ACLU Letter to the House of Representatives Urging Cosponsorship of The Torture Outsourcing Prevention Act (3/5/2007)
UPHOLD THE RULE OF
LAW--COSPONSOR THE TORTURE OUTSOURCING PREVENTION ACT
RE: The Torture
Outsourcing Prevention Act Restores the Rule of Law and Bolsters the American
Values of Freedom and Accountability
Dear Representative:
The American Civil Liberties Union strongly urges you to support the
Torture Outsourcing Prevention Act that Congressman Edward Markey will introduce
tomorrow. The Torture Outsourcing
Prevention Act will help restore the rule of law--and American values of freedom
and accountability. The bill would
forever stop the federal government from secretly kidnapping people and sending
them to foreign governments that commonly use torture or cruel, inhuman, or
degrading treatment in detention or interrogation.
The Federal Government Kidnapped an Innocent Canadian
Citizen and Sent Him to a Syrian Torture Cell for Ten Months
The federal government has acted lawlessly in targeting persons,
sometimes on the basis of mistaken identity, kidnapping them without ever making
an arrest or seeking charges in any court, and then shipping them off to foreign
torture cells. In a highly
publicized kidnapping, the federal government seized an innocent Canadian
citizen, Maher Arar, while he was switching planes at John F. Kennedy Airport in
New York. The federal government
held him in solitary confinement for nine days without charges or any access to
an attorney, and then flew him through Jordan to Syria.
The federal government did not
stop the Syrian government from brutally torturing the Canadian citizen that the
United States sent to Syria. In a
Syrian torture cell, he was tortured repeatedly, including suffering repeated
whippings with a two-inch thick electrical cable, before being released by Syria
ten months later. The Syrian
government said that it found no connection between the Canadian citizen and any
terrorist or criminal organization or activity.
Upon his return home to Canada,
the Canadian government not only did not charge him with any offenses, but
instead opened a formal investigation into why a Canadian citizen was rendered
by the U.S. federal government to torture.
After the thorough investigation, including a review of all documents
held by the federal government, the Canadian government determined that there
was no reason that Mr. Arar should have been detained or subjected to any
mistreatment. The Conservative
Prime Minister of Canada recently made a nationally televised apology to Mr.
Arar and his family, and provided $10 million Canadian dollars to him. At the same time—and, according to the
Canadian government, based on the same “evidence”--the U.S. federal government
is keeping Mr. Arar on a no-fly list, despite having no charges against him.
The Federal Government Has Kidnapped and Shipped People to
Torture Countries Such as Syria, Uzbekistan, Egypt, and Yemen
Unfortunately, the kidnapping and
torture of an innocent Canadian citizen is not an isolated example. At the same time that the United States
has condemned numerous countries for torturing and abusing their citizens, the
federal government has shipped persons to those same countries based on nothing
more than a promise that they will not torture them. The federal government has shipped its
kidnapped persons off to a “who’s who” of torture violators--including Syria,
Uzbekistan, Egypt, and Yemen.
The number of persons rendered by
the federal government to foreign countries that engage in torture is
large. In fact, the prime minister
of Egypt--which the U.S. State Department has found to have a horrific human
rights record--stated on Meet the Press in 2005 that his country alone has
received 60-70 persons from the U.S. federal government. The federal government sent those
persons to Egyptian prisons, despite the notorious reputation of Egypt for
maintaining torture cells.
State Department Lawyers Have Gutted the Prohibition Against Sending Persons
to Foreign Torture Cells by Playing Word Games with Federal Laws
Congress has acted at least twice to prohibit the federal government from
transferring persons to foreign countries when “there are substantial grounds
for believing that the person would be in danger of being subjected to
torture.” However, the State
Department now believes that those laws do not apply when the federal government
seizes people outside of the fifty states.
This reckless interpretation of federal law has opened the door to
sending persons to foreign torture cells on the basis of nothing more than a
promise that the foreign country will not engage in torture.
