                                                                                       |
The Church Bombing Case
Report and analysis concerning the
trial and verdict of Samir Geagea and the co-accused in the case of
the bombing of the church of Sayyidat Al Najjat, Zouk Mikayel No.3
of 1994.
Table of Content
1.0 INTRODUCTION 2.0
CHARGES - INDICTMENT 3.0 POLITICAL AGENDA 4.0 GIRGES EL
KHOURY 5.0 ACCUSED IN ABSENTIA 6.0 SAMIR GEAGEA
1.0
INTRODUCTION
1.1 Purpose of Paper; This Paper is compiled as
a response and was deemed necessary by the writer who acts on behalf
of Dr. Geagea for the purpose of highlighting what are believed to
be breaches of human rights provisions as they apply per force of
international instruments acknowledged by the Republic of Lebanon
and for which it has no reciprocal observance, either in its
domestic laws, or alternately has failed to implement and accord the
provision of those human rights provisions to Dr. Geagea and his
co-accused in the trial of the bombing of the Church of Sayyidat Al
Najjat (hereafter the Church).
1.2 The position that the
writer sees in presenting this paper is not one of commenting
specifically on the intricacies of the Lebanese domestic provisions
concerning the Criminal Law and its procedure, but rather to
highlight the fact that in the performance of the provision of a
trial to the accused it was less than a fair trail and in fact
constituted a gross abuse of human rights, resulting in a trial
which was unfair and a verdict which was unsafe and
unsatisfactory.
1.3 The manner and method of the analysis of
the verdict is to examine the procedure, the evidence, the findings
and or inferences derived therefrom and ultimately the verdict
arrived at and assess whether it conformed to the precepts laid down
by the international Covenants to which Lebanon is a
signatory.
1.4 In addition to acting for Dr. Geagea, the
writer has also had the carriage and control of the presentation of
representations on behalf of Jean Youssef Chahine, Antonios Obeid
and also a familiarity with the defence of Mr. Rushdi Raad as well
as acting for Mr. Rafik Al Fahel who was the subject of an
extradition request from Sweden to Lebanon which was rejected
shortly after the intervention of the writer acting in conjunction
with his Swedish lawyers.
1.5 The verdict is a document which
is annexed to this submission so that ease of reference may be made
to observe and follow the argument in the analysis presented. It is
obvious we submit that when one reads the verdict it is capable of
being followed as a document deliberative of the material presented
and of the conclusions reached from that material applying the law
as it purports to do in the circumstances. The legal norms that
pertain to an inquisitorial as opposed to an adversarial system are
not such that they would render an appreciation of the verdict any
less capable of being viewed for the deficiencies that appear
therein. In short, the writer is satisfied that in the circumstances
regardless of the manner in which the trial proceeded as to
inquisitorial or adversarial, there was a gross breach of human
rights accorded to each of the accused both those present and in
particular those in absentia. The accused in absentia and hereafter
to mean the following people unless the context otherwise requires
are Antonios Obeid, Rushdi Raad, Jean Chahine, Paul Al Fahel and
Rafik Al Fahel.
1.6 The significance of the analysis of the
verdict in the manner that it is presented is to highlight the fact
that the trial failed to accord the basic minimum in terms of the
conditions that have been laid down by the various international
instruments and in particular the International Covenant of Civil
and Political Rights, Universal Declaration of Human Rights as they
apply to the domestic forum and the laws that implement the
procedures in such forums.
1.7 There is no doubt in the
writer's opinion that the impetus given to this trial for
international condemnation was in no small part brought about by the
very pertinent and prompt response by Amnesty International which
was critical of the trial of Dr. Geagea, resulting in the conviction
for the murder of Mr. Danny Chamoun and his family on 24 June 1995:
Amnesty International Index MDE 24 June 1995, Lebanon, "Lebanese
Forces Trial Serious Flawed"; see also US Department of State Report
on Human Rights practices for 1995 - Lebanon and Amnesty
International Report 1995 at p192.
1.8 The method in
analysing the verdict as appears herein will be to initially
consider the method and the approach of the Judicial Council of
Lebanon, (hereafter the Court) and to assess the various procedures
that were embarked upon in the deliberation of the Court. Further,
there will be an analysis of the material presented as evidence by
those accused who were present for the trial and in particular Mr.
Malek, Mr. El Khoury and Dr. Geagea. In addition thereto we will
also attempt to highlight the gross miscarriage of justice accorded
to the accused in absentia and in particular Mr. Obeid, Mr. Chahine
and Mr. Raad who all presented affidavit material, duly notarised,
and which was summarily rejected out of hand by the Court when the
same showed that the accused could not have possibly been involved
in the planning, preparation and ultimate commission of the crime as
they were all absent from the territory of Lebanon.
2.0
CHARGES - INDICTMENT
2.1 The trial in respect of the case of
the bombing of the Church was conducted by the Court commencing in
or about November 1994 and concluding on 13 July 1996. The trial was
held on a week-end or certainly on a part time basis being convened
on a Friday and for half of Saturday. Such a feature is of itself
unusual in that a trial of such a major crime where capital
punishment is invariably a possible penalty and in all probability
would be called for, should be conducted in such a manner is rather
remarkable. The ability to concentrate, analyse and present evidence
and conduct cross-examination in a coherent and co-ordinate fashion
is difficult at the best of times in a trial that runs on a Monday -
Friday format with a regularity as to hours and a duration which is
to say the least permanent from the start Until the conclusion of
the matter. To so hold this trial which was indicted as a crime
against the State and an attempt to inflame sectarian violence
within Lebanon, after it had just come through a very sad and sordid
period of Civil War is bizarre. The trial running from November 1994
until July 1996 was not only marred by the intermittent hearing
given to it, but also was featured with lengthy periods of
adjournment for no explicable reason and at times the refusal by the
Attorneys representing the accused to continue whilst they perceived
the treatment of the prisoners by the Court to be less than
satisfactory. The detention in a military prison being an example of
the complaints registered by defence counsel.
