Detainees held in the Bagram Theater Internment Facility explained

On January 16, 2010, the United States Department of Defense complied with a court order and made public a heavily redacted list of the detainees held in the Bagram Theater Internment Facility.[1] [2] [3] Detainees were initially held in primitive, temporary quarters, in what was originally called the Bagram Collection Point, from late 2001.Detainees were later moved to an indoor detention center until late 2009, when newly constructed facilities were opened.

The identity of most detainees held in Bagram remained classified until the publication of the first list in January 2010.[2]

Dozens of the names on the list are identical to names of detainees who had been held in the Guantanamo Bay detention camps, in Cuba.It was reported that three of the detainees in Bagram had formerly been held in Guantanamo, because they had the same Internment Serial Numbers. They were: Gul Zaman, Khadan Kadri and Hafizullah Shabaz Khau.

While some Guantanamo detainees were sent directly to Guantanamo from CIA custody, most Guantanamo detainees spent some time in US Military custody at Bagram, or at the similar Kandahar detention facility. Close to one hundred detainees testified about their time in Bagram during one of their OARDEC proceedings, or told reporters about their stay after their release.

Several dozen individuals reported being held in Bagram prior to the preparation of the official list published in January 2010. A few individuals report being released from Bagram, who aren't on the official list because they arrived there are the official list was prepared.

