Re: Bush Wants POW Award Overturned
Date: April 08, 2004
For more, please visit: http://www.stoppowtorture.org/
"Bush
Seeks To Void Damage Award To Gulf War POWs
WASHINGTON -- The Bush administration urged an appeals court Wednesday to overturn
a judge's order awarding nearly $1 billion in Iraqi money to a Las Vegas man
and 16 other Americans taken prisoner by Saddam Hussein's government during
the 1991 Persian Gulf War.
Attorneys for the POWs, who were tortured and starved, countered that the award
-- to be paid from Iraqi government assets frozen in this country -- in no way
threatens the rebuilding of Iraq, taking issue with the central argument of
the administration.
Justice Department attorney Gregory Katsas said that foreign policy interests
are at stake, and that the POWs' claims should be handled through diplomatic
channels rather than the courts.
The administration maintains that countless people suffered at the hands of
Saddam and plenty will be seeking compensation from the new government, jeopardizing
its fragile existence. Once the Iraqi government gets on more solid footing,
the administration believes reparations could be negotiated.
Stewart Baker, attorney for Las Vegas resident Jeffrey Tice and the 16 other
former POWs, told a three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District
of Columbia Circuit that his clients simply want the judgment in their favor
upheld to affirm their suffering and allow them to collect at a later time.
"French oil companies are going to walk in and say 'I have a contract signed
by Saddam Hussein and I want to be paid,' and they're going to have a claim
that is recognized under international law," Baker said outside court.
"We think this is a debt incurred by Saddam Hussein that deserves much
more priority than some French oil contract."
Ret. Col. David Eberly, who was held by the Iraqis for more than 40 days, said
the government's effort to void the ruling is disappointing.
"Today, the argument boils down to the fact that the government simply
wants to say 'thank you very much for your service and now go home and live
forever the horrors and the memories of your captivity and the torture that
went on."' he said. "I think that's unjust."
Eberly was shot down over northwest Iraq on Jan. 19, 1991, and captured by Iraqi
soldiers who beat him daily and fed him just bread and broth.
The POWs filed suit against Iraq in April 2002 under a 1996 law that allows
victims to pursue blocked assets if they've won damage awards against foreign
governments that sponsor terrorism.
U.S. District Judge Richard W. Roberts sided with the POWs last summer and ordered
payment of $653 million in compensatory damages and $306 million in punitive
damages.
But the Justice Department stepped in and said the POWs could not have access
to any of the $1.7 billion of Iraqi assets frozen in 1990. It argued that President
Bush formally seized those assets after the invasion of Iraq last year and that
the money would be used for rebuilding the country. Judge Roberts reluctantly
agreed that the government had the right to block those funds from being used.
Last year Sen. Harry Reid, D-Nev., sponsored an amendment to aid the POWs, placing
it as part of the $87 billion bill to support U.S. military and reconstruction
efforts in Iraq. But the amendment was set aside by congressional negotiators
under State Department pressure.
Tice, who was an Air Force lieutenant colonel and now is a commercial pilot
for American Airlines, would receive $26 million from a favorable court judgment.
During the Gulf War, he ejected over Iraq after his F-16 was hit by a missile,
and in 46 days as a POW, Tice said he was beaten, kicked, tortured with electric
shocks and forced to play Russian roulette.
©The Associated Press"
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