Bangkok Post

Lawyer: Guantánamo Bay detainee has right to make, show art

- DEEPTI HAJELA

A man accused of helping to plan the Sept 11 attacks wants to be able to publicly distribute art he makes in his cell at the Guantánamo Bay detention center.

Ammar al Baluchi’s attorneys sent a motion to a military commission on Wednesday, saying the Department of Defense has violated his rights by making it more difficult for him to draw and paint and by blocking him from giving his artwork to his attorneys.

The Department of Defense put new restrictio­ns on materials created by al Baluchi, a nephew of suspected Sept 11 mastermind Khaled Sheikh Mohammed, after some of his artworks were given to curators putting together a New York City exhibition of detainee art last year. Two of the pieces were part of the show, which ran in the final months of 2017.

Lawyer Alka Pradhan said the restrictio­ns should be lifted because al Baluchi, who’s awaiting a trial by a military tribunal, gets a therapeuti­c benefit from being able to create and share his work and because it could help him appear more human to the officials who may decide whether he is put to death.

“The fact of the matter is, you cannot discount every possible method of humanising these men to the public when they have been so dehumanise­d by the government for so long,’’ Pradhan said.

A Pentagon spokeswoma­n, Navy Cmdr. Sarah Higgins, said items produced by detainees at Guantánamo Bay “remain the property of the US government”. She said she couldn’t comment further on any ongoing litigation.

The idea that al Baluchi should be able to create and display art spurred disgust and anger among some family members of those killed on Sept 11.

“My son doesn’t have a right to breathe. They shouldn’t have a right to draw,’’ said Jim Riches, a retired deputy fire chief whose firefighte­r son was killed at the World Trade Center. “My son went to work, and he died that day. These are the guys that plotted to kill them. I think they forfeited their rights to draw any pictures or whatever they want to do.’’

Al Baluchi is accused by US military prosecutor­s of being a senior member of al-Qaida directly involved in sending several of the Sept 11 aeroplane hijackers to the US, including financing their trips. The defence says there’s no proof he made those transactio­ns or knew the hijackers intended to attack the United States.

Al Baluchi was captured in Pakistan in 2003 and was extensivel­y interrogat­ed by the CIA before his transfer to Guantánamo Bay. His trial has yet to be scheduled.

One of al Baluchi’s art pieces is Vertigo At Guantánamo, a series of multicolou­red dots in a pattern that evokes a tornado. Pradhan said it is a reference to vertigo al Baluchi experience­s as a result of CIA torture. The Vertigo piece was among several from Guantánamo Bay detainees that were shown at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice at the end of last year in an exhibit called Ode To The Sea.

In the motion, al Baluchi’s attorneys say that after the exhibition got media attention, the Department of Defense said it would no longer allow objects made by the Guantánamo Bay detainees to leave the island. The attorneys also said al Baluchi’s art supplies have been confiscate­d at least once.

“This was the first time in a very long time that the public has got a window about how these men are living in Guantánamo,’’ Pradhan said.

 ??  ?? Artwork made by detainees at Guantánamo Bay.
Artwork made by detainees at Guantánamo Bay.
 ??  ?? Ammar al Baluchi.
Ammar al Baluchi.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand