[NewPacifica] Press Advisory: Gitmo Detainees get "Day in Court" Through Anti-Torture Activists



WITNESS AGAINST TORTURE

Press Advisory: For Immediate Release, May 22, 2008

Media Contact: Frida Berrigan, (347) 683-4928; frida.berrigan@xxxxxxxxx

http://www.witnesstorture.org/Guantanamo-Day-in-court

GUANTÁNAMO DETAINEES TO GET THEIR DAY IN COURT

Witness Against Torture Activists to "Represent" Detainees in Trial, May 27

WASHINGTON, DC ­ Detainees at the U.S. Military 
Prison in Guantánamo will finally get their day 
in court on May 27 ­ Superior Court, in Washington DC.

That is when 35 Americans from cities and towns 
across the country will go on trial for a protest 
at the U.S. Supreme Court on January 11, 2008. 
They face charges of either "unlawful free 
speech" or "causing a harangue" or both. Each 
count carries a maximum penalty of 60 days in 
jail, as well as fines and court fees.

In a new twist on traditional protest, the 35 
activists will enter their names as those of 
actual Guantánamo inmates. On January 11th, they 
were arrested without their own identification 
and were taken into custody under the name of a 
Guantánamo prisoner. This act symbolically grants 
the Guantánamo prisoners their day in court-- 
which the Pentagon has denied them for years.

Father Bill Pickard, a Catholic priest from 
Scranton, PA, is one of the defendants. But he 
will be tried "as" Faruq Ali Ahmed, a Guantánamo 
detainee. "I went to the Supreme Court to make a 
simple plea that the inhumane treatment and 
actual torture of inmates at Guantánamo Bay 
stop," says Fr. Pickard. "I went to bring the 
name and the humanity of Faruq Ali Ahmed ? who 
claims he traveled to Afghanistan in 2001 simply 
to teach the Koran to children and that he has no 
affiliation with the Taliban or Al Qaeda ? before 
the law. He cannot do it himself, so I am called 
by my faith, my respect for the rule of law and 
my conscience to do it for him."  Among the 
defendants is a hog farmer from Grinnell, Iowa, a 
social worker from Saratoga Springs, New York, 
and a legal secretary from Baltimore.

Representing themselves, the defendants plan on 
justifying their acts as upholding U.S. law and 
international human rights and will call 
witnesses to document the abuses at Guantánamo.

Witness Against Torture will hold two events related to the trial on May 27:

At 7:45 am, dressed in orange jumpsuits and black 
hoods, those facing trial will carry their 
Guantánamo inmates' names from the U.S. Supreme 
Court (Maryland Avenue and First Street) to the 
D.C. Superior Court (Carl Moultrie Court House, 
500 Indiana, Ave NW), where their cases will be heard.

At 8:30 am, Witness Against Torture will hold a 
press conference outside the Superior Court. 
Defendants and witnesses will address the media. 
They will also hold a ceremony of justice, 
expressing their demand that the rights and 
humanity of the detainees be respected by placing 
placards bearing the detainees' names alongside 
copies of the U.S. Constitution, the Geneva 
Convention, and the sacred texts of various religious traditions.

The trial will begin at 9:30 am. Press is invited 
to attend all the proceedings.

The January 11 protest was organized by Witness 
Against Torture (www.witnesstorture.org), which 
was formed in 2005 when 25 Americans walked from 
Cuba to the U.S. detention facility at Guantánamo.

A full media kit is available on our website at 
http://www.witnesstorture.org/5-19-PressKit

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