
Reprieve
The US Government has asked the US Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit to affirm the dismissal of American journalist Bilal Abdul Kareem’s challenge to his Government’s apparent decision to assassinate him without telling him why, or affording him the constitutional right to due process.
Mr Kareem, recipient of the Edward R. Murrow and Peabody Awards, grew up in Mount Vernon, New York and used to be a stand-up comedian in New York City. He has been reporting on the conflict from Syria since it began. In 2016, he narrowly escaped being killed on five separate occasions, including two strikes on cars he was travelling in and a further two strikes on the headquarters of his news agency, On The Ground News. He believes the US Government has mistakenly identified him as a terrorist for interviewing armed groups in Syria, a vital part of his journalistic work. Bilal exposes the untold stories of the Syria conflict and aims to build cross-cultural dialogue between East and West. He was inspired by his mother, Phyliss Phelps – a journalist during the civil rights era and a lifelong member of the NAACP and Rainbow Coalition.
In June 2018, the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia ruled that Mr Kareem had presented a plausible case that he had been placed on the ‘kill list’ – and that, if true, then the Government must afford him ordinary due process rights, rejecting the suggestion that this was a solely “political question” delegated to the president. However, on a second motion to dismiss the US Government succeeded on the grounds that the case could not be heard without reference to state secrets, the disclosure of which would prejudice national security. The district court’s dismissal of Mr Kareem’s case means that the government may target an American journalist in secret, without reference to the US Constitution.
Mr Kareem appealed the district court’s decision to the US Court of Appeal for the District of Columbia Circuit, arguing that whether a US journalist is on the kill list should not be a “state secret” and that the lower court’s ruling simply allows for the death penalty without any due process. The US Government filed its brief in response to Mr Kareem’s appeal last evening, asserting that the need to preserve “state secrets” trumps a US citizen’s constitutional right to life and that the case poses a political rather than a legal question – the latter argument one that was failed in the district court. At a time when the presumption of guilt and state sanctioned violence dominates our news feeds, Bilal Abdul Kareem is simply asking ‘Are you trying to kill me? And if so, why?’
WTH – really?
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Yep. And he’s not the only US journalist who has been targeted.
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Reblogged this on Alexanders' Blog.
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Bilal was essentially a CIA asset when he was dropped into Syria, hired to promote unrest by selling the terrorist AQ side of the story. Now he’s gone off script and the CIA are worried he has compromising information as to his status and mission. That being said, his death sentence is illegal by anyone elses standards, except of course the US of A, who acknowledge no standards at all. It does mean though, that anybody with a grudge against others for not toeing the line is perfectly justified in murdering people like Bolton, Trump, Clinton etc.The US is setting itself up for reprisals if they keep trying to kill anybody who may or may not be on the wrong side of their murderous agenda. Kareem doesn’t deserve to die for his betrayal anymore than Assange, Snowden or Solemeini. The US just keeps moving the red “do not cross” line whenever and wherever it is convenient, murder is murder, state sanctioned or otherwise and it’s time the shoe was on the other foot.
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Wow, I had no idea Mohandeer. Thanks for this background.
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