposed to the existence of Guantánamo and all it stands
for, that almost everyone still held at Guantánamo will continue to be
held indefinitely.
To raise awareness of these issues, and to call for action, Andy is taking part in the following events:
Thursday January 6, 7.30 pm: Special Forum — “WikiLeaks,
State Secrets, Guantánamo and Torture” with Andy Worthington, Katie
Gallagher, Pardiss Kebriaei, Leili Kashani and Jeremy Varon.
The Brecht Forum, 451 West Street (between Bank & Bethune Streets), New York, NY 10014.
For this special event, Andy Worthington will be joined by Katie Gallagher, Pardiss Kebriaei and Leili Kashani from the Center for Constitutional Rights and Jeremy Varon of Witness Against Torture to discuss the importance of WikiLeaks, attempts to extradite Julian Assange to the US, the dangerous isolation of Bradley Manning, revelations about Guantánamo and US interference to suppress torture investigations in Germany and Spain, and the significance of other stories not covered by Wikileaks — in particular, the circumstances surrounding the deaths of three prisoners at Guantánamo in June 2006.
For further information, and to register for this event, see the Brecht Forum
website, or phone: 212-242-4201. This event is free for Brecht Forum
Subscribers. Otherwise, admission is on a sliding scale: $6/$10/$15.
Friday January 7, 7 pm: Film screening – “Outside the Law:
Stories from Guantánamo,” followed by Q&A with Andy Worthington and
Scott Horton.
Revolution Books, 146 West 26th Street (between 6th & 7th Ave.), New York, NY 10001.
A screening of the documentary film, “Outside the Law: Stories from Guantánamo”
(directed by Polly Nash and Andy Worthington) will be followed by a
discussion about the film, the state of Guantánamo on the 9th
anniversary of its opening, and accountability for torture with Andy
Worthington and Scott Horton, law professor and columnist for Harper’s Magazine.
A donation of $10 is requested for the film, drinks and popcorn, to benefit Revolution Books. For further information, see the Revolution Books website, or contact the store by email or by phone: 212-691-3345. A Facebook page is here.
Sunday January 9, 4 pm: World Can’t Wait open house to celebrate the New Year and a new office, and to welcome Andy Worthington.
The World Can’t Wait, 112 West 27th Street, New York, NY 10001.
An open house to mark the opening of The World Can’t Wait’s
new office, and an opportunity to meet Andy Worthington, to discuss
actions to help close Guantánamo, and to hold senior Bush administration
officials accountable for torture, and also to hear about. and to
support the campaigning work of The World Can’t Wait.
For further information, please contact Debra Sweet, National Director, The World Can’t Wait by email or phone the office: 866-973-4463.
Monday January 10, 7 pm: Panel discussion — “War Is A Lie”
with David Swanson, plus guests Andy Worthington, Cindy Sheehan and
Debra Sweet.
Barnes & Noble Johns Hopkins Bookstore, 3330 St. Paul Street, Baltimore, MD 21218.
En route to Washington D.C. for events marking the 9th anniversary of
the opening of Guantánamo, Andy Worthington will be a guest of the
author, blogger and activist David Swanson at an event promoting his
latest book War Is A Lie, along with peace activist Cindy Sheehan and Debra Sweet of The World Can’t Wait.
For further information, see the War Is A Crime website, and to contact the store, please phone: 410-662-5850.
Tuesday January 11, 10.30 am: 11-day Vigil and Fast for the
Closure of Guantánamo begins outside The White House, 1600 Pennsylvania
Ave., Washington, D.C. Press conference at 11 am with Tom Parker
(AIUSA), Pardiss Kebriaei (CCR), Andy Worthington, Frida Berrigan and
Valerie Lucznikowska.
