THE US has floated plans to turn Guantanamo Bay into a death
camp, with its own death row and execution chamber.
Prisoners
would be tried, convicted and executed without leaving its
boundaries, without a jury and without right of appeal, The Mail
on Sunday newspaper reported yesterday.
The plans were revealed by Major-General Geoffrey Miller, who is
in charge of 680 suspects from 43 countries, including two
Australians.
The suspects have been held at Camp Delta on Cuba without charge
for 18 months.
General Miller said building a death row was one plan. Another
was to have a permanent jail, with possibly an execution chamber.
The Mail on Sunday reported the move is seen as logical by
the US, which has been attacked worldwide for breaching the Geneva
Convention on prisoners of war since it established the camp at a
naval base to hold alleged terrorists from Afghanistan.
But it has horrified human rights groups and lawyers representing
detainees.
They see it as the clearest indication America has no intention
of falling in line with internationally recognised justice.
The US has already said detainees would be tried by tribunals,
without juries or appeals to a higher court. Detainees will be
allowed only US lawyers.
British activist Stephen Jakobi, of Fair Trials Abroad, said:
"The US is kicking and screaming against any pressure to conform
with British or any other kind of international justice."
American law professor Jonathan Turley, who has led US civil
rights group protests against the military tribunals planned to hear
cases at Guantanamo Bay, said: "It is not surprising the authorities
are building a death row because they have said they plan to try
capital cases before these tribunals.
"This camp was created to execute people. The administration has
no interest in long-term prison sentences for people it regards as
hard-core terrorists."
Britain admitted it had been kept in the dark about the plans.
A Downing St spokesman said: "The US Government is well aware of
the British Government's position on the death penalty."
Herald
Sun