Mohammed Saghir

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Mohammed Saghir (also transliterated Mohammed Sanghir) is an elderly Pakistani who was held in extrajudicial detention in the United States Guantanamo Bay Naval Base, in Cuba.

The official list of detainees, released May 15, 2006, estimates Saghir was born in 1952, in Khohestan.[1] Saghir's Guantanamo detainee ID is 143.

When The Guardian interviewd Saghir, following his release, on October 22, 2002, they estimated he was in his sixties.[2]

Saghir was one the first four detainees to be released from Guantanamo. [3][4] He was the first Pakistani to be released from Guantanamo.

Saghir was released together with two even more elderly Afghan men, and one younger Afghan man.

[edit] Suing the USA

Saghir is suing the United States for $10.4 million dollars for the torture and abuse he reports he endured.[5]

[edit] Le Monde interview

Sanghir reportedly still wears the green ID bracelet issed to him in camp delta.[6] His bracelet says: US 9PK 0001 43 DP

According to Le Monde Mohmmed Sanghir said he had been in Afghanistan for three months prior to the al Qaeda attacks of September 11, 2001. He was Captured in Kunduz, a Taliban enclave in the North of Afghanistan, with 250 other people, who were loaded into a large shipping container, for the trip to General Dostum's prison at Sheberghan: Sanghir said 50 of his companions died:

"They were screaming for water, they were banging their heads against the walls and there, right there beside me, they died."

Mohammed Sanghir said he was held for 45 days in Sheberghan before he was first interrogated. several months in Afghanistan, where he was forcibly shaved, Sanghir said a female interrogator told him he was being sent to a better place. But, he reported, while still bound, he and his companions were thrown off the plane that took them to Guantanamo, and endured a brutal beating.

Mohammed Sanghir said he was interrogated twenty times while at Guantanamo:

"The questions were always the same, just presented in different ways. First, they showed me photographs of members of al-Qai'da to find out if I knew them; then they asked me if there were any al-Qai'da members around me; they wanted to know if I'd met bin Laden and if I'd be able to recognise him. The photos were of people who looked like Afghans or Arabs."


[edit] References

  1. ^ list of prisoners (.pdf), US Department of Defense, May 15, 2006
  2. ^ 'They interrogated us for hours', The Guardian, October 22, 2002
  3. ^ Afghans Describe Life Inside Gitmo CBS News, October 29, 2002
  4. ^ The oldest of the old: First 'hardcore' suspects freed from Camp Delta.. three Afghans, combined age 196, The Mirror, October 30, 2002
  5. ^ Pakistani says life in ruins after Guantanamo jail, Khaleej Times, September 11, 2006 - - mirror
  6. ^ Cuba:Escape from Camp Delta. Le Monde. Retrieved on 2007-7-3.


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