Wife of Control Order Detainee Speaks Out

Life being married to a control order detainee by Dina Al Jnidi – Wife of Mr. Mahmoud Abu Rideh

My name is Dina Al Jnidi, I am the wife of Mahmoud Abu Rideh. I left the United Kingdom on 25th May 2009 following eight years of a very traumatic life. My husband was in prison for 4 years and then placed under a control order.

It is still fresh in my mind the day the police came to arrest my husband, it was the 19th of December 2001. I don’t think I will ever be able to forget that day – They (the police) broke down the door, forced their way into our home whilst I was still in my night dress. The police pointing their guns in my face and the children’s faces. There were many police, around 30 armed. They forced my husband to the floor, handcuffed him pressing down on his back and neck with their knee’s as he screamed in pain – they yelled “shut up you F***ing terrorist”. I implored with the police that my husband suffers from back pain. All this taking place in view of my children who are terrified; they are crying, shaking many of them had wet themselves – frightened, terrified. The police took my husband away – where I do not know. They took me and my children and placed us in a hostel; they want to search our home.

After 2 days we were allowed to return to our house. The local newspaper had taken pictures of our home, the headlines read something to the effect “terrorist raid”. Following this article in the newspaper I forcibly had my face veil removed three times. We also had people throw rubbish at our front door.

40 days had passed, I still did not know where my husband was. I called the police, Scotland Yard, immigration – no one told me where my husband was.

Eventually I swapped my home as our neighbours had resorted to spitting at me. Prior to the arrest of my husband and the raid on our home we had never had any trouble with any of our neighbours – we had previously enjoyed a normal relationship with them. The police have caused this problem which led to our victimisation.

After I discovered that my husband was in Belmarsh prison I went to visit him. I discovered that he was on a hunger strike. The visit was a closed visit, which means that neither I nor my children could touch my husband. The children were unable to hug or hold their father, to even shake his hand was not allowed! On many occasions at subsequent visits after travelling long distances in difficult circumstances we were sent back without being allowed to see him. My husband does not speak English well, but was not allowed to speak Arabic on visits (eventually this was allowed for one visit out of four).

My husband used to call and on many occasions would be crying due to the torture, the discrimination he was facing. My children too would cry. The effect of all this torture, discrimination, and detention without charge or trial – drove my husband insane, angry, and psychologically mad. Never before was he like this, he was a normal person – a normal husband, a normal father – a normal person. Due to his mental state he was transferred to Broadmoor High Security Mental prison. A place for very dangerous high risk people. Whilst at Broadmoor he was frequently attacked by staff, nurses and other prisoners. I could not visit him whilst he was there, I tried but whenever I went there I was told he was in isolation, in solitary confinement. Broadmoor prison was very far from our home, it was very difficult travelling with 5 children only to be sent back home to be told your husband is in isolation.

It was around this time that my husband began to self harm. He drank detergents, he used pens to dig deep into his arms.

In 2005 my husband was released, we were only given 2 hours notice before his arrival. We were pleased to have him back home, but did not know the full extent of the conditions that were placed on him. I did not know what a control order was. He had to wear an electronic tag around his ankle. He had to report by telephone by special equipment that had been placed in our home several times a day (including during the middle of the night). We were not allowed to have a digital camera in the home, as well as basic other items such as; USB sticks, memory cards, MP3 players. Our children were not allowed to use internet or have a computer. We were not allowed visitors unless they had been cleared by the home office having to go through a rigorous vetting procedure. Many of them would not even call for fear of being harassed by the police or worse.

My husband was a wreck a shattered man, he could not sleep, he would be sweating, shaking, he would have nightmares and flashbacks. It was almost impossible to deal with him, he was ill and had complex psychological needs – I am not a trained nurse he required specialist help. One week later he attempted suicide by taking an overdose on a cocktail of his depression and anti-psychotic medications. I found him on the floor unconscious, in a pool of vomit foam coming from his mouth. He was taken to the hospital and remained unconscious for 3 whole days.

My life is ruined, I cannot sleep, I cry so much – it is all having an effect on my children. This all I blame on Tony Blair, the House of Lords, the Queen, the Politicians, Parliament! They all have a hand in this.

I AM BRITISH! As are all my children! Why then is it acceptable for us to be treated in this manner? How many times the police came to search my home, violate the sanctity that is a home. What do they expect to find amongst my children’s and my clothes? The confiscated money, Nintendo Wii, Playstation, PSP. The Nintendo Wii a gift from my husband’s solicitor for the children. None of these items despite numerous requests have ever been returned to us. Why? Are my children not allowed to things as everyone else’s children are?

