The gamecock. (Columbia, S.C.) 1908-2006, November 11, 2005, Page 6, Image 6
Senate votes to bar foreign terror suspects at Guantanamo from U.S. courts
Liz Sidoti
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON —The Senate voted
Thursday to bar foreign terror suspects
at the U.S. prison in Guantanamo Bay,
Cuba, from challenging their
detentions in American courts, despite
a Supreme Court ruling last year that
granted access.
In a 49-42 vote, senators added the
provision by Sen. Lindsey Graham,
R-S.C., to a sweeping defense policy
bill.
“For 200 years, ladies and
gentlemen, in the law of armed
conflict, no nation has given an enemy
combatant, a terrorist, an al-Qaida
member the ability to go into every
federal court in this United States and
sue the people that are fighting the war
for us,” Graham told his colleagues.
Sen. Jeff Bingaman, D-N.M., said
the provision was a major mistake and
deserved scrutiny. “It’s contrary to the
way the court decisions have come
down already. It is an extraordinary
step for this Congress to be taking,” he
said.
■>% . .
Democrats indicated they may try
to kill or change the provision before
the Senate votes on the overall bill next
week. Five Democrats sided with 44
Republicans in voting for the
provision.
In a separate war matter, the Senate
voted 82-9 to require National
Intelligence Director John Negroponte
to provide the Senate and House
intelligence committees with details of
any clandestine facilities where the
United States holds or has held
terrorism suspects.
That was a reaction to a
Washington Post story from Nov. 2
that said the CIA has had secret
prisons for terror detainees in eight
countries, including democracies in
Eastern Europe. The Bush
administration has refused to confirm
whether the prisons exist.
The Senate hopes to complete work
next week on the overall bill. It already
includes provisions barring abusive
treatment of foreign prisoners and
standardizing interrogation
techniques. Those provisions also are
in the separate $445 billion military
spending bill the Senate passed last
month.
The White House has threatened to
veto any bill with the restrictions on
handling detainees, saying it would
limit the president’s ability to protect
Americans and prevent a terrorist
attack. Vice President Dick Cheney
has vigorously lobbied Congress to
drop or modify the detainee provisions
sponsored by Sen. John McCain, R
A ri7
That has set up a rare challenge of
the president’s wartime authority by
members of his own party. The
confrontation comes as Bush is under
fire for detention policies at Iraq’s Abu
Ghraib prison and other facilities.
It also coincides with a turbulent
period in Bush’s second term. His
public support has eroded to its lowest
level yet in polls, dragged down by the
war, high gas prices and the indictment
of a top White House aide in the leak
of a CIA agent’s identity.
The McCain and Graham
provisions are not in the House-passed
defense bills.
The Senate’s approval of Graham’s
amendment followed Monday’s
Supreme Court decision to review a
constitutional challenge to the Bush
administration’s military trials for
suspected foreign terrorists held at the
U.S. naval base in Cuba.
In 2004, the Supreme Court said
the 500 or so prisoners held there
could file petitions known as habeas
corpus in U.S. courts to fight their
detentions. Many of the prisoners were
captured in Afghanistan and have been
held at Guantanamo for several years
without being charged.
Since that ruling, prisoner lawsuits
against the government have piled up.
Graham sought to curb what he
called “lawsuit abuse,” arguing that
prisoners of war and enemy
combatants have never before been
given access to U.S. courts.
But Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich., said
it was too broad and would effectively
reverse the Supreme Court’s previous
decision on the issue of detainees
rights. “It is inconsistent with what the
Supreme Court did,” he said.
Human-rights groups also cried
foul.
“Depriving an entire branch of
government of its ability to exercise
meaningful oversight is a decidedly
wrong course to take,” said Elisa
Massimino, the Washington director
of Human Rights First.
On Iraq, Senate Democrats offered
a proposal requiring the president to
outline a timetable for a phased
withdrawal of U.S. forces, and
Republicans put forth their own Iraqi
policy proposal. Votes on both are
expected next week.
Dita Alangkara / The Associated Press
A member of Indonesian Police bomb squad walks after searching a house where
gunfight between police and terrorist suspects occurred on Wednesday, in Batu,
East Java, Indonesia, on Thursday. Malaysian terror leader Azahari bin Husin
was believed to have been killed in the shootout.
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