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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Mohamed, R (on the application of) v Secretary of State for Foreign & Commonwealth Affairs [2009] EWHC 2973 (Admin) (19 November 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2009/2973.html Cite as: [2009] EWHC 2973 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
DIVISIONAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
and
MR JUSTICE LLOYD JONES
____________________
The Queen on the Application of Binyam Mohamed |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs |
Defendant |
____________________
Thomas de la Mare and Martin Goudie (instructed by The Treasury Solicitor's Special Advocates Support Office)
as Special Advocates for the Claimant
Pushpinder Saini QC and Karen Steyn (instructed by The Treasury Solicitor) for the
Respondent
Guy Vassall-Adams (instructed by Jan Johannes) for the Guardian News and Media Ltd, British Broadcasting Corporation,
Times Newspapers Limited, Independent News and Media Ltd, The Press Association (The UK Media)
Geoffrey Robertson QC, Kate Annand and Alex Gask (instructed by Finers Stephen Innocent LLP)
for The New York Times Corporation, The Associated Press, the LA Times,
the Washington Post and the Index on Censorship (The International Media)
Guy Vassall-Adams (instructed by Bindmans LLP) for The Incorporated Council of Law
Reporting
David Rose in person
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Thomas:
i) The question whether the redacted passages in the fifth judgment should be made public.
ii) Permission to appeal and any terms on which it should be granted.
iii) An application that the entirety of the fifth judgment be provided to counsel and solicitors on the basis of a "confidentiality club".
iv) Costs.
We did so with the consent of counsel for the Foreign Secretary and set the timetable to accommodate the timing the Foreign Secretary then desired. We sent out a draft order embodying those directions that evening asking for responses by close of business on Monday 19 October 2009. The Foreign Secretary asked for more time and we received his submissions on Tuesday 20 October 2009. In the light of those further submissions from the Foreign Secretary we reconsidered the agreed directions.
The redactions
Paragraph 38(iv):
"One of those memoranda dated 1 August 2002, from Mr. J. S. Bybee, Assistant Attorney-General, to Mr. John Rizzo, acting General Counsel of the Central Intelligence Agency, made clear that the techniques described were those employed against Mr. Zubaydah, alleged to be a high-ranking member of Al-Qaida"
Paragraph 79(vii):
"As the paragraphs relate to the actions of the United States itself, disclosure of the redacted paragraphs is consistent with the publication of the CIA interrogation technique memoranda (to which we referred at paragraph 38(iv) and does not publicise any information about foreign States."
i) Our existing public judgments make clear:
a) The seven paragraphs redacted from the first judgment contain a short summary of our closed judgment (see paragraph 4 of our revised first judgment).
b) Those seven paragraphs include a short summary of reports of the treatment accorded to BM by officials of the United States Government during his unlawful and incommunicado detention in Pakistan in April and May 2002 (see paragraph 14 of our fourth judgment).
c) That was the period during which he was interviewed by the United States Officials and was refused access to a lawyer (see paragraphs 15 and 87(iv) of our first judgment).
d) What is contained in those seven redacted paragraphs gives rise to an arguable case of torture or cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment (see paragraph 22 of our fourth judgment).
e) The reports so summarised in those seven redacted paragraphs are admissions by officials of the United States Government as to BM's treatment by them (see the same paragraph).
f) There is nothing in those seven redacted paragraphs about actions by the Government of Pakistan (see paragraph 79 (vii) of our fifth judgment)
It is also important, once again, to emphasise the nature of the content of what is in the seven paragraphs redacted from our first judgment and withheld from the public domain:
a) The seven paragraphs simply contain a short summary of the treatment of BM in April and May 2002 and our conclusion on its characterisation.
b) There is therefore nothing secret or of an intelligence nature in the seven paragraphs redacted from the first judgment. In providing the summary of the treatment of BM in those seven redacted paragraphs, we were not in the judgment "giving away the intelligence secrets of a foreign country" or making public "American secrets".
c) The claim to redact the information about BM's treatment was advanced on the basis that the summary of BM's treatment in the seven paragraphs redacted from our first judgment is contained within communications between intelligence agencies which must always remain secret or confidential, unless the originator of the communications consents. Of itself, the treatment to which BM was subjected could never properly be described in a democracy as "a secret" or an "intelligence secret" or "a summary of classified intelligence".
The entire content of the four passages redacted from the fifth judgment is already in the public domain. No contention has or could be advanced to the contrary.
In the period between the handing down of our fourth and our fifth judgments, much was put into the public domain by the United States Government in 2009 about the actions of officials of the United States Government. Of greatest significance were the memoranda made public on 16 April 2009 - see paragraph 38(iii) of our fifth judgment.
It was argued by BM and the media that the putting of these memoranda into the public domain not only demonstrated that the position of President Obama was different to that of President Bush, but also that there could be no proper objection to putting into the public domain details of the actions of United States officials in relation to BM when interrogating him, as President Obama had put details of interrogation techniques into the public domain. This argument was addressed in the CIA letter of 30 April 2009 in the sixth paragraph quoted at paragraph 79 (vii) of our judgment.
vi) The redactions to our fifth judgment essentially set out our reasoned decision on these arguments. They are central to an understanding of our judgment. Although the Foreign Secretary had accepted that the four passages in our fifth judgment were "essential to the court's reasoning" (see paragraph 20 of his submissions of 20 October 2009), it was contended in his submissions of 28 October 2009 that the court's reasoning clearly emerged from the judgment handed down in redacted form. We reject this new submission by the Foreign Secretary. His first view was plainly correct. We consider the four redacted passages essential to the reasoning of our fifth judgment.
vii) We consider the four redactions from our fifth judgment viewed sensibly do not put the content of the seven paragraphs of our first judgment into the public domain anymore than is obvious from what has been argued before us and what is already in the public domain and well known.
A: paragraph 38 (iv): The redacted passage is a verbatim quotation from the memoranda made public on 16 April 2009 illustrating the detail of what is set out in the memoranda.
B: paragraph 74(ii): The redacted subparagraph explains that what is in the redacted paragraphs is akin to what is already public.
C: paragraph 81: The redacted passage explains (1) the relationship of what has been placed into the public domain to what is in the redacted paragraphs, (2) why in the light of that relationship it is impossible to believe that President Obama would take action against the United Kingdom and (3) why publication of the redacted paragraphs is necessary to uphold the rule of law and democratic accountability.
D: paragraph 102: The redacted passage explains the reasons why the position is different because of the action of President Obama in releasing the memoranda (at paragraph 38(iv) above) and because the redacted paragraphs do not refer to anything about actions of authorities of the State of Pakistan (as set out at paragraph 79. vii).
Confidentiality club
Permission to appeal
" Whereas the intelligence liaison situation that pertained following the Court's 4th Judgment of 4 February 2009 was manageable by HMG, as the Court had upheld the Defendant's PII certificates against disclosure, the effect of the Court's 5th Judgment, in particular its conclusion that court ordered disclosure does not breach the principle of control of intelligence, and the substitution of its own views for those of the Secretary of State on the risk to national security, has been to increase the level of concern and uncertainty in the field of intelligence sharing, and goes directly to the United Kingdom's national security." (Foreign Secretary's submissions of 20th October 2009, paragraph 5)
Costsof the action