2.2 Initially
the observation that has to be made is that the trial by virtue of
its intermittent hearings was unsatisfactory with respect to the
conduct and presented a prejudice and a disadvantage to the accused
and their lawyers to be able to participate in the process by
following the evidence, challenging and testing it where necessary
and presenting their own cases. Coupled with this are the materials
and the findings that I made in my earlier report on the conduct of
the trial of both this matter and the trial of Dr. Geagea for the
murder of Mr. Danny Chamoun and his family of which Dr. Geagea was
found guilty and sentenced to life imprisonment. This trial was
running in tandem with the trial the subject of this paper and that
also in itself constituted a gross abuse by having to meet two cases
of a capital nature, together with sundry offences associated
therewith, such as possession of firearms and weapons and/or
breaches of public order. The joinder of several matters on one
indictment may well be justifiable in respect of the particular
crime at hand, but where there is a trial of two major matters and
the indictments for both matters are tried jointly, it represents a
very difficult task for any trial lawyer. In particular in this
matter, that is to say the trial in question and the case concerning
the Chamoun Family, both trials were conducted simultaneously but on
alternate week-ends from the Friday extending to the Saturday by
different prosecutors, whereas the defence teams were invariably the
same for reasons of economy and logistics of presenting and meeting
the material.
2.3 At the outset it must be said that the
accused who were present are referred to in the verdict as are the
accused who were absent. Those accused who were absent were as
regards Mr. Obeid and Mr. Chahine, situated in Australia, the former
being an Australian citizen, while the later is a person seeking
refugee status. As regards Mr. Raad, he is a citizen of Canada and
the A1 Fahel brothers are residents of Sweden and in the case of Mr.
Rafik A1 Fahel, he has been granted asylum and consequently
citizenship. It is my understanding that his citizenship came
swiftly on the refusal of the request for extradition by the
Lebanese authorities.
2.4 No formal request was made to my
knowledge to extradite either Mr. Obeid or Mr. Chahine from
Australia and I know of no formal extradition being applied for or
for that matter entertained by the Canadian Government in respect of
Mr. Raad.
2.5 The prosecution of the accused in respect of
the case of the Church, was as a result of a decree setting up the
investigation No. 4835 and dated 2 March 1994~which referred the
matter to the Court. The case's significance is not in anyway
undermined by the fact that it highlighted apart from the murder of
the individual worshipers and desecration of the Church, it was
referred to as an assault on the States internal security and public
safety and sought to bring to justice all of the perpetrators who
either participated, instigated or interfered in the bombing in any
capacity. Not unnaturally the accessorial liability of all who were
responsible in anyway shape or form was cast as wide as possible in
terms of the drag net that looked for suspects.
2.6 The
judicial investigator who was appointed to review the material was
Judge Joseph Freiha. His deliberations and investigations resulted
in an indictment, which was dated 13 June 1994 and constituted the
basis for the presentation of the case before the Court. The
indictment statement that also emanated from the office of the
prosecutor was issued on 16 June 1996 which is referred to in the
Courts judgment.
2.7 The indictments as presented charged and
sought to portray Dr. Geagea as the principal, accountable for the
perpetration of the crime of the bombing of the Church as its
planner, the one who ordered the execution thereof and was a
participant in concealing the perpetrators who acted under his
orders and enabled them to flee from justice. The motive for the
bombing was expressed to be an attempt to bring about an alteration
to the Constitution of the country for which charges were laid
pursuant to articles 30, 308-315 of Punitive Act as well as article
549 and 549 - 201 of Act 11.1.1958. In addition the accused Obeid,
Raad, Chahine and E1 Khoury, were each charged pursuant to those
provisions excepting article 30 of the Punitive Act. With respect to
Mr. Malek, he was charged with Dr. Geagea as participating in the
agenda and further that he acquired military weapons taking part in
concealing the same ensuring there distribution thereby breaching
articles 301 and 308-315 together with article 219 of the Punitive
Act as well as Act 11.1.1958.
2.8 As to the complicity of the
A1 Fahel brothers, they also were charged with respect to offences
pursuant to articles 301 and 308-315 together with article 219 of
the Punitive Act and Act 11.1.1958. In addition each of the accused
who are referred to above were all charged pursuant to article 72 of
the Weapons Act. The accused were indicted on 16 June 1994 after a
period of arrest, interrogation and detention which I am informed
and verily believe was in the case of Dr. Geagea accompanied by
torture, and in particular to Mr. E1 Khoury. I understand that a
similar complaint was also made by Mr. Malek.
2.9 Upon the
initial presentation of the indictment it was noted that there were
defendants, viz. Atonios Obeid, Rushdi Raad, Jean Chahine, Paul A1
Fahel and Rafik A1 Fahel, who the judgment refers to as "declining
to appear at the Council" It is my understanding that rather than
declining to appear, they were not sought with a view to ensuring
their appearance and in particular feared their ability to obtain a
fair and just trial, and in the case of Mr. Antonios Obeid, he had
his passport detained at the Lebanese Consulate in Sydney on making
inquiries of the charges laid against him. The subterfuge given by
the consulate was that they were attempting to investigate his
passport validity and having taken it into their possession refused
to give it back. Similarly Mr. Chahine felt no confidence in so
submitting himself when he saw how Mr. Obeid was treated. Mr.
Chahine also made a complaint as to the loss of his passport through
the offices of the Lebanese Consulate in Sydney.
2.10 The
Court insofar as it purported to give them a concession to attend
the trial, thereafter deemed them to be escapees and or fugitives
from justice and then tried them in their absence on the basis that
they did not comply with a request in the form of a concession to
attend and appear in the hearing of the matter.
