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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Mohamed, R (on the application of) v Secretary of State for Foreign & Commonwealth Affairs (Rev 31-07-2009) [2008] EWHC 2048 (Admin) (21 August 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2008/2048.html Cite as: [2009] 1 WLR 2579, [2009] WLR 2579, [2008] EWHC 2048 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
DIVISIONAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
and
MR JUSTICE LLOYD JONES
____________________
The Queen on the Application of Binyan Mohamed |
Claimant |
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-and- |
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Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs |
Defendant |
____________________
(instructed by Leigh Day) for the Claimant
Thomas de la Mare and Martin Goudie
(instructed by The Treasury Solicitor's Special Advocates Support Office)
as Special Advocates for the Claimant
Pushpinder Saini QC, Vaughan Lowe QC, Karen Steyn and Tim Eicke
(instructed by The Treasury Solicitor) for the Respondent
Michael Birnbaum QC as Amicus Curiae
Mr Duncan Penny (instructed by Kingsley Napley) was present for Witness B
Hearing dates: 28, 29, 30 and 31 July and 1 and 18 August 2008
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Paragraph | |
1 INTRODUCTION | 1 |
II THE FACTS, THE ALLEGATIONS OF BM AND THE COURSE OF THE PROCEEDINGS | 5 |
(1) The facts and the allegations made by BM | 5 |
(a) BM's period in the United Kingdom | 7 |
(b) The UK Security Services and their position after 11 September 2001 | 9 |
(c) BM's arrest in Pakistan and the provision of information to the United Kingdom | 10 |
(d) The interview of BM by the Security Service | 16 |
(e) The lawfulness of BM's detention in Pakistan | 23 |
(f) BM's allegations as to his treatment when held in Pakistan | 26 |
(g) Information available to the SIS and SyS derived from other matters | 28 |
(h) The requests by the SyS to the United States authorities to interview BM again: May to September 2002 | 29 |
(i) The provision by the SyS of further information and questions to the United States authorities | 30 |
(j) The total absence of information as to BM's whereabouts between May 2002 and May 2004 | 31 |
(k) BM's allegations as to his rendition to Morocco and his torture there | 35 |
(l) BM's allegations of rendition from Morocco to Afghanistan | 36 |
(m) The statements made by him at Bagram and Guantanamo Bay between May and November 2004 and the use made of them by the United States | 38 |
(2) The attempts made by the United Kingdom Government to assist BM | 42 |
(3) The commencement of proceedings | 45 |
(4) The events after the commencement of these proceedings in May 2008 | 47 |
(5) The urgency of the matter | 48 |
(6) The course of the proceedings | 50 |
(7) The position of the Convening Authority | 54 |
III THE CLAIM TO THE DOCUMENTS UNDER THE PRINCIPLES IN NORWICH PHARMACAL | 61 |
(1) Was there wrongdoing? | 65 |
(2) Was the UK Government involved, however innocently, in the arguable wrongdoing? | 69 |
(a) The relevant legal principles | 69 |
(b) The application of the principles in relation to the involvement in the alleged wrongdoing and our findings of fact | 74 |
(i) The case made by BM | 74 |
(ii) The cross-examination of Witness B: the invocation of the right against self-incrimination | 76 |
(iii) Our findings in relation to involvement and facilitation | 86 |
(3) Was the information necessary? | 92 |
(a) The legal principles | 93 |
(b) Application of principles to the facts | 98 |
(i) The necessity of the provision of the information to BM's lawyers | 102 |
(ii) Whether the information will be provided to and considered by the Convening Authority if not produced by the Foreign Secretary | 109 |
(iii) Whether the information will be provided to BM's lawyers by order of the Military | |
Judge during the course of hearings before the Military Commission | 115 |
(iv) Our conclusions on the procedures in the United States | 123 |
(4) Was the information sought within the scope of the available relief? | 127 |
(a) The legal principles | 128 |
(b) The application of the principles to the facts | 135 |
(5) Should the court exercise its discretion in favour of making disclosure? | 139 |
(a) Our approach | 139 |
(b) The consequences to BM | 141 |
(c) The importance of the state prohibition on torture and cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment | 142 |
(d) Time, cost and convenience | 145 |
Our conclusion on the Norwich Pharmacal application | 146 |
Public Interest Immunity | 148 |
IV QUASHING THE DECISION NOT TO MAKE VOLUNTARY DISCLOSURE | 150 |
V THE CLAIM FOR DISCLOSURE UNDER THE ALLEGED DUTY UNDER PUBLIC INTERNATIONAL LAW | 161 |
(1) Article 15 of the Torture Convention and customary international law | 163 |
(2) Consequences of the prohibition of torture as a rule of jus cogens | 170 |
(3) Customary international law and the common law | 184 |
Lord Justice Thomas:
I INTRODUCTION
The issue
II THE FACTS, THE ALLEGATIONS OF BM AND THE COURSE OF THE PROCEEDINGS
(1) The facts and the allegations made by BM
(a) BM's period in the United Kingdom
(b) The UK Security Services and their position after 11 September 2001
i) The United Kingdom Armed Forces are trained in the laws of armed conflict set out in the Geneva Conventions. The Joint Services Intelligence Organisations' training documentation states that the following techniques are expressly and explicitly forbidden: (a) physical punishment of any sort; (b) the use of stress positions; (c) intentional sleep deprivation; (d) withdrawal of food, water or medical treatment and three other specified techniques.
ii) The United Kingdom Government has a very strong record in advocating the case against torture and urging other States not to use torture. There is, as the Intelligence and Security Committee (the ISC) established by the Intelligence Services Act 1994, concluded in its report of 1 March 2005 on the handling of detainees in Afghanistan, Guantanamo Bay and Iraq (Cm 6469), a debate as to whether intelligence which may have been obtained by torture or cruel, inhumane or degrading treatment should be rejected as a matter of principle or whether the Government should use such intelligence to protect the safety of its citizens. It is most certainly not urging States to use torture and pass that information to the United Kingdom (see paragraph 32 of the Report). Although the ISC did not attempt to answer those difficult questions on which it is clear opinions were divided, the ISC drew attention to the evidence of the then Foreign Secretary given on 11 November 2004 that there were circumstances in which intelligence was obtained from a liaison State where the Government knew that their practices were well below the line; however the Government never got intelligence which stated "Here is the intelligence and, by the way, we conducted this under torture". What was important was to consider whether the intelligence is credible. In A v The Secretary of State for the Home Department (No. 2) [2005] UKHL 71, [2006] 2 AC 221 Lord Bingham made clear his view at paragraph 34:
"There is reason to regard it as a duty of states, save perhaps in limited and exceptional circumstances, as where immediately necessary to protect a person from unlawful violence or property from destruction, to reject the fruits of torture inflicted in breach of international law. As McNally JA put it in S v Nkomo 1989 (3) ZLR 117, 131: 'It does not seem to me that one can condemn torture while making use of the mute confession resulting from torture, because the effect is to encourage torture.'"
iii) As regards rendition, it is clear from the decision of the Court of Appeal Criminal Division in R v Mullen [2000] QB 520, that the Court of Appeal considered the facilitation of the rendition by the United Kingdom Secret Intelligence Service (the SIS) of Mr Mullen from Zimbabwe to the United Kingdom (in order for him to stand trial on charges related to Irish Republican terrorism) was a serious failure to adhere to the rule of law and was a clear abuse of process. It is clear from paragraph 11 of the ISC report dated 28 June 2007 on the practice of rendition published in July 2007 (Cm7171) in its redacted form that the SyS and the SIS thereafter no longer operated the process of rendition. They must have appreciated that it was contrary to the rule of law.
iv) It is also clear from the ISC report of 1 March 2005 that the position of the SIS and SyS was that they operated in a culture that respected human rights and that coercive interrogation techniques were alien to the Services' general ethics, methodology and training (see paragraph 39 of the Report).
v) The events of 11 September 2001 were unprecedented and represented a step change in attitudes to the global terrorist threat. On 7 October 2001, the United States led coalition military action against Afghanistan. The Foreign Secretary had on 28 September 2001 approved the deployment of SIS officers to Afghanistan to support the United States military action and to take covert action. Shortly thereafter some of those fighting the coalition were captured by United States authorities and detained by them. The SIS deployed officers to Afghanistan who then began to interview detainees held by the Northern Alliance, which was part of the coalition of anti-Taliban fighters. They also explored, with United States military authorities, the possibility of gaining access to United States-held detainees. (See paragraph 37 of the ISC report of 1 March 2005). The ISC report of 1 March 2005 noted at paragraph 38 that, although the observance of human rights was an important part of the SIS's and SyS's general training, prior to deployment to Afghanistan, SIS officers were not given specific training on the rights of detainees and the Geneva Conventions, nor were they aware of the 1972 announcement banning certain interrogation techniques. The SIS regarded the normal level of training, which emphasised the requirements of the Human Rights Act 1998, as sufficient given the general ethos of the Service.
vi) On 13 November 2001 President Bush announced by Presidential Military Order a change in United States policy towards terrorism. The change in policy aimed to
"identify terrorists and those who support them, to disrupt their activities and to eliminate their ability to conduct or support [terrorist attacks] and for suspects to be detained and, when tried, tried by Military Tribunals". (See ISC Report of 28 June 2007 at paragraph 53 quoting a White House press release).
vii) The Presidential Military Order authorised the detention of suspects at any designated location worldwide with no guarantee of trial. It prescribed that suspects, if tried, would be tried by a Military Commission. The SIS learnt in November 2001 that the United States intended to use Military Tribunals set up under the Presidential Military Order to try terrorist suspects captured outside Afghanistan (see paragraph 4 of the report of 28 June 2007).
viii) In December 2001 it was agreed that SyS personnel should interview detainees in Afghanistan if the United States authorities permitted it. The first SyS staff arrived in Bagram on 9 January 2002 and began to interview the detainees over the course of the next few days (see paragraphs 42 and 43 of the ISC report of 1 March 2005).
ix) As appears from paragraph 46 of the ISC report of 1 March 2005, an SIS officer had access to United States-held detainees and conducted an interview of a detainee on 10 January 2002. Although the ISC report concludes that the officer was satisfied there was nothing during his interview which could have been a breach of the Geneva Conventions, he reported back to London his observations on the circumstances of the handling of the detainee by United States military before the beginning of the interview. The detail of his report has been redacted from the version of the ISC report provided to us.
x) As a consequence, on 11 January 2002, instructions were sent to the SIS officer concerned and copied to all SIS and SyS officers in Afghanistan as follows:
"With regard to the status of the prisoners, under the various Geneva Conventions and protocols, all prisoners, however they are described, are entitled to the same levels of protection. You have commented on their treatment. It appears from your description that they may not be being treated in accordance with the appropriate standards. Given that they are not within our custody or control, the law does not require you to intervene to prevent this. That said, HMG's stated commitment to human rights makes it important that the Americans understand that we cannot be party to such ill treatment nor can we be seen to condone it. In no case should they be coerced during or in conjunction with an SIS interview of them. If circumstances allow, you should consider drawing this to the attention of a suitably senior United States official locally.
