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Australia to carry out Hicks' nine-month sentence (Roundup)

Mar 31, 2007, 5:39 GMT

David Hicks, an Australian who has admitted he trained with al-Qaeda, was formally convicted Friday of material support for terrorists, news reports said. EPA/FAIR GO FOR DAVID / HANDOUT

David Hicks, an Australian who has admitted he trained with al-Qaeda, was formally convicted Friday of material support for terrorists, news reports said. EPA/FAIR GO FOR DAVID / HANDOUT

Washington/Sydney - Australia will not commute the nine- month sentence a Guantanamo Bay military tribunal handed convicted al-Qaeda supporter David Hicks, Foreign Minister Alexander Downer said Saturday.

'The sentence would be fully carried out,' Downer told national broadcaster ABC. 'I say that with a bit of passion because we take a very strong stand against terrorism.'

Hicks pleaded guilty at a US military commission Friday to providing material support for a terrorist organization and was given a seven-year sentence.

Hicks was 'composed' throughout the hearing, according to the American Forces Press Service in Guantanamo. His hair was cut short and he wore a business suit, contrasting with his disheveled appearance in court on Monday when his hair was long and unkempt and he wore his tan detainee uniform.

The 31-year-old former kangaroo skinner, a Guantantamo inmate for more than five years, will have to serve only nine months of that sentence - less even than what his defence counsel had been seeking, US military officials said late Friday.

The reduction was part of a complicated set of agreements made when Hicks entered his original guilty plea on Monday under a pre- trial arrangement, the US Department of Defence said.

'As part of the pretrial agreement, Hicks admitted to 35 facts that supported the charge,' the statement said. 'These facts included training at multiple al-Qaeda camps in Afghanistan and joining fighters at Kandahar Airport and frontline forces in Konduz after the terrorist attacks of 9/11.'

Hicks had to affirm that he 'has never been illegally treated by anyone while in US custody,' the statement said, in apparent reference to charges by civil rights advocates and others connected to the case that he was mistreated and sodomized.

The sentence will probably be served in a maximum-security facility in his Adelaide hometown. US officials indicated that Hicks would return to Australia within 60 days of his sentencing.

Last year Canberra secured a commitment from Washington that Hicks could serve any remainder of his jail time in Australia.

Hicks' father said he was relieved that his son would be home within two months and could be a free man early next year.

'It's a lot better than 12 years or seven or two or whatever they were touting through the night,' Terry Hicks said. 'But it's a real shame David had to go through all this to get released when he should have had the Australian government standing up for Australian citizens' rights.'

A convert to Islam who was captured in Afghanistan in December 2001, Hicks is the first Guantanamo prisoner to have his case brought before the commissions set up to try terrorism suspects. Years of legal wrangling preceded the trial.

In court on Friday, the prosecutor, Marine Lieutenant Colonel Kevin Chenail, sought a maximum sentence, noting that Hicks would 'always be a threat unless he changes his beliefs, his extremist ideology.'

'The real damage Hicks can do is to influence other confused souls,' Chenail was quoted as saying by the military press service.

Hicks' defence attorney, Marine Major Michael Mori, who has travelled several times to Australia to build support for his case, argued that Hicks was a high school dropout who was desperate for acceptance after he failed to qualify for the Australian army.

After signing up with al-Qaeda, however, Hicks got a taste of real combat in Afghanistan, then panicked and ran away, Mori said.

'His heart wasn't in al-Qaeda,' Mori was quoted as saying. 'He wanted to be a soldier, and it was the one place he could do it.'

Mori asked for an 18-month sentence to give Hicks 'an opportunity to try to make a new start in life.'

Hicks confessed to attending al-Qaeda training courses and to travelling to Afghanistan from Pakistan after the September 11 attacks, intent on joining the fight against the US-led coalition.

He said he sold the AK-47 assault rifle he was issued with at Kandahar airport to raise the cab fare to flee to Pakistan. The taxi was stopped by anti-Taliban forces and he was handed over to US forces.

Hicks, whose alleged nicknames included Abu Muslim Australia and Muhammad Dawood, would have faced up to 20 years in prison if he had contested the charges and then been convicted.

Guantanamo holds about 400 detainees, including 14 high-level suspects transferred there last year after being held at secret CIA sites abroad.

Hicks' arraignment last week marked the resumption of tribunals after they were halted in 2004 over lawsuits filed in US courts challenging their legitimacy.

The US Supreme Court ruled last summer that the tribunals could not continue unless President George W Bush got explicit authorization from Congress, which lawmakers approved late last year.

© 2007 dpa - Deutsche Presse-Agentur


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computerMar 31st, 2007 - 06:40:26

I am from Neptune and I have a stuffed rabbit named Ralhpy. I totally agree with government officials..9/11/01 my speakers are oud. i have flat tires, with air pressures. The attack of the New your City Center, was very successful. But, the lives lost will ever be lived in hatred. Let the poor chinese kids go home. much love. ip address 192.168.1.15

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BfreesunMar 31st, 2007 - 06:40:31

Isn't it appropriate that a kangaroo skinner should be the first person 'convicted' in these American kangaroo courts.

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truth machineMar 31st, 2007 - 06:55:24

'Hicks had to affirm that he 'has never been illegally treated by anyone while in US custody,' the statement said, in apparent reference to charges by civil rights advocates and others connected to the case that he was mistreated and sodomized.'

Had to affirm to avoid 20 years in jail, not because he wasn't actually tortured -- we all know he was.

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alteredstateMar 31st, 2007 - 06:59:40

David got what he deserved, right or wrong as an Australian I can not condone the fact, he was where he should never have been.
When captured by the C.O.W he should have said, I was 'Good Will Hunting'
how the hell could he get five years for that? innocent until proven guilty, not locked up and presumed guilty until he submits to a plea bargain to get out of the place, shame on the US government, and Mr Howard, don't expect Dads Army to bail you out. You should have demanded his immediate release, to be dealt with here in Australia, as he had not committed a crime under Australian Law did He!

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chocolate jesusMar 31st, 2007 - 07:54:43

Funny. Friend of mine here in the UK got nine years for robbing a building society (bank) with a banana.

He'd have done less time if he'd taken up war crimes instead and associated with the evil al Quaeda.

Actually it's banks and financiers who are largely responsible for bringing about the War of Terror because they are worried about a petrodollar collapse scuttling their evil plans for world government and a new world order.

Take up your bananas!



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michael boothMar 31st, 2007 - 11:15:04

I refer to the comments regarding Hicks and his alleged treatment at the hands of the USA There is and never has been any evidence to prove Torture whilst in Custody awy from Iraq so lets not go down that road.

Ther are a lot of Australians who feel he should still be locked up after all he was captured whilst fighting against the Free World and Australia is included in the FREE WORLD

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