2.11 In these
circumstances, justifiably in view of the treatment by the Lebanese
Consulate in Sydney, the gravity of the allegations bearing in mind
that the accused tried in absentia were as their defence sought to
show, absent from the jurisdiction at the critical times of the
alleged complicity by themselves, very much in fear of their safety
and apprehensive that they would receive a fair trail. No arrest
having been issued for them, but rather a concession given to enable
them to attend in the circumstances they not unnaturally chose to
preserve their life and liberty and declined to respond to any
request of the Lebanese Government and or the Court to return to
Lebanon, this was very much so compounded by the fact that the
withdrawal of the passports would ensure that they had no chance of
having their mobility for international travel restored once they
were in Lebanon.
2.12 Similarly the requests made of the A1
Fahei brothers Were not pursued with any vigour until it was sought
to have Mr. E1 Khoury's retraction of his confession put into doubt
by the attempted extradition by Mr. Rafik A1 Fahel from Sweden which
was refused and which saw the trial proceed thereafter to a
Conviction of Mr. El Khoury despite his retraction of the alleged
confession and his allegations of torture.
2.13 The position
concerning Mr. Raad in Canada is even more tenuous bearing in mind
that he had left Lebanon several years prior to the bombing of the
Church and which was well documented by the Canadian authorities,
consideration of which will be given in this report to the
particularmaterial to show that he was conclusively nowhere :near
Lebanon at the time of the alleged perpetration of this offence and
even in its planning stages, but was allegedly placed in and around
Lebanon, with very detailed descriptions of his alleged complicity
in the crime.
2.14 In any event all accused having been
indicted, those present were tried in the manner referred to above
and those who declined the invitation to appear where tried in their
absence. The manner in which the trial was conducted is given at
page 4 of the Judgment where it is recited that the preliminary and
preparatory investigation minutes, together with the case documents,
there tabling for discussions, the interrogations of the Defendants,
and the hearing or the witnesses statements, together with summing
up by the prosecution and the submissions of the defence lawyers,
where all conducted and ultimately deliberated on by the Court
arriving at its verdict, recorded in the Judgment and sentence
pronounced on each of the accused at pp. 111-114.
3.0
POLITICAL AGENDA
3.1 That the highest Court in Lebanon should
allow itself to become a conduit for political parlance and
propaganda in of all matters a trial for crimes against the State
carrying penalties as serious as capital punishment is
tragic.
3.2 This occurred in the trial of the accused and is
borne out in the references made by the Court at pp. 6/7 where the
Court referred to Lebanon as a civilised country, taking 'pride in
the coexistence among all its citizens and showing the world that
Lebanon was a country of great example as a tolerant nation of all
who resided within her borders.
3.3 The Court thereafter
refereed to the State of Israel as "the Israeli enemy, which has
evil intentions for Lebanon's success, either in future or economic
progress, so it worked to destroy Lebanon, with the assistance of
professional agents and, for the abortion of Lebanon security as a
result of which the useless war took place." That a Court should
condescend to such language and to refer to neighbouring sovereign
States in such a manner is both tragic and regrettable where at
heart and at issue is the attainment of justice in the contest
between the State and the accused to ensure that the path to truth
is trod carefully and surely. To allow the puerile proliferation of
politics into such a consideration in the reference made to Israel
and the intentions that were perceived by the Court to be the
destruction of the Lebanese State by Israel whether founded or
unfounded, has no place in a Court of law.
3.4. This was the
template for the consideration of the matters against each of the
accused, both present and in absentia and seen as the motive for
bringing about the possession, distribution and use of the weapons,
together with the planting of the bomb.
3.5 Throughout the
judgment there are many references to the accused, in particular,
Mr. E1 Khoury, Dr. Geagea (seen on an Israeli Warship) and Mr
Chahine, Mr Obeid and Mr. Raad, all meeting at hotels and/or in
establishments in the State of Israel. Also there are references to
the arranging of visas at frontier zones controlled by Israel and
the admiration of the Israeli State and its language by Mr Khoury.
To leave nothing out of the epic proportions within which the State
of Israel's involvement is seen, there also crept into the judgment
the alleged romance between Mr E1 Khoury and a Miss Oria, (an
Israeli Agent), seen particularly as a development on the "human
side", within the matrix of the facts, acts and
circumstances.
3.6 Each and every sighting of the accused in
the State of Israel, together with the particular inferences and
ultimate findings of fact derived from such references, were
remarkably unsubstantiated by documentary material. They were also
pictured as devoid of factual corroboration, and in Mr E1 Khoury's
case were extracted as a result of being obtained under torture in
confessions obtained from him which were later retracted. As to the
sighting of Mr Raad, Mr Obeid and Mr Chahine, each of these
references were similarly lacking in corroborative
confirmation.
3.7 The presence of Israel's involvement was
juxtaposed as one of the reasons for the cancellation of the visit
of His Holiness. It was also cited as the continuing festering cause
for dissension in the stability and attainment of peace in
Lebanon.
3.8 There was also reference to the concept of the
Canton system that is operative in Switzerland and much approved by
Dr. Geagea as a possible future model for Lebanon. This was refereed
to by the Court as the "Mini-State Concept", and was if not
explicitly then certainly inferentially derided and adds to the
political prose which literally abounds in the judgment and in
particular is condemnatory of the accused, Dr. Geagea, and his role
as a Christian leader which is perceived as nothing more than a
nuisance value by the Court and one responsible for national
division and turmoil.
3.9 The Court in giving in to what is
obviously a submission which ignores facts and refuses to look at
the evidence, becomes a proselyte of the political parody and the
Judges in turn regrettably become puppets in the theatre of a trial
which is seeking to make excuses for the inability to achieve a just
and sensible political solution to a nation's woes. In turn it is a
reflex response to those who ultimately control and administer
Lebanon and are hell bent on repressing the expression of freedom of
speech and seek to emasculate those who differ with the
regime.