It is important that you do not engage in any activity yourself that involves inhumane or degrading treatment of prisoners. As a representative of a UK public authority, you are obliged to act in accordance with the Human Rights Act 2000 which prohibits torture, or inhumane or degrading treatment. Also as a Crown Servant, you are bound by Section 31 of the Criminal Justice Act 1948, which makes acts carried out overseas in the course of your official duties subject to UK criminal law. In other words, your actions incur criminal liability in the same way as if you were carrying out those acts in the UK." (See paragraph 47 of the ISC report of 1 March 2005).
xi) It is clear from the ISC report of 1 March 2005 that the SIS regarded this as an isolated incident. Nonetheless from January 2002 the SyS, according to paragraph 49 of that ISC report, ensured that all officers involved in interviews of detainees were briefed individually by a senior manager prior to their deployment.
xii) Although as we have already set out, the United Kingdom regarded all the detainees as subject to the provisions of the Geneva Conventions, on 7 February 2002 President Bush stated that United States policy was that the Geneva Conventions did not apply to the conflict with Al Qaeda. He stated that although the Conventions did apply to the conflict with Afghanistan, the Taliban were unlawful combatants and, therefore, did not qualify for prisoner of war status. The President, however, ordered that the detainees were to be treated "humanely and, to the extent appropriate and consistent with military necessity, in a manner consistent with the principles of Geneva". (See paragraph 51 of the ISC report of 1 March 2005)
xiii) In March 2002 there was a further isolated incident reported back from an SIS officer in Afghanistan. We were provided with no details of this as we have only seen the redacted version of the report of 1 March 2005.
xiv) In April 2002, an SIS officer was present at an interview conducted by the United States military of a detainee in Afghanistan who complained of time in isolation and who had previously had a nervous breakdown. The redacted report of the ISC dated 1 March 2005 makes clear that the SIS officer asked the United States officer in charge of the interview "for better treatment", but he was unable to follow up the situation.
xv) It is apparent from paragraph 54 of the ISC report dated 1 March 2005, that in June 2002 the SyS discussed with Foreign and Commonwealth Office officials a United States report that referred to the hooding, withholding of blankets and sleep deprivation of a detainee in Afghanistan. It appears that the matter was raised promptly with United States authorities.
xvi) It also appears from paragraph 55 of the same ISC report that in July 2002 an SyS officer reported to senior management that, whilst in Afghanistan, a United States official had referred to "getting a detainee ready", which appeared to involve sleep deprivation, hooding and the use of stress positions. The officer reported they had commented to the United States official that this was inappropriate, but the SyS's senior management took no further action. The ISC were told that this was primarily because the report was based on second-hand information and the SyS had raised the general point the previous month. The detainee, when interviewed later that night, had provided a list of grievances, which included the use of constant bright lights. The SyS officer raised the complaints with the United States officer in charge of the facility at the time, but no further follow-up action was taken. The report also stated that neither the SyS nor the SIS had interviewed detainees in Afghanistan after July 2002 (see paragraph 56).
xvii) It also appears from the report (paragraph 74) that United Kingdom military personnel in Afghanistan conducted no joint interrogations with either the SIS or SyS personnel, nor did they attend United States interviews as observers. The Ministry of Defence told the ISC that although conditions in Bagram were noted as austere, there were no records of adverse comments being formally reported by the United Kingdom military personnel in Afghanistan.
xviii) It is clear from paragraph 57 of the ISC report of 1 March 2005 and paragraph 57 of the ISC report of 28 June 2007 that on 12 January 2002 the United States authorities moved the first group of detainees to Guantanamo Bay from Afghanistan in a publicly-reported operation. They were designated by the United States as unlawful combatants. On 16 January 2002 the SyS was granted access to certain of the detainees and, in March 2002, the Foreign Secretary, with the agreement of the then Home Secretary, approved an SIS/SyS joint submission recommending that intelligence personnel should interview detainees at Guantanamo Bay. Prior to that on 31 January 2002 at a meeting of Permanent Secretaries it was reported that there were anecdotal reports, sometimes second or third hand, of "undue exuberance" by American personnel at Guantanamo Bay. The United Kingdom Government indicated at the time of the first transfer its sense of unhappiness at the process and sought assurances that detainees transferred to Guantanamo Bay would be treated appropriately. (see paragraphs 57 and 58 of the ISC report of 1 March 2005)
xix) It is apparent from paragraph 59 of the ISC report of 28 June 2007 that signs began to emerge in 2002 that the United States rendition programme was not limited to the conflict in Afghanistan. We have only been provided with the redacted version of that part of the report. We, therefore, do not know when this occurred or the name of the country to which the person concerned was transferred, but it is clear from the report that the person was not transferred into United States military custody or to his home country. The report makes clear that the SIS questioned the appropriateness of the transfer with the United States authorities, but regarded it as an isolated incident.
(c) BM's arrest in Pakistan and the provision of information to the United Kingdom
"We would also like to explore the possibility of Security Service officers conducting a debrief of *** regarding his time spent in the UK. As has been the case with other UK nationals/residents detained in Pakistan and Afghanistan, we believe that our knowledge of the UK scene may provide contextual background useful during any continuing interview process. This may enable individual officers to identify any inconsistencies during discussions. This will place the detainee under more direct pressure and would seem to be the most effective way of obtaining intelligence on BM's activities/plans concerning the UK. Grateful for your views"
In a further telegram of 8 May 2002 further questions were sent to be asked of BM by the United States authorities; the telegram made clear that answers would assist the SyS greatly. An update on the plans of the United States authorities for BM was also sought.
(d) The interview of BM by the Security Service
"I told [BM] that he had an opportunity to help us and help himself. The US authorities will be deciding what to do with him and this would depend to a very large degree on his degree of cooperation. I said that if he could persuade me he was telling the complete truth I would seek to use my influence to help him. He asked how, and said he didn't expect ever to get out of the situation he was in. I said it must be obvious to him that he would get more lenient treatment if he cooperated. I said that I could not and would not negotiate up front, but if he persuaded me he was cooperating fully then (and only then) I would explore what could be done for him with my US colleagues. It was, however, clear that, while he appeared happy to answer any questions, he was holding back a great deal of information on who and what he knew in the UK and in Afghanistan. I said I wanted to come back and see him again. In the meantime, he should reflect on what I had told him and, if he wanted my help, he would need to be completely forthcoming. [BM] did not argue and appeared to accept what I said. We closed the interview on an amicable note."
"[BM] is intelligent and patient. If he chooses not to cooperate he has the personal qualities and I believe strength of will to maintain his story indefinitely. He showed no signs of being anxious about his position, I suspect that he will only begin to provide information of genuine value if he comes to believe that it is genuinely in his interests to do so. I don't think he has yet reached this point."
(e) The lawfulness of BM's detention in Pakistan
(f) BM's allegations as to his treatment when held in Pakistan
i) After an initial period of custody by the Pakistani police, he was taken to the interrogation centre of the Pakistan Security Services where he was interrogated, not by the Pakistani Security Services but by United States agents whom he believed to be the FBI. They believed he was a top Al-Qaida person and involved in the creation of a dirty bomb and would be sent to the United States to commit terrorist attacks. As we have set out above and as is set out at paragraph 47.i) below, these are amongst the matters with which he was charged on 28 May 2008.
ii) He told the United States agents that he would not talk until he was given access to a lawyer. He was told by the United States agents that the law had been changed and there were no lawyers. He was hung by a leather strap around his wrists so he could only just stand, he was allowed to go to the toilet only twice a day and was given food only once every second day. He was told by them that he must co-operate with them the hard or the easy way. If he did not do so he would be taken to Jordan. "We can't do what we want here, the Pakistanis can't do exactly what we want them to do. The Arabs will deal with you."
iii) In consequence of this threat he made admissions as to his identity and his address. That was checked out with the United Kingdom authorities and he was told it was true. He then admitted that he had been to Afghanistan.
iv) He was then beaten by the Pakistani authorities and threatened with a gun.
v) When the British agent visited him, the torture stopped. The agent introduced himself as "John". BM provided a description of him. He was interviewed in the presence of a United States agent who had previously been part of the team that interrogated him:
"They gave me a cup of tea with a lot of sugar in it. I initially only took one. 'No, you need a lot more. Where you are going you need a lot of sugar' I didn't know exactly what he meant by this, but I figured he meant some poor country in Arabia. One of them did tell me I was going to get tortured by the Arabs."
BM asked for a lawyer. The British agent also asked what he could do to help. BM said he did not know. The agent told BM he would see what he could do with the Americans, promising to tell BM what would happen to him, but he did not see him again.
vi) He thereafter refused to talk until he was given an access to a lawyer.
(g) Information available to the SIS and SyS derived from other matters
i) The ISC also reported at paragraphs 77 and 78 of the Report of 28 June 2007 in relation to "ghost prisoners". The ISC asked whether the United Kingdom Agencies had knowledge of the individuals whom the United States authorities were holding at undisclosed locations under unknown conditions and to whom the International Committee of the Red Cross did not have access. The answer of the SyS was in the following terms, as recorded at paragraph 78:"Clearly the US is holding some Al Qaida members in detention, other than at Guantanamo, but we do not know the locations or terms of their detention and do not have access to them. The US authorities are under no obligation to disclose to us details of all their detainees and there would be no reason for them to do so unless there is a clear link to the UK. We have however received intelligence of the highest value from detainees, to whom we have not had access and whose location is unknown to us, some of which has led to the frustration of terrorist attacks in the UK or against UK interests."ii) The ISC report of 28 June 2007 refers at paragraph 62 to the SIS being informed that an unnamed individual had been captured with the assistance of a third country. The SIS was not involved in the rendition and was informed of the transfer after it had occurred. After referring to the case of BM, paragraph 64 of the report refers to another case in mid-2002 which appeared inconsistent with what the SIS and SyS believed to be United States policy on Al Qaeda detainees, including that laid out in the Presidential Military Order of November 2001.
iii) The ISC report then states at paragraph 65 that a step change, crucial to the Agencies' growing knowledge of United States actions came in November 2002 when the authorities conducted the rendition to detention of Bisher Al-Rawi and Jamil el-Banna from The Gambia to Afghanistan and subsequently to Guantanamo Bay. The ISC concluded that this case showed that the United States rendition programme had now extended its boundaries beyond individuals connected to the conflict in Afghanistan. At paragraph 67 the report refers to the fact that the SIS and SyS became aware of another case involving the transfer of an individual to a third country. The SyS and the SIS were made aware because the individual was thought to be planning attacks in the United Kingdom. The SyS was allowed to put questions to the detainee, but the ISC concluded that it was not clear whether any assurances to prevent torture or cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment were sought. The ISC then reported at paragraph 68 that they had been told that from 2003 onwards, the SIS were involved in a number of joint operational discussions which developed to the point where they began to become concerned about the legality of their assisting what foreign liaison services, including the United States, were proposing. The ISC reported at paragraph 71 that the Agencies first suspected the possible existence of these secret CIA detention facilities in March 2003, with the arrest of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed. As appears from paragraph 71 of the report, the Chief of the SIS told the ISC that they realised at that point in time that intelligence was coming from a detention facility which was outside and away from Guantanamo. The ISC reported that despite the suspicions about the existence of "black facilities", the Agencies did not fully appreciate at the time that this might mean an increased risk of torture or cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment. As the ISC reported at paragraph 74, the United States authorities would not divulge details of the secret facilities to the SIS or SyS when asked and, as a result, greater use was made of assurances from the United States. As the Chief of the SIS told the ISC:
"As time went on ... we began to get more aware of black facilities and ... so we became more aware of the conditions [in which detainees might be held or interrogated]. At that point we began to consider [that] we need assurances that when we go back to the Americans with a follow-up question to [unsolicited intelligence] that they may have given us, that ... [torture or CIDT] are not going to be used to seek and get answers to our questions." (quotation from the report)
(h) The requests by the SyS to the United States authorities to interview BM again: May to September 2002
i) Witness A of the SyS stated in his open witness statement that the United States authorities suggested that BM might be transferred to Afghanistan at that time; that in the circumstances prevalent at the time, the transfer of detainees by the United States authorities to detention facilities in Afghanistan was not unusual or regarded as unlawful or improper. In a further statement witness A said that it was widely known that there were other transfers of detainees from Pakistan to Afghanistan at the time. He was not aware that the United Kingdom Government objected and did not know if anyone had given specific consideration to its lawfulness at the time. The issue of the United Kingdom's position on rendition by the United States was considered by the ISC in its report of 28 June 2007 on the practice of rendition to which we have referred at paragraph 28.
