Former Guantanamo Bay detainee David Hicks (L) says he will appeal his US conviction. Source: AAP
FORMER Guantanamo Bay detainee David Hicks says an appeal against his US conviction for supporting terrorism is an attempt to right the wrongs committed against him.
But the man who spent more than five years in Guantanamo Bay before being released in Australia in 2007 says financial compensation is not at the front of his mind.
The 37-year-old South Australian says his admission of providing material support to terrorists - part of a plea deal to facilitate his transfer to Australia - was made under duress.
"The purpose of this action is to obtain formal recognition of my innocence so that the wrongs of the past committed against me can be righted, to put it all behind me and move on with my life," Mr Hicks told reporters in Sydney.
Mr Hicks said he has not thought about financial compensation should his appeal succeed.
"At this stage I haven't thought about it," he said.
"This is all about recognising my conviction should be null and void."
Justice, he said, was convincing authorities and the media he is innocent.
"To show that no crime was committed and to have you guys on board to say it was wrong," he said.
"As long as we allow the Australian government to do this to citizens like myself and others, and not to do nothing about it, it'll just happen to Australian citizens again."
Lawyers for Mr Hicks lodged the appeal papers in the US Court of Military Commission Review on Tuesday.
Mr Hicks' lawyer, Stephen Kenny, is seeking a summary dismissal of the conviction because the offence was not a war crime when Mr Hicks was detained, and his guilty plea was made under duress.
"What he was charged with and pled guilty to is not a crime, it is not recognised anywhere outside of the United States since 2006," he said.
"There is really no way the courts can ultimately maintain the fiction of what happened in Guantanamo Bay."
Mr Hicks said while he did not expect the military review to be successful, he welcomed the fact it would open an opportunity to move his appeal in a US civilian court.
"I have full faith in the civilian courts," he said.
Mr Hicks' father, Terry, told AAP he wanted the military courts in the US to admit they were wrong in convicting his son.
He hoped the military review would be successful and there would be no need to bring the case to the civilian court.
"What I'd like is for the military to finally look at the process and say 'we were wrong'," Terry Hicks said.
Now working as a panel beater in Terrey Hills, in Sydney's north, Mr Hicks says he tries to live a normal life with his wife Lucy and friends and family, but is engaged in a lengthy process of self-healing.
He suffers from post traumatic stress, nightmares, back pain and pain in one of his hands, which was broken during his detention.
Mr Hicks also said his teeth were rotting after Guantanamo.
He described to journalists how "biscuit teams" - doctors specialising in behavioural science - treated him during his detention.
"When medical personnel came to see you it's not like 'how are you, how can we help?'" he said.
"They get as much information out of you as possible to see how that treatment is affecting you so they can use it (in interrogation techniques)."
He said detainees who attempted suicide were stripped, hosed down and placed in the "chill box" - a small metal box with high-powered air-conditioning - instead of getting treatment.
A US court last year quashed a similar charge of material support for terrorism relating to Salim Hamdan, Osama bin Laden's former driver.
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