Appellant, Kelbessa Negewo, appeals a judgment of the District Court for the Northern District of Georgia awarding compensatory and punitive damages to appellees, Hirute Abebe-Jira, EdgeGayehu Taye, and Elizabeth Demissie, for torture and cruel, inhuman, and degrading treatment, pursuant to the Alien Tort Claims Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1350. We affirm.
FACTS
In the mid-1970s, a military dictatorship, known as “the Dergue,” ruled Ethiopia and employed a campaign of torture, arbitrary imprisonment, and summary executions against perceived enemies of the government. Leaders of local governing units carried out the terror campaign, called “the Red Terror,” at the local level. The dictatorship divided Ethiopia’s capital, Addis Ababa, into twenty-five governing units called Higher Zones. During the relevant period, Negewo served as chairman of Higher Zone 9.
In December 1977, guards from Higher Zone 9 arrested Abebe-Jira and took her to a prison where she met Negewo. She remained imprisoned for two weeks without any charges being filed against her. In January 1978, Higher Zone 9 guards arrested Abebe-Jira and her sixteen-year-old sister and took them to the prison where Abebe-Jira had been previously detained. Negewo and other men tortured and interrogated Abebe-Jira for several hours. They ordered her to undress, bound her arms and legs, and whipped her on her legs and back with a wire. Abebe-Jira’s torturers also repeatedly threatened her with death. The district court found that Negewo personally supervised at least some of the interrogation and torture of Abebe-Jira and also personally interrogated and participated directly in some of the acts of torture. Following her interrogation and torture, Abebe-Jira remained imprisoned for three months.
Higher Zone 9 guards arrested Taye in February 1978. Shortly after her arrest, Negewo and guards interrogated and tortured her for a period of several hours. Ne-gewo and several guards instructed Taye to remove her clothes, bound her arms and legs together, hung her from a pole, and severely beat her. They then poured water onto her wounds to increase her pain. Taye received no medical care for the wounds and, as a result of the torture, bears permanent physical scars. Taye remained incarcerated for a period of ten months, and during that time she endured frequent interrogations and several incidents of torture. The district court found that Negewo personally supervised and participated in some of the interrogation and torture of Taye.
In April 1977, Negewo and several guards arrested Demissie, a seventeen-year-old student, three of her sisters, and her father. *846 Demissie and her family remained imprisoned for two weeks without charges. In October 1977, Higher Zone 9 guards again arrested Demissie and her fifteen-year-old sister, Haimanot. After being detained at two different prisons, guards took Demissie and her sister to the jail in Higher Zone 9 that Negewo controlled, where guards interrogated and tortured them. The guards ordered Demissie to undress, bound her arms and feet, and placed a wooden pole under her legs and lifted her into the air;, then, they beat her severely. After torturing her, the guards returned Demissie to her cell with her sister. Several days later, guards took Demissie’s sister from the cell. Demissie and her family have not heard from nor seen Haimanot since that day. Demissie remained in custody until June 1978. The district court found that Negewo personally supervised some of the interrogation and torture of Demissie.
Following their release, the appellees fled Ethiopia and sought exile in the United States and Canada. In 1989, Taye encountered Negewo in an Atlanta, Georgia, hotel where they both worked.
PROCEDURAL HISTORY
In September 1990, the appellees filed this lawsuit against Negewo charging him with responsibility for their torture and other cruel acts in violation of the Alien Tort Claims Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1350. Prior to trial, Nege-wo made three requests for the appointment of counsel. The district court denied the first two requests on the ground that Nege-wo had not made a showing sufficient to authorize or justify the appointment. The district court apparently did not enter a written order on Negewo’s third request. Following a two-day bench trial, the court found Negewo liable for the torture and cruel, inhuman, and degrading treatment of the appel-lees and awarded each appellee $200,000 in compensatory damages and $300,000 in punitive damages. Negewo appeals.
CONTENTIONS
Negewo argues that the district court lacked subject matter jurisdiction because the Alien Tort Claims Act neither provides a private right of action nor incorporates a right of action through reference to a treaty or federal law. He also contends that this suit is barred because it involves a non-justiciable political question. *
The appellees contend that a literal reading of the Alien Tort Claims Act demonstrates that the district court had subject matter jurisdiction. They also contend that the political question doctrine does not bar this action.
DISCUSSION
Subject Matter Jurisdiction Under the Alien Tort Claims Act
The subject matter jurisdiction of the district court is a question of law we review
de novo. United States v. Perez,
The Alien Tort Claims Act provides: “The district courts shall have original jurisdiction of any civil action by an alien for a tort only, committed in violation of the law of nations or a treaty of the United States.” 28 U.S.C.A. § 1350 (West 1993). The leading case interpreting the Alien Tort Claims Act was decided by the Second Circuit Court of Appeals in
Filartiga v. Pena-Irala,
The
Filartiga
court was not squarely presented with the question of whether the Alien Tort Claims Act provided a private right of action. The Second Circuit, however, in dicta, “eonstrue[d] the Alien Tort Statute, not as granting new rights to aliens, but simply as opening the federal courts for adjudication of the rights already recognized by international law.”
Filartiga,
We reject Negewo’s assertion that the district court lacked subject matter jurisdiction because the Alien Tort Claims Act does not provide a private right of action. On its face, section 1350 requires the district courts to hear claims “by an alien
for a tort
only,
committed in violation of the law of nations.”
28 U.S.C.A. § 1350 (West 1993) (emphasis added). We read the statute as requiring no more than an allegation of a violation of the law of nations in order to invoke section 1350.
See, e.g., Kadic,
The TVPA would establish an unambiguous and modern basis for a cause of action that has been successfully maintained under an existing law, section 1350 of the Judiciary Act of 1789 (the Alien Tort Claims Act), which permits Federal district courts to hear claims by aliens for torts committed “in violation of the law of nations.”
H.R.Rep. No. 367, 102d Cong., 2d Sess. 3, reprinted in 1992 U.S.C.C.A.N. 84, 86 (emphasis added). Congress, therefore, has recognized that the Alien Tort Claims Act confers both a forum and a private right of action to aliens alleging a violation of international law.
Accordingly, we conclude that the Alien Tort Claims Act establishes a federal forum where courts may fashion domestic common law remedies to give effect to violations of customary international law.
See, e.g., Kadic,
Applicability of the Political Question Doctrine
Negewo also contends that this case should have been dismissed because it presents a nonjusticiable political question. The political question doctrine prevents the judicial branch from deciding issues textually committed to the legislative or executive branches.
Baker v. Carr,
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
Negewo presses two other claims that we reject in summary fashion. First, Negewo asserts that the applicable statute of limitations, which he contends is Georgia’s two-year limitation for tort actions, bars this lawsuit. Negewo, however, did not raise this claim below; accordingly, we will not consider it on appeal. Second, Negewo argues that the district court erred in failing to grant his requests for appointment of counsel. In a civil case, appointment of counsel "is justified only by exceptional circumstances.”
Fowler
v.
Jones,