ii) On 11 June 2002 the SyS sought information as to his whereabouts in Pakistan or Afghanistan and asked to interview BM. The United States authorities noted that efforts were underway to have him moved to Afghanistan and suggested that a further interview be deferred until after the transfer had taken place. Logistically this was more convenient to the SyS and, as the SyS informed the United States authorities, it made more sense to wait until his transfer. The United States authorities indicated that they would keep the SyS informed about his transfer.
iii) In the event this did not happen. On 7 July 2002 the SyS recorded in a telegram that, frustratingly, they had no information of the whereabouts of BM who was described as one of their highest priorities. Urgent clarification of his whereabouts was sought and whether they were likely to see him at Bagram in the near future.
iv) On 15 July 2002 the United States authorities told the SyS in a briefing on an unrelated matter that BM was to be moved to Afghanistan, when a further interview could be facilitated. The SyS sought information on 31 July 2002 as to whether BM was in Pakistan or Afghanistan and for an indication as to when the interview could take place. No response was received. Witness A stated that, although this would not have been regarded as particularly unusual or suspicious, no further information was received as to whether the transfer had taken place.
v) On 12 August 2002 the SyS sought information from the SIS. They asked if on their routine visits to Bagram the SIS could check whether three individuals, including BM were at Bagram; the telegram stated "*** appear to have no information on his current whereabouts exclam".
v)(a) By 19 August 2002, the SyS were aware that BM was being held in a covert location where he was being debriefed. Direct access was not possible but the SyS were able to send questions to the US authorities to be put to him.
v)(b) On 28 August 2002 the SIS told the SyS that there was no record of BM having arrivedthere at Bagram.
vi) On 22 August 2002 the SyS again sought direct access to BM; no response was received. On 28 August 2002 the SIS informed the SyS that BM had not arrived at Bagram.
vii) In late September 2002 the SyS received a report from the United States authorities of an interview with BM.
viii) On 30 September 2002 the SyS discussed the case of BM with the United States authorities at a meeting at Thames House, the headquarters of the SyS. The SyS asked for direct access to BM, but were told that SyS access could not be facilitated at that time.
(i) The provision by the SyS of further information and questions to the United States authorities
0) An agenda for a video conference on 23 October 2002 included an update by the US authorities on their continued interviewing of BM.
i) On 25 October 2002, the SyS sent a telegram referring to the meeting at Thames House. It included the following passage:
"We would like to stress that we regard [BM] as a key focus point for our investigations into the activities of UK passport holders in Afghanistan and elsewhere. ... We feel in the light of [BM]'s recent cooperation further debriefs by these same officers **** may have a positive effect on our intelligence gathering operation into this subject area. However we are grateful for the opportunity to provide material to be used in the current debriefing at this stage."
The telegram then set out further information about BM and the questions to be asked of BM including information relating to Fouad Zouaoui and general questions. The telegram indicated the SyS would provide further information if it discovered further intelligence and asked for updates regarding direct access to BM for the SyS.
ii) Further questions were raised on 5 November 2002 and a photobook sent. Witness A stated that no reply was ever received by the SyS to these two telegrams despite a chasers on 8 and 12 November 2002 which made clear that although the SyS appreciated that this might be "a long winded process", the urgent nature of the enquiries was obvious.
iii) In February 2003, the SyS received 5 reports from the United States authorities of an interview with BM, though they did not relate directly to the questions put by the SyS. We were told by witness A at the hearing that two of these were the last interview reports received.
iv) On 15 April 2003, the SyS requested, in the light of BM's reported co-operation, a further interview by Witness B; a list of over 70 further questions was also sent.
v) Further information from debriefings of BM was supplied to the United Kingdom authorities by the United States authorities on 14 November 2003, 14 January 2004 and 15 March 2004.
(j) The total absence of information as to BM's whereabouts between May 2002 and May 2004
(k) BM's allegations as to his rendition to Morocco and his torture there
i) He was taken from Karachi to Islamabad and then subjected to extraordinary
rendition by United States personnel to Morocco on 22 July 2002. He was handed over to other people in Morocco. His lawyers have obtained evidence which suggests that a Gulfstream V aircraft operated on behalf of the CIA left Islamabad and landed at Rabat on that day.
ii) After arrival in Morocco he was handed over to other persons and held in various facilities. He was told that the United States wanted a story from him and he was to testify against others in relation to matters such as the dirty bomb. He was then tortured by some persons who were masked. A detailed account of that alleged torture has been given to us in a note provided by his lawyers; it is only necessary to mention, for reasons that are made clear at paragraph 103.ii) below, that he contends that apart from being severely beaten and subjected to sleep deprivation, his penis and private parts were cut with a scalpel. One of those who interrogated him stated she was a Canadian; it is alleged by BM's lawyers that she was an agent of the CIA.
35.A It is clear from documents subsequently supplied to us that Witness B visited Morocco once in November 2002 and twice in February 2003. As no information about these visits was available at the hearing Witness B was not questioned in the open or closed sessions about these visits or the document referred to at paragraph 30.iv). We have been informed that the SyS maintains that it did not know that BM was in Morocco in the period in question.iii) During the course of his interrogation he was questioned about his links with the United Kingdom, told of personal information about himself (such as details of his education, the name of his kick boxing trainer and friendships in London). He was told that they had been working with the British and had seen photographs of people given to them by MI5.
(l) BM's allegations of rendition from Morocco to Afghanistan
(m) The statements made by him at Bagram and Guantanamo Bay between May and November 2004 and the use made of them by the United States
"This chapter establishes procedures governing the use of military commissions to try alien unlawful combatants engaged in hostilities against the United States for violations of the law of war and other offenses triable by military commission."
(2) The attempts made by the United Kingdom Government to assist BM
(3) The commencement of these proceedings
i) The quashing of the decision refusing to provide information on the basis that it was irrational.
ii) The provision of information and documents under the principles set out in Norwich Pharmacol v Customs and Excise Commissioners [1974] AC 133.
iii) The provision of the same materials under a duty said to exist under customary international law.
(4) The events after the commencement of these proceedings in May 2008
i) On 28 May 2008 BM was charged, under the Military Commissions Act of 2006, as an alien unlawful enemy combatant with offences that may carry the death penalty. It is not yet clear whether the death penalty will be sought by United States military prosecutors. BM is charged with conspiracy with members of Al-Qaida, including Osama Bin Laden, to murder and to attack civilians and providing support to terrorism. The overt acts relied on include allegations that:
(1) He had trained with and fought for Al-Qaida and the Taliban in Afghanistan against the Northern Alliance.
(2) He was then selected for specialised terrorist missions because of his facility in English and his refugee status in the United Kingdom.
(3) He was then trained in remote controlled detonation devices both in Afghanistan and Pakistan.
(4) In Lahore, he and Jose Padilla reviewed technical information on the construction of an improvised radioactive bomb (a dirty bomb).
(5) BM and Padilla plotted attacks against the United States. BM agreed to travel to the United States and carry out a terrorist act. He discussed with Padilla blowing up gas tankers, spraying people with cyanide in night clubs and the targeting of buildings with natural gas and gas stations. BM with others were to rent several apartments in large apartment buildings in the United States, fill the apartments with natural gas and then detonate the natural gas using delayed timing devices. It was alleged that Khalid Sheikh Mohamed had instructed BM and Padilla to buttress support pillars of the apartments with aluminium or steel panels to cause the pillars to absorb the force of the blast, thereby collapsing buildings entirely. BM agreed to do this.
(6) He tried to leave Karachi with Padilla on 4 April 2002 but was detained for apparent passport irregularities. He then obtained a different forged passport while Padilla continued on to the United States.
The same or similar acts are relied on for the second charge of providing material support for terrorism
ii) On 6 June 2008 Daniel Bethlehem QC, the Legal Adviser to the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, wrote to Mr Clive Stafford Smith, at the request of the Foreign Secretary. The letter made clear that the United Kingdom Government were continuing to request BM's return and had written to the United States authorities asking them to investigate BM's allegation of mistreatment. The letter made clear that the Foreign Secretary had concerns about a number of aspects of the Military Commissions Act. The letter continued:
"The Government has previously said to you and to the [ISC] that it had no information to confirm [BM]'s account of his detention following his arrest in Pakistan or his allegations of mistreatment while in detention. In the light of your correspondence and the related judicial review proceedings, all the various branches of the Government have recently undertaken a further review of the material held on their files. In the course of this review, some limited additional material was discovered. While this material may not have a bearing on the charges preferred against [BM], and may not be definitive, it is possible that it could be considered to be exculpatory or might otherwise be relevant under 948r, 949j.(d) or other sections of the MCA and the accompanying provisions of the Manual for Military Commissions (MMC).
Given its nature, we are not in a position to provide you with this information. However, given the terms of the MCA and the MMC, insofar as the information may be relevant and exculpatory, and [BM] is committed for trial, trial counsel would be required to disclose the information to the defence as soon as practicable. We have raised this issue with U.S. officials and we will engage further with them on this point."
This letter is of very considerable significance:
(1) It is in effect an acceptance by the Foreign Secretary that he has in his possession material that is potentially exculpatory or otherwise relevant to the proceedings before the United States Military Commissions.
(2) The provisions to which Mr Bethlehem QC refers are provisions of the Act which exclude evidence obtained by torture and which relate to the provision of exculpatory evidence. They are set out at paragraph 117 below. Although the letter states that United States military prosecutors (referred to in the letter as "trial counsel") would be required to disclose the material as soon as practicable, as is set out in sub-paragraph 47.v) below, the Foreign Secretary no longer contends that the United States military prosecutors will disclose the material.
(3) A copy of the letter was provided to United States officials. Following the letter, Mr Bethlehem QC visited the United States on 16 June 2008 and met senior officials of the Department of Defense and the State Department to reiterate the request of the United Kingdom Government for the return of BM. Mr Bethlehem QC gave to the Acting General Counsel to the Department of Defense and to the Legal Adviser to the State Department a classified letter which drew detailed attention to the additional material which had been identified as relevant to BM's detention in Pakistan. As was made clear to us, the purpose of that letter was to "draw formally to the attention of the relevant United States authorities the documents in question to enable them to address issues of relevance, exculpation and disclosure".