Even irrelevant documents the police have confiscated – birth certificates, school reports, and car Log book, and MOT certificates; for what, of what significance or benefit are these?

I was at breaking point, I could take no more. I was pregnant expecting my 6th child. During my pregnancy the home office made things very difficult, I could not get help as people required clearance before being allowed to visit me. I had no help. How could I care for a sick husband and 5 children whilst pregnant?

I ask where is the humanity, where are all the human rights organisations.

I want to know how do the majority of the Christian members of Britain prepare and share joy at the christening of their new born children. Am I exempt from sharing my happiness with friends and family? Should I too not be allowed to show off my precious gift to others. Am I sub-human from the rest of you? I want to ask the politicians, the queen would this not affect you!

I tried to remain hopeful many times. But there is no hope. There is no court hearing for my husband, so that he can profess his innocence. He has been charged of no crime, he has not been interviewed or interrogated. He has been presumed guilty because he is Muslim, what other reason? Please explain to me and my family – why have we had to endure this treatment. Pets are treated better than we have been. Is this the humanity you profess, it this the justice you want to spread!

Judge Ousley ordered and ruled that the Home office should release to me the Secret evidence that is held against my husband, the home office appealed this decision and it has been a long time and nothing has been heard or seen.

On or around the 19th of February 2009 the European Courts of justice and European court for human rights declared that this information (secret evidence) be released to my husband and his solicitors. They said the control order should be lifted from my husband, that the secrets should be released, that he should receive compensation for his unfair treatment. What is the point of these courts if Britain makes a mockery of them and refuses to submit to their judgement.

There is no Justice, I have lost all hope of justice.

My family especially our children are scared from the police, the have suffered at the hands of the police. Their education has suffered they have not been able to complete homework, they have been at a disadvantage from the other children – as they are not allowed to access the internet. I have 3 girls in secondary school and 3 boys in primary school, I was attending college to study childcare. All of these things require computers, USB, etc.

My husband was re-arrested for alleged breaches of his control order on at least four different occasions – once for 3 months, once for 2 weeks, 1 week, 3 days, 2 days. Once for having a Nintendo Wii – A gift for our children from his solicitor. Once for having mobile phones in the home, which were toys purchased from the pound shop and not real mobiles.

We as a family are dead! We are sick to death with the police and the government’s torture of our family for 8 years. How many months is 8 years, how many weeks, how many days, how many hours? Our family have been hostage in Britain. My husband and I escaped torture at the hand of the Israelis to find worse torture in the UK. From coming to Britain as asylum seekers to now find myself in another country where I have sought asylum from the torture that Britain has placed me and my family under. I have been a hostage.

Some psychiatrists from the Home office told and advised me to divorce my husband saying that it would be better for me and my children. Scotland Yard on many occasions also told me this. What kind of twisted advice is this? Would this really be better for me and my children? Or are they looking for more reasons to drive my husband to suicide?

I have too many things to get off my chest, my heart is filled with anger. I am crying as I write this, it is all too much for me to remember. I have left my home to be in Jordan, my husband was not allowed to accompany us to the airport he is forbidden under the restrictions of his control order. Is it really likely that he can escape; he has no passport, no travel documents – where will he go? As we left our home I knew and he knew that it was probably the last time we would see one another, the last time he would see, hold, hug, and kiss his children. I had to watch my children crying at the thought of never seeing their father again. However I had no choice, I have been forced to leave. Perhaps now I can try to repair the damage done to my children, the emotional scars they will bear for how long I do not know. I can finally try to rid myself of the effects of the ‘Terrorist Act’ the police, Scotland Yard the searches, the torture I have had to witness my husband go through.

However I still fear for my husband. He is alone, I am very scared. He has made 4 suicide attempts – each time he has been serious. However Allah (God) has not willed that he be successful.

The British public and government complain about the effects of immigration and asylum seekers in the UK. About people coming to the UK and claiming benefits – well then why do you force my husband to remain here. He has not been charged or convicted of any crime – yet you treat him this way .

I would like to tell the British Government and the rest of the World, I would like to tell anyone who has a heart, anyone who has an ounce of humanity Please allow my husband to leave the United Kingdom. Please provide him with the necessary documentations to leave to any country. Where there may be at least some hope of seeing him again – Before I lose him for good and our children lose their father.

