Mohamed Jawad

Mohamed Jawad

Three months before capture.[1]
Born Miranshah, FATA, Pakistan
Arrested December 2002
Afghanistan
Afghan police
Released August 24, 2009
Citizenship Afghan
Detained at Bagram, Guantanamo
Alternate name Amir Khan, Mir Jan, Sakheb Badsha[2]
ISN 900
Charge(s) Attempted murder in violation of the law of war

Mohamed Jawad, born in Miranshah, Pakistan, was accused of attempted murder before a Guantanamo military commission on charges that he threw a grenade at a passing American convoy on December 17, 2002. Jawad's family says that he was 12 years old at the time of his detention in 2002. The United States Department of Defense maintains that a bone scan showed he was about 17 when taken into custody.[3]

Jawad insists that he had been hired to help remove landmines from the war-torn region, and that a colleague had thrown the grenade. He has been held in extrajudicial detention first at the Bagram Theater Internment Facility and then at the Guantanamo Bay detention camp from 2003 until 2009.[4][5] His Internment Serial Number was 900.[6]

The military commission presiding judge ruled that Jawad's confession to throwing a grenade was inadmissible since it had been obtained through coercion after Afghan authorities threatened to kill him and his family.[7] He was ordered released after a successful petition for a writ of habeas corpus before Judge Ellen Huvelle of the U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C. on July 30, 2009.[8] On August 24, 2009 he was transported from Guantanamo Bay to Afghanistan.[7]

Contents

Age

Like many Afghans, Mohamed Jawad has no official record of his birth, and doesn't know his exact age.[9] Human rights workers trying to more clearly establish a reliable estimate of his birth date were told by his mother that he was born six months after his father was killed during a battle near Khost in 1991.[9] In an English language Al Jazeera broadcast, one of his uncles said he was born four months after the battle where his father was killed, which he said occurred in 1990.[1]

Guantanamo spokesman Jeffrey D. Gordon disputed the human rights workers' claims, referring to bone scans performed when Jawad arrived at Guantanamo, which he asserted established he was eighteen when he arrived at Guantanamo.[9] A report about juveniles held at Guantanamo stated that military records show Jawad to have been either 17 or 18 at the time of his arrival.[10]

Background

Jawad's father was killed in a battle in Khost called Battle for Hill 3234 in January, 1988, and he continued to live with his mother in an Afghan refugee camp in Miran Shah, Pakistan.

Jawad was studying at a sixth or seventh-grade level at a school the United States later described as "Jihadi".[11][12] Several years later, he was approached by four or six men at Qari Mosque in his hometown. They asked if he would be willing to take a lucrative job in Kabul, Afghanistan where recent government attention had been called to the need to remove landmines,[13] and help clear Soviet-era mines from the region for a promised 12,000 Pakistani Rupees.[11]

Jawad agreed, but said he would first need to secure the permission of his mother. The men told him to tell his family he had found a job across the border, but not to mention the details lest they worry about his safety. Some of his relatives tried to discourage him, saying he was too young for a job, but since his mother wasn't present, he decided to accompany the men.[11]

Attack and capture

A white Soviet UAZ jeep,[5] driven by Sergeant first class Michael Lyons with Sergeant first class Christopher Martin in the passenger seat and Afghan interpreter Assadullah Khan Omerk[2] in the rear, had just finished an operation in the marketplace and was stopped in traffic, when somebody tossed a homemade grenade through the jeep's missing rear window.

Both soldiers from the 19th Special Forces were wounded, Lyons in the eye and both feet, and puncturing an eardrum, while Martin escaped with less serious injuries to his right knee, and the Afghan interpreter suffered only minor injuries.[5][14]

Four American Humvees cordoned off the site of the attack, and Afghan police near the area arrested three men, holding Jawad and Ghulam Saki, while releasing a third suspect. A police officer said that he had seen one throw the grenade, and the other tackled by a fruit vendor as he prepared to throw a second.[15] Jawad would later tell his tribunal that he had been handed devices he didn't recognise by the men with him, and told to put them in his pocket and wait for their return. When he went into his pocket to purchase raisins from a shopkeeper, he was asked why he had a "bomb" in his pocket - and the shopkeeper advised him to run and throw the two grenades in the river. It was while running toward the river, yelling at people to move aside because he had a bomb, that Jawad alleges he was "caught".[12]