(4) The letter was sent, as Sullivan J pointed out at the hearing on 20 June 2008, after summary grounds of resistance had been filed on behalf of the Foreign Secretary which made no allusion to these matters.
iii) On 20 June 2008, the Treasury Solicitor wrote to BM's solicitors setting out the Foreign Secretary's formal decision not to make voluntary disclosure; we refer to the details of that letter at paragraphs 151 and following below.
iv) On 22 July 2008 a letter was written on behalf of the Foreign Secretary to Mr Stafford Smith stating that the United States had informed the Foreign Secretary that, "based on a review of records and consultations" the allegations made by counsel to [BM] that are reflected in his letter were "not credible".
v) On 25 July 2008 the Treasury Solicitor on behalf of the Foreign Secretary wrote to BM's lawyers to state that the Foreign Secretary would no longer rely upon the fact that the prosecuting authority would necessarily disclose of its own motion the material requested by BM's lawyers when BM was tried before the Military Commissions. The contention was maintained before us, however, that the material would be disclosed in the trial before the Military Commissions as we set out at paragraphs 109 and following.
(5) The urgency of the matter
(6) The course of the proceedings
(7) The position of the Convening Authority
III. THE CLAIM TO THE DOCUMENTS UNDER THE PRINCIPLES IN NORWICH PHARMACAL
"If through no fault of his own a person gets mixed up in the tortious acts of others so as to facilitate their wrongdoing he may incur no personal liability but he comes under a duty to assist the person who has been wronged by giving him full information and disclosing the identity of the wrongdoers. I do not think that it matters whether he became so mixed up by voluntary action on his part or because it was his duty to do what he did. It may be that if this causes him expense the person seeking the information ought to reimburse him. But justice requires that he should co-operate in righting the wrong if he unwittingly facilitated its perpetration."
i) Was there wrongdoing?
ii) Was the United Kingdom Government, however innocently, involved in the arguable wrongdoing?
iii) Was the information necessary?
iv) Was the information sought within the scope of the available relief?
v) Should the court exercise its discretion in favour of granting relief?
(1) Was there wrongdoing?
i) After being subject to torture and cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment in Pakistan, he was unlawfully rendered from Pakistan to Morocco by the United States authorities.
ii) Whilst in Morocco he was subject to unlawful incommunicado detention and torture during his interrogation there by or on behalf of the United States authorities.
iii) He was unlawfully rendered by the United States authorities from Morocco to Afghanistan on 21 or 22 January 2004
iv) He was detained unlawfully and incommunicado at the "Dark Prison" near Kabul and thereafter at the United States Air Force base at Bagram.
v) He was tortured or subject to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment by or on behalf of the United States authorities in the "Dark Prison".
(2) Was the United Kingdom Government involved, however innocently, in the arguable wrongdoing?
(a) The relevant legal principles
a. In Norwich Pharmacol itself the distinction that was drawn was between the mere bystander or witness to wrongdoing whom all the Law Lords were clear could not be placed under an obligation to provide information and those who were involved or who participated in wrongdoing in such a way as to place them under an obligation. We have already referred to the test of Lord Reid - being mixed up so as to facilitate (p.175 B-C); Lord Morris of Borth-y-Gest referred to someone becoming "actually involved (or actively concerned) in some transactions or arrangements as a result of which he has acquired the information" (p.178 H); Viscount Dilhorne spoke of a person being involved in the transaction or involvement or participation in the wrongdoing (p.188 A-C); Lord Cross spoke of unwitting facilitation arising through a relationship of the person against whom relief was sought and the person alleged to have committed the wrong (p.197 B-G); Lord Kilbrandon (p.203D-204D) spoke of the right to relief of the person seeking disclosure depending on the relationship of the wrongdoer to those against whom relief was sought. None of the speeches speak of causation; it is clear that facilitation is not the same as causation.
b. In Ashworth Hospital v MGN [2002] UKHL 29 ([2002] 1 WLR 2033) at paragraph 30 Lord Woolf referred to the speeches in Norwich Pharmacol in these terms:
"They make it clear that what is required is involvement or participation in the wrongdoing and that, if there is the necessary involvement, it does not matter that the person from whom discovery is sought was innocent and in ignorance of the wrongdoing by the person whose identity it is hoped to establish."
At paragraph 35, he added:
"Although this requirement of involvement or participation on the part of the party from whom discovery is sought is not a stringent requirement, it is still a significant requirement. It distinguishes that party from a mere onlooker or witness. The need for involvement, the reference to participation can be dispensed with because it adds nothing to the requirement of involvement, is a significant requirement because it ensures that the mere onlooker cannot be subjected to the requirement to give disclosure. Such a requirement is an intrusion upon a third party to the wrongdoing and the need for involvement provides justification for this intrusion."
Lord Slynn of Hadley whose speech was the only other speech to refer to this element spoke only of "participation" and "involvement" in the wrongdoing. Again there is nothing that requires the involvement be causative of the wrongdoing.
c. We were referred to other decisions and observations including Axa Equity & Life Assurance (1998) CLC 1177 (where Morritt LJ spoke of involvement in terms of "causing or facilitating"), the observations of Sedley LJ in InterBrew SA v Financial Times and Ors [2002] EWCA Civ 274 ([2002] 2 Lloyd Rep 229) (where he spoke of facilitation), and Campaign Against Arms Trade v BAE Systems plc [2007] EWHC 330. In the last case King J said at paragraph 12:
"The third party has to have some connection with the circumstances of the wrong which enables the purpose of the wrongdoing to be furthered."
d. We are not sure that it was necessary to go so far as King J went in that case. That is because as Sir Anthony Clarke, MR said in Koo Golden East Mongolia v Bank of Nova Scotia and Ors [2007] EWCA Civ 1443 at paragraph 37 it is necessary to consider all the circumstances in the light of the fact that Norwich Pharmacol relief is a flexible remedy.
(b) The application of the principles in relation to the involvement in the alleged wrongdoing and our findings of fact
(i) The case made by BM
i) The supply of information about BM after his arrest in Karachi on 10 April 2002.
ii) The interview by Witness B when BM was held incommunicado and unlawfully at Karachi, his observation of BM on his arrival and his threat to BM during interview that the United Kingdom would not help him unless he co-operated with the United States authorities.
iii) The failure to object to the intended transfer of BM to Afghanistan and the failure to obtain assurances as to BM's treatment by or on behalf of the United States authorities.
iv) Supplying further information and receiving results of the interrogation with a continued failure to seek assurances of proper treatment in the knowledge from the end of July 2002 that BM had not been transferred to Afghanistan but remained held in custody by or on behalf of the United States and that United Kingdom representatives had been refused access to him despite their requests,
v) There was an arguable case that the information supplied by the United Kingdom had been used in the interrogation of BM.
vi) Failing to make objections and protests to the United States Government about the incommunicado detention and treatment of BM during such detention
(ii) The cross-examination of Witness B: the invocation of the right against self incrimination
i) Both counsel for BM and the Special Advocates told us that they challenged the bona fides and candour of Witness B's witness statement and in some respects its credibility. This alone was a powerful reason to allow cross-examination as this was the trial of the action for disclosure. Furthermore he had specific knowledge about BM, as the interviewer of BM. The questions directed to him would not be generalised but relate to specific matters. The question of the knowledge of the SyS went not only to the issue of involvement and facilitation but also to the exercise of the court's discretion. The question of knowledge was also arguably relevant to the challenge to the decision of the Foreign Secretary on voluntary disclosure, as it was said on behalf of BM that, if the discretion were exercised on a wrong basis, then it would be open to the court to quash it. The open cross-examination conducted by Ms Rose QC was limited to specific topics. For the reasons we have given at paragraph 53 it was conducted in private.
ii) Witness A's position could be dealt with by his being asked to make a further statement in relation to the topics canvassed because there was no attack on his bona fides or candour and because the enquiries sought to be made of Witness A went to general matters concerning the documents and practices of the SyS and not to specific knowledge in relation to BM.
"S. 51 Genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes
(1) It is an offence against the law of England and Wales for a person to commit genocide, a crime against humanity or a war crime
(2) This section applies to acts committed:
(a) in England or Wales, or
(b) outside the United Kingdom by a United Kingdom national, a United Kingdom resident or a person subject to United Kingdom service jurisdiction.
s.52 Conduct ancillary to genocide, etc committed outside jurisdiction
(1) It is an offence against the law of England and Wales for a person to engage in conduct ancillary to an act to which this section applies.
(2) This section applies to an act that if committed in England or Wales would constitute -
(a) an offence under section 51 (genocide, crime against humanity or war crime), or
(b) an offence under this section
but which, being committed (or intended to be committed) outside England and Wales, does not constitute such an offence.
s. 55 Meaning of 'ancillary offence'
(1) References in this Part to an ancillary offence under the law of England and Wales are to:
(a) aiding, abetting, counselling or procuring the commission of an offence,
(b) inciting a person to commit an offence
(c) attempting or conspiring to commit an offence, or
(d) assisting an offender or concealing the commission of an offence.
A war crime is defined by s.50(2) to be a war crime as defined by Article 8.2 of the ICC statute as set out in schedule 8 to the Act. In so far as material Article 8.2 provides:
"For the purpose of this Statute, 'war crimes' means:
(a) Grave breaches of the Geneva Conventions of 12 August 1949, namely, any of the following acts against persons or property protected under the provisions of the relevant Geneva Conventions:
(ii) Torture or inhuman treatment, including biological experiments;
(iii) Wilfully causing great suffering, or serious injury to body or health;
(vi) Wilfully depriving a prisoner of war or other protected person of the rights of fair and regular trial;
(vii) Unlawful deportation or transfer or unlawful confinement;"
(iii) Our findings in relation to involvement and facilitation
(i) The SyS and the SIS were interested in BM because of his residence in the United Kingdom, his connections with suspected persons in the United Kingdom, the period of time spent in Pakistan and Afghanistan, those whom he was said to have been with and the gravity of the allegations made against him at the time.
(ii) We have no doubt that on the basis of that information the SIS and SyS were right to conclude that BM was a person of great potential significance and a serious potential threat to the national security of the United Kingdom. There was therefore every reason to seek to obtain as much intelligence from him as was possible in accordance with the rule of law and to cooperate as fully as possible with the United States authorities to that end.
(iii) It was clear from reports that BM was held incommunicado from 10 April 2002 whilst a series of interviews was conducted by the United States authorities in April 2002 during which he had asked for a lawyer and had been refused.
(iv) In May 2002, the SyS and the SIS received reports containing information relating to BM's detention and treatment in Pakistan. The details of the reports are set out in the closed judgment.
(v) Our finding after the hearing was that the probability is that Witness B read the reports either before he left for Karachi or before he conducted the interview. Since the hearing we have been provided with the documents to which we have referred at paragraph 17 which show a briefing document was prepared for sending to him.
(vi) If, contrary to that the finding we made after the hearing, Witness B had not read them prior to going to Karachi or after arrival at Karachi and prior to the interview, we have no doubt that other persons within the SyS, including persons more senior to Witness B, must have read the reports and must have appreciated what they said about BM's detention and treatment at Karachi. Those officers should have drawn to the attention of Witness B these matters either before or after the interview. It is now clear that the reports were studied by other desk officers.