Mrs. Dina Al Jnidi – Wife of Mr Mahmoud Abu Rideh.

Published in: on June 18, 2009 at 8:39 am Comments (1)

Law Lords Condemn UK’s Use of Secret Evidence And Control Orders

Four years late, the Law Lords finally put the British government’s anti-terror policies under the spotlight on Wednesday by delivering a resounding repudiation of the government’s use of secret evidence to impose control orders on alleged terror suspects (the full judgment is here).

An unjustified stranglehold on liberty: the control orders

Introduced in March 2005 after the Law Lords ruled in December 2004 that the government’s previous policy of imprisoning suspects without charge or trial in Belmarsh prison (which had begun three years before) was in contravention of the Human Rights Act, the control order regime is effectively a form of house arrest. As I explained in an article for the Guardian in April,

[Control orders] keep suspects, for most hours of the day, confined to their houses. They are tagged, told to report to the authorities several times a day, and are subjected to unannounced house raids by Home Office officials to ensure they are not breaching the conditions of their confinement.

Visitors have to be vetted by the Home Office. If the detainee is a single man, he is unbearably isolated; if married with children, he is trapped, unable to work, pushed to mental collapse as his children are unable to have friends over to visit, and are denied access to a computer for their studies.

In the Belmarsh years, several of the prisoners held without charge or trial developed what Gareth Peirce, one of their lawyers, described as “florid psychosis,” and as Press TV reported two weeks ago in an exclusive interview with one of these men, Mahmoud Abu Rideh, a Palestinian who has spent the last seven years either in Belmarsh, Broadmoor psychiatric hospital, or at home under a control order, the practical difference between prison and house arrest is often minimal.

On May 25, Abu Rideh’s wife finally gave up the struggle and returned to Jordan with their children. As Cageprisoners explained, “They were prevented from taking many of their belongings with them since many of the children’s possessions had been seized by police as claimed breaches of their father’s control order.” Cageprisoners also noted that “Mr. Abu Rideh was denied the opportunity of bidding his family farewell at the airport,” and stated that “He now despairs at the thought of never seeing his family again, since he cannot leave the country and his family were told that they have no right to return to the UK, despite the fact that they are British nationals.”

In his interview with Press TV, which took place just a week before the death, reportedly by suicide, of Muhammad Salih, a prisoner at Guantánamo who was held for seven years without charge or trial, Abu Rideh stated that he was unable to bear the thought of living any longer:

I am already dead. My soul, my life, my heart — every part of me is dead. I am just like a machine walking, with no other feeling. I have nothing left — I cannot even sleep at night; I have nightmares of what they have done to me, to my wife, my children, my time in prison, the searches … this is enough. I’ve lost my senses, I’ve been driven insane, I can no longer take it. What is the point of living? I’ve lost everything, I’ve lost my wife, I might as well kill myself, that is better for me. I swear by God I have written to Gordon Brown saying that you have two weeks, if I am not helped in this period I will kill myself, whether that’s by throwing myself in front of a train, or slitting my wrists, or throwing myself from a high building, or taking an overdose, whatever it takes. Nobody has lived the life I have or what I’ve had to endure.

However, while the practical effects of control orders should be genuinely troubling to anyone who believes in open justice, and the ancient right not to have your liberty removed except through the verdict of a jury of your peers, the Lords’ rulingon Wednesday focused on the equally troubling context of how the decisions to impose control orders are made.

The Kafkaesque world of secret evidence

Primarily, this centres on an absurd situation whereby, in the Special Immigration Appeals Court (SIAC), which deals with these cases, special advocates are responsible for representing the accused in closed sessions involving the use of secret evidence, but are prevented from revealing anything about those sessions to the men they represent. This impenetrable barrier to transparency also works in the other direction, as suspects cannot brief the advocates effectively when they are kept in the dark regarding the details of the case against them.

In March, the full, horrific absurdity of this system was exposed by Dinah Rose QC in a Parliamentary meeting chaired by Diane Abbott MP, which was convened to canvas support for an Early Day Motion calling for an end to the use of secret evidence, and to discuss strategies for future campaigns. Uniquely, to my knowledge, Rose has direct experience of SIAC in three different roles — as instructed by the Home Office, as a representative of some of the detainees held on the basis of secret evidence, and as a special advocate — and her insight was, therefore, particularly powerful.

