WASHINGTON (AP) — A Guantanamo Bay detainee who says he was waterboarded lost a legal battle Friday when a federal appeals court ruled that the Obama administration can keep information secret that the prisoner wanted to make public.
The decision came in the case of Djamel Ameziane, an Algerian citizen who is seeking his release from the U.S. military prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, where he has been held since 2002.
In a 3-0 decision, the appeals court said U.S. District Judge Ellen Segal Huvelle had failed to give substantial deference “to the government’s assessment of its foreign relations and national security interests” if certain information were to be revealed. Judge Huvelle had declared that “I don’t understand how” revealing the information “will interfere in anything.”
The government’s argument provided a detailed and logical explanation of the impact disclosure would have, appeals Judge Janice Rogers Brown wrote.
Judge Brown and one of the other judges on the appeals panel, Thomas Griffith, are appointees of President George W. Bush. The third member of the panel, Douglas Ginsburg, was appointed by Ronald Reagan.
Ameziane told his attorney that early in his confinement at Guantanamo Bay, guards at the base placed a water hose between his nose and mouth and ran it for several minutes. Ameziane said they repeated the procedure several times, nearly suffocating him.
“I had the impression that my head was sinking in water,” Ameziane wrote in a letter to his attorney. “I still have psychological injuries, up to this day. Simply thinking of it gives me the chills.”
During the same purported incident the guards applied pepper spray all over his body, hosed him down and left him shackled and shivering in wet clothes in front of an air conditioner in an interrogation room, according to Ameziane’s account, which became public through his lawyer in 2008.
The government says Ameziane stayed with Taliban fighters in Kabul, Afghanistan, and illegally traveled with them into Pakistan.
In March of last year, Judge Huvelle directed the Justice and Defense Departments and a third agency whose identity was blacked out of the ruling to search their files for any recordings or records favorable to Ameziane, and then certify to the court that all evidence supportive of Ameziane has been produced.
Judge Huvelle specified that such evidence would include statements that were the product of abuse or torture.
The following month, the judge rejected the Obama administration’s request to throw out Ameziane’s petition seeking release from Guantanamo Bay and expressed doubts about whether the government had looked hard enough for any evidence favorable to the detainee, directing prosecutors to look further.
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