(vii) In the light of Witness B's continued involvement with BM and the importance attached to BM by the SyS, it is inconceivable that he did not carefully read the materials after his return.
(viii) During the interview Witness B saw himself as having a role to play in conjunction with the United States authorities in inducing BM to cooperate by making it clear that the United Kingdom would not help unless BM cooperated. We can well understand why, given the exigencies of the time, Witness B put matters in such stark terms as he did. It is clear that what he said to BM was, in effect, that the United Kingdom would not attempt to assist him unless BM persuaded him that he was cooperating fully with the United States authorities.
(ix) By 30 September 2002, it was clear to the SyS that BM was being held at a covert location (either by the authorities of the United States or under the direct control of the United States)at a facilitywhich was not a United States military facility, such as Bagram. It is clear to us that theymust have appreciatedknew that he was not in a regular United States facility, that the facility in which he was being detained and questioned was that of a foreign government (other than Afghanistan) and that the United States authorities had direct access to information being obtained from him.
(x) The SyS were supplying information as well as questions which they knew were to be used in interviews of BM from the time of his arrest whilst he was held incommunicado and without access to a lawyer or review by a court or tribunal. They continued to supply information and questions after they knew of the circumstances of BM's detention and treatment as contained in the reports of the series of interviews in May 2002 and after September 2002 when theymust have appreciatedknew the circumstances related to his continued detention which we have described in subparagraph (ix).
i) The conduct of the SyS facilitated interviews by or on behalf of the United
States when BM was being detained by the United States incommunicado and without access to a lawyer.
ii) The SyS continued to facilitate the interviewing of BM by providing information and questions after 17 May 2002 untilNovember 2002at least April 2003 in the knowledge of what had been reported to them in relation to the conditions of his detention and treatment and his interviews in Karachi in May 2002 to which we have referred.
iii) Witness B worked with the United States authorities to the extent of making it clear to BM that the United Kingdom Government would not help BM unless he cooperated fully with the United States authorities.
iv) The SyS continued to facilitate interviews by the United States authorities after September 2002 when also they knew BM was still incommunicado and when they knewmust also have appreciatedthat he was not in a United States facility and that the undisclosed facility in which he was being detained and questioned was that of a foreign government (other than Afghanistan) and that the United States authorities had direct access to information being obtained from him.
v) If the question of facilitation is considered as one where an important factor is the relationship between the person from whom the information is sought and the alleged wrongdoer (as some of the authorities to which we have referred at paragraph 70a suggest), then by seeking to interview BM in the circumstances described and supplying information and questions for his interviews, the relationship of the United Kingdom Government to the United States authorities in connection with BM was far beyond that of a bystander or witness to the alleged wrongdoing.
vi) We are unable to determine the significance (if any) of Witness B's visits to Morocco discussed in paragraph 35A.
(3) Was the information necessary?
(a) The legal principles
"In my judgment despite the argument of [counsel for the claimant] that there is no authority directly in point, it is clear that the exercise of the jurisdiction of the court under Norwich Pharmacol against third parties who are mere witnesses innocent of any participation in the wrongdoing being investigated is a remedy of last resort... The jurisdiction is only to be exercised if the innocent third parties are the only practicable source of information."
After referring to the speeches in Norwich Pharmacol and Ashworth, Lightman J concluded:
"The necessity required to justify exercise of this intrusive jurisdiction is a necessity arising from the absence of any other practicable means of obtaining the essential information."
In Nikitin & Ors v Richards Butler LLP [2007] EWHC 173 (QB) ([2007] All ER (D) 129) Langley J, after referring to the decision of Lightman J in Mitsui seemed to consider at paragraph 24 that it was necessary to show that such information was vital to a decision to sue or an ability to plead and whether or not, even if it was, it could be obtained from other sources. The requirement of necessity was also considered by King J in Campaign Against Arms Trade v BAE paragraphs 15-20; it was argued on behalf of the defendant in that case that this test was not met where the claimant had failed to exhaust other available avenues through which the information might be obtained. King J observed that that was to put the matter "too high" and to put the discretion of the court into too much of a straitjacket. He considered that the court was entitled to have regard to all the circumstances prevailing in the particular case including the size and resources of the applicant, the urgency of its need and to obtain the information it requires and any public interest in its having its needs satisfied.
"In my judgment the principle of the Norwich Pharmacol case applies whether or not the victim intends to pursue action in the courts against the wrongdoer provided that the existence of a cause of action is established and the victim cannot otherwise obtain justice. The remedy of discovery is intended in the final analysis to enable justice to be done. Justice can be achieved against an erring employer in a variety of ways and a plaintiff may obtain an order for discovery provided he shows that he is genuinely seeking lawful redress of a wrong and cannot otherwise obtain redress."
(b) Application of principles to the facts
i) Whether on the facts of the case the provision of the information to BM's lawyers is necessary.
ii) Whether the information will be provided to and considered by the Convening Authority if not produced by the Foreign Secretary.
iii) Whether the information will be provided to BM's lawyers by order of the Military Judge during the course of hearings before the Military Commissions
(i) The necessity of the provision of the information to BM's lawyers
i) As we have set out the United States Government has refused to provide any information as to his location between the time he was clearly in the de facto custody of the United States in Pakistan on 17 May 2002 and his arrival in Bagram two years later.
ii) The only information provided by the United States Government about that period is evidence that points to the fact that BM's allegations cannot be supported. On 25 April 2008, in response to requests for information under the Data Protection Act 1998 and the Freedom of Information Act 2000 the Foreign and Commonwealth Office disclosed a copy of a narrative summary of BM's medical record received by the United Kingdom Government from the United States authorities at Guantanamo Bay. That document is from the Senior Medical Officer dated 24 January 2008. It stated that BM arrived in Guantanamo Bay in fair health and set out a report on his mental condition to which it will be necessary to refer (see paragraph 126.v) below). In the letter of 22 July 2008 (to which we referred at paragraph 47.iv)) the Foreign Office also stated that the United States Government had informed them that there was no evidence to support the claim that BM's genitalia had been brutalised; nothing abnormal about his genitalia was noted in any his medical records and no scarring had been identified.
(ii) Whether the information will be provided to and considered by the Convening Authority if not produced by the Foreign Secretary
"Military commission under this chapter may be convened by the Secretary of Defense or by any officer or official of the United States designated by the Secretary for that purpose."
"This Manual applies the principles of law and rules of evidence in trial by general courts-martial so far as I have considered practicable and consistent with military intelligence activities and not inconsistent with the [Military Commissions Act of 2006]"
i) Under Part II, Rule 401, it was the obligation of the Convening Authority to consider the evidence and the interests of national security.
"Rule 401. Forwarding and disposition of charges in general
(a) Who may dispose of charges? Only the Secretary of Defense or an officer or official of the United States designated by the Secretary for the purpose to convene military commissions may dispose of charges.
(b) How charges may be disposed of. The authority may dispose of the charges by dismissing any or all of them or referring any or all of them to a military commission in a prompt manner.
A proper authority may dispose of charges individually or collectively. ... A charge should be dismissed when it fails to state an offense, when it is unsupported by available evidence, or when there are other sound reasons why trial by military commission is not appropriate. Charges may be dismissed because trial would be detrimental to the prosecution of a war or harmful to national security, see R.M.C. 407(B).'"
ii) Under Part II, Rule 406, the charges have to be referred to the legal adviser to the Convening Authority for consideration and advice before a decision is made. Rule 406 (b) sets out the contents of that advice and requires consultation with the Office of the Director of National Intelligence; Rule 406 (c) necessitates the provision of that advice to the defence if charges are referred. As the information held by the Foreign Secretary has been drawn to the attention of the United States Department of Defense and the State Department, it was submitted it would as part of this process be drawn to the attention of the Convening Authority by this route:
"(c) Contents: The advice of the legal adviser shall include a written and signed statement which set forth that person's
....
(2) Conclusion with respect to whether the allegation of each offence is warranted by the evidence indicated in the report of the investigation (if there is such a report)...
(4) Conclusion, after consultation with the Office of the Director of National Intelligence and appropriate intelligence agencies, with respect to whether trial of the charges would be harmful to national security.
Discussion
The legal adviser is personally responsible for the pretrial advice and must make an independent and informed appraisal of the charges and evidence in order to render the advice....."
(c) Distribution. A copy of the advice of the legal advisor shall be provided to the defense if charges are referred to trial by military commission."
iii) Under Part II, Rule 407, the Convening Authority is obliged to consult the Office of the Director of National Intelligence if it finds that the trial would be inimical to national security before coming to a decision.
Rule 407. "Action by convening authority
(b) National security matters. When in receipt of charges the trial of which the convening authority finds would probably be inimical to the prosecution of a war or harmful to national security, that convening authority, unless otherwise prescribed by regulations of the Secretary of Defense, and after appropriate consultation with the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, shall determine whether trial is warranted and, if so, whether the security considerations involved are paramount to a trial. As the convening authority finds appropriate, he may dismiss the charges, or authorize trial of them."
iv) However Part II, Rule 601 makes clear the limitations on the scope of the Convening Authority's duties:
Rule 601: Referral
(d) When charges may be referred. If the convening authority finds, or is advised by a legal advisory that there are reasonable grounds to believe that an offense triable by a military commission has been committed and that the accused committed it, and that the specification alleges an offense, the convening authority may refer it. The finding may be based on hearsay in whole or in part......... The convening authority or legal advisory shall not be required before charges are referred to resolve legal issues, including objections to evidence, which may arise at trial."
(iii) Whether the information will be provided to BM's lawyers by order of the Military Judge during the course of hearings before the Military Commissions
"Any commissioned officer of the armed forces on active duty is eligible to serve on a military commission under this chapter."
"A military judge shall be detailed to each military commission under this chapter..... The military judge shall preside over each military commission to which he has been detailed."
i) The provisions in relation to self incrimination and evidence obtained by torture and coercion are at sub-chapter 948r. No evidence obtained by torture is admissible, but evidence obtained by coercion prior to December 2005 may be admissible.
"(a) In General. - No person shall be required to testify against himself at a proceeding of a military commission under this chapter.
(b) Exclusion Of Statements Obtained By Torture. - A statement obtained by use of torture shall not be admissible in a military commission under this chapter, except against a person accused of torture as evidence that the statement was made.
(c) Statements Obtained Before Enactment Of Detainee Treatment Act Of 2005. - A statement obtained before December 30, 2005 (the date of the enactment of the Defense Treatment Act of 2005) in which the degree of coercion is disputed may be admitted only if the Military Judge finds that -
(1) the totality of the circumstances renders the statement reliable and possessing sufficient probative value; and
(2) the interests of justice would best be served by admission of the statement into evidence."
ii) Documents detrimental to United States national security are privileged from production; sub-chapter 949d(f) provides for the protection of classified information:
"(1) National Security Privilege. (A) Classified information shall be protected and is privileged from disclosure if disclosure would be detrimental to the national security. The rule in the preceding sentence applies to all stages of the proceedings of military commissions under this chapter....
(2) Introduction of Classified information
(A) Alternatives to Disclosure. To protect classified information from disclosure the Military Judge, upon motion of trial counsel, shall authorise to the extent practicable (i) the deletion of specified items of classified information from the documents to be introduced as evidence before the military commission (ii) the substitution of a portion or a summary of the information for such classified information; or the statement of statement of relevant facts that the classified information would tend to prove.
