Australian Guantanamo inmate strains US ties

By Staff
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CANBERRA, Jan 31 (Reuters) The United States may speed up the trial of Australia's only Guantanamo Bay inmate, David Hicks, following a rare split between the two allies over accusations he faced ''Nazi concentration camp'' conditions.

With his five-year detention shaping as an election year issue for Australia's conservative government amid growing public clamour for his release, Prime Minister John Howard has insisted to US authorities that Hicks be charged by February.

''Our position is we want him charged by the end of next month.

We have made that very clear to the Americans,'' Howard told a news conference today.

''We are not happy about the time that has gone by it is also important to remember the gravity of the charges.'' US-based lawyer Sabin Willet said Hicks's cell was like a Nazi death camp and Australian lawyer David McLeod who visited Hicks's Cuban enclave prison yesterday said he was shocked ''seeing him chained to the floor, hollow eyes''.

Hicks, 31, was arrested in Afghanistan in late 2001 and accused of fighting for al Qaeda. He is among around 395 suspected al Qaeda and Taliban fighters being held in the US enclave, and is tipped to be one of the first to face trial.

Charges against Hicks of conspiracy, attempted murder and aiding the enemy were dropped when the US Supreme Court last June rejected the tribunal system set up by President George W Bush to try foreign terrorism suspects.

Hicks, a convert to Islam, had previously pleaded not guilty.

But his case is straining Canberra's usually unswerving support for the US-led war on terror, as Howard faces re-election in the second half of the year against polls showing 62 percent of Australians oppose the handling of the Iraq war.

Australia was an original coalition member in both Iraq and Afghanistan. US Vice-President Dick Cheney will visit Canberra in February to thank the country for its military support.

But in a subtle shift, Australian Foreign Minister Alexander Downer, who has previously lashed out at terrorist ''appeasers'', said on Wednesday he did not want any Australian maltreated.

''If fresh allegations, detailed allegations, facts can be brought forward to us in relation to Hicks, then we're obviously happy to investigate that,'' he told local radio.

Attorney-General Philip Ruddock has admitted Hicks's case is dragging and called last week for an urgent medical assessment.

''I think the government must now be feeling a bit angry with Washington, as the Americans have done nothing to meet Australian concerns,'' Hugh White, Professor of Strategic and Defence Studies at the Australian National University told Reuters.

US military prosecutor Colonel Moe Davis denied Hicks was in poor physical and mental condition, but said the Australian was confined in his Guantanamo cell for long periods.

''The detainees there generally are offered two hours of outdoor recreation time a day, so that would be the 22 hours a day - about right,'' Davis said.

REUTERS SY MIR RAI1106

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