3.10 Such an intrusion into politics abrogates
utterly and convincingly any attempt to administer justice and
achieve a fair trial between the interests of the State and the
accused. It impacts on article six of the International Covenant on
Civil and Political Rights (hereafter ICCPR), in particular that the
death penalty could be imposed is in breach of Part III, article
6(2) and also is in breach of article 7, where it could be
established that a person was tortured or subjected to cruel,
inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment. This must be said of
the treatment of Mr El Khoury as it emerged in the course of the
trial.
3.11 In addition to the failure by the Court to
implement article 6 of Part III of the ICCPR it also infringed, we
would submit, the fact that the penalty was imposed in breach of the
Covenants injunction that no such penalty was to be passed, unless
it was pursuant to a final judgment. This could never be the case in
question because the final judgment was incapable of review by an
Appellate Court, as the Judicial Council is the Supreme Court from
which there is no appeal, and thus it is in breach of article 14 (5)
of the ICCPR.
3.12 It is now proposed to consider each of the
cases of the accused and in such detail as is necessary to exemplify
the propositions advanced and to highlight the considerations that
we say are applicable to the matters at hand.
4.0 GIRGES EL
KHOURY
4.1 The prime sources of evidence against Mr. El
Khoury were as follows:
a). His alleged confession and an
enactment of the crime, 28 March 1994, which he did in person at the
Chief of Staff Building together with drawings that he made placing
the Defendants' in absentia at that area.
b). Evidence
derived from his frequent visits to Israel - seven.
c). The
involvement with a girl called, Manassa, also known as Ms Vera Oria
and;
d). The evidence of contradictions which the accused
gave in response to questions in the interrogatory procedures and in
the course of final investigations conducted prior to the trial
Generally.
4.2 The defence of Mr E1 Khoury was given at pp.
19-26.
4.3 There were both oral and written submissions
prepared on this Defendant's behalf.
4.4 Essentially the
circumstances in which Mr. El Khoury found himself were as a result
of the bombing of the Church, he became a suspect, but for no
particular reason. He was alleged to have had contacts with Israel,
and when his family where set upon by the authorities, he came out
of hiding and was taken into custody. The custody that he was taken
into was of a military and not civil nature, and hence was
highlighted by his defence as being in breach of the provisions and
violated articles 47 & 99 of the Criminal Trials Act and
accordingly should have been annulled as a defective action and/or
step taken in the prosecution of Mr. E1 Khoury pursuant to article
340 of the Criminal Trials Act. The investigation was of itself
conducted at a military camp/establishment, and was tainted by the
subjection of Mr. El Khoury to psychological, physical and extreme
bouts of mental and physical violence in an effort to extract a
confession -which was ultimately successful - but which was finally
retracted when Mr. E1 Khoury would have confidently assumed that a
Court of law would have assessed his retraction for what it was
worth, namely an explanation of the response that he gave under
severe mental and physical pressure and which he sought to retract
at the first available public opportunity. He was denied his lawyer
or the presence of a legal adviser in violation of article 71, such
exclusion of a legal representative was to enable the authorities to
obtain a confession and each in turn, that is to say the civil
prosecutorial authority and the military authority, competed against
each other to obtain such a confession.
4.5 The
contradictions that were utilised by the Court ultimately to convict
Mr. E1 Khoury were to say the least ridiculous. They refer to the
fact that no one can act on a confession as conclusive and in
accordance with the manner in which it is treated by the Lebanese
domestic criminal law, unless it is supported by other evidence,
i.e., corroborated. That such is a universal application of the
criminal law in any system, whether it is adversarial or
inquisitorial, is a trite observation. The defence sought to set up
the fact that the accused would have hardly had the facility and/or
the mobility to travel to Israel on the numerous occasions that they
allege he said he did, and more particularly, that his confession
was to be seen for what it was, namely, a matter that was extracted
by torture and/or physical abuse and violence because of the fact
that in the circumstance the presence of Raad, Obeid and Chahine was
physically impossible both as to the frequency of sightings and the
localities in question in view of the affidavit evidence presented
by each of those co-accused and which were relied upon by this
Defendant as well as in Dr. Geagea's case.
4.6 An enactment -
by a person in custody, and one who is allegedly being tortured is
hardly surprising. That he should then carry on with the thespian
portrayal of not only acting out the scenario, but, resorting to the
graphic and pictorial depiction of such events and referring to
other incidents which he put in a diagram and signed, is hardly
convincing and/or corroborative, even though it was accepted as
being the basic requirement by the Court. In other words to hold up
what is the principle, and then find that the same Zhad been
complied with on the most pathetic of material, and implausibly so,
is to make a mockery of justice as the judicial council did in the
case at bar. The reliance on Ms Antoinette Chahine, whose
whereabouts is still unknown, having been taken into custody and
held without trial and charge being preferred against her, (sister
of co-accused Jean Chahine) is equally incapable we would submit, of
supporting the States ultimate findings. In fact her evidence was in
support of Mr El Khoury and her brother that they were not in
Lebanon, ie, the brother and Mr E1 Khoury, as referred to and that
Mr Chahine was for some time and more particularly at the pertinent
times, in Cyprus, which he deposed to in his affidavit.
4.7
Mr. E1 Khoury's position was that effectively he had been tortured,
and he maintained the same at the trial, and the medical evidence
was inconclusive to refute such claims. That he did not come to
trial and was not publicly arraigned or seen from the time Of his
arrest in March 1994 until the trial in November 1994 is ample
evidence of the fact that there was both opportunity and motive to
enable the carrying out of the torture at the military establishment
of Yarzi as was maintained and occurred. The medical evidence to
refute such claims as advanced by the State was both mediocre and
devoid of any documentary proof corroborating the same. No medical
records and/or independent examination by a doctor of the accused's
choice or alternatively, a doctor agreed upon by both parties
mutually, was made available to refute convincingly the claims of
torture which were maintained and adhered to by Mr. El Khoury
throughout the trial. The Court dealt with Mr. El Khoury's defence
at pp. 66 - 81. It was to say the least disheartening in its attempt
to treat the defence case with any respect. The Court relied on, and
gave evidence to the alleged involvement by Mr. E1 Khoury with the
State of Israel, and in particular his enlisting in its Intelligence
Service. Despite the fact that he had alibi material presented from
the French Cultural Centre for his whereabouts on certain occasions,
this was disregarded. Pathetic and desperate were the attempts to
stretch tenuous facts into ultimate findings can be seen from the
use of identikit pictures of the co-accused drawn by this accused
and in particular putting glasses on Mr. Raad who I am informed and
verily believe, having met the person and having spoken to him on
lengthy occasions in Montreal where he is presently residing, that
he has never worn glasses in his life. To so say that because he put
glasses on him in the identikit picture that convincingly showed
that he knew Mr. Rushdi Raad is a bizarre example of the judicial
process gone askew. It is hardly an example of inductive reasoning.