Guantanamo detainees who reported spending time in Bagram

Name Notes
762
307
  • Sent to Bagram after several days of beatings by Afghan soldiers in Gardez.[5]
  • Eventually sent to Guantanamo.
489
  • Passed directly from Taliban custody to American custody.[6]
  • Taliban believed he was an American spy.
686
  • Testified to his Combatant Status Review Tribunal that he had spent months in detention in Pakistani custody, and then in American custody, in Kandahar and Bagram, prior to being transferred to Cuba.[7] He said none of his interrogators had asked him questions that implied they thought he was affiliated with Al Qaida until after he came to Cuba.
1463
963 Abdul Bagi
  • Testified, to his Combatant Status Review Tribunal, that he learned, seven days after his capture, in Bagram, that he was accused of tossing a rifle down a well,[12]
  • Would have arrived in Bagram on February 17, 2003.
  • Eventually transferred to Guantanamo.
502
1032
954
1007
  • Alleged to have sent students from Pakistani madrassas to serve as fighters in Afghanistan.[13]
Abdul Jabar
  • A 35-year-old taxi driver who testified he was held near Dilawar and experienced abuse.
1002
874
  • One of the detainees whose amalgamated habeas corpus petition is known as Ghulam Mohammed v. Don Rumsfeld.
306
  • Former Taliban ambassador to Pakistan.[14]
  • Reports abuse in Bagram.[15]
  • Currently under house arrest.
  • One of the detainees whose amalgamated habeas corpus petition is known as Ghulam Mohammed v. Don Rumsfeld.
753
  • One of the passengers in Dilawar's jitney taxi.[16]
  • Testified to the same kind of abuse that killed Dilawar.
  • Eventually transferred to Guantanamo—but his name is missing from the official list of Guantanamo detainees.
  • Beaten to death in Bagram on November 6, 2003.[17]
332
452
940
  • Captured with five other men from the village of Kirmati, near Gardez city in late May 2002. and his brother [18]
845
Amanullah
  • Captured with five other men from the village of Kirmati, near Gardez city in late May 2002. and his brother
Amanullah
  • A veteran of struggle against Afghanistan's Soviet invaders, in the 1980s, captured in early 2004, who reports he never learned why he was apprehended.[19]
  • Claims he was held for a year in solitary confinement in Bagram.
948
  • A Yemeni who was in Afghanistan as a Tablighi Jamaat pilgrim and was trapped in Afghanistan when the borders were closed following 9-11.[20]
256
782
817
975
BT421[21]
  • Beaten to death in Bagram on December 10, 2002.
680
888 Esmatulla
688
  • One of the detainees whose amalgamated habeas corpus petition is known as Ghulam Mohammed v. Don Rumsfeld.
1897 Fazel Karim
987
516
  • One of the detainees whose amalgamated habeas corpus petition is known as Ghulam Mohammed v. Don Rumsfeld.
1021
  • One of the detainees whose amalgamated habeas corpus petition is known as Ghulam Mohammed v. Don Rumsfeld.
  • One of the detainees whose amalgamated habeas corpus petition is known as Ghulam Mohammed v. Don Rumsfeld.
907
  • Beaten to death in Bagram on December 4, 2002.
1001
  • Spent five years in Guantanamo, was cleared for release in December 2007, and subsequently rearrested in September 2008.[22]
  • His American lawyer believes he was rearrested because US military officials in Afghanistan failed to update their records to show he had been cleared for release.
  • One of the detainees whose amalgamated habeas corpus petition is known as Ghulam Mohammed v. Don Rumsfeld.
  • A 32-year-old farmer who testified he was held near Dilawar and experienced abuse.
  • One of the detainees whose amalgamated habeas corpus petition is known as Ghulam Mohammed v. Don Rumsfeld.
1119
  • One of the detainees whose amalgamated habeas corpus petition is known as Ghulam Mohammed v. Don Rumsfeld.
940
94
  • A militia leader who captured and turned over Dilawar, Habibullah, Khandan Kadir. and half a dozen other detainees.[23]
  • Had the security contract for Firebase Salerno. Turned over suspects following a rocket attack on December 1, 2002, only to fall under suspicion of being behind the attack himself.
  • The nephew and protégé of a powerful militia leader named Pacha Khan Zadran.
  • An Afghan journalist working as a cameraman for the Canadian CTV network who was accused of being in possession of video of members of the Taliban.[24] [25]
  • The American base commander confirmed that a review Board determined that he was an "unlawful enemy combatant".[26] [27]
1095
586
831
  • A pharmacist who was hired by the new government of Afghanistan's to be Khowst's regional director of the anti-narcotics branch of its new Intelligence service.[28]
  • Denounced and captured by Jan Baz, a local militia leader who was himself captured by the Americans, four months later.
  • Eventually transferred to Guantanamo.
  • Captured with five other men and his brother from the village of Kirmati, near Gardez city in late May 2002.
3984Lahur Gul[29] [30]
  • Testified that he was collecting firewood when arrested.[31]
  • Uniform issued consisted of "bottle-green overalls over loose brown trousers", which Reuters reported indicated that camp authorities regarded him as a medium security risk.
660
1052
  • A teenage student. captured with, Azimullah, Mohammed Salim and Rahman Tulah, accused of helping guide fighters who launched a rocket attack on Firebase Salerno.[32]
  • Eventually transferred to Guantanamo.
519
  • One of the detainees whose amalgamated habeas corpus petition is known as Ghulam Mohammed v. Don Rumsfeld.
939
558
909
333
900
7
849 Mohammed Nasim
681
1008
  • Captured with five other men from the village of Kirmati, near Gardez city in late May 2002. and his brother
955
Mohammed Salim
  • Captured with Mahbub Rahman, Azimullah and Rahman Tulah.
  • Mahbub Rahman requested a statement from him, at his Tribunal. He was told that although he was still in US custody, in Bagram, his testimony was not reasonably available.
532
  • One of the detainees whose amalgamated habeas corpus petition is known as Ghulam Mohammed v. Don Rumsfeld.
1004 Mohammed Yacoub
  • One of the detainees whose amalgamated habeas corpus petition is known as Ghulam Mohammed v. Don Rumsfeld.
  • A District Chief in Zabul Province who was apprehended in September 2005, accused of being a Taliban informant.[33]
  • Lived out most of the Taliban's administration in exile in Pakistan.
  • David Hicks was also known as Muhammed Dawood.
  • One of the detainees whose amalgamated habeas corpus petition is known as Ghulam Mohammed v. Don Rumsfeld.
  • An individual named Mohammed Dawood was among the 645 names listed on the only list of

Bagram capties to be published.[34] [35]