In an October 2009 interview Jawad asserted that his nose was broken during his first interrogation at an Afghan police station.[16]

Imprisonment at Bagram

Jawad was held at Bagram prison from December 2002 until February 2003.[17]

Imprisonment at Guantanamo

Military records show Jawad tried to kill himself on December 25, 2003 by repeatedly banging his head against a cell wall.[18][19][20]

Medical records

The Department of Defense published heights and weights for the detainees on March 16, 2007.[21] At the time of his capture in Afghanistan in December 2002, Jawad was weighed at 130 pounds. Jawad is one of the detainees whose inprocess date at Guantánamo is missing. His inprocess weight is recorded as 119 pounds. His inprocess height is recorded as 64 inches tall (5'4"). His weight was recorded 23 times between August 2003 and November 2006. No record of his weight was made for six months during the longest and most widespread Guantánamo hunger strike from October 2005 through March 2006.

Experienced the "frequent flyer" program

Although the practice was officially banned in March 2004,[22] in May 2004 Jawad was given the "frequent flyer" program of sleep deprivation by being forced to move to a new cell at least every 2 hours and 55 minutes. These transfers happened 112 times over two weeks.[20][23] Jawad testified that during these weeks, he was subjected to blaring loud music and bright lights at all times.[19] Military records indicated that Jawad lost 10% of his body weight over this period and told doctors he was urinating blood.[24]

Combatant Status Review

A summary of evidence memo was prepared on October 19, 2004 for Jawad's Combatant Status Review Tribunal. The memo stated that Jawad was from Miran Shah, Pakistan and was recruited by six men in the local mosque to clear Russian mines in Kabul, Afghanistan. The memo stated allegations that Jawad:

Jawad had his Personal Representative read from notes from a previous interview at his CSRT hearing. Jawad added verbal testimony for clarification.[26]

First annual Administrative Review Board

A unclassified summary of evidence memo was prepared on November 7, 2005 for Jawad's first annual Administrative Review Board.[27] It listed several factors favoring continued detention, including that Jawad:

The ARB memo repeated claims about training from the CSRT memo, summarized Jawad's statements from his interrogation in Afghanistan immediately after the attack, and registered Jawad's contention that although he was at the scene of the attack, he did not throw the grenade and that he never received any military or terrorist training.[27] There is no transcript listed in Department of Defense records.

Second annual Administrative Review Board

A unclassified summary of evidence memo was prepared on October 26, 2006 for Jawad's second annual Administrative Review Board. The memo lists Jawad's name as Amir Khan. The allegations and denials listed in the memo are mostly similar to earlier memos and mostly summarize alleged statements from Jawad. There is no transcript listed in Department of Defense records.[28]

Guantanamo military commission charges

Jawad was charged before a Guantanamo military commission of attempted murder for allegedly throwing a grenade into a U.S. military vehicle in Kabul, Afghanistan on December 17, 2002. He was the fourth detainee to face charges under the Military Commissions Act of 2006.[29][30][31] On October 17, 2007, Jawad was charged with three counts of attempted murder in violation of the law of war and three counts of intentionally causing bodily injury in violation of the law of war.[2]

Jawad refused to appear at his arraignment in March 2008, but was forcibly removed from his cell and brought to the commission hearing room. He appeared without incident at the next hearing in May.[32]

Jawad's defense attorney, Major David Frakt, filed motions seeking the dismissal of charges based on the fact that Jawad was captured as a teenager, treated brutally in U.S. custody and wasn't a member of a terrorist organization.[33] Another motion complained of the involvement by the legal advisor to the commissions, Brigadier General Thomas W. Hartmann,[20] who had been suspended from participating in another tribunal following similar complaints. On August 14, 2008, judge Colonel Stephen Henley barred Hartmann from future participation in Jawad's case.[34]