On the 9th anniversary of the opening of Guantánamo, anti-torture activists Witness Against Torture
launch a Daily Vigil and Fast for Justice that will continue for 11
days and includes demonstrations throughout Washington D.C. The event on
January 11 begins with a rally of a coalition of human rights and
grassroots groups and individuals, including the Center for
Constitutional Rights, Amnesty International USA, September 11 Families for Peaceful Tomorrows, Torture
Abolition and Survivors Support Coalition, The World Can’t Wait, Andy
Worthington, Cindy Sheehan and, hopefully, peace activist Ray McGovern
and others, followed by a press conference at 11 am, a “prisoner
procession” to the Department of Justice at 11.45 am, arriving at 12.15
pm, where members of Witness Against Torture will engage in nonviolent
direct action. Speakers at the rally will include: Tom Parker, Amnesty
International USA’s advocacy and policy director of terrorism,
counterterrorism and human rights, Valerie Lucznikowska, September 11
Families for Peaceful Tomorrows, historian and Guantánamo
researcher Andy Worthington, Pardiss Kebriaei, staff attorney, the
Center for Constitutional Rights, representing Guantánamo detainees,
and Frida Berrigan, Witness Against Torture.
For further information, please visit the Witness Against Torture website, or contact Frida Berrigan by email or phone: 347-683-4928 or Jeremy Varon by email or phone: 732-979-3119. Or contact Aaron Barnard-Luce of AIUSA by email or phone: 202-509-8194, Jen Nessel of CCR by email or phone: 212-614-6449, or Shonna Carter of September 11 Families for Peaceful Tomorrows by email or phone: 212-260-5000
Tuesday January 11, 3.30-5 pm: Panel discussion — “Nine Years
of Guantánamo: What Now?” with Andy Worthington, Tom Wilner, Morris
Davis and Benjamin Wittes.
New America Foundation, 1899 L Street, N.W., Suite 400, Washington, D.C. 20036.
On the 9th aniversary of the opening of Guantánamo, Andy Worthington is
joined by attorney Tom Wilner, Morris Davis, the former chief
prosecutor of the Military Commissions at Guantánamo, and Benjamin
Wittes of the Brookings Institution, for what promises to be a lively
discussion about the future of Guantánamo. Tom Wilner is the former
attorney for the Kuwaiti prisoners in Guantánamo, who argued the
Guantánamo cases in the Supreme Court (and is hoping to challenge the ongoing detention of one of the two remaining Kuwaiti prisoners before the Supreme Court), Morris Davis resigned in October 2007,
after being placed in a chain of command under Pentagon General
Counsel William J. Haynes II, who advocated for the use of torture, and
Benjamin Wittes has spent several years arguing that new legislation is required
authorizing the indefinite detenton of prisoners. Among the topics
under discussion will be the viability of the Authorization for Use of
Military Force as a basis for detention, the approach taken by the Obama administration and the courts with regard to the prisoners’ habeas corpus claims,
and the conficting claims for federal court trials, trials by Mlitary
Commission or indefinite detention without charge or trial for the 81
of the remaining 174 prisoners that the adminstration has stated that
it wants to try or to detain indefinitely. The discussion will be moderated by Patrick Doherty of the New America Foundation.
For further information, please contact Andrew Lebovitch of the New America Foundation.
Wednesday January 12, 12-1.30 pm: Panel discussion on the
future of Guantánamo and accountabiity for torture with Andy
Worthington, Juan Méndez, Leili Kashani and Frida Berrigan, plus
excerpts from “Outside the Law: Stories from Guantánamo.”
American University Washington College of Law, JD Lounge, 6th floor, 4801 Massachusetts Avenue NW, Washington, D.C. 20016.
For the final event of this short US tour, Andy Worthington will be joined by Juan Méndez, Visiting Professor of Law at the American University Washington College of Law, and the newly appointed UN Special Rapporteur on Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment,
and Leili Kashani of the Center for Constitutional Rights for further
discussion about how to push for the closure of Guantánamo, fair
trials, the release of cleared prisoners, an end to indefinite
detention without charge or trial, and accountability for torture. The
panel discussion will be moderated by Frida Berrigan of Witness Against
Torture, excerpts from “Outside the Law; Stories from Guantánamo” will
be shown, and refreshments will be served.
For further information, please contact Kate Kelly or Ann Warshaw of WCL.