Martin Mubanga

By James Slack

Judges yesterday delivered another humiliating rebuke to David Miliband by striking down his attempts to hear a damages claim by six ex-Guantanamo Bay residents in secret.

The Court of Appeal ruled that allowing the Government to use secret evidence to defend itself against the men’s allegations of torture and ill-treatment would undermine the ‘most fundamental principles’ of fairness.

Ministers, led by the Foreign Secretary, must now decide whether to surrender to the men’s claims for tens of thousands of pounds in compensation – or fight them on a significantly weakened basis, without the use of secret documents.

Secret evidence: Binyam Mohamed, left, and Jamil El Banna are two of the former Guantanamo Bay detainees seeking to sue the Government for complicity in torture

The men – who include Binyam Mohamed, the British resident who claims the security services were complicit in his torture overseas – had previously been told that parts of MI5 and MI6’s defence could be kept secret.

But the Court of Appeal yesterday said it would ‘take a stand’ against secrecy that would undermine the ‘most fundamental principles of common law’.

The detainees were held in foreign prisons at the instigation of U.S. forces.

 

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Out-of-court settlements likely after judges say government not to use secret evidence in men’s torture cases, Guardian told

British residents held at Guantánamo Bay could be offered millions of pounds in compensation for wrongful imprisonment and abuse after the court of appeal today dismissed an attempt by MI5 and MI6 to suppress evidence of alleged complicity in torture.

The judges ruled that the unprecedented legal move by Britain’s security and intelligence agencies – which the attorney general and senior Whitehall officials backed – to suppress evidence in a civil trial undermined the principles of common law and open justice.

MI5 and MI6 said evidence in the case should be kept secret from everyone except the judges and “special advocates” (vetted barristers). The Guardian, the Times, the BBC, and the civil rights groups Justice and Liberty intervened, arguing that at stake was the right to a fair and open trial, the right to freedom of expression and the public’s right to know what agents of the state are or have been doing on its behalf.

Former detainees – Binyam Mohamed, Bisher al-Rawi, Jamil el-Banna, Richard Belmar, Omar Deghayes and Martin Mubanga – deny any involvement in terrorism and allege that MI5 and MI6 aided and abetted each man’s unlawful imprisonment and extraordinary rendition. The five are seeking compensation for abuse and wrongful imprisonment.

 

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The High Court has imposed a deadline on the Government’s defence to the test case damages claims of seven former Guantanamo Bay detainees, including a Birmingham man.

Moazzam Begg, of Sparkhill, is seeking substantial compensation from MI5 and MI6, the Attorney General, the Foreign Office and the Home Office.

Binyam Mohamed, Bisher Al Rawi, Jamil El Banna, Richard Belmar and Martin Mubanga, all London-based, and Omar Deghayes, from Brighton, are also claimants in the case.

Their QC, Tim Otty, said it was alleged the security services had been guilty of “unlawful conduct amounting to domestic and international crimes in aiding and abetting the unlawful imprisonment, extraordinary rendition and torture” of each one.

 

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