New Era

Trial of accused 9/11 mastermind resumes

… days before 20th anniversar­y

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GUANTANAMO BAY - The trial of five men accused in the September 11 attacks restarted Tuesday just days before the 20th anniversar­y but quickly ground to a halt on technical issues, underscori­ng that victims of the Al-Qaeda plot could wait much longer for justice.

Accused September 11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and four others appeared in the military commission­s court at the US naval base in Guantanamo, Cuba for the first time in more than 18 months after the death-penalty case emerged from a coronaviru­s-forced pause.

But the stress of nine years of pretrial battling surfaced almost immediatel­y as the new judge, the eighth assigned to the case, was forced to suspend the hearing after two-and-a-half hours to deal with issues arising from his appointmen­t.

And a military appeals court’s new ruling supporting the destructio­n of a CIA black site where some of the defendants may have been tortured before they came to Guantanamo immediatel­y turned the case back to its central issue: can men who underwent methodical torture be tried fairly with the due process promised by US law?

Tuesday’s session began with alleged 9/11 “architect” Mohammed, with a dense, greying red beard, striding into the courtroom with a military escort, followed one by one with his alleged co-conspirato­rs Ammar al-Baluchi, Walid bin Attash, Ramzi bin al-Shibh and Mustafa al-Hawsawi.

The court was packed with military prosecutor­s, interprete­rs, military security and five defense teams, one for each defendant.

In the public gallery, behind thick glass, were members of the families of the 2v976 people that they are accused of murdering almost exactly 20 years ago.

Mohammed wore a blue turban and matching face mask which he removed to let free a long, flowing beard. He chatted animatedly with bin Attash while leafing through a pile of documents.

Bin Attash, who allegedly helped plan the 9/11 attacks, wore a pink keffiyeh headdress and a military desert camouflage jacket, walking

slowly with a prosthetic on one leg he lost in a firefight in Afghanista­n in 1996.

Al-Shibh, a member of the “Hamburg Cell” of hijackers, also wore desert camouflage over his white cotton pants, seemingly to reflect his days as an Al-Qaeda jihadist.

Baluchi, also known as Ali Abdul Aziz Ali and the nephew of Mohammed, revealed a short, black beard under his mask and wore a Sindhi cap of his native Balochista­n, along with a traditiona­l vest over his white robe. He is accused of handling money transfers in the plot.

The fifth defendant, Hawsawi, who worked together with Baluchi, entered in a Saudi thobe-style white robe. He also carried a pillow which he placed on the hospital chair reserved for him, due to rectal damage his lawyers say was incurred in the abusive interrogat­ions by the CIA.

McCall, who is the eighth to be named to preside, opened by asking each of the defendants if they understood the guidelines for the hearing.

“Yes,” each answered, some in English and some in their own languages.

He then launched into a discussion of the need to wear masks when not addressing the court - though Mohammed and a couple others seemed to ignore it. Some if not all of the defendants have been vaccinated for Covid-19, according to defense attorneys.

Defense attorneys said they were eager to continue where they stopped in February 2019, building a case to discredit the bulk of the prosecutio­n’s evidence due to the torture the five endured while in CIA hands between 2002 and 2006.

But immediatel­y an example of their uphill battle to obtain classified evidence surfaced, tied into McCall’s appointmen­t.

He was named to preside last year, but it surfaced that he did not yet have the two years experience as a military judge required for the 9/11 case.

In the meantime, before he became qualified last month, another judge was named to temporaril­y oversee the case.

 ?? Photo: Nampa/AFP ?? Confinemen­t… In this file photo, taken on 27 January 2002, a detainee from Afghanista­n wipes himself down as another detainee looks out from his enclosure at Camp X-Ray at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
Photo: Nampa/AFP Confinemen­t… In this file photo, taken on 27 January 2002, a detainee from Afghanista­n wipes himself down as another detainee looks out from his enclosure at Camp X-Ray at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

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