Talking about a case on which she had served as a special advocate, she explained, “The special advocates were told what the evidence was, but we were prohibited from discussing the material with the appellant or his lawyers. We were simply unable to offer any resistance at all to the application, in the absence of any instructions, which might have explained or cast a different light on the evidence.”

As a result, the judge revoked the man’s bail, and ordered him to be sent to Belmarsh. Remembering this ruling, Rose said, “I can still recall my deep feeling of shame when I heard the appellant ask the judge the question: why are you sending me to prison? To which the judge replied: ‘I cannot tell you that.’ I could not believe that I was witnessing such an event in a British court. I could not believe that nobody protested or made a fuss. They simply took him to jail, without any explanation at all.”

She also explained that, “although SIAC looks and sounds like a court, and the judges and barristers behave with the courtesy and formalities that are used in court, it is in reality nothing of the kind. Often it feels to me like an elaborate charade, in which we are all playing the roles of barrister, solicitor, appellant and judge, but where the basic substance of a court hearing — the testing of evidence to establish where truth lies — is entirely missing.”

The detainees and the Law Lords’ ruling

In Wednesday’s ruling, following hearings in February and March, the Law Lords were deciding the cases of three men, a joint Libyan/British national, an Iraqi and a British national, who are identified only as AF, AE and AN. This anonymity is allegedly for their own protection — although it also conveniently dehumanizes them — but a few details about them are in the public domain.

AE, for example, who spoke to the BBC on Wednesday, is a Kurdish imam, who fled Iraq in 2002 after being imprisoned by the regime of Saddam Hussein in Abu Ghraib prison, and was given leave to remain in the UK. Seized from his house in May 2006, he says that he has no idea why he was placed on a control order, and has no way of responding to the vague claims that have been made publicly available, which indicate that the security services regard him as a radicalizing influence who supports the insurgency in Iraq. Speaking about when he was first seized, he told the BBC, “I said, ‘Why am I being put on a control order?’ The answer was that they did not have to tell me.”

AN, the British national, who was born in Derby, is apparently regarded as a link between extremists in the UK and the Middle East, and was placed on a control order after returning from a visit to Syria, and the joint Libyan/British national is AF, who was born in the UK to a Libyan father and a British mother. A banking graduate, he had intended to become an accountant, but was placed on a control order in June 2006, allegedly because the Home Secretary believed that he had connections to members of a group opposed to the regime of Colonel Gaddafi (who, lest we forget, was our own implacable enemy until six years ago, when he cannily signed up to support the “War on Terror”). Under the terms of his control order, he is now compelled to remain in his flat for 16 hours a day, cannot see anyone without permission, and is prohibited from using the Internet.

When the Lords made their ruling, they unanimously declared that they had had enough of the system as it currently stands, By nine votes to nil, they ruled that imposing control orders breaches Article 6 of the European Convention on Human Rights, which guarantees the right to a fair trial, because a suspect held under a control order is not given “sufficient information about the allegations against him to enable him to give effective instructions to the special advocate assigned to him.”

In the ruling, Lord Phillips of Worth Matravers, the senior Law Lord, wrote, “A trial procedure can never be considered fair if a party to it is kept in ignorance of the case against him.”

His opinion was followed by that of Lord Hope of Craigshead, who declared, “The principle that the accused has the right to know what is being alleged against him has a long pedigree … The fundamental principle is that everyone is entitled to the disclosure of sufficient material to enable him to answer effectively the case against him.”

Lord Hope also wrote, The consequences of a successful terrorist attack are likely to be so appalling that there is an understandable wish to support the system that keeps those who are considered to be most dangerous out of circulation for as long as possible. But the slow creep of complacency must be resisted. If the rule of law is to mean anything, it is in cases such as these that the court must stand by principle. It must insist that the person affected be told what is alleged against him.”

Reinforcing these opinions, Lord Scott of Foscote wrote, “An essential requirement of a fair hearing is that a party against whom allegations are made is given the opportunity to rebut the allegations. That opportunity is absent if the party does not know what the allegations are. The degree of detail necessary to be given must, in my opinion, be sufficient to enable the opportunity to be a real one. The disclosure made to each of these appellants was insufficient to afford him a real opportunity for rebuttal. He did not, therefore, have a fair hearing for Article 6(1) purposes and these appeals must be allowed.

Opposition to control orders in the last two years

Since the control orders were introduced, the scope of their application has regularly been called into question not just by those whose job it is to work tirelessly against the State’s increasingly authoritarian impulses, but also by politicians, and, in particular, by Lord Carlile, the government’s “independent reviewer” of the control order regime.

