Bin Laden’s driver pleads not guilty

By DPA,

Washington : The former driver of Al Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden pleaded not guilty to terrorism-related charges as the first trial under US President George W. Bush’s controversial military commissions got under way Monday in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.


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Salim Hamdan, a Yemeni national, has been charged with conspiracy and providing material support for terrorism, and faces a maximum sentence of life in prison if convicted. The trial is the first US military war tribunal since World War II.

Hamdan is alleged to have served as bin Laden’s driver and bodyguard before his capture in 2001 and transfer to the US detention centre at the naval station in Cuba the following year.

Hamdan alleges he was abused during intense interrogations while in US custody, and has been among the most active Guantanamo detainees challenging the legal process in federal court, including in a key ruling by the US Supreme Court in June 2006 that President Bush’s commissions were unconstitutional and violated the Geneva Conventions.

The decision forced the White House to revamp the process and get congressional approval, which took place several months later.

Hamdan’s trial is seen as the first test of the military commissions since they were established by Bush more than six years ago. The Pentagon has charged 20 detainees, and that number is expected to climb to 80 of the 270 detainees who remain locked up at Guantanamo.

Human rights groups have said that the tribunals do not provide the detainees with the rights afforded by US civilian courts and are designed to produce convictions.

“These are second-class trials to which the US government would not subject its own nationals,” Amnesty International said Friday.

The defendants have military-appointed attorneys and are permitted to seek private counsel. The US military maintains the trials are fair because defendants are allowed to summon witnesses to testify on their behalf, and have access to all of the evidence prosecutors display in court.

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