(B)Protection of sources, methods or activities. The military judge on the motion of trial counsel shall permit trial counsel to introduce otherwise admissible evidence before the military commission, while protecting from disclosure the sources, methods or activities by which the United States acquired the evidence, if the military judge finds that (i) the sources, methods and activities by which the United States obtained the evidence are classified and (ii) the evidence is reliable. The military judge may require trial counsel to present to the military commission and the defence to the extent practicable and consistent with national security, an unclassified summary of the sources, methods or activities by which the United States acquired the evidence.......
(3) Consideration Of Privilege And Related Materials. - A claim of privilege under this subsection, and any materials submitted in support thereof, shall, upon request of the Government, be considered by the military judge in camera and shall not be disclosed to the accused."
iii) The right of the defence to obtain documentary evidence is in chapter under the heading "Opportunity to obtain witnesses and other evidence "
.....
(b)Process For Compulsion. Process issued in a military commission under this chapter to compel witnesses to appear and testify and to compel the production of other evidence shall be similar to that which courts of the United States having criminal jurisdiction may lawfully use...
(c)Protection Of Classified Information.
(1) With respect to the discovery obligations of trial counsel under this section, the military judge, upon motion of trial counsel, shall authorize, to the extent practicable -
(A) the deletion of specified items of classified information from documents to be made available to the accused;
(B) the substitution of a portion or summary of the information for such classified documents; or
(C) the substitution of a statement admitting relevant facts that the classified information would tend to prove
(2) The military judge, upon motion of trial counsel, shall authorise trial counsel, in the course of complying with discovery obligations under this section, to protect from disclosure the sources, methods, or activities by which the United States acquired evidence if the military judge finds that the sources, methods or activities by which the United States acquired such evidence are classified. The military judge may require trial counsel to provide, to the extent practicable, an unclassified summary of the sources, methods or activities by which the United States acquired such evidence".
(d) Exculpatory Evidence. -
(1) As soon as practicable, trial counsel shall disclose to the defense the existence of any evidence known to trial counsel that reasonably tends to exculpate the accused. When exculpatory evidence is classified, the accused shall be provided with an adequate substitute in accordance with the procedures under subsection (c).
(2) In this subsection, the term 'evidence known to trial counsel' in the case of exculpatory evidence, means exculpatory evidence that the prosecution would be required to disclose in a trial by general court-martial under chapter 47 of this title."
iv) Provision for appeals and the intervention of the Federal Courts is in subchapter 950g
"(a) Exclusive Appellate Jurisdiction. - (1)(A) Except as provided in subparagraph (B), the United States court of Appeals for the district of Columbia Circuit shall have exclusive jurisdiction to determine the validity of a final judgment rendered by a military commission (as approved by the convening authority) under this chapter."
"(c) Scope Of Review. - The jurisdiction of the Court of appeals on an appeal under subsection (a) shall be limited to the consideration of-
(1) whether the final decision was consistent with the standards and procedures specified in this chapter; and
(2) to the extent applicable, the Constitution and the laws of the United States."
v) The Manual for Military Commissions also contains a provision in Rule 701(e) and (f) in relation to exculpatory evidence:
"(e) Exculpatory evidence. Subject to section (f), the trial counsel shall, as soon as practicable, disclose to the defense the existence of evidence known to the trial counsel which reasonably tends to:
(1) Negate the guilt of the accused of an offense charged;
(2) Reduce the degree of guilt of the accused of an offense charge; or
(3) Reduce the punishment.
In this section, the term "evidence known to trial counsel," as it relates to exculpatory evidence, means exculpatory evidence that the prosecution would be required to disclose in a trial by general court-martial under chapter 47 of this title."
(f) National Security Privilege. Classified information shall be protected and is privileged from production if disclosure is detrimental to the national security. The rule applies to all stages of proceedings in military commissions, including the discovery phase. Pursuant to 10 USC§§949d(f) and 949(j)(c), the military judge may issue a protective order to limit the distribution or disclosure to the defence, including the sources, methods or activities by which the United States acquired the evidence
(1) To withhold disclosure of information otherwise subject to discovery under this rule, the military judge must find that the privilege is properly claimed under Mil. Comm. R. Evid. 505."
Detailed provisions are then made for the provision of the information mirroring the provisions in the Act. §§ 949d (f) and 949(j)(c) are set out at subparagraphs ii) and iii) above. The reference to Mil. Com. R' Ev is a reference to the Rules of Evidence set out in the Manual at Part III; Rule 505 of that Part deals with classified information and its disclosure in similar terms. It is necessary to refer to the safeguard contained in Rule 505(e)(4) which provides:
" Protection of the fairness of the proceedings. If the military judge determines that the government's proposed alternative to full disclosure be inadequate or impracticable and the Government objects to the provision of the information in a from approved by the military judge, the military judge, upon a finding that the information in question is evidence that the Government seeks to use at trial, exculpatory evidence or evidence necessary to enable the defence to prepare for trial, shall issue any order that the interests of justice require"
The orders which can be made include dismissing the charges.
vi) Part II, Rule 707 makes provision for arraigning the defendant within 30 days of the service of charges, for the assembly of the Military Commission within 120 days and the setting of an appropriate schedule for discovery as soon as practicable after the service of charges.
(iv) Our conclusion on the procedures in the United States
i) The Foreign Secretary does not rely on the fact that the military prosecutor will provide the documentation as part of its disclosure obligations. The reasons why he has reached that view are set out in the closed judgment. Given the centrality to the common law of excluding admissions obtained by torture, cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or coercion (as we set out at paragraph 147.v)) and the duty on any prosecutor to act fairly and in the interest of justice, it is difficult to find reasons in these circumstances to reject the submission made on behalf of BM that torturers or those who subject those in their custody to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment do not readily hand over evidence of their conduct.
ii) On the evidence of Mr Stafford Smith (which is the only evidence before us on this issue), it is possible that the Convening Authority will take into account evidence of rendition and torture or cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment as a reason for not referring the charges. It would not be right to deny BM the chance of such a possibility, given the long period of his detention without trial.
iii) If information was to be provided to the Convening Authority either by the military prosecutors or some other branch of the United States Government, it would have been easy to inform the United Kingdom Government that this would be the case, given the history of this matter. Similarly it would have been easy for the Convening Authority to inform the United Kingdom Government of its position. The fact that no such indication has been given must be a pointer to the fact that the information has not been provided to the Convening Authority.
iv) Moreover, the provision of the information to the Convening Authority without informing BM's lawyers or asking them for their submissions on it would not enable BM to put forward his case to the Convening Authority. We have been given no reason for the failure to provide such information, other than the Convening Authority and the military prosecutors are not required to provide it.
v) In the proceedings under the former Military Commissions Act no documents were provided under the order of the Military Judge which related to anything that occurred prior July 2004. In the light of the findings we have made and which are set out at paragraph 87 and in the closed judgment, it is inconceivable that there are no documents in the possession of the United States Government that relate to what happened to BM in the two year period from April 2002 to May 2004. There must be documents that record or evidence his movements, his custody and his treatment when interviewed. We have been given no reason why such documents cannot now be produced by United States military prosecutors and can think of none. As we have pointed out the only material to which the United States Government has made reference is documentation that is inconsistent with BM's claim as to the injuries inflicted to his genitalia (see paragraph 103.ii))
vi) There is a real concern as to the effect of further delay. It is Lt Col Bradley's evidence that there is a continuing deterioration in BM's mental health. So concerned was Lt Col Bradley at BM's behaviour by December 2007 that she located a mental health expert who had proper clearance to visit him at Guantanamo Bay. The officials at Guantanamo Bay rejected her requests for an independent mental health assessment. When she visited in January 2008, conditions had deteriorated. She again requested a mental health evaluation from an independent doctor. It was also refused. That evidence is uncontradicted, save by the medical report dated 24 January 2008 to which we have referred at paragraph 103.ii) and which simply states BM had mild depression. It contains no analysis whatsoever of the matters described in detail in Lt Col Bradley's statement.
vii) Although we approach the evidence of Mr Stafford Smith with the necessary caution that must be applied to the evidence of a defence advocate in a case such as this, there are grounds, given what has happened since information was discovered in the United Kingdom, which would lend support to the view that the United States Government will seek to delay as long as possible the disclosure of not only of the information and documentation provided by the United Kingdom Government, but other information and documentation which it undoubtedly also has or had in its possession
(4) Was the information sought within the scope of the available relief?
(a) The legal principles
"The Norwich Pharmacol case clearly establishes that where a person, albeit innocently, and without incurring any personal liability, becomes involved in a wrongful act of another, that person thereby comes under a duty to assist the person injured by those acts by giving him any information which he is able to give by way of discovery that discloses the identity of the wrongdoer."
"The reference to "full information" has sometimes led to an assumption that any person who has become mixed up in a tortious act can be required not merely to disclose the identity of the wrongdoer but to give general discovery and answer questions on all matters relevant to the course of action. In my view this is wrong. The principle upon which Lord Reid distinguished the "mere witness" rule was that unless the plaintiff discovered the identity of the wrongdoer, he could not commence proceedings. The reasoning of the other members of the House is the same. The Norwich Pharmacol case is no authority for imposing upon "mixed up" third parties a general obligation to give discovery or information when the identity of the defendant is already known."
"This new jurisdiction must of course be carefully exercised. It is a strong thing to order a bank to disclose the state of its customers account and the documents and correspondence relating to it."
But he went on to make it clear that the court would, if necessary, make a more wide-ranging order. Other cases were cited to us including the decision of Judge McGonigal in Aoot Kalmneft v Denton Wilde Sapte [2002] 1 Lloyds Rep 417.
"The Norwich Pharmacol jurisdiction is an exceptional one and one that is only exercised by the courts when they are satisfied it is necessary that it should be exercised. New situations are inevitably going to arise where it would be appropriate for the jurisdiction to be exercised where it has not been exercised previously. The limits which apply to its use in its infancy should not be allowed to stultify its use now that it has become a valuable and mature remedy. That new circumstances for its appropriate use will continue to arise as illustrated by the decision of Sir Richard Scott V-C in P v T Ltd [1997] 1 WLR 1309 where relief was granted because it was necessary in the interests of justice, albeit that the claimant was not able to identify without discovery what would be the appropriate cause of action."
(b) The application of the principles to the facts
Type A: Documents and information specific to BM.
(1) Rendition: evidence of the United Kingdom's knowledge of BM's upcoming rendition when he was held in Pakistan, the decision to render BM to Morocco for torture, the identity of United States agents involved in the rendition of BM, the flights that were used to render BM to and from Morocco, BM's rendition from Bagram to Guantanamo and the identity of the two people who were taken to a military airport in Islamabad on or around 21 July 2002.
(2) BM's treatment: any evidence concerning BM's arrest and detention in Pakistan, buttressing BM's claims that he was rendered to Morocco for torture and cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment, of allegations of coercion or abuse of BM in Bagram, Afghanistan, concerning the condition of BM's detention at any time from April 2002 to date, concerning the denial of counsel to BM at any time from April 2002 to date and concerning the denial of consular access to BM at any time from April 2002 to date; information that a United States official told BM the normal rules no longer applied or similar statements.
