The so-called “war on terror” has led to an erosion of a whole host of human rights. States are resorting to practices which have long been prohibited by international law, and have sought to justify them in the name of national security.
Hundreds of people are feared to have been unlawfully detained and transferred, usually in secret, to countries where they face further human rights violations, including torture or other ill-treatment and enforced disappearance.
The rules and procedures governing military commission trials at Guantánamo are at odds with international law. The system is deeply flawed and should be abandoned.
Five human rights groups urged governments to accept into their countries, those detainees who will not be charged with any crime but who cannot be returned to
their country of origin for fear of torture or other human rights
violations.
Three men convicted of involvement in the 2002 Bali nightclub bombings,
which killed 202 people and injured a further 209, are to be executed
in early November.