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Guantanamo Bay: The Legal Black Hole1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 January 2008

Extract

The most powerful democracy is detaining hundreds of suspected foot soldiers of the Taliban in a legal black hole at the United States naval base at Guantanamo Bay, where they await trial on capital charges by military tribunals. This episode must be put in context. Democracies must defend themselves. Democracies are entitled to try officers and soldiers of enemy forces for war crimes. But it is a recurring theme in history that in times of war, armed conflict, or perceived national danger, even liberal democracies adopt measures infringing human rights in ways that are wholly disproportionate to the crisis. One tool at hand is detention without charge or trial, that is, executive detention. Ill-conceived rushed legislation is passed granting excessive powers to executive governments which compromise the rights and liberties of individuals beyond the exigencies of the situation. Often the loss of liberty is permanent. Executive branches of government, faced with a perceived emergency, often resort to excessive measures. The litany of grave abuses of power by liberal democratic governments is too long to recount, but in order to understand and to hold governments to account, we do well to take intoaccount the circles of history.

Type
Guantanamo Bay: The Legal Black Hole1
Copyright
Copyright © British Institute of International and Comparative Law 2004

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52 I have been greatly helped in preparing this lecture by my wife, Susan, by Laura Johnson, my judicial assistant, and by Alex Glassbrook, my son-in-law.