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26 May 2009 KABUL, (Reuters) - An Afghan who has
spent over six years at the
U.S. military's Guantanamo Bay prison was only
around 12-years-old when he was detained, not 16 or 17
as his official record says, an Afghan rights group
said on Tuesday.
Interviews with the family of Mohammed Jawad, who like
many poor Afghans does not know his exact age or
birthday, showed he was probably not even a teenager
when he was arrested in 2002, the
Afghan Independent Human Rights Commission
said.
He was picked up by Afghan police in connection with a
grenade attack in
Kabul in which two U.S. soldiers and their
Afghan interpreter were wounded. He was transferred to
U.S. custody the same day and flown to Guantanamo in
early 2003.
Commissioner Nader Nadery said in addition to
being a minor at the time of his detention, Jawad was
tortured and abused by the Afghan police and while at
the Guantanamo detention centre, located at a U.S.
naval
base in
Cuba.
The
Commission is seeking his release and
repatriation, and in the course of looking into his
case found out he was probably considerably younger
than his records showed.
"We asked his mother what was the big event close to
his birth that you can remember, any change in the
president etcetera, and she said that he was born
around six months after his father's death," Nadery
told Reuters.
"We tried to explore more when his father died, and
his father died in a battle in Khost," he said.
That fighting was in 1991, according to a petition
submitted to the Afghan supreme court this month on
Jawad's behalf, aiming to force President Hamid Karzai
to seek his release.
Nadry said the commission checked Jawad's mother's
story, interviewing other relatives and officials
including a soldier who commanded Jawad's father.
Major Eric Montalvo, a Pentagon-appointed U.S. Marine
Corps lawyer representing Jawad, said his client — who
may still be a teenager if his mother's dates are
correct — should be released.
"We have a child of
Afghanistan that was wrongfully taken from this
country and he needs to be returned. He was tortured,
he was abused over seven years of custody," he told a
news conference in the Afghan capital.
Nadry said the commission had raised Jawad's case with
the Afghan and U.S. governments in the past, without
success.
Since joining with Afghan troops to oust the
Taliban in 2001, the U.S. has arrested
thousands of suspected Taliban and
al
Qaeda militants in Afghanistan. Some were then
transferred to other places, including the
Guantanamo Bay prison.
EsinIslam.Com
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