E/CN.4/2006/120
page 27
Annex I*
NOTES
1
These interviews were carried out with the consent of the Governments concerned (France,
Spain and the United Kingdom). Similar requests have been addressed by the five mandate
holders to Afghanistan, Morocco and Pakistan in order to meet with former detainees currently
residing in the three respective countries. No response has been received so far.
2
Response of the United States of America, dated 21 October 2005 to the inquiry of the
Special Rapporteurs dated 8 August 2005 pertaining to detainees at Guantánamo Bay, p. 52.
For more updated information, see the fact sheets of the US Department of Defense (available
at http://www.defenselink.mil/news/Aug2005/d20050831sheet.pdf>), according to which, as
of 31 August 2005, there were four “cases where detainees are charged and the case is under
way”, with another eight subject to the president’s jurisdiction under his November 2001
military order. According to further fact sheets posted by the Department of Defense on its
website, in December 2005 five further detainees had “charges … referred to a military
commission”, bringing the total of detainees referred to a military commission to nine as of the
end of December 2005.
3
Declaration annexed to Security Council resolution 1456 (2003). Relevant General Assembly
resolutions on this issue are 57/219, 58/187 and 59/191. The most recent resolution adopted
by the Security Council is 1624 (2005), in which the Security Council reiterated the
importance of upholding the rule of law and international human rights law while countering
terrorism.
4
Statement delivered by the Secretary-General at the Special Meeting of the Counter-Terrorism
Committee with Regional Organizations, New York, 6 March 2003, http://www.un.org/apps/sg/
sgstats.asp?nid=275.
5
Speech delivered by the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights at the
Biennial Conference of the International Commission of Jurists (Berlin, 27 August 2004),
http://www.unhchr.ch/huricane/huricane.nsf/NewsRoom?OpenFrameSet.
6
See Commission on Human Rights resolutions 2003/68, 2004/87 and 2005/80.
7
The United States has entered reservations, declarations and understandings with regard to a
number of provisions of these treaties. Most relevant are the reservations to article 7 of ICCPR
and article 16 of the Convention against Torture, as noted in paragraph 45.
8
“The United States Position on the Relation of Customary International Law to
the 1977 Protocols Additional to the 1949 Geneva Conventions”, Remarks of
Michael J. Matheson, Deputy Legal Adviser, United States Department of State, in The
* Annexes I and II are being circulated in the language of submission only.