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Top court rejects Guantanamo test Top court rejects Guantanamo test
(20 minutes later)
The US Supreme Court has said it will not rule on whether detainees held at Guantanamo have the right to challenge their detention in US federal courts. The US Supreme Court has said it will not decide whether detainees held at Guantanamo have the right to challenge their detention in US federal courts.
The decision means the court will not rule on the constitutionality of an anti-terror law pushed through Congress by President George W Bush last year.The decision means the court will not rule on the constitutionality of an anti-terror law pushed through Congress by President George W Bush last year.
The provision in question states that Guantanamo Bay inmates cannot challenge their detention in US civil courts.The provision in question states that Guantanamo Bay inmates cannot challenge their detention in US civil courts.
Many of the 385 detainees at the camp have been held for five years or more.Many of the 385 detainees at the camp have been held for five years or more.
None has yet been able to challenge their detention in a US civil court.
The provision stripping detainees of their right to mount a legal challenge to their confinement was upheld by a federal appeals court in Washington in February.
The court's majority opinion was that "the will of Congress" should prevail and that habeas corpus did not apply to foreign nationals being held at Guantanamo Bay because it is not US soil.
The detainees have argued that they are entitled to access to US courts wherever they are being detained by the US authorities.
Military tribunals
Pushing the anti-terror legislation through Congress last year, Mr Bush said he needed the new law to bring terror suspects to justice.
It allows for the indefinite detention of people as "enemy combatants".
Last week, Australian David Hicks became the first inmate to have his case heard by a special Guantanamo Bay military tribunal.
He is the first Guantanamo detainee convicted of any terrorist offence since the camp was set up a little over five years ago.
The US has said it plans to use the military tribunal system to prosecute about 80 of 385 prisoners remaining at the camp.