839
  • One of the detainees whose amalgamated habeas corpus petition is known as Ghulam Mohammed v. Don Rumsfeld.
967
1019
  • One of the detainees whose amalgamated habeas corpus petition is known as Ghulam Mohammed v. Don Rumsfeld.
727
  • Has stated that Bagram was worse than Guantanamo.[36]
  • Testified before the inquiry into Dilawar's death that he was suspended from the ceiling for 8 to 10 days.
591
  • One of the detainees whose amalgamated habeas corpus petition is known as Ghulam Mohammed v. Don Rumsfeld.
  • One of the detainees whose amalgamated habeas corpus petition is known as Ghulam Mohammed v. Don Rumsfeld.
835
  • An Afghan whose family had fled to Pakistan to escape the decades of warfare in Afghanistan. He and his brothers had been educated in Pakistan, and he had trained to become a medical technician. In response to Hamid Karzai's entreaties for educated expatriate Afghans to return he and his brother had returned and set up a medical clinic in their families traditional home. His brother Shahwali Zair Mohammed Shaheen Naqeebyllah was a doctor, and he ran the lab.
  • The first American officer commanding a small nearby outpost had relied on his brother for introductions to all the local elders, because he was an educated, Western-oriented man, who spoke English.[37] Because his brother had introduced them, the local elders directed all of their requests to the Americans through him. So his brother started writing a series of notes to the local American officer.
  • When the first American officer was replaced, his brother continued to write these notes to his replacement—who regarded them as threats and arrested the two brothers.
  • One of the detainees whose amalgamated habeas corpus petition is known as Ghulam Mohammed v. Don Rumsfeld.
  • A Tunisian, captured at his home in Karachi in May 2005 who spent two years in the CIA's black sites prior to being sent to Bagram.[38]
945
1035
1056
1154
311
  • Three Guantanamo detainees testified that Samoud Khan had led the platoon-sized armed band they were captured with; most of their group escaped, but they were told that Samoud was still in Bagram.[39] [40] [41]
Sardar Khan
  • One of the detainees whose amalgamated habeas corpus petition is known as Ghulam Mohammed v. Don Rumsfeld.
  • One of the detainees whose amalgamated habeas corpus petition is known as Ghulam Mohammed v. Don Rumsfeld.
  • Alleged to have played a role in the kidnapping and murder of Daniel Pearl.[42] [43] [44]
  • Disappeared shortly after Pearl's murder, only to be left on the doorsteps of his family in April 2007.
  • Saud Memon's weight had dropped to 36 kilograms; he was unable to recognize his relatives; and died less than a month after his release.
  • On November 12, 2007 The Wall Street Journal reported that he had been held and interrogated in Bagram.
914
944
899
834
  • An Afghan whose family had fled to Pakistan to escape the decades of warfare in Afghanistan. He and his brothers had been educated in Pakistan, and he had worked his way through medical school. In response to Hamid Karzai's entreaties for educated expatriate Afghans to return he and his brother had returned and set up a medical clinic in their families traditional home. His brother Rasool Shahwali Zair Mohammed Mohammed was a trained medical technician, who ran the modern medical lab they set up in their clinic.
  • The first American officer commanding a small nearby outpost had relied on him for introductions to all the local elders, because he was an educated, Western-oriented man, who spoke English. Because he had introduced them, the local elders directed all of their requests to the Americans through him. So he started writing a series of notes to the local American officer.
  • When the first American officer was replaced, he continued to write these notes to his replacement—who regarded them as threats and arrested the brothers.
  • Captured with five other men from the village of Kirmati, near Gardez city in late May 2002. and his brother
933
902
535
  • The Taliban's last Foreign Minister, released in the fall of 2003.[45]
  • The BBC reports he sent an envoy to warn the USA a month prior to al Qaeda's attack on 9-11, and that he had argued for turning over Osama bin Laden in September 2001.[46]
550 Walid Said Bin Said Zaid
  • Captured in 2002, filed a writ of habeas corpus in 2006, still held in Bagram as of December 2008.[47]
  • Held for ten months, and released in 2006.[48]
898
  • A 20-year-old farmer who testified he was held near Dilawar and experienced abuse.
  • One of the detainees whose amalgamated habeas corpus petition is known as Ghulam Mohammed v. Don Rumsfeld.
Zalmay Shah

