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WSWS : News
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: Afghanistan
New revelations about Guantanamo Bay prisoners
By Richard Phillips
3 January 2003
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A recent story in the Los Angeles Times reports that
at least 10 percent of the 625 war prisoners captured in Afghanistan
and now held at the notorious US naval base prison in Guantanamo
Bay have no meaningful connection with the Taliban
or Al Qaeda.
Citing military sources, the December 22 article revealed that
a group of US army officers in Afghanistan last year called for
scores of detainees not to be sent to Guantanamo Bay. Senior US
military commanders in Afghanistan, Kuwait and America, however,
ignored their advice. The article also reported that Maj. Gen.
Michael E. Dunleavy, operational commander at Guantanamo Bay until
October, visited Afghanistan last year complaining that there
were too many Mickey Mouse detainees being
sent to the naval base.
According to the newspaper, army officers who were frustrated
that their recommendations were being ignored decided to circulate
a list of 49 Afghans and 10 Pakistani prisoners they wanted released
or repatriated. The list included street vendors, taxi drivers,
farmers and several men suffering severe mental health problems.
While no names were provided, many of the men were kidnapped by
bounty-hunting Pakistani soldiers near the Afghan border. One
young detainee was captured in a border town where he had lived
and worked for 20 years. He had no connection with the Al Qaeda
or the Taliban.
The article also said that many Afghans now in Guantanamo Bay
were forcibly conscripted into the Taliban army because they could
not afford the bribes demanded to avoid military service. One
example cited was of a 30-year-old farmer who was picked up by
Northern Alliance forces because they were interested in
stealing his car and money.
The Times quoted from the case file of a 22-year-old
Afghan who sold firewood at a bus station in Kunduz. According
to interrogators: He answers all questions quickly and fully....
His story is plausible and consistent and there is no evidence
that he has worked for or had any knowledge of the Taliban or
Al Qaeda. In another instance, interrogators described a
33-year-old taxi driver from Pakistan captured by Northern Alliance
forces near Mazar-i-Sharif as a low-level fighter with no
tactical intelligence. Recommend repatriation.
January 15 will mark one year since the Bush administration
began jailing war prisoners in Guantanamo Bay. In this 12-month
period only five detainees have been releasedone in April,
who was mentally ill, and four others in October, including two
elderly men. One of the old men had no teeth and required a cane
to walk. Another, Faiz Mohammed, told the media that he was over
100 years old. He said US and Afghan troops captured him in late
2001 when he was visiting a local village in his native Oruzgun
province, ignoring his protests that he had nothing to do with
Al Qaeda or the Taliban.
Violation of fundamental legal rights
While the Los Angeles Times referred to only 59 of the
hundreds imprisoned in Guantanamo Bay, it failed to mention that
the detainees, most of whom are in their early 20s, are being
held without charge and in contravention of their democratic and
legal rights.
The prisoners have been deemed unlawful combatants
by the US authorities in order to deny them official prisoner-of-war
status and the most rudimentary human rights. They have no access
to their families or lawyers and the US government has given no
indication when or if the prisoners, some of whom are only 16
years of age, will ever be charged or brought to trial. Under
their current status, the prisoners can be held as long as the
US government decrees.
Supported by the US judiciary, the Bush administration has
thumbed its nose at criticism from the International Red Cross
and Amnesty International. These and other human rights organisations
have pointed out that the detainees are being held in contravention
of the Geneva Convention, the International Covenant on Civil
and Political Rights and the US Constitution.
In April last year, Guantanamo Bay detainees were moved from
Camp X-Raya collection of outdoor cagesto Camp Delta,
several kilometres away within the naval base. The new facility
was built at a cost of $US9.7 million by Brown and Root Services,
a division of Halliburton, Vice President Dick Cheneys former
company. Using low-wage contract workers from the Philippines
and India, the jail was constructed from international shipping
containers.
Each container houses five prisoners in separate 6.8 feet by
8 feet cells, with eight containers making up a cellblock. Steel
mesh replaces three sides of the containers, which are not air-conditioned,
with half the cell space taken up by a metal bed welded to the
wall. These cells are smaller than the death row facilities in
Texas, where inmates are allowed to shower and to exercise for
an hour outside the cells each day.
Camp Delta prisoners, by contrast, are permitted to leave their
tiny cells for only two 15-minute shower and exercise sessions
per week. This means they are confined to their non air-conditioned
cells in fierce tropical heat for all but 30 minutes each week,
unless they are called to an interrogation session, which can
happen at any time of the day or night. The so-called exercise
yards consist of 25 x 18 foot cages, with prisoners only allowed
to exercise alone, wearing manacles.
A recent article in the Miami Herald reported that up
to 10 percent of the inmates suffered mental health problems and
were taking anti-depressants. The newspaper quoted from a prison
guard who said some prisoners yell all day long, calling
to a spirit to take them away.
Amnesty International has described the conditions at Camp
Delta as cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment in violation
of international law and called for all interrogations to
be halted until the detainees are given the opportunity to consult
lawyers. These appeals, needless to say, have been brushed aside
by the Bush administration while the military has announced that
it plans to expand the jail to take up to 1,000 prisoners, including
upwards of 80 in total isolation cells.
Last July, US District Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly rejected
a habeas corpus writ from lawyers representing 16 detainees12
Kuwaitis, two British, 24-year-old Safiq Rasul and 21-year-old
Asif Iqbal, and two Australians, 27-year-old David Hicks and 44-year-old
Mamdouh Habib.