The alleged depiction of the Church and its details as drawn by this
accused and the absence between what it was like before and after
the bombing are hardly capable, bearing in mind the scenario in
which they came about (torture and he being in custody without bail
and Without any prospect of being placed in a civilian establishment
as opposed to a military establishment), would hardly lend credence
as pieces of evidence that are sufficiently corroborative, both
independently and of their own weight. Also relied upon was the
evidence of his brother, Anwar. El. Khoury and his relationship with
the Israeli authorities and his acquaintance with Ms Vera Oria and
most convincingly the eventual "development of a love affair between
them" - p. 71. Coupled with this is his alleged flight and his
disappearance. His response to this was, in view of the focus of
attention of the government on former Lebanese Forces members, puts
his flight as both understandable and a rationale response in the
circumstances. This of course was not so regarded and more
particularly the Court in attempting to analyse the evidence at pp.
72 - 81, systematically, clumsily but convincingly tore out the
logic and rationale of each and every proposition that was posited
by the defence, and in particular, where evidence supported the
defence it was ridiculed and reduced with comments which rendered
the assessment of it absurd on the part of the Court, in their
desperate efforts to reduce his defence thus making a mockery of it
in its ultimate rejection.
4.8 The confession was attended by
torture and gross abuse of the position that the authorities were in
having the care and custody of the Defendant as their prisoner
pending investigation and ultimately being charged. The report of Dr
Kahwahji, who conducted a bedside examination of this accused,
surprisingly did not find, "any traces of bashing or torture". p.72.
Remarkably Dr Kahwahji found that his answers and his mental status
were both sound and his detention during the remaining period and in
particular his health during that detention Was without any
remarkable change. Incidentally, his psychological status remained
calm as at the initial stages of the examination when he was first
taken into custody, as compared to the sighting of him in the video
when played before the Court, concerning his enactment of the
scenario.
4.9 The incredulity of the Judicial Council is only
outdone by their attempt to belie what were the facts and
circumstances made in support of the allegation of torture and ill
treatment. Article 7 of Part III of ICCPR specifically injuncts the
subjection to torture or to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or
punishment. There was a gross breach if one accepts Mr. E1 Khoury's
testimony and the submissions made by his lawyers who were both
responsible and admirably competent in the presentation of his case.
The claim by the defence was rejected out of hand by the Court
without any support both rational and/or logical relying on any
corroborative material to so disavow the defence claim.
4.10
It is often asserted that assaults on the inherent dignity of human
beings as recognised as being relevant to the stability of
international order. It follows that a profound transformation of
international relations has been heralded with profound
transformation of International Law, because ultimately, the rules
of behaviour of society and the aims in which they are so regulated
has seen the evolution of humanitarian law rules to reduce and
eradicate what occurred to Mr. El Khoury.
4.11 He is a
prisoner within the term, as has evolved in International Law, as a
person who is unable to remove themselves from the orbit of official
action and abuse. The concept of torture has been one which
traditionally is referred to as a method of arriving at the truth,
of determining responsibility for offences by means of eliciting
confessions or other information. Less obviously, it has also become
a method of inspiring fear among the population at large, or
specific segments of it. In the Universal Declaration of Human
Rights, it provides that:
a). Article 3. Everyone has the
right, liberty and security of person. b). Article 5. No one
shall be subjected to torture or to cruel, inhuman or degrading
treatment or punishment. c). Article 9. No one shall be subject
to arbitrary arrest or detention...
4.12 Each of these
provisions was so breached in the case of Mr. E1 Khoury and in that
regard with respect to all Defendants who were in
custody.
4.13 Mr. E1 Khoury is seen as a typical victim of
torture, in other words, he is a political opponent of the
government - violent or non-violent, a real force for change or a
minor irritant to the regime, seized by the security forces. These
as in the case in question may be military or police (or both acting
together) but will more commonly be the military, who may or may not
be in uniform. Their vehicles may or may not have number plates and
frequently, although not inevitably, the government of the State
concerned will have been ousted unconstitutionally by the armed
forces, which can then operate free of restraint. They may well be
there at the grace and favour of an occupying force, ever present,
but seemingly benign in its attendance to supervising the
administration, but without being seen to take an active
part.
4.14 The scenario as occurred to Mr. E1 Khoury and for
that matter Dr. Geagea and Mr. Malek, is both Composite and
consistent of what occurs generally in barbaric regimes where the
administration of justice is nothing more than a sinecure to the
ultimate aims of the State and is used as a perfidious and political
panacea albeit an adjunct as a piece of panoply.
4.15
Invariably, once seized, a prisoner is transported to a place of
detention, which may be a police station, or in this case an army
barracks where the torture and the ill-treatment will take place
unless already started during the transportation. The methods are as
infinite as the reaches of the human imagination, but among the more
common are prolonged beatings, especially on the soles of the feet
or genitals, immersion in excrement, near-asphyxiation, violent
sexual assault, and the administering of electrical shocks. More
sophisticated in that they leave little physical trace. Under
psychological techniques, deprivation of light (or of darkness),
deprivation of sound, of sleep, general disorientation, threats of
mutilation or death, mock execution and most powerful of all, in
many cases, the threat of physical abuse would be extended to
persons close to the prisoner.