Individuals who reported being held in Bagram prior to the publication of the first official list

Name Notes
Abdul Jabar
  • A 35-year-old taxi driver who testified he was held near Dilawar and experienced abuse.
  • One of the detainees whose amalgamated habeas corpus petition is known as Ghulam Mohammed v. Don Rumsfeld.
  • One of the detainees whose amalgamated habeas corpus petition is known as Ghulam Mohammed v. Don Rumsfeld.
  • One of the passengers in Dilawar's jitney taxi.
  • Testified to the same kind of abuse that killed Dilawar.
  • Eventually transferred to Guantanamo—but his name is missing from the official list of Guantanamo detainees.
  • Beaten to death in Bagram on November 6, 2003.
  • Captured with five other men from the village of Kirmati, near Gardez city in late May 2002. and his brother
  • Captured with five other men from the village of Kirmati, near Gardez city in late May 2002. and his brother
  • A veteran of struggle against Afghanistan's Soviet invaders, in the 1980s, captured in early 2004, who reports he never learned why he was apprehended.
  • Claims he was held for a year in solitary confinement in Bagram.
  • Beaten to death in Bagram on December 10, 2002.
  • A mugshot of Dilawar has been published

showing that he had the ISN 421.

  • One of the detainees whose amalgamated habeas corpus petition is known as Ghulam Mohammed v. Don Rumsfeld.
  • One of the detainees whose amalgamated habeas corpus petition is known as Ghulam Mohammed v. Don Rumsfeld.
  • One of the detainees whose amalgamated habeas corpus petition is known as Ghulam Mohammed v. Don Rumsfeld.
  • One of the detainees whose amalgamated habeas corpus petition is known as Ghulam Mohammed v. Don Rumsfeld.
  • Beaten to death in Bagram on December 4, 2002.
  • One of the detainees whose amalgamated habeas corpus petition is known as Ghulam Mohammed v. Don Rumsfeld.
  • A 32-year-old farmer who testified he was held near Dilawar and experienced abuse.
  • One of the detainees whose amalgamated habeas corpus petition is known as Ghulam Mohammed v. Don Rumsfeld.
  • One of the detainees whose amalgamated habeas corpus petition is known as Ghulam Mohammed v. Don Rumsfeld.
  • A militia leader who captured and turned over Dilawar, Habibullah, Khandan Kadir. and half a dozen other detainees.
  • Had the security contract for Firebase Salerno. Turned over suspects following a rocket attack on December 1, 2002, only to fall under suspicion of being behind the attack himself.
  • The nephew and protégé of a powerful militia leader named Pacha Khan Zadran.
  • An Afghan journalist working as a cameraman for the Canadian CTV network who was accused of being in possession of video of members of the Taliban.
  • The American base commander confirmed that a review Board determined that he was an "unlawful enemy combatant".
  • Captured with five other men from the village of Kirmati, near Gardez city in late May 2002. and his brother
  • One of the detainees whose amalgamated habeas corpus petition is known as Ghulam Mohammed v. Don Rumsfeld.[49] [50]
  • One of the detainees whose amalgamated habeas corpus petition is known as Ghulam Mohammed v. Don Rumsfeld.
  • One of the detainees whose amalgamated habeas corpus petition is known as Ghulam Mohammed v. Don Rumsfeld.
  • Captured with five other men from the village of Kirmati, near Gardez city in late May 2002. and his brother
Mohammed Salim
  • Captured with Mahbub Rahman, Azimullah and Rahman Tulah.
  • Mahbub Rahman requested a statement from him, at his Tribunal. He was told that although he was still in US custody, in Bagram, his testimony was not reasonably available.
  • One of the detainees whose amalgamated habeas corpus petition is known as Ghulam Mohammed v. Don Rumsfeld.
  • One of the detainees whose amalgamated habeas corpus petition is known as Ghulam Mohammed v. Don Rumsfeld.
  • A District Chief in Zabul Province who was apprehended in September 2005, accused of being a Taliban informant.
  • Lived out most of the Taliban's administration in exile in Pakistan.
  • David Hicks was also known as Muhammed Dawood.
  • One of the detainees whose amalgamated habeas corpus petition is known as Ghulam Mohammed v. Don Rumsfeld.
  • One of the detainees whose amalgamated habeas corpus petition is known as Ghulam Mohammed v. Don Rumsfeld.
  • One of the detainees whose amalgamated habeas corpus petition is known as Ghulam Mohammed v. Don Rumsfeld.
  • Testified before the inquiry into Dilawar's death that he was suspended from the ceiling for 8 to 10 days.
  • One of the detainees whose amalgamated habeas corpus petition is known as Ghulam Mohammed v. Don Rumsfeld.
  • One of the detainees whose amalgamated habeas corpus petition is known as Ghulam Mohammed v. Don Rumsfeld.
Raymond Azar
  • Alleges abusive treatment by security officials.[51] [52] [53]
  • A Tunisian, captured at his home in Karachi in May 2005 who spent two years in the CIA's black sites prior to being sent to Bagram.
  • One of the detainees whose amalgamated habeas corpus petition is known as Ghulam Mohammed v. Don Rumsfeld.
  • Three Guantanamo detainees testified that Samoud Khan had led the platoon-sized armed band they were captured with, most of their group escaped, but they were told that Samoud was still in Bagram.
Sardar Khan
  • One of the detainees whose amalgamated habeas corpus petition is known as Ghulam Mohammed v. Don Rumsfeld.
  • One of the detainees whose amalgamated habeas corpus petition is known as Ghulam Mohammed v. Don Rumsfeld.
  • Alleged to have played a role in the kidnapping and murder of Daniel Pearl.
  • Disappeared shortly after Pearl's murder, only to be left on the doorsteps of his family in April 2007.
  • Saud Memon's weight had dropped to 36 kilograms; he was unable to recognize his relatives; and died less than a month after his release.
  • On November 12, 2007 The Wall Street Journal reported that he had been held and interrogated in Bagram.
  • Captured with five other men from the village of Kirmati, near Gardez city in late May 2002. and his brother
  • The Taliban's last Foreign Minister, released in the fall of 2003.
  • The BBC reports he sent an envoy to warn the USA a month prior to al Qaeda's attack on 9-11, and that he had argued for turning over Osama bin Laden in September 2001.
  • Captured in 2002, filed a writ of habeas corpus in 2006, still held in Bagram as of December 2008.
  • Held for ten months, and released in 2006.
  • One of the detainees whose amalgamated habeas corpus petition is known as Ghulam Mohammed v. Don Rumsfeld.
Zalmay Shah