In 1986, at the request of President
Ronald Reagan, the Senate ratified the Convention Against Torture, which
includes a specific provision that prohibits rendering persons to torture. Specifically, the federal
government may not “expel, return, or extradite a person to another State where
there are substantial grounds for believing that he would be in danger of being
subjected to torture.” In 1998,
Congress reinforced this prohibition against rendering a person to torture when
it enacted a law that provides, “[i]t shall be the policy of the United States
not to expel, extradite, or otherwise effect the involuntary return of any
person to a country in which there are substantial grounds for believing the
person would be in danger of being subjected to torture, regardless of whether
the person is physically present in the United States.”
Both the Senate-ratified
Convention Against Torture and the 1998 statute were clear that the federal
government cannot seize a person either in a New York airport or on a European
street and send that person to a torture country, particularly without
meaningful accountability such as U.S. inspection and monitoring of the person’s
confinement. The objective of both
laws is to ensure that the federal government cannot render any person to
torture or abuse.
However, the federal government
has gutted enforceability of the law.
State Department lawyers are playing word games with federal law and now
argue that federal law does not prohibit kidnapping persons and sending them to
foreign torture cells.
State Department lawyers now find
no federal prohibition on sending these persons to foreign torture cells
because, in their unprecedented interpretation:
- They believe that the 1998 law does not prohibit
rendering persons to foreign torture cells because the statute provides that not
rendering to torture is the “policy” of the United States--which somehow means,
in their view, that the statute is not a binding prohibition. In this interpretation, the statute is
not a prohibition, but merely advice that was passed by Congress and signed by
the President.
- They believe that the
Senate-ratified Convention Against Torture does not apply to persons that the
federal government kidnaps overseas because they are not “returning” a person to
a torture country. In this view,
“return” of a person can only occur if the person is within U.S. borders. In this baseless definition of “return,”
it does not matter that the person is in the custody or control of the United
States.
- They believe that the
entire Senate-ratified Convention Against Torture is inapplicable to the federal
government when acting outside of the fifty states because an unrelated section
of the treaty discusses a separate duty to pass laws preventing torture in all
United States territory. The result
of this incorrect interpretation of the Senate-ratified treaty is that the
federal government now believes that this law does not prohibit the federal
government from sending persons to foreign torture cells, as long as those
persons are not on U.S. soil at the time that they are in U.S. custody or
control.
The combined result of these
word games by State Department lawyers is that the federal government no longer
views itself as bound by the Convention Against Torture or by the 1998 statute
when it seizes persons overseas and sends them to foreign countries that the
State Department itself documents as engaging in systematic and widespread
torture or abuse.
The Torture Outsourcing Prevention Act Shuts the Door on a Route to Torture
Opened by an Unprecedented Government Interpretation of U.S. Anti-Torture
Law
The Torture Outsourcing Prevention Act would forever prohibit the federal
government from sending persons to foreign torture cells. It closes all of the loopholes that have
been opened by unprecedented government interpretations of the Senate-ratified
Convention Against Torture and the 1998 federal statute. Specifically, it provides:
Any person who is
imprisoned, detained, or held for transfer to another country by, or is
otherwise in the custody or control of, a department, agency, or official of the
United States Government, or any contractor of any such department or agency,
may not, regardless of the nationality or location of that person, be rendered,
returned or otherwise transferred [to a country found by the Secretary of State
to be a country where] . . . torture or cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment
is commonly used in the detention or interrogation of individuals.
This provision reinforces the
longstanding ban against rendering persons to torture, and should withstand any
effort to undermine it. The bill
also shuts other loopholes by prohibiting transfer to a country that will then
transfer the person to a torture country, ensuring judicial review of the
torture question during treaty-based extraditions, and requiring the federal
government to issue new regulations implementing the law.
We strongly urge you to stand up
for American values of freedom and accountability by cosponsoring the Torture
Outsourcing Prevention Act.
Sincerely,
Caroline Fredrickson Director
Christopher E. Anders Legislative Counsel
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