Why Won't the Bush Administration Release the Uighur Prisoners at Gitmo?
Also in Rights and Liberties
Pockets of White America Are in the Throes of an Existential Crisis
Rich Benjamin
"We Can Make Him Disappear": Immigration Officials Are Holding People In Secret, Unmarked Jails
Jacqueline Stevens
Always Controversial Cornel West Disses Obama, Survives Cancer and Almost Spent His Life in Prison
Terrence McNally
Politicians Are Portraying 'Gitmo North' as a Terrific Local Jobs Program -- Don't Count On It
Liliana Segura
"How Does Somebody Have a Baby in Jail Without Anybody Noticing?" The Awful Plight of Pregnant Prisoners
Rachel Roth
25 Days In Federal Prison For Littering? Border Patrol Cracking Down on Human Rights Activists
Jessica Weisberg
Pity the Uighurs. Originally known best in this country for their unusual name (pronounced WEE'-gurz), the group of 17 Chinese Muslims has been locked up at Guantanamo Bay for the past seven years. That has contributed to the Uighurs new-found notoriety as hapless victims of a U.S. detention policy that can't send them home, yet can't send them anywhere else.
The Bush administration has acknowledged that it no longer considers the Uighurs "enemy combatants" subject to detention. Yet on Nov. 24, it vigorously fought a court's order to release them in the United States -- insisting that only the president and his Homeland Security Dept. have the authority to make that call. (Because the 17 Chinese Muslims received weapons training in Afghanistan, the administration claimed they posed a threat and cannot be allowed to live here. Yet the government has never presented any evidence that the men intended to use their training to stage attacks in the United States.)
The case has become such a global embarrassment for the U.S. that a group of 10 distinguished conservatives recently wrote to the administration appealing for the Uighurs' release, saying their continued detention without cause "undermines our standing in the world."
None of this seems to matter. As the administration faces its last days in power, officials, citing strategic reasons, are using even their weakest cases against detainees in the war on terror to hold onto what power they can exert.
In a series of interviews with more than 10 legal experts and law professors, as well as many litigators involved with detainee lawsuits, most said that the administration is intent on leaving a strong legal legacy that will fortify its efforts to strengthen executive power. If it succeeds, Congress will be even more hard-pressed to reclaim the power that the administration has concentrated in the executive branch.
Success could also present the Obama administration with some difficult challenges -- both to its ability to dismantle the Bush detainee policy and to its resolve to resist exercising the greatly enhanced executive powers it will inherit.
"I think it's a matter of principle for the Bush administration," said David Remes, executive director of Appeal for Justice and a lawyer who represents more than a dozen Yemeni detainees at Guantanamo Bay. "They can't control what happens after they leave office. But at least they'll have the satisfaction of knowing that the principle wasn't compromised on their watch."
The reputations of administration officials are also at stake.
"I think they're trying to make their record less damning in terms of not having produced much in the way of convictions or sentences," said Madeline Morris, a law professor at Duke University and former chief counsel to the Office of the Chief Defense Counsel for Military Commissions in the Defense Dept. "They want some high-profile signs that something's happening -- for example, that the 9/11 defendants are being brought to justice. The more that they can get [these cases] even into the pretrial phase … the more the commission process would seem efficacious, at least in its public impression."
In the case of the 17 detained Uighurs, it is a matter of principle: Who gets to decide whether they are released -- a judge or the president?
The answer to the legal question isn't completely clear, said Fordham law professor and criminal defense expert James Cohen. "It presents difficult issues of separation of powers," he said.
But as a political matter, what makes this case worth fighting?
"I think [the administration] would like to establish and preserve favorable precedents, so that a president in the future would be free to pursue the same course," said Remes. "So much of what the White House has been doing in the past seven years has been creating precedents for unilateral exercises of presidential power. I think it sees no reason to capitulate before it has to."
See more stories tagged with: habeas corpus, supreme court, afghanistan, war on terror, guantanamo, fisa, david hicks, enemy combatants, military commissions, ali saleh kahlah al-marri, uighurs, mohammed jawad
Liked this story? Get top stories in your inbox each week from Rights and Liberties! Sign up now »
You've chosen to turn comments off for the entire site. Would you like to turn them back on?
Support AlterNet
Do you value the information you're getting from AlterNet? Please show your support with a tax-deductible donation.
Feedback
Tell us how we're doing.