Hicks was seized by Northern Alliance forces in Afghanistan
in December 2001 and handed over to the US military. He was interrogated
for weeks and then flown to Guantanamo Bay. Habib, a former contract
cleaner from Sydney and the father of four children, was arrested
in Pakistan in October 2001 and transported to Egypt, where he
was held incommunicado and interrogated for five months. He was
shifted to a US military prison in Afghanistan in April and then
relocated to Guantanamo Bay in early May.
Rasul and Iqbal travelled to Pakistan to visit relatives just
before September 11, 2001. They were kidnapped by Taliban forces
and later taken into US military custody in Afghanistan. The 12
Kuwaiti detainees were involved in Kuwaiti government-endorsed
charity work in Pakistan and Afghanistan.
Kollar-Kotelly ruled that Guantanamo Bay naval base was not
US territory and therefore not under American legal jurisdiction.
She also said that the prisoners were not being deprived of due
process because they had not been charged with any offence. In
other words, the prisoners had no legal rights and could be held
indefinitely. This ruling has been challenged and a decision on
the case, which began in a US Federal Court of Appeals on December
3, is expected some time in the next two months.
Prisoners father denounces illegal detention
Terry Hicks, David Hicks father, recently spoke with
the World Socialist Web Site, voicing his concerns over
the conditions at Guantanamo Bay and denouncing Australias
Howard government.
Every human right you can imagine is being trampled on
in Guantanamo Bay and yet this is OK as far as Howard is concerned,
he said.
Bush tells the world he is conducting a war on
terrorism and yet the people they capture cant be
called prisoners of war. This is a load of crap, so they can get
around the Geneva Conventions and everybody knows it. They have
dozens of legal loopholes to justify their contravention of basic
human rights. If they cant find a loophole theyll
make one up.
While its been a difficult 12 months for us we
can only guess what its like for David and others in Cuba.
They are being treated worse than animalsa dog has more
rights than these prisoners.
Weve received nine letters altogether from David
in the last year, including two just recently to my daughter.
The letters are censored, of course. Weve had the odd one
where it might be a line or few words, but the last one had three
lines blacked out. I tried to read it but it was impossible.
He seems all right, although the last two indicated that
he was starting to feel some homesickness. He asked for photographs
of some of his old fishing spots and parts of the Adelaide Hills.
He wanted to stick them on the wall of his cell. He is obviously
starting to feel the pressure.
Ive just written to him and told him to stand on
his feet, take a deep breath, and start again. Im confident
hell come through all this. Obviously he is being treated
very roughly. There will be no beg-your-pardons and although David
can take a bit of heavy treatmenthe was in the boxing ring
for a long whileit will be the mind games that will be hard.
There is no such thing as darkness there. The lights are on 24
hours and there are only two 15-minute exercise periods and two
showers a week.
In the last letter David said hed been in hospital
for an operationhe thought it was in October. He didnt
say what it was for, but said hed never felt so human in
all his life because he spent three days in the hospital, was
able to shower regularly and they gave him a chair for three days
back in his cell.
Terry Hicks said one of the most frustrating aspects of his
sons plight was the attitude of the Howard government and
the Opposition Labor Party to the illegal detention of his son
by the US military.
Our support group has been trying to meet with Alexander
Downer [Australian Foreign Minister], but to no avail. We get
fobbed off with the bureaucratic stuff all the time. Im
told I have to go through my lawyer, he keeps submitting requests
to see Downer or to be able to visit David and they respond by
saying the US is in charge. It has gone on and on like this all
year.
I suppose the most laughable thing is when you pick up
a newspaper and read about the governments response to the
two Australian girls found guilty of heroin possession in Vietnam
and who now face the death penalty. Downer immediately said he
would do whatever he could to get them outhe was not going
to walk hand-in-hand down the path to their death. And there was
another case of an Australian caught with drugs in Singapore and
the Howard government said they would do whatever they could to
assist him. Talk about double standards. My son has been held
for a year. He has not been charged and there is no sign that
he will ever be released, and yet the Australian governments
attitude is to hell with him, he can stay there and rot.
And there is not much different from the Labor Party.
Youd think that the opposition would try and apply some
pressure here. Isnt this why they are called the opposition?
The problem is they agree with the government. Rodney Sawford,
the Labor member in Port Adelaide, was very rude and aggressive.
He just berated the ladies from the support group. It was like
banging your head against a brick wall with him.
There are others who say they agree, at least when we
talk to them. Yes, they disagree with what is happening and they
say theyll bring it up in parliament at the next sitting.
But when it comes to the crunch they fade away. The US is holding
two Australian citizens who havent been charged with anything.
Weve got all these so-called humanitarians in the Labor
Party and the parliament, but they are too frightened to say anything.
Terry Hicks told the World Socialist Web Site that he
was very encouraged by the support the family was receiving and
said people were concerned, not just about what had happened to
his son, but the general situation with the US government.
No one condones the internal situation in Iraq or Saddam
Hussein, he said, but everyone I talk to is worried
about the attitude of the American government and wonder where
all this is going to lead. The issue is oilits pretty
obviousand yet the Howard government follows America without
any questions asked. They are hell bent on war and are not taking
a scrap of notice of anyone. Someone has asked why havent
the inspectors gone into America. Why are they allowed to have
weapons of mass destruction and no one else?
See Also:
Detainee dies during
US interrogation in Afghanistan
[11 December 2002]
Howard government
complicit in detention of Australian citizen by US military
[26 April 2002]
The CIAs international
dirty war
US oversees abduction, torture, execution of alleged terrorists
[20 March 2002]
Australian detainee
at Guantanamo Bay abandoned by Howard government
[8 February 2002]
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