Last March, a vote in the House of Commons to extend, for another year, the use of control orders — which were, at the time, in place against 15 alleged terror suspects — passed by 267 votes to 60, but, as I explained at the time, “Tory MPs were clearly not bowled over by a hyperbolic statement made by Security Minister Tony McNulty, who, as though infected by the ghosts of previous Labour hard men John Reid and David Blunkett, claimed, ‘The threat (of terrorism) is clearly real, serious and represents a threat unparalleled in our country’s history.’”

Speaking on behalf of his fellow MPs, the Tories’ shadow attorney general Dominic Grieve declared, “On balance, and with a considerable degree of reluctance, our view is we should allow renewal to take place this year.” Other notes of caution were sounded by Labour MPs. Andrew Dismore, the chairman of the joint Human Rights Committee, warned that the orders could create “Guantánamo-style martyrs” unless a maximum time limit was imposed, and Lord Carlile said that no control order should be extended beyond two years “save in genuinely exceptional circumstances.”

Similar scenes — involving Labour scaremongering, Tory “reluctance” and opposition from the Liberal Democrats — took place when the control orders were again renewed three months ago, but the most important dissent to note is Lord Carlile’s mantra, repeated every year in his annual reports (see here for the latest PDF), and just three weeks ago he repeated his call, backed up by peers and MPs on the Parliamentary Human Rights Committee.

Refuting claims by the Home Office that “A definite end-date would mean individuals on control orders could simply disengage from involvement in terrorism-related activity on the basis that they knew they could re-engage at the end of that time period,” Carlile reiterated his assertion that control orders lasting more than two years can only be justified “in a few exceptional cases,” telling the Committee, “After that time, at least the immediate utility of even a dedicated terrorist will seriously have been disrupted.”

Throughout this period, the Law Lords were critical, too, but not with the robustness with which they demolished the policy of imprisonment without charge or trial in December 2004. In November 2007, for example, when they were called upon to review the cases of six Iraqis held under control orders, they ruled that an 18-hour home curfew was in breach of the right to liberty, as guaranteed by the European Convention on Human Rights, and, moreover, ruled that the system of secret evidence must be changed to let the suspects know the case against them, and to give them the right to a fair hearing, even though the Home Secretary, Jacqui Smith, proceeded to ignore their ruling about secret evidence (leading, 19 months later, to Wednesday’s reiteration of terror suspects’ rights), and also showed little willingness to relax the curfews.

As I explained in an article at the time, there was some great rhetoric in the ruling. Lord Brown, memorably, said that the right to a fair hearing was “one of altogether too great importance to be sacrificed on the altar of terrorism control,” and Lord Hoffman declared, “Such is the revulsion against detention without charge or trial, such is this country’s attachment to habeas corpus, that the right to liberty ordinarily trumps even the interests of national security,” adding that such rights were simply “too precious to be sacrificed for any reason other than to safeguard the survival of the state.”

However, as I also noted at the time, it was apparent that, by refusing to condemn the control orders outright, the Lords “perpetuated a brazenly draconian system, which appears, dangerously, to be fuelled by anti-Muslim vindictiveness, even though the more prosaic truth is that it is driven by an anachronistic refusal to ‘compromise the security services’ by proceeding with trials using intercept evidence (despite the fact that most other western democracies have managed to do so without imperiling their ‘spooks’).”

Throughout this period, however, the most disturbing opinions came not from the Lords, but from the Court of Appeal, whose ruling in October 2008 — that there might be cases where “very little indeed” or nothing could be disclosed to people accused of being involved in terrorism, in spite of a dissenting judge’s alarm at a principle that might “move us back towards unbridled executive power over personal liberty” –- partly triggered the Law Lords’ latest review, and may, in its bald defense of intolerable secrecy, have contributed to a necessary backlash.

What next?

What happens next is not entirely clear. The Lords did not quash the control orders on Wednesday, but ordered the men’s cases to be heard again, and it is now up to the Home Office to decide whether to release more material to the men and their lawyers, or to rescind the control orders completely.

It is also unclear what effect the ruling will have on the other 14 men who are currently on control orders, or the 20 or so men in prison — or on deportation bail — whose cases are closely related, differentiated only by the government’s extremely dubious determination to deport them to their home countries, even though, as I reported in February, this involves politicians and judges being obliged to creatively reinterpret the anti-torture laws preventing the return of foreign nationals to countries where they face the risk of torture.