Jawad's military prosecutor, Lt. Col. Darrel Vandeveld, resigned from the Office of Military Commissions in September 2008.[35] Vandeveld filed a four-page declaration with the court that stated "potentially exculpatory evidence has not been provided" to the defense.[36] The evidence included the possibility that Jawad may have been drugged prior to the attack and that the Afghan Interior Ministry said two other men had confessed to throwing the grenade into the U.S. military jeep in Afghanistan.[35] Vandeveld later testified to the same effect in court.[37]

In October 2008, judge Col. Henley determined that both confessions Jawad made to Afghan and U.S. officials on December 17, 2002 were inadmissible due to being obtained as a result of torture, because Afghan policemen threatened to kill him and his family unless he confessed.[38] Col. Henley ruled the confession in U.S. custody was also inadmissible because of the earlier torture in addition to the fact that the U.S. interrogator blindfolded and hooded Jawad in order to maintain his fearful state.[39]

Maj. Frakt filed a motion on July 28, 2009 with Jawad's military commission asking for dismissal following US District Court Judge Ellen Huvelle's ruling he was a noncombatant.[40]

Release order and possible trial in a civilian court

Judge Huvelle was assigned Jawad's habeas corpus petition.[41][42][43][44] On July 17, 2009 Judge Huvelle ruled that the Jawad's confessions were coerced, and thus inadmissible. She gave the Department of Justice a deadline of July 24, 2009 to produce another justification for holding Jawad as an enemy combatant. On July 24 the Department of Justice acknowledged it lacked the evidence necessary to justify holding Jawad as an enemy combatant.

According to Reuters the Department of Defensee announced it was "taking steps to house" Jawad at an "appropriate facility" in Guantanamo.

United States Attorney General Eric Holder has said that he has ordered a new criminal investigation.[42][45] The Justice Department said the new investigation is examining videotapes of eyewitness testimony that was not previously available. The new investigation could result in new criminal charges in a civilian court on US soil.

On July 28, 2009 Judge Huvelle gave the Department of Justice 24 hours to justify continuing to hold him so it could conduct an "expedited criminal investigation, scheduling a hearing for July 30, 2009.[46]

On 29 July 2009 BBC News reported that he would be released because "there was no military case for Mr Jawad's continued detention."[47]

Carol Rosenberg, writing in the Miami Herald, reported on July 28, 2009 that Jawad has been transferred to Camp Iguana.[40] David Frakt told Rosenberg that one of his co-counsels had recently visited Jawad in Camp Iguana. "He's adjusting to his new environment, learning to play the Wii and getting caught up on Afghan cricket and soccer scores. He's pleased but bewildered by the legal developments. Yet again he's won, but he's still there."

Repatriation

Carol Rosenberg, writing in the Miami Herald, reports that Jawad was repatriated on August 24, 2009.[48] Jawad was first sent to the Pul-e-Charkhi prison, a former Soviet facility, where the United States built an American wing in 2007.

Major Eric Montalvo, a former Defense counsel, said that Jawad was scheduled to meet with President Hamid Karzai, and would then be released into the custody of an uncle, Hajji Gul Naik.[48] Montalvo who had flown to Afghanistan at his own expense because the Department of Defense would not authorize him to help aid Jawad arrival, said: "It's still not over until he can walk free, but he is almost there. I don't trust anything until I see him in his house with his family."

An article published in The National on October 15, 2009 contained quotes from Jawad in Afghanistan:

A photograph of [Jawad] before his ordeal shows a boy virtually unrecognisable from the 19-year-old man who, after his release in the summer, described being stripped naked, choked, slammed against walls and often held in isolation during this time. "The people who are in [Guantanamo and Bagram] jails are all Muslims. The Americans are not respecting their religion and they are not respecting them as humans," he said. Now back in Kabul, he finds himself caught up in a war that has grown noticeably fiercer in the years he has been away. "The situation will get worse because it's impossible to finish fighting with fighting," he said. "It's impossible to clean blood with blood."[16]

See also

References

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