Talk:Alan Kay (judge)

rough work
I'll move the following to the article when I dig up the references. Geo Swan (talk) 22:42, 19 August 2009 (UTC)
 * {| class="wikitable"


 * In December 2006 Kay issued a "protective order" on behalf of the Uyghur captives in Guantanamo. The Uyghurs feared abuse, harrasment, torturee or even execution, if they were repatriated back to China.  The Bush administration had repatriated some captives to countries that practice torture, transfers that would normally be proscribed, because the USA is a signatory to international agreements that bar transferring individuals to countries where they had a reasonable fear of torture.  The Bush administration's position was that the previous transfers did not lapse from its international agreements because they had received diplomatic assurances the former Guantanamo captives would not be abused.  Human rights workers had criticized the Bush administration for these transfers, noting that the diplomatic assurances were unenforceable, and that the administration had given the men's laywers no notice of the transfer.  Kay's ruling required the administration to give the Uyghur's attorney's thirty days notice of plans to transfer the cpatives from Guantanamo.
 * In December 2006 Kay issued a "protective order" on behalf of the Uyghur captives in Guantanamo. The Uyghurs feared abuse, harrasment, torturee or even execution, if they were repatriated back to China.  The Bush administration had repatriated some captives to countries that practice torture, transfers that would normally be proscribed, because the USA is a signatory to international agreements that bar transferring individuals to countries where they had a reasonable fear of torture.  The Bush administration's position was that the previous transfers did not lapse from its international agreements because they had received diplomatic assurances the former Guantanamo captives would not be abused.  Human rights workers had criticized the Bush administration for these transfers, noting that the diplomatic assurances were unenforceable, and that the administration had given the men's laywers no notice of the transfer.  Kay's ruling required the administration to give the Uyghur's attorney's thirty days notice of plans to transfer the cpatives from Guantanamo.


 * }

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