The official list of Bagram detainees, as of September 22, 2009

First official list of Guantanamo detainees[54] First official list of Bagram detainees
  • Hamidullah (Guantanamo detainee 456),
  • Hamidullah (Guantanamo detainee 1119),
  • Hamidullah (Guantanamo detainee 642),
  • Hamidullah (Bagram detainee sequence 001869),
  • Hamidullah (Bagram detainee sequence 003658),
  • Hamidullah (Bagram detainee sequence 003718),
  • Hamidullah (Bagram detainee sequence 003881),
  • Abdul Ghani (Bagram detainee)
  • Abdul Malik (Guantanamo detainee)
  • Abdul Malik (Bagram detainee)
  • Gul Zaman (Bagram detainee sequence 000459)
  • Gul Zaman (Bagram detainee sequence 003355)
  • Abdul Satar (Bagram detainee sequence 003409)
  • Abdul Sattar (Bagram detainee sequence 003663)
  • Abdul Satar (Bagram detainee sequence 020021)
  • Abdul Rahim (Bagram detainee sequence 004077)
  • Abdul Rahim (Bagram detainee sequence 020017)
  • Mohammed Rahim (Guantanamo detainee 10030)
  • Mohammed Rahim (Guantanamo detainee 1104)
  • Mohammad Rahim (Bagram detainee sequence 003821)
  • Mohammad Rahim (Bagram detainee sequence 004164)
  • Naqibullah (Bagram detainee sequence 003701)
  • Naqibullah (Bagram detainee sequence 3960bf)
  • Mohammad Fazil (Bagram detainee)
  • Abdul Zahir (Bagram detainee)
  • Abdul Karim (Bagram detainee sequence 003014)
  • Abdul Karim (Bagram detainee sequence 004139)
  • Rahmatullah
  • Rahmatullah (Bagram detainee sequence 003086)
  • Rahmatullah (Bagram detainee sequence 003802)
  • Rahmatullah (Bagram detainee sequence 004136)
  • Rahmatullah (Bagram detainee sequence 004142)
  • Rahmatullah (Bagram detainee sequence 020003)
  • Maulawi Hafizullah (Bagram detainee sequence 003279)
  • Hafizullah (Bagram detainee sequence 004067)
  • Mohammed Gul (Bagram detainee)
  • Fazil Rahman (Guantanamo detainee 496)
  • Fazil Rahman (Bagram detainee)
  • Hafizullah Shabaz Khau (Bagram detainee)
  • Rohullah (Bagram detainee)
  • Rohullah (Bagram detainee sequence 003417)
  • Rohullah (Bagram detainee sequence 003830)
  • Rohullah (Bagram detainee sequence 003841)
  • Mohammed Sharif (Bagram detainee)
  • Abdul Rahim (Bagram detainee)
  • Gulam Farouq