New to his job, Home Secretary Alan Johnson has not yet succumbed to the rabid paranoia that infects all Home Secretaries when confronted by the “terror threat.” In February, for example, Jacqui Smith actually declared war on the government’s own secret terror court, overruling decisions by a SIAC judge that met with her disapproval, and — in what can only be described as an act of executive fiat — unilaterally revoking the bail of five men on deportation bail, kidnapping them on their way home from the London courtroom (or in raids on their homes) and imprisoning them in Belmarsh until the judge reasserted his authority the following day.

Presumably reading from a script that was left for him by Smith, Johnson said on Wednesday that the judgment was “extremely disappointing,” but did not spontaneously combust, as Jacqui Smith may well have done. “Protecting the public is my top priority and this judgment makes that task harder,” he continued. “Nevertheless, the government will continue to take all steps we can to manage the threat presented by terrorism.”

He added, “All control orders will remain in force for the time being and we will continue to seek to uphold them in the courts. In the meantime, we will consider this judgment, and our options, carefully.” Explaining that control orders had been introduced to “limit the risk posed by suspected terrorists who could not be prosecuted or deported,” as the Guardian put it, he also said, “The government relies on sensitive intelligence material to support the imposition of a control order, which the courts have accepted would damage the public interest to disclose in open court. We take our obligations to human rights seriously and as such we have put strong measures in place to try to ensure that our reliance on sensitive material does not prejudice the right of individuals subject to control orders to a fair trial.”

This was standard government fare, though rather muted in its delivery, but if the new Home Secretary is seeking a “third way,” beyond releasing more sensitive material or rescinding the control orders, he might want to take some advice from Chris Huhne, the Liberal Democrat home affairs spokesman, who responded to the Lords’ ruling by saying that it “clearly states that control orders are a fundamental infringement of human rights and an affront to British justice. It is unacceptable to deny a person freedom without even telling them what they are suspected of.” Crucially, Huhne added, “We do not need to sacrifice the freedoms we have fought so hard for. We must not become what we are fighting. This discredited regime should be scrapped immediately. The government should focus instead on making it easier to prosecute terrorists by making intercept evidence available in court.”

Using intercept evidence, and testing the reliability of the intelligence services

Huhne’s main point — that the government should find a way to join the rest of the world in finding a way to use intercept evidence in court without compromising its intelligence sources or methods — is clearly the way forward, as without it the government is left clinging to nothing but its manifestly unjust, and largely failed attempt to deport men on the sly, or is required to maintain the “house arrest” charade that is both horribly petty and ruinously strenuous for those held in such a novel form of legal limbo.

As I also explained in my article in February, the government has, for years, been distressingly intransigent on the subject of intercept evidence, although, in a recent letter from the Home Office, Minister of State Vernon Coaker informed me that “We [the government] have accepted the Chilcot recommendation that we should introduce intercept as evidence provided the conditions outlined in the report can be met.”

The reference to “the Chilcot recommendation” refers to the findings in the Privy Council Review Of Intercept As Evidence (PDF), headed by Sir John Chilcot and published in January 2008, and although Coaker’s concession is still rather hedged in by caveats, I hope that it signifies real change, because on Wednesday, the NGO JUSTICE, which describes itself as “an all-party law reform and human rights organization working to improve the legal system and the quality of justice,” published a major report on the use of secret evidence in British courts since SIAC was introduced in 1997 (241 pages, PDF), establishing the extent to which secret evidence has been used “in a wide range of court proceedings from deportation hearings before SIAC, pre-charge detention hearings in terrorism cases, employment tribunals, asset-freezing cases, parole board hearings, and control order cases in the High Court and the Court of Appeals.”

The report also explains that, although more than 90 special advocates have been appointed since 1997, “no central figures are published and even the government may not know the total number of special advocates that have been appointed,” and also notes, in an analysis of the use of secret evidence that is at least as worrying as the “mission creep” outlined in the paragraph above, that “defendants in some criminal cases are now being convicted on the basis of evidence that has never been made public. Criminal courts have issued judgments with redactions [passages blacked out] to conceal some of the evidence relied upon. Evidence from anonymous witnesses has also been used in criminal trials and is widespread in ASBO hearings.”

