I e-mailed a short statement earlier this morning, but it's only in English and hasn't been translated into French. It sets out the role of the special advocate and my experiences as one.
The role of special advocate came into existence in 1998, really, following a case in the European Court of Human Rights called Jahal, in which enormous criticism was directed against a previously existing advisory panel, which suggested arrangements had to be made that would both accommodate legitimate security concerns and yet accord the individual a substantial measure of protection. That resulted in the creation of what we've called the Special Immigration Appeals Commission, which was set up by an act of Parliament in 1997 and came into operation in 1998.
Although it's called a commission, in fact it's a court presided over by a high court judge, who sits with an immigration judge on one side and someone who usually has a security background on the other side. The proceedings are fairly informal.
The act that sets up that court also makes provision for the appointment of special advocates. I was one of the first special advocates to be appointed by the Attorney General in 1998. At that time I, like the other special advocates, took the appointment because I felt that it was a new system and a very big improvement in terms of fair procedure over the advisory panel that had gone before. At that time, I certainly saw it as a progressive measure.
I felt that all changed after 9/11. The main reason was that after 9/11 the government gave the Special Immigration Appeals Commission, or SIAC, a completely new jurisdiction under the Anti-terrorism, Crime and Security Act of 2001, which made provision for the indefinite detention without trial of suspected international terrorists accused of having links to al Qaeda. This applied only to foreigners who could not otherwise be deported or removed safely from the U.K.; it did not apply to British citizen suspects.
During the course of that particular act, I represented the interests of five of the detainee suspects. Overall, during my time at SIAC I represented roughly 10 different appellants; not all of them, of course, were suspected international terrorists or were being locked up indefinitely. There were, for example, PhD students from Middle Eastern countries whom the government wanted to kick out because it thought they were carrying out studies in order to give their country weapons of mass destruction that would allow them to send missiles to Israel. There was another man who was on it who was accused of helping Pakistan to obtain a nuclear procurement, and so forth.
I'll come to my experience within SIAC. Although the SIAC rules and judgments speak about witnesses and evidence, in fact it's not evidence in the normal sense in which civil and criminal lawyers understand that term. The evidence is almost entirely, in my experience, given by intelligence officers, and their evidence consists not of things that are within their direct knowledge at all, but of assessments. These assessments may be based on a whole variety of sources, from informers and telephone or e-mail intercepts to other assessments by other intelligence services.
One of the things that's very difficult to do, even if you're on the inside, in the kinds of proceedings that are only based on reasonable suspicion, is to test the accuracy of the assessments or the truthfulness of human source materials that are used in reaching these assessments. That's one of the major problems. It's a problem that has certainly been heightened since 9/11 through the widespread use of physical and psychological torture in the quest for better intelligence. One of the troubles with obtaining evidence by torture and slightly less oppressive means, as the Latin historian Tacitus wisely observed 2,000 years ago, is that it tends to bring about false witness. One of the problems is that there is a danger now that you have a whole raft of intelligence that may not be reliable and is certainly questionable.
A second objection is that if you simply allow, as we did, indefinite detention on the basis of reasonable suspicion raised by intelligence assessments, there is no actual role in those cases for the police to play. In the U.K., we have very experienced police who have been dealing with terrorist offences over a long period of time, and they simply don't come into the picture. Therefore, there isn't any real method of turning what is really information into evidence that could be put before a criminal court in the normal way.
A third objection is the more obvious one that is usually put forward, the objection of fairness. As a special advocate, you are allowed to see the appellant and speak to the lawyers representing him or her until the moment that you receive the closed material, the secret material. Then a Chinese wall goes up and you can't speak any longer about the case without the leave of the commission, which will usually only be given to speak of procedural matters. You certainly are not allowed to reveal any of the secret material in order to take instructions on it. Did the appellant make a phone call to A on such and such a day? What was it about? Did he really meet Bin Laden at a training camp in Afghanistan on such and such a date, or was he in fact working at the checkout at a large electrical store in Manchester on that particular date? Has he any proof of that? These are all no-go areas in these cases where you're actually, as a kind of dislocation of representation, between the special advocate and the legal representatives of the appellant.
There are certain situations where it may well be that a special advocate is of value and of some use. One of the first tasks that a special advocate in SIAC has to perform on receipt of the closed evidence is to go through it and then see if it contains material that ought to be disclosed to the appellant, because, for example, it's already in the public domain. That's not very easy to do, because a special advocate has no legal team to back him or her up, nor have they the time to scan through hundreds of websites, some of which may be in foreign languages and so forth. But it is potentially a valuable function, and indeed it's a function that has been replicated in some criminal trials where a special advocate will look at evidence that the prosecution doesn't want to disclose for all kinds of reasons—protection of informers, whatever, but usually for public interest immunity reasons.
The difference, of course, between that and SIAC is that if evidence is not disclosed, then in a criminal trial the prosecution can't use it; in SIAC, they can.
So those are general observations about my experiences.
The House of Lords, in a landmark decision in December 2004, ruled that a law that imposes indefinite imprisonment without trial, that is partial in its operation and only targets one of the groups that may be involved in terrorist planning, is unlawful, and they held that it was a disproportionate and discriminatory response to threats to the nation.
Since that time, the government has introduced control orders under the Prevention of Terrorism Act of 2005, which is basically a form of house arrest—