See also

References

  1. Web site: Bagram detainees . . 2009-09-22 . https://web.archive.org/web/20100124143455/http://www.aclu.org/files/assets/bagramdetainees.pdf . 2010-01-24 . dead.
  2. News: Where the Detainees Have Been Held. The New York Times. Tim Golden. January 7, 2008. 2008-01-07. https://web.archive.org/web/20080726030423/http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/2008/01/06/world/07bagram.graph.190.jpg. July 26, 2008. live.
  3. News: US releases long-secret list of 645 detainees held at Bagram Air Base in Afghanistan . . The United States has released a long-secret list of 645 detainees held at a military base in Afghanistan... In response to the lawsuit, the government released roughly 2,000 pages of documents Friday evening. . 2010-01-16 . https://archive.today/20240524202228/https://www.webcitation.org/5mrN3KUkJ?url=http://www.google.com/hostednews/canadianpress/article/ALeqM5gKpH0-Oc6MwSz7Otz7u4VaZIrn1Q . 2024-05-24 . dead.
  4. http://www.dod.mil/pubs/foi/detainees/csrt/ARB_Transcript_Set_8_20751-21016.pdf#219 Summarized transcript (.pdf)
  5. written statement (.pdf)
  6. News: From Taliban jail to Gitmo – hard-luck prisoners tell of unending ordeal . . . June 30, 2007 . 2007-07-01 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20080725010817/http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/world/20070630-0908-guantanamo-alwaysaprisoner.html . 2008-07-25 .
  7. Summarized transcripts (.pdf)
  8. http://www.aljazeerah.info/Opinion%20editorials/2005%20Opinion%20Editorials/April/4o/Al-Hila%20Another%20'ghost%20prisoner'%20rendered%20By%20William%20Fisher.htm Al-Hila: Another 'ghost prisoner' rendered
  9. http://hrw.org/english/docs/2005/03/28/usint10379.htm Cairo to Kabul to Guantanamo
  10. http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/HRW/05bee6d5f916310a6f68909e2e67ecf7.htm U.S. Operated Secret 'Dark Prison' in Kabul
  11. News: U.S. Operated Secret 'Dark Prison' in Kabul . 2005-12-19 . John Sifton . https://web.archive.org/web/20090514134128/http://www.hrw.org/en/news/2005/12/18/us-operated-secret-dark-prison-kabul . 2009-05-14 . dead.
  12. Summarized transcripts (.pdf)
  13. Summarized transcripts (.pdf)
  14. http://www.pajhwak.com/viewstory.asp?lng=eng&id=525 Taliban ambassador Zaeef freed from Guantanamo Bay
  15. News: Ex-Taliban Official Calls for Unity Government in Afghanistan. April 12, 2007. Der Spiegel. Olaf Ihlau. 2007-07-01. https://web.archive.org/web/20081016123152/http://www.spiegel.de/international/world/0,1518,476403,00.html. October 16, 2008. live.
  16. News: In U.S. Report, Brutal Details of 2 Afghan Inmates' Deaths. Tim Golden. The New York Times. May 20, 2005. 2007-03-27. https://web.archive.org/web/20080125012206/http://www.nytimes.com/2005/05/20/international/asia/20abuse.html?ei=5088&en=4579c146cb14cfd6&ex=1274241600&pagewanted=all. January 25, 2008. live.
  17. Web site: Medical Investigations of Homicides of Prisoners of War in Iraq and Afghanistan. Medscape. 2007-09-13.
  18. News: Violations by U.S. Forces. Human Rights Watch. 2007-09-25. https://web.archive.org/web/20070914201936/http://www.hrw.org/reports/2004/afghanistan0304/3.htm#Arbitrary%20or%20Mistaken%20Arrests%20and%20Indefinite%20Detention. 2007-09-14. live.