In conclusion, then, if justice is once to be asserted in the UK, the government needs to move fast on incorporating intercept evidence in terror trials, so that the public — as well as the suspects themselves — will be able to test the validity of its claims. One additional problem with secret evidence, of course, is that its use shuts off all scrutiny of the intelligence services’ reliability, and although it is necessary for this work to take place behind the scenes, it is also unacceptable for the government to effectively hide behind a blanket assertion that the intelligence services never make mistakes, and that “national security concerns” should quash any notion of skepticism on the part of lawyers, prisoners and members of the public, especially because the public record is littered with abominable failures of intelligence in the years since the 9/11 attacks.

Without even having to draw comparisons with the non-existent “ricin plot,” the pointless and brutal Forest Gate raid, the intelligence failures surrounding the terrorist attacks on July 7, 2005, the murder of Jean Charles De Menezes, and countless other incidents, some of the chronic failures of intelligence in the control order regime — compounded by bureaucratic incompetence — are already well-known. In April 2005, for example, the Home Office was forced to apologize to ten of the men under control orders after what it described as a “clerical error,” which resulted in letters being sent to them stating, incorrectly, that the basis for their detention was their alleged involvement in the “ricin plot,” and in January 2005 an extraordinary list of intelligence blunders relating to the Belmarsh prisoners was published in the Independent.

In an article entitled, “Belmarsh detainees: Flawed intelligence exposes scandal,” Robert Verkaik noted, amongst other errors, that “A security service assessment was embarrassingly withdrawn after it emerged that the purpose behind a visit to Dorset by a group of Muslim men had not been to elect a terrorist leader but to get away from their wives for the weekend,” that “The Home Secretary has been forced to concede that some of the funds raised by [Mahmoud] Abu Rideh for alleged terrorist activity were sent to orphanages in Afghanistan run by a Canadian priest,” that “Two of the detainees were awarded compensation for false arrest shortly before they were detained under the anti-terrorist emergency powers,” and that “Testimony against two of the detainees came from an affidavit sworn by a man who was offered a lenient sentence in return for evidence.”

Although Verkaik observed, justifiably, that these mistakes were based on the “open” evidence against the suspects, he was undoubtedly correct to add that “the inaccuracy of some of these assertions raises questions about the reliability of the secret evidence that the detainees have never been allowed to see.” Given the government’s poor track record, there is absolutely no reason to believe that the quality of the government’s secret evidence is any more reliable, and, in fact, more than enough reasons to suspect that it not only involves credulousness and incompetence, but also, as with the “ricin plot” (one of whose cleared defendants is currently on a control order), material derived from the use of torture.

As Eric Metcalfe, JUSTICE’s director of human rights policy, said in response to the Lords’ ruling on Wednesday, “The House of Lords judgment marks a turning point. The government can decide to limp on with the use of secret evidence for ever diminishing returns. Or Parliament can act to end its use once and for all.” He added, “Secret evidence is always unreliable, unnecessary, undemocratic and unfair. Because it has never been properly tested, it breeds complacency and false confidence in its results. Secret evidence damages public trust in our courts and in the rule of law itself.”

Andy Worthington is the author of The Guantánamo Files: The Stories of the 774 Detainees in America’s Illegal Prison (published by Pluto Press, distributed by Macmillan in the US, and available from Amazon — click on the following for the US and the UK). To receive new articles in your inbox, please subscribe to my RSS feed, and see here for my definitive Guantánamo prisoner list, published in March 2009.

As published exclusively on Cageprisoners.

A day in the life of a terror suspect

Mahmoud Abu Rideh has lived under a control order since 2005. He reveals how the loss of his freedom, his family and his friends has driven him to despair

http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/video/2009/jun/13/control-order-mahmoud-abu-rideh

Ladders of pale scars run up Mahmoud Abu Rideh’s inner arms to a scarred gouge in the crook of each elbow. The scars are testament to years of self-harm, but the gashes were made last year in a lavatory in a police station in west London. Abu Rideh has to report in every day and, for whatever reason, this day was worse than most – he was in a wheelchair and it was raining heavily, the desk staff were rude to him, he says. He locked himself in the toilet, swallowed a handful of the psychiatric drugs he is on and slashed the veins in his arms. He says he woke up in hospital.

Abu Rideh, 37, has been on a control order since 2005. He had been arrested in 2001, and detained under the Anti-Terrorism, Crime and Security Act but in eight years, he has never been charged with any offence, and because whatever evidence there is against him is “secret”, he doesn’t even know what he is accused of. All this has left this man, who was psychologically fragile to start with, physically and mentally broken.

He sits in a small room at the Guardian’s offices. Under his control order, he isn’t allowed to arrange to meet anybody but he turned up at the Guardian reception, wanting to tell somebody his story.

