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Guantanamo men's return bid fails | Guantanamo men's return bid fails |
(about 2 hours later) | |
The families of three British residents held in Guantanamo Bay since 2002 have failed in a bid to force the government to request their return to the UK. | |
Appeal court judges rejected claims the men should be treated as UK citizens. | |
Libyan-born Omar Deghayes, 37, from Brighton, Jordanian Jamil el-Banna and Iraqi Bisher al-Rawi, both from London, all have leave to remain in the UK. | |
The ruling comes after the High Court also refused to quash the government's decision not to request their return. | |
Lawyers for the families have argued the detainees have been tortured and should be released from the US-run camp in Cuba. | |
This suffering is the consequence of the actions of a foreign sovereign state for which the United Kingdom bears no responsibility... Lord Justice Laws | |
But the Foreign Office says it cannot provide diplomatic protection to non-citizens. | |
The Court of Appeal judges were asked to declare that the men, although foreign nationals, were long-term UK residents entitled to help similar to that received by British citizens freed from Guantanamo in 2004 and 2005. | |
But Lord Justice Laws, announcing that the court had dismissed the three appeals, said the government's decision did not contravene human rights or race relations laws. | |
Families suffering | |
Rabinder Singh QC, acting for the families, had told the Appeal Court none of the detainees had any "meaningful ties" to any other country, and that Mr el-Banna and Mr Deghayes, as refugees, had been accepted by the UK as being at risk of persecution or torture. | |
He said the government's continuing refusal to act was contrary to the Race Relations Act and was breaching the rights of the men's' families, who are British citizens. | |
Mr Singh said each man had been subjected to arbitrary detention without trial and that their plight was causing their families intense suffering. | |
Lord Justice Laws accepted the premise that the detainees had been subjected at least to inhuman and degrading treatment. | |
The government... must fulfil its responsibilities towards all Guantanamo detainees, regardless of whether they are UK citizens or residents Amnesty International | |
But he said there had been no discrimination against the detainees either under human rights or race relations laws. | |
Lord Justice Laws said the families' argument that their human rights were being infringed because of their separation from their husbands and fathers also failed. | |
He said: "This suffering is the consequence of the actions of a foreign sovereign state for which the United Kingdom bears no responsibility under the European Convention on Human Rights or the Human Rights Act." | |
'Inconsistent' | |
Human rights group Amnesty International said the court had missed an opportunity to "send a clear message to the government that it must fulfil its responsibilities towards all Guantanamo detainees, regardless of whether they are UK citizens or residents". | |
Europe and Central Asia director Nicola Duckworth said: "The failure of the UK authorities to make representations on behalf of all UK residents held at Guantanamo Bay is inconsistent with the strong condemnation by a number of government members of the detention centre for its human rights abuses." | |
Mr al-Rawi and his friend Mr el-Banna were arrested in November 2002 during a business trip to Gambia, on suspicion of having links to terrorism. Mr Deghayes was arrested in Pakistan in 2002 and accused of committing terrorist acts against the US. | Mr al-Rawi and his friend Mr el-Banna were arrested in November 2002 during a business trip to Gambia, on suspicion of having links to terrorism. Mr Deghayes was arrested in Pakistan in 2002 and accused of committing terrorist acts against the US. |
He fled Libya for the UK in the 1980s after his father was assassinated and applied for British citizenship. | He fled Libya for the UK in the 1980s after his father was assassinated and applied for British citizenship. |
The men's relatives, many of whom are British, deny the trio have any links to terrorism. | The men's relatives, many of whom are British, deny the trio have any links to terrorism. |
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