4.16 Torture is usually aimed
at securing information about the activities of the victim, or
persons connected with the victim. The activities in question may be
thought to relate to the commission of criminal offences (with or
without political connections), or the planned commission of such
offences, or simply to political dissent that the authorities are
not prepared to tolerate. The torture is also often aimed at
securing confessions to criminal acts. Another purpose is the
intimidation of the victim and others, possibly even society as a
whole, so as to deter people from undertaking an activity that could
risk their falling into the hands of the authorities.
4.17
Torture is usually carried out while the victim is excluded from any
contact with the outside world. Family, doctor, lawyer, and so on -
a condition known as detention incommunicado. The period is often
prolonged, measured in weeks and months rather than in days,
(though, of course, a lot of suffering maybe inflicted in a period
of days even hours). The incommunicado detention may, like the
torture itself, be frankly illegal under the law of the country in
question. Sometimes the authorities will facilitate the perpetration
of torture by declaring a state of siege or emergency in order to
permit the suspension of legal guarantees that could have acted as
checks.
4.18 That each of the above items, as indicia of a
repressive regime can be applied to the Lebanese Government is both
apt and sound on instructions received by me from refugees presently
situated in Canada, America, Australia and the United Kingdom. That
I have participated in such refugee hearings and prepared a report
which has been accepted by authorities in Sweden, Australia and
Canada and have given evidence in the United Kingdom with a decision
pending, is confirmatory, sufficient for me to make the observations
that I do that I accept what Mr El Khoury has said and in particular
having spoken to him briefly and under pain of punishment on the
basis that soldiers would have if they had found me so talking to
him, physically removed me, from the precincts of the Court, enables
me sufficiently to believe what his lawyers put on instructions and
also with respect to the Defendant himself.
4.19 Analysing
the reasons for the rejection of the claims made by this accused by
the Court, leads me to the inevitable conclusion that the just and
rational approach to justice, objective and devoid of sympathy
and/or political preference was not arrived at by the Court in the
consideration of Mr El Khoury's case.
4.20 To say that he was
motivated by instinct to survive, the death penalty and hence make
the confessions he did, is to answer the obvious, that under the
fear of execution and the arbitrary denial of just and due process
together with the physical and mental torture exacted on him, was
the real motive for the confessions initially, and then their
retraction. Why otherwise would he be so prepared to retract a
confession that would enable and assure him of his preservation of
life and possible early restoration of liberty? To so publicly decry
the confession as obtained by torture and fraud is to fly in the
face of logic and reason other than it was both a false and wrongly
obtained confession.
4.21 To display him as a spy for both
Israel and the Lebanese Forces, and thus an enemy of the State is
only to appease the political politburo and to become a proselyte of
regimes that occupy Lebanon and seek to have Lebanon bend to their
will in contra distinction to their acclaimed sovereign status and
democratic ideals. It indeed makes hollow and a mockery of the
remarks of the Judicial Council that Lebanon is both free and
democratic where a just and fair trial is available to all who Come
before the Courts. See p. 6.
4.22 The Court certainly gave
some emphasis and placed a degree of focus on the motive for
retracting his confession at p. 79. It is to be noted that Mr E1
Khoury's confession was retracted on the first opportunity after the
Indictment Decree handed down on 13 June 1994, and prior to him
being a witness in the hearing of an associated case which was to
commence on 23 June 1994, in relation to the bombing of a building
known as A1 Kataeb House. That it was prompt and that he was
consistent in denouncing the confession cannot be argued with. That
the Judicial Council did not give such emphasis and consider such
retraction on other than a nonsensical basis, is also apparent. In
short, their ultimate conclusion was as follows:
"The Council
remained confident that Girges' confessions in regard to the main
points of the case were true and that these confessions with its
supportive elements are enough to prove the actions attributed to
Girges, which appear in the Chapter of Facts." P.80
Those
facts were his complicity as an agent of enemies both within and
outside the State and the fact that he took money for his
intelligence service and was prepared to denounce the State and act
against it. All ethereal and fanciful and more particularly
obnoxious to the cause of attaining justice as was incumbent on the
Judicial Council.
4.23 When the template of his
conspiratorial co-operation and the acts in furtherance of the
conspiracy and the perpetration of the matters in question are taken
into account and in particular looked at as regards the
co-ordination between him and the accused in absentia and their
defences are also under the microscope, it is patently obvious that
the following propositions are available:
i) He could not
have been with the co-accused, especially those in absentia on the
days and in the periods in question or at the locations;
ii)
That if he so maintained it, bearing in mind that he was taken into
detention, it was in circumstances where he was and is to be
regarded as a victim of a miscarriage of justice on the basis that
the confession obtained from him was and should be seen for what it
was, namely, no confession at all, or certainly not voluntarily
given;
iii) That there is both a reasonable and rationale
explanation for the confession and its extraction, and this in turn
leads to a doubt when compared to the lack of presence of the
co-accused as against the intimately particular and meticulous
narration of their involvement and presence, plausibly explained
away by reason of the extraction of the confession -thus leaving
inevitably the conclusion that the doubt must be not only in favour
of this accused, but his co-accused, including Dr. Geagea and Mr.
Malek, and the accused in absentia.
4.24 The Judicial Council
in failing to appreciate the Process and in failing to accord to the
affidavit material the force and the tenor on which they were sworn
have denied this accused the ability to present his defence and
thereby denied him a fair and just trial and insofar as their
verdict is incapable of review by a High Court in breach of article
14 (5) of ICCPR has rendered the verdict unsafe and unsatisfactory
for the reason that it was so unsafe and so unsatisfactory in being
arrived at and insofar as it is allowed to remain so by the denial
of a review of a appellate authority is equally offensive to the
notions of justice and the international obligations to which
Lebanon is a signatory.
