By Andrew Cohen
Christina Hioureas '07 and Kathy Roberts ’04 |
For Christina Hioureas ’07 and Kathy Roberts ’04,
representing torture victim Abukar Hassan Ahmed offered a rare chance to
achieve both justice and history. “No member of Somalia’s notorious National
Security Service (NSS) had ever been held accountable for atrocities committed
during that country’s 20-year military dictatorship,” Roberts said. “It was
long overdue.”
In November 2012, the Southern District Court of Ohio
ruled that Colonel Abdi Aden Magan—former NSS investigations chief—was liable
for Ahmed’s torture; cruel, inhuman, and degrading treatment; and arbitrary
detention. A constitutional law professor and human rights advocate, Ahmed says
he was targeted by the military dictatorship after ignoring orders to stop
defending political dissidents and to refrain from teaching his students about
human rights. He gave a harrowing account of his treatment in court May 30; a
damages award is expected by the end of July.
Roberts first spoke with Ahmed when he contacted the
Center for Justice & Accountability (CJA), where she is legal director.
Ahmed had been vainly trying to track down Magan for years. The center’s
Internet research showed that Magan—who fled Somalia in 1991 when the brutal
regime of dictator Siad Barre collapsed—had found a safe haven in Columbus,
Ohio.
In 2010, CJA filed Ahmed v. Magan in Ohio under the Alien
Tort Statute and the Torture Victim Protection Act. Hioureas joined the case
when her firm, Latham & Watkins, was enlisted as pro bono counsel. Hioureas
was a public international law attorney in the firm’s London office, and with
Ahmed also living in London as well as several factual witnesses, she began
steering the case with CJA.
“Representing Professor Ahmed alongside the Center for
Justice & Accountability has been an honor; promoting justice, human
rights, and the rule of law,” said Hioureas, who now works at Chadbourne &
Parke in New York. At trial, she gave the opening statement and conducted a
direct examination of Ahmed. “Kathy and I have become good friends over the
course of the case. We had the Berkeley Law connection and a strong desire to
achieve justice for our client.”
Magan was a key figure in the NSS, also known as the
“Black SS” or “Gestapo of Somalia” because of barbarous techniques used to gain
confessions. He did not present any evidence to dispute allegations that he
directed subordinates to carry out human rights abuses under Barre’s regime.
Magan failed to appear for his deposition, and is believed to now be living in
Kenya.
Ahmed, 67, is currently the Legal Adviser to the
President of Somalia. In this role, he is continuing to promote the rule of law
and working to draft the Somali Human Rights Bill and Provisional Constitution.
He is seeking more than $12 million in damages, alleging that Magan maliciously
ordered the torture he endured, leaving him with chronic pain and symptoms of
post-traumatic stress disorder.
“Regardless of what the court decides for damages, its
ruling sends a message that this kind of egregious behavior will not be
tolerated,” Roberts said. “As Professor Ahmed told us: ‘This case will be heard
in Somalia and will tell people that no one can torture a Somali citizen.
Justice has no national borders, justice is universal, and a human being will
be held to account anywhere he is located.’”
Last year, a federal judge in Virginia ordered the former
prime minister of Somalia, Mohamed Ali Samantar, to pay $21 million in
compensatory and punitive damages to several members of the minority Isaaq
clan. The victims said they suffered severe repression—including torture and
mass killings—under Barre’s regime. Roberts served as lead trial counsel on the
case in her role with CJA.
Calling upon her international law background and
“experience having attended a diverse university like UC Berkeley” for both her
political science and law degrees, Hiroueas interviewed witnesses from all over
the world, including some who spoke little or no English.
“You have to understand different cultural and religious
norms, consider the manner in which you ask questions, and approach
witnesses—many of whom themselves have endured so much—in a way that allows
them to trust you and feel comfortable opening up about the brutality they
witnessed,” she said. “It’s crucial to shed light on this dark time in history,
and we were very careful and methodical in our approach.”
Having spent time in Somalia, Roberts used her contacts
there to secure key witnesses such as Colonel Abdulkarim Shabel—the former head
of finances for the NSS. Despite his position, Shabell was arrested multiple
times because he came from a minority clan targeted by Barre’s military. Shabel
submitted testimony relating to Magan’s command authority and his reputation
for savagery.
“I knew how important this case was for the people in
Somalia,” Roberts said. “We left no stone unturned and produced 962 pages of
documentary evidence. It’s very difficult to get information about high-ranking
people from the clandestine services, so the significance of this case is hard
to overstate.”
While the case helped shed light on a dark period of
Somali history, it also revealed Professor Ahmed’s persistence in promoting
human rights and the rule of law. He said the victory is not just for him, but
“for all of the silent survivors of torture, dead or alive.”
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