(3) Any information concerning the SyS visit to interview BM in Pakistan on 17 May 2002.
(4) Information provided to the United States or Morocco by the United Kingdom about BM and any evidence that the United Kingdom told the United States that BM was "a nobody, only a cleaner from London".
(5) Information about BM.
(6) Any evidence that the United Kingdom has failed to provide BM with assistance that should have been provided.
Type B: General information
(1) Rendition: any evidence of extraordinary rendition carried out by the United States generally and in particular to Morocco and in respect of certain identified flights.
(2) Treatment of detainees: any evidence relating to the "Dark Prison" near Kabul or of mistreatment of prisoners or allegations of coercion, abuse or homicide committed by the United States forces in Bagram and Kandahar, information regarding the abuse of prisoners in Morocco, information concerning the torture and abuse methods used by the United States or its allies on prisoners in the United States custody in the war on terror, any United States violations of its international legal obligations and the treatment of prisoners of war on terror, including but not limited to certain identified conventions.
(5) Should the court exercise its discretion in favour of making disclosure?
(a) Our approach
(b) The consequences to BM
(c) The importance of the state prohibition on torture and cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment
i) The common law has long set its face against torture, a practice which it has regarded for centuries with a particular abhorrence reiterated most recently in the speeches in the House of Lords in A v. Secretary of State for the Home Department (No. 2). When practised by a State as an instrument of State policy it is a particularly ugly phenomenon. As Lord Hoffmann explained in that case, at paragraph 82, the use of torture by a State is dishonourable, corrupting and degrading the State which uses it and the legal system which accepts it.
ii) Equally significant in this regard is the status which the prohibition on State torture has achieved in international law. The United Nations Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment 1984 (New York, 10 December 1984; TS 107 (1991); Cm 1775) ("the Torture Convention"), which came into force in June 1987, now has some 145 State parties. The prohibition on State torture under this Convention and in customary international law has attained a particularly high status in the hierarchy of rules constituting international law. It is now established as a peremptory norm or a rule of jus cogens, from which derogation by States through treaties or rules of customary law not possessing the same status is not permitted. In this it resembles the prohibition on genocide, slavery and the acquisition of territory by force. This superior status has been recognised by international and domestic tribunals. {Prosecutor v. Furundzija, International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia, unreported, 10 December 1998, Case No. IT - 95- 17/T 10, [1998] ICTY 3; R. v. Bow Street Metropolitan Stipendiary Magistrate, ex parte Pinochet Ugarte (No. 3) [2000] 1 AC 147, 197,199; A v. Secretary of State for the Home Department (No. 2); Jones v. Ministry of Interior of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia [2006] UKHL 26.) As the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia explained in Furundzija at paragraphs 153-157, the status of the prohibition on State torture as a rule of jus cogens has the consequence that at the inter-State level, any legislative, administrative or judicial act authorising torture is illegitimate. Furthermore, the prohibition on State torture imposes obligations owed by States erga omnes, to all other States which have a corresponding right and interest in compliance. As a United States court put it in Filartiga v. Pena-Irala, (1980) 630 F 2d 876, "the torturer has become like the pirate and the slave trader before him, hostis humani generis, an enemy of all mankind".
i) Article 5 of the UN Universal Declaration of Human Rights states "no one shall be subject to torture or to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment."
ii) Article 3 of the Geneva Convention relative to the Treatment of Prisoners of War 1949 and Article 3 of the Geneva Convention relative to the Protection of Civilian Persons in Time of War 1949 both prohibit "violence to life and person, in particular murder of all kinds, mutilation, cruel treatment and torture". The same Articles of the Conventions also prohibit "outrages upon personal dignity, in particular humiliating and degrading treatment".
iii) Article 16 of the Convention against Torture provides, by paragraph 1, "Each State Party shall undertake to prevent in any territory under its jurisdiction other acts of cruel inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment which do not amount to torture as defined in Article I, when such acts are committed by or at the instigation of or with the consent or acquiescence of a public official or other persons acting in an official capacity".
iv) On 2 March 1972, following the report of a Committee of the Privy Council, under the chairmanship of Lord Parker of Waddington, into allegations relating to events in Northern Ireland in 1971, the then Prime Minister told the House of Commons that the techniques of hooding, wall standing, sleep deprivation, food deprivation and white noise would not be used in future as an aid to interrogation. In Republic of Ireland v United Kingdom [1978] 2 EHRR 25, the European Court of Human Rights concluded that, since the five techniques were premeditated, were applied in combination for hours at a time and caused at least intense physical and mental suffering and acute psychiatric disturbances, they amounted to inhuman treatment. Since the five techniques were such as to arouse in the victims feelings of fear, anguish and inferiority capable of humiliating and debasing them and possibly breaking their physical or mental resistance they were also degrading. However, as the term "torture" attached a special stigma to deliberate inhuman treatment causing very serious and cruel suffering, the five techniques did not occasion suffering sufficient in intensity and cruelty to constitute torture.
(d) Time, cost and convenience
Our conclusion on the Norwich Pharmacol application
i) There is plainly a case for BM to answer in relation to terrorist offences, based on the evidence contained in the statements we have been told BM made in Bagram and Guantanamo Bay after May 2004 and on the record of BM's interview by Witness B in May 2002. However the admissibility of that evidence is dependent upon the circumstances in which the confessions and statements were made.
ii) There is little doubt that the initial questioning of BM, including the questioning by Witness B, was undertaken to elicit information from him in relation to terrorist threats of a grave kind. That took place in the unprecedented situation following the attack on Washington and New York on 11 September 2001.
iii) Although those were the circumstances in which BM was interviewed and interrogated, the United States Government is now seeking to use the confessions made after a two year period of incommunicado detention as evidence against BM on charges where the death penalty may be sought.
iv) BM contends that the confessions relied on were obtained not only in consequence of the undisputed period of incommunicado detention, but in consequence of torture and cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment.
v) Although there may be a debate as to the use of information obtained through torture or cruel inhuman and degrading treatment in averting serious and imminent threats to national security (as we have set out at paragraph 9.ii)), it is a principle at the heart of our systems of justice that evidence of involuntary confessions obtained by such means are inadmissible at a trial. The principle in relation to involuntary confessions dates back at least to the decision in 1783 in R v Warickshall 1 Leach 263 at 263-4, where the court stated:
" a confession forced from the mind by the flattery of hope, or by the torture of fear comes in so questionable a shape when it is to be considered as the evidence of guilt, that no credit ought to be given to it; and therefore it is rejected."
In Wong Kam-ming v R, Lord Hailsham [1980] 1 AC 247, giving the opinion of the Privy Council said at 261:
".. any civilised system of criminal jurisprudence must accord to the judiciary some means of excluding confessions or admissions obtained by improper methods. This is not only because of the potential unreliability of such statements, but also, and perhaps mainly, because in a civilised society it is vital that persons in custody or charged with offences should not be subjected to ill treatment or improper pressure in order to extract confessions."
In R v Sang [1980] AC 402 at 436 Lord Diplock expressed the view that the rule originated in the principle expressed as "nemo debet prodere se ipsum ", "nemo tenetur se ipsum accusare " or "nemo tenetur prodere seipsum "— the right against self incrimination. (See also Lang Chi-ming v R [1991] 2 AC 212 at 216-220, Harz v Power [1967] 1 AC 760 at 820, and Helmholz and others: The Privilege against Self Incrimination, (1997) 136, 153-162). It is closely connected to the revulsion that the common law has had for torture and to which we have referred at 142.i); the effect of that revulsion in the development of the principle is clear: see Sir James Fitzjames Stephen, History of the Criminal Law of England (1883) Vol 1. at 441-447); Holdsworth, History of English Law (1924) Vol 5 p 194-5 and Helmholz and others at p 108, 117-122 and at p 249 the citation from Barlow's JP Manual of 1745. In Brown v Walker 161 US 591 (1896), the Supreme Court of the United States set out at pages 596-7 its view on this. Although there may be differences in the historic rationale for the principle excluding involuntary confessions, especially any obtained by abusive treatment, the rule is a fundamental part of the right to a fair trial. For several centuries the common law has excluded evidence obtained by torture or cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment; it cannot be used to secure a conviction.
vi) As is clear from our findings, the United Kingdom Government facilitated the interrogation of BM for part of that period in the knowledge of the reports of the interviews at Karachi which contained information relating to his detention and treatment and to which we have referred at paragraph 87. It is also significant that his detention incommunicado was unlawful under the law of Pakistan; it is important to take into account the observations of Lord Bridge in R v Horseferry Road Magistrates Court ex p Bennett [1994] 1 AC 42 at 67F-H:
"Whatever differences there may be between the legal systems of South Africa, the United States, New Zealand and this country, many of the basic principles to which they seek to give effect stem from common roots. There is, I think, no principle more basic to any proper system of law than the maintenance of the rule of law itself. When it is shown that the law enforcement agency responsible for bringing a prosecution has only been enabled to do so by participating in violations of international law and the laws of another state in order to secure the presence of the accused within the territorial jurisdiction of the court, I think that respect for the rule of law demands that the court take cognisance of that circumstance. To hold that the court may turn a blind eye to executive lawlessness beyond the frontiers of its own jurisdiction is, to my mind, an insular and unacceptable view."
vii) As we have set out at paragraphs 105 to 107, one, but only one, of the reasons why the information is essential for a fair consideration of his case by the Convening Authority and for a fair trial is that the information provides some evidence independent of BM in respect of a small part of the account of BM as to what happened, as is indicated in the open judgment. The full reasons are set out in the closed judgment.
viii) The information will be disclosed solely for the purpose of the pending proceedings leading to a trial.
ix) Even though the dismissal of the charges or an acquittal would not result in BM's release (as we understand he will be detained as an enemy combatant at Guantanamo Bay until the "war on terror" is concluded), this does not in any way negate the necessity of the provision of the information to uphold the fundamental principle that BM receives a fair determination of the charges brought against him.
x) We can think of no good reason why the materials have not now been made available by the United States Government to BM's lawyers in confidence and subject to the strict conditions of secrecy in which part of the proceedings before the Military Commissions operate, given that:
(1) BM has been in custody by or on behalf of the United States for over 6 years.
(2) There is independent evidence of the deterioration in his mental health.
(3) It cannot be said that the materials are not identified and available, as the materials have been identified to the Executive Branch of the United States Government (which is responsible for the prosecution) at its highest level.
(4) The unreasoned dismissal by the United States Government of BM's allegations as "not credible" as recorded in the letter of 22 July 2008 is, in our view, untenable, as it was made after consideration of almost all the material provided to us.
xi) It is of particular significance that the United States Government has refused to provide any information as to BM's location during the period between May 2002 and May 2004. The fact that no explanation has been provided to date (despite the disclosure in the earlier proceedings) is a matter of serious concern in relation to the practical operation of the disclosure procedures before the United States Military Commission and a pointer towards the very real difficulties that BM's lawyers may face in obtaining information under the United States Military Commissions procedures. It might have been thought self evident that the provision of information as to the whereabouts of a person in custody would cause no particular difficulty, given that it is a basic and long established value in any democracy that the location of those in custody is made known to the detainee's family and those representing him.
xii) In these circumstances to leave the issue of disclosure to the processes of the Military Commission at some future time would be to deny to BM a real chance of providing some support to a limited part his account and other essential assistance to his defence. To deny him this at this time would be deny him the opportunity of timely justice in respect of the charges against him, a principle dating back to at least the time of Magna Carta and which is so basic a part of our common law and of democratic values.
xiii) It is clear that the United Kingdom Government considers that such material should be made available by the United States Government to BM's lawyers in confidence. All its strenuous actions have been directed to that end. It is its view that the material should be made available by the United States Government which has so far declined to do so. It has therefore been compelled to resist this claim. We set out our reasons for so concluding in the closed part of the judgment.
xiv) The material is limited in its scope and has been identified.