5.0 ACCUSED IN ABSENTIA
5.1
The accused in absentia are Jean Chahine, Antonios Obeid and Rushdi
Raad and the A1 Fahel brothers.
5.2 Affidavit evidence was
presented and compiled by myself in respect of Obeid and Chahine and
representations were made on behalf of Al Fahel in Sweden and I also
liaised with Rushdi Raad's lawyers in Canada and he himself
personally as to the preparation of affidavit material by him and
its provision to the judicial authorities and the prosecution in
Lebanon.
5.3 That the dissemination of the material was both
universal, that is to both the State and prosecutor and to each of
the other Defendants and that it was open, as confirmatory with
corroborative material annexed thereto is to underestimate the
extent to which the preparations were made and attended to in the
provision of the material in question. This is in no way, in any
sense to justify the material or the manner or the state of it as
presented, but rather to indicate that what was made available was
done with the best possible resources co-ordinated and provided
bearing in mind there were time constraints in the provision of this
material and its consideration.
5.4 The Judicial Council's
complaint that no one came to support the affidavit material is
absurd for these reasons:
a) Insofar as I was concerned, I
was denied and still am denied a visa to attend and visit Lebanon
for any purpose, so how could I having applied for a visa in March
1995 and still have unanswered my application for such a visa
(although I am informed and verily believe on reliable sources that
the same is denied to me as I am on a black list and in fact am
referred to as No. 3 on that list). How could I hope to attend and
participate in the forensic process?
b) The treatment
afforded to Obeid and Chahine by the deprivation of their passports
and the ill-treatment afforded to their co-accused, would leave them
with no hope or without any degree of optimism that they would not
also be treated in a like manner must of itself weigh on their minds
as to why they would not seek to surrender themselves,
and;
c) The treatment of the affidavit material in the
judgment and in particular the conscious disregard to refer to the
itemisation of the matters in the affidavit, to so regard it as, if
not directly then inferentially as a fraud, and to denounce the
material without referring to it in particular manner but to
generally disclaim it as opposed to the meticulous treatment of the
prosecution's evidence, is to highlight the dishonesty that
permeated the judicial approach and ultimate conclusion that was
arrived at.
5.5 It is apparent in the course of the judgment
that all defendants in absentia were regarded as one category and so
treated in the judgment. The "infamous three" - Obeid, Raad and
Chahine were all regarded as escapees from justice and it was held
against them that as they had not seen fit to discuss or offer an
opportunity for the discussion of their evidence with the
authorities then they would be tried in their absence. Needless to
say it was akin to the vernacular expression, "shooting fish in a
barrel" It had all of the trappings of what we refer to in Australia
as a "Kangaroo Court". It was both a farce and a mockery and
constituted nothing more than a rubber stamp insofar as they were
convicted.
5.6 Of special interest and when read and
reflected on in utter disbelief, is the comment and the finding of
the Court at page 85, where it held that the fact that there were no
exits visas in the relevant passports meant, that that of itself did
not mean that false passports were used or that the countries in
question were not efficient enough in maintaining exit records. The
Republic of Cyprus, and the situation pertaining in Canada, Sweden
and Australia are sufficient to my knowledge to indicate that the
migration and immigration procedures are so monitored and of such
sophistication that the obtaining of a false passport, whilst not
out of the question, would make it virtually impossible for either
of these defendants. More particularly, the records of the
governments in question, and when one utilises reference to the
affidavits in question for each of the clients that I was privy to,
it is patently obvious that the reference by the Judicial Council
that, "both cases could not constitute a definite evidence that the
person has actually remained in that country, because of his
passport and the stamps appearing on it." - P.85. It is regrettable
that judicial expositions of this nature are needed to, to resort to
imposing a decision that is neither based in logic nor reason.
Equally to the point that nowhere in the affidavit material is any
fact or matter addressed concerning the issues such as Mr Chahine
residing in a unit in Cyprus and the further affidavit by his
landlord, confirming the same. Likewise with Mr Raad, running a
business in Canada and Mr Obeid conducting transactions in
Australia, significantly, buying a home, attending doctors and
generally being in and with his family, having entered Australia in
June 1993 and not having gone from its shores. How then does the
Judicial Council explain that the persons abroad remained unreliable
evidence when either for reasons of their personal safety or in my
case the fact that I was not able to be given a visa, all render the
matter of the need for attendance hypocritical where it is relied on
for the need to give evidence viva voce.
5.7 The percolation
of this denial and rejection of the alibi material in relation to
the persons referred to is equally seen in the rejection of it in Mr
E1 Khoury's defence. The Court was adamant that it would rely on
what had been reported in Mr. E1 Khoury's confessions against the
defendants, as long as the confessions were convincing in their
details. To be convincing is one thing To be coerced and lacking in
corroboration is another and this was not averted to by the Court,
rather they held the view that: "...[it] consolidated by the factual
evidence derived from the past dealings amongst them all" -
P.86.
5.8 In the circumstances it is absolutely imperative
that in any review of the verdicts against the gentlemen concerned
in this section of my report, it must be noted that no opportunity
was given nor any gesture made to take the evidence on commission or
alternately to have whatever I collected and collated tested by an
opportunity for me to give evidence and to be cross-examined on the
same, or to make an independent investigation of the materials
through consulate officials in the various countries concerned. To
dismiss the matters on the basis that if one were not to attend,
irrespective of whether one could physically be able to go to the
Court, is to yet again conveniently remove from serious
consideration the matters at hand. In all it was a gross miscarriage
of justice and against evidence which must render the verdict unsafe
and unsatisfactory as applies to each of these persons.
6.0
SAMIR GEAGEA
6.1 The position of this Defendant is that he
was acquitted of the capital charge, but convicted of firearm
offences and sentenced to ten years in prison. It was utterly
unbelievable, bearing in mind that the odds were against this
defendant securing an acquittal and especially when one reads the
balance of the judgment as to how the other defendants: were treated
if he was at the apex and they were serving underneath
him.
