http://www.guardian.co.uk/terrorism/story/0,12780,1375732,00.html How many people have been detained, and who are they?
Sixteen men, all of them Muslim, have been detained under the act and certified as a "suspected international terrorist" and another is detained under other powers. Ten men remain in detention in Belmarsh and Wood Hill high security prisons, one is held in Broadmoor high security mental hospital and another, known as G, is held under house arrest. One man, M, was released after being held in Belmarsh for 16 months when the Special Immigration Appeals Commission ruled that the home secretary had "exaggerated" his links to al-Qaida and that he had been held on "unreliable" evidence. Another, D, was recently released when the government said "new information" indicated that he no longer presented a threat. Two men have chosen to return to their country of origin.
Since these men are entitled to, why don't they just go home?
They are almost all asylum seekers or refugees from such countries as Algeria, Morocco, Egypt and Tunisia, where they argue their life would be at risk should they return. One, Mahmoud Abu Rideh, is a stateless Palestinian, with nowhere to return to. All of them have wives and families in the United Kingdom. Britain is prohibited from deporting people to countries where they may be at risk of torture. The men could travel to third countries, but finding one willing to take a man classified by the British government as a suspected international terrorist would be difficult.
What is the evidence against them?
The men have never been charged and have had no evidence presented to them. During their hearings before the Special Immigration Appeals Commision, much of the evidence was heard by the panel of judges in secret and the men's lawyers were not present. The government will not reveal the evidence on grounds of national security.
Why has this legislation been so controversial?
Britain has been the only European country to opt out of the human rights convention in the wake of September 11. The majority of the men have been held for more than two years without being questioned or knowing what it is they are accused of. A number have succumbed to psychosis as a result of their detention.