  19. News: Afghanistan: Kabul Seeks Release Of More Bagram Detainees. Ron Synovitz. October 5, 2006. Radio Free Europe. 2007-04-21. https://web.archive.org/web/20070411031631/http://www.rferl.org/featuresarticle/2006/10/896ff3f4-f2df-4912-9276-ea4f9d69ab6a.html. April 11, 2007. live.
  20. Web site: Summary of Evidence for Combatant Status Review Tribunal -- Al Khalaqi, Asim Thahit Abdullah . 4 November 2004 . . 52 . . 2007-12-04 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20071204202342/http://www.dod.mil/pubs/foi/detainees/csrt_arb/000101-000200.pdf#52 . 4 December 2007.
  21. E8 -->. Down a dark road: Movie Uses Afghan's Death to Ask Tough Questions About U.S. and Torture. C01. The Washington Post. Richard Leiby. 2007-09-30. April 27, 2007.
  22. News: Guantanamo prisoner returns, and is arrested again . https://archive.today/20240524081852/https://www.webcitation.org/5eT03LQzd?url=http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5iqkvuVHP9_liWGnQ9Is4HY9_yeHAD966T6K08 . dead . 2024-05-24 . . Kathy Gannon . 2009-02-07 . 2009-02-07 .
  23. News: THE REACH OF WAR: THE PRISONS; Afghan Abuse Charges Raise New Questions on Authority . . The New York Times . 2004-09-17 . 2007-09-21 . https://web.archive.org/web/20121022041954/http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9B01E2D61639F934A2575AC0A9629C8B63&sec=&spon=&pagewanted=all . 2012-10-22 . live.
  24. News: Afghan journalist detained at Bagram Air Base. Committee to Protect Journalists. February 18, 2008. 2008-03-02. New York, February 18, 2008—The Committee to Protect Journalists is greatly concerned by the detention of Canadian Television (CTV) journalist Jawed Ahmad by U.S. military forces at Bagram Air Base in Afghanistan, for almost three months without charge.. https://web.archive.org/web/20080516040053/http://www.cpj.org/news/2008/asia/afghan18feb08na.html. May 16, 2008. live.
  25. News: U.S. should grant rights to detained CTV journalist: groups . . February 19, 2008 . 2008-03-02 . We are deeply troubled that Jawed Ahmad has been secluded in a U.S. military base for nearly three months without charge," Joel Simon, executive director of the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists, said in a statement."The United States military must explain the reason for his detention and accord him due process. If he is not charged with any crime then he must be released immediately..
  26. News: Pentagon detains CTV's Afghan journalist. Toronto Sun. February 27, 2008. 2008-03-02. A military spokesman says a review board has determined that Jawed Ahmad, an Afghan national, is a danger to foreign troops and the Afghan government..
  27. News: Afghan CTV journalist declared enemy combatant. Toronto Star. Tang, Alisa. February 27, 2008. 2008-03-02. The U.S. military said today a journalist working for Canada's CTV television network, who has been held for four months without being charged, has been designated an unlawful enemy combatant.. https://web.archive.org/web/20080303000637/http://www.thestar.com/News/World/article/307393. March 3, 2008. live.
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