Relief under Norwich Pharmacol principles is an exceptional remedy and its application to the present circumstances is unprecedented. We have carefully weighed all the circumstances and considered whether we should extend the relief to the claim made in this case. We have concluded, subject to issues of public interest immunity and similar considerations that would also affect the exercise of our discretion, that we will, in the unique circumstances of this case, order the provision of the specific information broadly described as Type A in a form to be agreed or decided by us. We refuse to order the provision of information broadly described as Type B.
Public Interest Immunity
IV QUASHING THE DECISION NOT TO MAKE VOLUNTARY DISCLOSURE
"The Secretary of State, SIS and the Security Service have given particular consideration to the question whether this material should be disclosed in response to your request. However, they are satisfied that it would not be appropriate to do so. In the Secretary of State's view, the course he has adopted (of drawing material to the attention of the US authorities) is the appropriate one to ensure proper protection for your client's interests without causing damage to the national security interest of the UK. There is no reason to suppose that the US authorities and prosecuting counsel would fail in the course of the Military Commission proceedings to disclose this material to your client's lawyers, insofar as it may be relevant and is properly to be regarded as exculpatory under 948, 949(d) or other sections of the MCA and the accompanying provisions of the Manual for Military Commissions, having regard to the evidence on which the US authorities eventually propose to rely. The Secretary of State does not regard it as appropriate for him to seek to anticipate, on the basis of very incomplete information, what particular issues may arise in those proceedings regarding the admissibility of evidence; still less does he regard it as appropriate for him to seek to anticipate the application of the Military Commission Rules and other relevant law if the Military Commission proceedings progress or to substitute his assessment of whether the material should be disclosed in those proceedings for that of the US authorities and prosecutors."
V THE CLAIM FOR DISCLOSURE UNDER THE ALLEGED DUTY UNDER PUBLIC INTERNATIONAL LAW
(1) Article 15 of the Torture Convention and customary international law
"Each State Party shall ensure that any statement which is established to have been made as a result of torture shall not be invoked as evidence in any proceedings, except against a person accused of torture as evidence that the statement was made."
Although the Torture Convention has been implemented in part into domestic law within the United Kingdom by the Criminal Justice Act 1988, Article 15 has not been implemented by legislation. Non-implemented treaty provisions do not of themselves give rise to rights or obligations in domestic law within the United Kingdom. (See J.H. Rayner (Mincing Lane) Ltd. v. Department of Trade and Industry [1990] 2 AC 418.) It is, of course, for this reason that BM's argument depends, inter alia, on demonstrating that the rule for which he contends is a rule of customary international law.
" It would in the first place be necessary that the provisions concerned should, at all events potentially, be of a fundamentally norm-creating character such as could be regarded as forming the basis of a general rule of law ... With respect to the other elements usually regarded as necessary before a conventional rule can be considered to have become a general rule of international law, it might be that, even without the passage of any considerable period of time, a very widespread and representative participation in the convention might suffice of itself, provided it included that of States whose interests were specially affected.
....
Although the passage of only a short period of time is not necessarily, or of itself, a bar to the formation of a new rule of customary international law on the basis of what was originally a purely conventional rule, an indispensable requirement would be that within the period in question, short though it may be, State practice, including that of States whose interests are specially affected, should have been both extensive and virtually uniform in the sense of the provision invoked; - and should moreover have occurred in such a way as to show a general recognition that a rule of law or legal obligation is involved." (at pp 41-3)
"[The Special Immigration Appeals Commission] should throughout be guided by recognition of the important obligations laid down in articles 3 and 5(4) of the European Convention and, through them, article 15 of the Torture Convention, ..." (at paragraph 56 and cf Lord Hope at paragraph 112 and Lord Carswell at paragraph 151).
In view of the very limited amount of time devoted to issues of international law during the course of argument in the present case, we express no concluded view on this issue. We do not need to do so because we have come to the clear conclusion that in any event Article 15 does not create, either expressly or impliedly, the obligation of disclosure for which BM contends.
"6.3 The Committee considers in this regard that the generality of provisions of Article 15 derive from the absolute nature of the prohibition of torture and imply, consequently, an obligation for each State party to ascertain whether or not statements constituting part of the evidence of a procedure for which it is competent have been made as a result of torture. The Committee finds that the statements at issue constitute part of the evidence of the procedure for the extradition of the complainant, and for which the State party is competent. In this regard, in the light of the allegation that the statements at issue, at least in part the basis for the additional extradition request, were obtained as a result of torture, the State party had the obligation to ascertain the veracity of such allegations."
(2) Consequences of the prohibition of torture as a rule of jus cogens
"155. The fact that torture is prohibited by a peremptory norm of international law has other effects at the inter-state and individual levels. At the inter-state level, it serves to internationally de-legitimise any legislative, administrative or judicial act authorising torture. It would be senseless to argue, on the one hand, that on account of the jus cogens value of the prohibition against torture, treaties or customary rules providing for torture would be null and void ab initio, and then be unmindful of a State say, taking national measures authorising or condoning torture or absolving its perpetrators through an amnesty law. If such a situation were to arise, the national measures, violating the general principle and any relevant treaty provision, would produce the legal effects discussed above and in addition would not be accorded international legal recognition. Proceedings could be initiated by potential victims if they had locus standi before a competent international or national judicial body with a view to asking it to hold the national measure to be internationally unlawful; or the victim could bring a civil suit for damage in a foreign court, which would therefore be asked inter alia to disregard the legal value of the national authorising act. What is even more important is that perpetrators of torture acting upon or benefiting from those national measures may nevertheless be held criminally responsible for torture, whether in a foreign State, or in their own State under a subsequent regime. In short, in spite of possible national authorisation by legislative or judicial bodies to violate the principle banning torture, individuals remain bound to comply with that principle. As the International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg put it: 'individuals have international duties which transcend the national obligations of obedience imposed by the individual State'. "
"156. Furthermore, at the individual level, that is, that of criminal liability, it would seem that one of the consequences of the jus cogens character bestowed by the international community upon the prohibition of torture is that every State is entitled to investigate, prosecute and punish or extradite individuals accused of torture, who are present in a territory under its jurisdiction. Indeed, it would be inconsistent on the one hand to prohibit torture to such an extent as to restrict the normally unfettered treaty-making power of sovereign States, and on the other hand bar States from prosecuting and punishing those torturers who have engaged in this odious practice abroad. This legal basis for States' universal jurisdiction over torture bears out and strengthens the legal foundation for such jurisdiction found by other courts in the inherently universal character of the crime. It has been held that international crimes being universally condemned wherever they occur, every State has the right to prosecute and punish the authors of such crimes. As stated in general terms by the Supreme Court of Israel in Eichmann, and echoed by a USA court in Demjanjuk, 'it is the universal character of the crimes in question ie. international crimes which vests in every State the authority to try and punish those who participated in their commission'. "
"157. It would seem that other consequences include the fact that torture may not be covered by a statute of limitations, and must not be excluded from extradition under any political offence exemption." "
This passage was approved by Lord Bingham in A (No. 2) at paragraph 33.
"159. Given the character and the importance of the rights and obligations involved, the court is of the view that all states are under an obligation not to recognise the illegal situation resulting from the construction of the wall in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including in and around East Jerusalem. They are also under an obligation not to render aid or assistance in maintaining the situation created by such construction. It is also for all states, while respecting the United Nations Charter and international law, to see to it that any impediment, resulting from the construction of the wall, to the exercise by the Palestinian people of its right to self-determination is brought to an end. In addition all states parties to the Geneva Convention relative to the Protection of Civilian Persons in Time of War of 12 August 1949 are under an obligation, while respecting the United Nations Charter and international law, to ensure compliance by Israel with international humanitarian law as embodied in that Convention."
If the British Government owed a duty to intercede in case of torture, it would no doubt have to arrive at a judgment, after inquiry as appropriate, as to the likely truth of the allegation; although it is to be noted that the European Court of Human Rights accepts a rule in respect of allegations of violations of article 3 under the European Convention on Human Rights that they have to be established beyond reasonable doubt: see e g ÖCALAN v Turkey (2005) 41 EHRR 45 , paragraph 180. (at paragraph 100)
He then cited paragraph 33 of the speech of Lord Bingham in A (No. 2) and paragraphs 151-155 of the judgment of the Yugoslavia Tribunal in Furundzija. It is convenient to set out paragraphs 151 and 152 of the Furundzija judgment at this point.
The prohibition imposes obligations erga omnes
"151. Furthermore, the prohibition of torture imposes upon states obligations erga omnes, that is, obligations owed towards all the other members of the international community, each of which then has a correlative right. In addition, the violation of such an obligation simultaneously constitutes a breach of the correlative right of all members of the international community and gives rise to a claim for compliance accruing to each and every member, which then has the right to insist on fulfilment of the obligation or in any case to call for the breach to be discontinued.
"152. Where there exist international bodies charged with impartially monitoring compliance with treaty provisions on torture, these bodies enjoy priority over individual states in establishing whether a certain state has taken all the necessary measures to prevent and punish torture and, if they have not, in calling upon that state to fulfil its international obligations. The existence of such international mechanisms makes it possible for compliance with international law to be ensured in a neutral and impartial manner.
Laws LJ. then continued:
"102. This learning shows that, as a matter of international law: (1) the status of jus cogens erga omnes empowers but does not oblige a state to intervene with another sovereign state to insist on respect for the prohibition of torture: Prosecutor v Furundzija Case No. IT - 95- 17/T 10, [1998] ICTY 3, (1998) 38 ILM 317, paragraph 151; (2) special standing is accorded to international bodies charged with impartially monitoring compliance: paragraph 152; (3) there can be no derogation from the prohibition: paragraph 153; (4) the prohibition is to be treated as an absolute value: paragraph 154; (5) any measure authorizing torture is illegitimate and proceedings may be taken to declare it so: paragraph 155; (6) perpetrators of torture may be held criminally responsible in the courts of any state: paragraph 155. These features are a powerful constellation, demonstrating that, as Lord Bingham said [2006] 2 AC 221, paragraph 33: "There can be few issues on which international legal opinion is more clear than on the condemnation of torture."
"103. But none of this imposes a duty on states, sounding in international law, of the kind for which the claimants must here contend. As a matter of the law of the European Convention on Human Rights, there is nothing to qualify the principle in the Bertrand Russell Peace Foundation case. The claimants' point 4 above appears to possess no more force than the others."
"No statement that is verified as having been obtained through torture shall be admissible as evidence in a legal proceeding, except in a legal action taken against a person or persons accused of having elicited it through acts of torture, and only as evidence that the accused obtained such statement by such means."
The very general terms of this provision take the matter under consideration no further.
(3) Customary international law and the common law