He is thin and walks with a stick, clutching a bag to his chest, containing reams of documents neatly filed in plastic folders. His shirt and trousers are clean and pressed, but have holes in the seams. His emotional state shouldn’t be surprising, given all he has been through, but it still is.

He fixes me with a stare and I don’t think he blinks once. He seems nervous; he looks behind him several times, before getting up to shut the door.

There have been other attempts to take his own life, and he says he has suicidal thoughts almost constantly. He carries a small packet of razor blades, wrapped neatly in paper, on him and opens his bag to show me a length of orange rope. “I want to hang myself,” he says. “Maybe I will take tablets and hang myself in the park. I wake up in the night and I think, today I will throw myself in front of a train on the Circle [underground] line, then I think, no the Central line. Then I think I will throw myself in front of one of the trains that go to Gatwick. I can’t take it.”

This week, law lords ruled that it was unlawful for secret evidence to be used to place people under a control order. What this means for the future of control orders isn’t clear – the new home secretary, Alan Johnson, called it a “disappointing judgment” and said that all control orders, currently imposed on 20 men accused of being terror suspects, would remain in place – but, for Abu Rideh, surely the ruling should be a cause for some celebration? He shakes his head. “Nothing changes,” he says. “I have lost everything already. I have no life.”

Just over two weeks ago, his wife and six children left to go and live with her parents in Jordan. “I don’t know if I will ever see them again,” he says. For his wife and children, life here had become intolerable. Their friends weren’t allowed to visit. They were terrified of the police raids and once, he claims, his teenage daughter was searched by a male police officer. Because he is not allowed access to the internet, neither were they. His own deteriorating mental state must have been painful for his children to see – not just the suicide attempts, but the smaller things, such as their father waking up screaming from nightmares and the trembling in his hands.

After September 11, Abu Rideh, a Palestinian refugee, was one of 17 men rounded up by the authorities and detained without charge. David Blunkett, the then home secretary, said Abu Rideh was “an active supporter of various international terrorist groups, including those with links to Osama bin Laden’s network” but he has never been put on trial or allowed to see whatever evidence for that suspicion exists.

He was imprisoned in Belmarsh, before being transferred to Broadmoor on the advice of psychiatrists. In 2005, he was released and placed under a control order, the terms of which seem barely better than being in prison. At least in prison, he says, “I can see people, I can sleep.”

Now his life is ruled by alarms. At 3am he has to wake up and call a monitoring service and he rarely goes back to sleep; he has to call them again at 7am when his curfew ends to let them know he will be leaving his house. He has to report daily to the police station and isn’t allowed to arransecret ege to meet anybody. Only a handful of people have Home Office clearance to visit him at home.

He isn’t allowed a bank account or a mobile phone and he was forced to turn down a place at a local college to study English because it would have given him access to the internet.

His neighbours are good to him, he says, and often cook for him (the restrictions mean it is impossible to find a job) but at best, people ignore him in the street; at worst, some – white teenagers, mostly — call him “terrorist” and “Bin Laden”. He is allowed to go to his mosque, but says everyone there is too terrified of attracting attention from the police to talk to him. He has to call the monitoring company again in the afternoon, and has to be back in his house at 7pm.

He is wary of missing his curfew so we drive back to his house in west London. Once, a police siren sounds behind us and he jumps in his seat. Apart from the fear and the constant stress, I want to know how he deals with the isolation and boredom of this half-life. What does he do all day? He shakes his head and says he doesn’t know. “I walk around the house,” he says. “My children’s beds are empty. My wife isn’t there. I am stuck. I am a hostage.”

Every day his imam and lawyers call him to check that he hasn’t killed himself — his imam tells him it is forbidden, his lawyers explain that he has to keep hope that one day this limbo will end.

His is a situation so nightmarish, he doesn’t have the words to explain what it has done to him. “I am alone. I don’t have friends. Everyone is scared to see me. I have escaped from torture before, and now I am being tortured by the British government. I am like a machine. I don’t feel anything inside. I am already dead.”

We arrive at his house, but I’m not allowed in (it would break the terms of his control order) so I leave him at his gate. A small pink child’s bicycle lies in the front garden and he goes inside to an empty house.

• Amnesty International has launched an appeal, calling for the home secretary to lift Abu Rideh’s control order
Amnesty International – working to protect human rights worldwide

Source: Guardian

Published in: on June 13, 2009 at 9:29 pm Comments (1)
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