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Revealed: flawed
intelligence exposes the scandal of Belmarsh detainees
The case against the foreign terror
suspects imprisoned in Britain without trial for three years is
partly founded on flawed and inaccurate intelligence, court papers
seen by The Independent reveal.
Alarming weaknesses in the secret
services' evidence cast serious doubt on the Home Secretary's
justification for detaining 12 men held under emergency legislation
rushed through Parliament in the aftermath of 11 September.
Last month a historic judgment in the
House of Lords triggered a constitutional crisis when the judges
ruled that the men's detention was in breach of human rights law.
The documents reveal:
* 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embarrassingly withdrawn after it emerged that the purpose behind a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.
* Confirmation that the Government is
using evidence of association with the Guantanamo detainee Moazzam
Begg to hold at least two of the foreign terror suspects under its
emergency powers.
* False allegations made against one
of the Algerian detainees in relation to his association with Mr
Begg arose from an MI5 surveillance operation of Mr Begg's Islamic
bookshop in Birmingham in 2000. MI5 wrongly claimed that weapons had
been found there.
* The Home Secretary has been forced
to concede that some of the funds raised by the detainee Abu Rideh
for alleged terrorist activity were sent to orphanages in
Afghanistan run by a Canadian priest.
* Testimony against two of the
detainees came from an affidavit sworn by a man who was offered a
lenient sentence in return for evidence.
* Newspaper reports, including ones
in The Guardian and La Stampa, were used by the Home
Secretary to support allegations of terrorism against at least two
of the detainees.
* Two of the detainees were awarded
compensation for false arrest shortly before they were detained
under the anti-terrorist emergency powers.
* MI5 reports, as part of the
evidence against the detainees, describe the men as being
"excessively security conscious" when travelling to and from London
shopping centres.
* The detention certificate of F, one
of the Algerian detainees, was revoked after it emerged he should
have been deported to France rather than imprisoned without trial.
* One of the detainee's children has
been taken into care.
While the papers, released in the
run-up to the implementation of the Freedom of Information Act and
now available on the Special Immigration Appeal [SIAC] website, only
give details of the "open" evidence against the detainees, 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.
It also supports conclusions reached
by the SIAC judges in granting the release of a Libyan suspect last
year when they warned that many assertions had not been supported by
a fair analysis of the facts.
They said then: "Some [of the
assertions] are clearly misleading when the source documents are
looked at and some can only be justified if the worst possible view
is taken of the appellant.
"Further, in some instances it was
apparent that insufficient effort was made to ensure that what
appeared to be accurate on a somewhat superficial view of the
material was in fact accurate since further investigation showed
that it was not."
SIAC was set up in 1997 and had its
jurisdiction extended in the aftermath of the 11 September attacks
to hear appeals against the Home Secretary's power to certify a
person to be an international terrorist and detain them under Part 4
of the Anti-terrorism, Crime and Security Act 2001.
In all but one of 16 appeals the SIAC
judges have ruled that the totality of the evidence, both open and
secret, has established a "reasonable suspicion" that the detainee
is involved or linked to terrorism. But they have also acknowledged
that their rulings are bound by the House of Lords judgment that
found the detention to be unlawful.
At the end of this month SIAC will
hear the first challenges to the Home Secretary's power of
certification after the House of Lords ruled that detention without
trial was a fundamental breach of the men's human rights.
Source: The Independent, Robert Verkaik - Legal Affairs
Correspondent
6 January 2004
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