Anonymous ID: 875acf Sept. 11, 2021, 5:06 p.m. No.14561283   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun

Guantanamo Bay: In a courtroom, just feet away from 9/11 suspects

 

By Aleem Maqbool

BBC News

 

Published

 

13 hours ago

 

Related Topics

 

September 11 attacks

 

The towers after the attacksimage source, Getty Images

 

This grim anniversary has meant renewed focus on the five suspects in detention accused of involvement in the 9/11 attacks.

 

The men, including Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, have all appeared in court in Guantanamo Bay this week after an 18 month hiatus in pre-trial hearings caused by the coronavirus pandemic.

 

Behind the glass in the viewing gallery have been a small number of relatives of victims of the attacks, some members of non-profit organisations and a handful of journalists, all there to observe proceedings.

 

Guantanamo Bay already feels cut off from the world, and given the magnitude of this case and weight of the horrific crimes being considered the courtroom here feels all the more singularly alien.

 

"Walking into the courtroom for the first time was extremely emotionally powerful for me," says Dr Elizabeth Berry, whose younger brother Billy Burke was one of the firemen in the North Tower when it collapsed.

 

"I wasn't quite sure what to expect because you see things in the newspapers, portrayals of the way people look which are not really an accurate representation when you see them in the courtroom. It was very moving and very difficult," she says.

Dr Elizabeth Berry's brother Billy was one of those killed in the 9/11 attacks

image captionDr Elizabeth Berry's brother Billy was one of those killed in the 9/11 attacks

 

Dr Berry has attended many of the 42 pre-trial hearings in this case at Guantanamo Bay and says she specifically wanted to be here for the 20th anniversary of the attacks to feel she was supporting the team fighting for justice for her brother and nearly 3000 others.

 

"I felt what better place to honour my brother than here with other family members, what and with this, the prosecution team," she says.

A trial like no other

 

It was noticeably difficult for most in the gallery to stop glancing, sometimes staring, at the defendants throughout the sessions.

 

Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, diminutive and with a henna-dyed orange beard, bounded into the courtroom the first morning to his seat beside his legal team.

 

He and the four other defendants talked throughout much of the proceedings, either to their legal teams or to each other.

 

Khalid Sheikh Mohammed would often turn around for long periods, draping an arm over the back of his chair and chatting to Walid Bin Attash the defendant sitting directly behind him; the man believed to have conceived of the idea of the 9/11 attacks and overseen their planning, in animated discussion with one accused of training two of the hijackers.

A courtroom sketch of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed.image source, Reuters

image captionA courtroom sketch of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed.

 

By their feet, it was noticeable that each of the five defendants had a large plastic tub filled with papers and files that they would often delve into.

 

"They've got all sorts of things in there," says Alka Pradhan, a lawyer representing Ammar al Baluchi who is alleged to have provided logistical support to 9/11 attackers including through money transfers.

 

"They've got legal motions they want to talk to us about. They've got printouts from advocacy websites. Ammar, for example, will often ask us to print out recent material from his ongoing campaign with Amnesty International so he can discuss it," says Ms Pradhan, indicating just how engaged all five defendants are in the direction their legal cases take.

 

It is striking that many of the women that form part of the defence teams of the 9/11 suspects, like Alka Pradhan, wear the hijab in the courtroom in the presence of their clients. Some even cover themselves in an abaya, which they remove in sessions during which the defendants are not present.

Defence attorney Alka Pradhan

image captionDefence attorney Alka Pradhan

 

"I do it in the courtroom because several of the guys were tortured specifically by females in very specific ways, the intentional sexual humiliation by women," says Ms Pradhan.

 

"You can see a difference in the way they talk to you when you put the hijab on. It's not that they refuse to talk to me if I wear a hijab and it's not that they have ever said you must wear hijab, but there is a difference in the way they interact with me," she says.

 

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https://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-58527700