Above the law? UK govt attempts to block torture, rendition lawsuit

2015/02/13
Reuters / Stephen Hird

The UK government previously said the case would compromise relations with Washington.


Yunus Rahmatullah claims he was tortured for a decade following his capture by UK Special Forces in Iraq, and his subsequent handover to American soldiers in Afghanistan.


Lawyers from legal charity Reprieve are representing the 32-year-old. The charity says he was kidnapped in Iraq by British forces, tortured and detained in a notorious Abu Ghraib detention facility, and subsequently taken to Afghanistan by American officials.Following a decade of captivity and abuse, Rahmatullah was eventually freed in 2014.



The Pakistani man’s defense team is appealing a former decision by Britain’s High Court that the UK government could use the “Crown Act of State” doctrine to throw out his case.


The government argues the legislation prevents UK courts from intercepting state acts abroad, even in cases where they are criminal.


If the High Court’s ruling remains in force, Reprieve says individuals' capacity to hold the British government accountable for serious human rights abuses in foreign states will be curtailed.


Rahmatullah’s lawyer, and legal director at Reprieve, Ket Craig, maintains her client was forced to endure “some of the most shocking abuses of the ‘War on Terror.’”


Craig said she hopes the Court of Appeal rejects the government’s “shameful attempt to frustrate justice.”


“If Yunus’ ordeal had taken place on British soil, there is no question that the government would have faced serious consequences,” she said.


“Instead of accepting responsibility for Yunus’ appalling mistreatment, the government is now seeking to put itself above the law.”


READ MORE:'US-UK torture' victim wins right to sue British government


Britain’s High Court previously dismissed the UK government’s claim that US-UK relations would be damaged if Rahmatullah was given the right to sue for damages.


Following the court’s ruling last November, Mr Justice Leggatt said British courts would be failing in their fundamental duty to uphold the law if they didn’t deal with such claims.


Whether the court eventually finds US forces acted in an unlawful manner is irrelevant, he added.


The Ministry of Defence (MoD) told RT at the time it had seen “no evidence” to support the “very serious allegations of mistreatment” made by Rahmatullah.


However, his treatment by American and British forces was condemned in 2013 by Britain’s Supreme Court as a breach of the law and potentially a war crime.


Rahmatullah's case at the Royal Court of Justice in London continues.


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