6.2 Reliance was had by the Judicial Council on the
establishment of what they refer to as a sham party. It was seen as
a political subterfuge to establish a party which despite being
pronounced as established for political purposes, was in reality the
old militia but hid by the penumbra of a political party. It was
alleged that Geagea paid wages, kept staff on and conducted the
security apparatus with Mr. Touma. Mr. Touma, I am informed and
verily believe, was in America, and had been for some
time.
6.3 The evidence continued to establish and ultimately
lead for consideration by the Court that Geagea had collaborated in
and actively counselled and/or procured the accumulation of weapons,
in line with the Lebanese Forces Party which in turn was a cover for
the Lebanese Forces. As well there were active training programs in
intelligence, mapping, and weapons operation. There was a cover
set-up allegedly as a scout group, known as, Al Moustakbal Scouts,
as well as the running of the Ghosta Military Academy.
6.4
Generally the Court looked at each of the matters that it referred
to earlier in respect of Mr. Khoury and the other defendants grouped
and discussed above, but came to a conclusion that even though the
Church bombing was an operation which was an organised crime, which
would have had commanders, planners, and those who would ultimately
execute it, Dr. Geagea's participation therein was not as integral
or as principally positioned as was first thought. While it is
conceded in the Judgment that he made capital of the bombing and
would have used the opportunity presented by it, it is important to
note that prior to the bombing of the Church, Dr Geagea had not come
under any suspicion for any of the crimes that he has been
previously tried with, or is currently standing trial for. And yet
the Church was the catalyst that led to his incarceration and to the
determination of matters which one would have thought were covered
by a general amnesty. It is important in this regard to note that at
the time of writing this opinion and analyse of the case at hand,
one of the former prosecutors has conceded that the trials given to
Dr. Geagea in the past were far from fair and he has publicly
apologised and indicated that he no longer wishes to be identified
with the States legal team. I refer to the press conference of Mr.
Rizk, which I understand has been disseminated to various
organisations and a copy of which will be made available to those
who having read this report could access it at the same
time.
6.5 Ultimately the Court gave to Dr. Geagea the benefit
of the doubt on the basis that whilst there were planners and
organisers of the bombing operation they could not give any certain
role to Samir Geagea neither in co-ordinating nor in planning and
executing the operation. Ultimately they came to the conclusion
that: "As a result, Council has doubts about the participation of
the defendant, Samir Geagea in the Church bombing operation. These
doubts should benefit the defendant and lead to the declaration of
his innocence."
6.6 However, such doubts did not arise when
it came to the amassing of weapons and the conducting of sham
political party which was a disguise for the continuation of the
militia. This to my mind is a contradiction in terms, where the
evidence is preferred for one conclusion but not the other, when
they are both equally capable of the logical conclusion that bears
uniformity in the innocence of the alleged perpetrator as opposed to
his conviction on one and acquittal on the other. Why is it not that
the doubts that existed for the denial and ultimate acquittal of Dr.
Geagea in the Church bombing, also remain the same for the
possession of weapons, conduct of a militia and the various other
matters that were seen fit to render him liable, when in fact and in
substance, the evidence was sufficiently incomprehensible and
unconvincing to allow an acquittal? One can only say that the answer
lies in the genesis of the trial being one of a political witch hunt
and ultimately a conviction on a lesser charge and the acquittal on
the main charge, will both, (hopefully), place the prosecution and
the Judicial Council in a benign and seemingly just light, as
opposed to the calamitous catastrophe resulting in the gross
miscarriage of justice that has occurred.
6.7 In reality the
verdict was both unsafe and unsatisfactory for Dr. Geagea on the
very critical basis that leaving aside the absurd conviction of the
other defendants in the face of their overwhelming alibi evidence
and the fact that E1 Khoury's conviction was tainted by his
confession and should similarly have been rejected, the conviction
of Dr. Geagea has massive and mammoth implications akin to the
"Guilford Six" and "Birmingham Four" - UK. This occurred in a regime
which is judicially far better organised with much more safeguards
and entrenched Appellate review; and still was overturned as being
found to be procured in circumstances which rendered it unsafe and
unsatisfactory. Here in stark contrast there is no such recourse to
any review procedure either Appellate or independent thereof and for
these reasons the procedure stands damned as being in gross
violation of article 14(5) of the ICCPR.
6.8 Nothing further
need be entered into to discuss what is already well and truly
fallowed turf. It remains to be said though that even with
organisations that are loathe to embark upon and enter into matters
which have been the subject of domestic remedies and conducted by
legal systems within those domestic forums, here there was such a
gross departure from what was the minimum required, pursuant to
article 14(5) of the ICCPR that it requires close and careful
scrutiny and sustained protest. Accordingly, this report should be
disseminated to organisations who have been receptive and for which
the writer has been extremely grateful such as Amnesty
International, the Human Rights Committee of the Congress of the
United States, the European Union Human Rights Commission and of
course to the particular governments of Australia, Cyprus, the
United States, Canada, Sweden and the United Kingdom, who have
patiently and properly received the reports for their own
international advices but which would not cause any redress for the
parties concerned.
6.9 Of special interest, this report is in
part dedicated to all of those people who have assisted me from the
Lebanese Forces and the political wing of that party and in
particular to Mrs. Samir Geagea and all of Dr. Geagea's workers
throughout the world who actively campaign and properly organise
themselves for the attainment of peace and justice by lawful means,
as opposed to resorting to activities which would belie the respect
for the system of law and order that Dr. Geagea maintains and holds
firm. Of special interest and the recognition of that interest this
report is equally dedicated to His Beatitude Cardinal Boutros
Nasrallah Sfeir whose campaign for truth and justice in the name of
God and the Maronite Church is especially warmly regarded and
acknowledged in his tireless efforts and campaign on behalf of all
Lebanese citizens for democracy and just government.
20
November 1996 STEPHEN J. STANTON G. Geagea. PAP
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