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==Early life== | ==Early life== | ||
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Agha was born in Durabin (also written as Doorbini),<ref name=trarec /><ref name=wasboy /> a poor farming village near ].<ref name=wasboy /> There is some confusion about his date of birth: U.S. Department of Defence records indicate he was born in 1988,<ref name=trarec />, while first-hand reports suggest it was after December 1988, but before February 1989.</sup>]] | Agha was born in Durabin (also written as Doorbini),<ref name=trarec /><ref name=wasboy /> a poor farming village near ].<ref name=wasboy /> There is some confusion about his date of birth: U.S. Department of Defence records indicate he was born in 1988,<ref name=trarec />, while first-hand reports suggest it was after December 1988, but before February 1989.</sup>]] | ||
Revision as of 23:43, 3 August 2017
Muhammad Ismail Agha | |
---|---|
Born | Nawzad, Afghanistan |
Arrested | December 2002 Girishk Afghan soldiers |
Released | January 29, 2004 Bagram |
Citizenship | Afghanistan |
Detained at | Girishk; Bagram; Guantanamo Bay detention camp |
ISN | 930 |
Status | Released, then recaptured |
Parents | Hayatullah (father) |
Muhammad Ismail Agha is an Afghan national who was among some 15-21 juveniles held at the Guantanamo Bay detention camps. He is believed to be 13-14 when arrested by Afghan soldiers. Detained without charge, he was released on January 29, 2004 and returned home.
He was recaptured in May 2004 during an engagement with US Forces near Kandahar.
Early life
Agha was born in Durabin (also written as Doorbini), a poor farming village near Nawzad, Afghanistan. There is some confusion about his date of birth: U.S. Department of Defence records indicate he was born in 1988,, while first-hand reports suggest it was after December 1988, but before February 1989.
He helped his father, Hayatullah, as a builder, before leaving his village to look for construction work in December 2002.
Detention in 2002
Shortly after leaving home to look for work in December 2002, Agha was detained by Afghan soldiers in Girishk for attempting to join the Taliban to fight against Americans, a charge which he denied. At the time, he would have been aged between 13 to 14 years old. He was then transferred to the United States at Bagram Air Base in Afghanistan. During this time he says he was held in solitary confinement and subjected to sleep deprivation and stress position, both enhanced interrogation techniques used at the time by the U.S. Armed Forces.
He was then transferred on 7 February 2003 to Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. He was put with two other teenagers, Naqibullah and Asadullah, in Camp Iguana, the section of Guantanamo built for juveniles. Unlike other detainees, those in Camp Iguana were not shackled and hooded, and did not wear orange boiler suits.
They were given classes in Pashto (their own language), English, Arabic, Islam, maths, science, and art. While there, they learned to read and write. Their camp had a recreation yard, where the boys played football every day with their guards, and sometimes basketball and volleyball. Agha and his family said that he was well-treated by the American troops and attended school during his incarceration at Guantanamo, although he criticized the US for not contacting his parents for 10 months, and failing to let them know that he was still alive during that time.
He was transported to Bagram along with the other two juvenile detainees and released on 29 January 2004; a Red Cross plane took him from there to Kandahar.
Subsequent recapture
Agha was recaptured in May 2004, while participating in an attack on US forces near Kandahar, and was carrying documentation linking him to the Taliban. In June 2005, Representative Duncan Hunter, chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, said that the Guantanamo release policy was too liberal, pointing to the capture of Agha four months after his release. This was repeated by Senator Lindsey Graham in the U.S. Senate a year later, adding that the attack occurred near Kandahar The US military released a list confirming his recapture in May 2007.
Notes
- a. Agha was interviewed by reporters on 11 February 2004. They variously reported him as being aged 15 then, and as being 13 when detained, which occurred early in December 2002.
- b. As noted in (a) above, his birthday has been reported as likely being between December 1988 and February 1989. The U.S. DoD record his birthyear as 1998. Together, that gives an age range of 13-14 years old on capture in December 2002.
- c. The U.S. DoD Transfer Recommendation misstates the year as 2002. Agha was transferred in February 2003.
References
- ^ "(S) Transfer Recommendation for Guantanamo Detainee, Mohammed Ismail, ISN: US9AF-00930DP". U.S. Department of Defence. 23 July 2003 – via New York Times.
- ^ "An Afghan Boy's Life in U.S. Custody". The Washington Post. 12 February 2004 – via MSNBC.
- "Am I Human or Not? Guantánamo Detention Undermines Human Rights Worldwide". Amnesty International. June 2004.
- "Boy praises Guantanamo jailers". BBC News. 14 February 2004.
- ^ "Cuba? It was great, say boys freed from US prison camp". The Guardian. 6 March 2004.
- ^ "Freed Afghan youth tells of Guantanamo". Boston Globe. 12 February 2004.
- ^ "I had a good time at Guantanamo, says inmate". The Telegraph. 8 February 2004.
- "DOD Report: One in Seven Released Gitmo Detainees Returns to Terrorism". CNS News. 4 June 2009.
- "Fact sheet: Former GTMO Detainee Terrorism Trends". Defense Intelligence Agency. 13 June 2008 – via Wikisource.
- "Pol: Too Many Inmates Freed". Fox News. 21 June 2005.
- "Congressional Record, V. 152, Pt. 9, June 16, 2006 to June 27 2006". United States Government Printing Office. 20 June 2006.
- "FACTBOX: Pentagon releases data on former Gitmo detainees". Reuters. 15 May 2007.
- "Heights, weights, and in-processing dates" (PDF). U.S. Department of Defence. 16 March 2007 – via Center for the Study of Human Rights in the Americas.
Controversies surrounding people captured during the War on Terror | |
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Guantanamo Bay detention camp | |
CIA black site operations | |
Prison and detainee abuse | |
Prison uprisings and escapes | |
Deaths in custody | |
Tortured | |
Forced disappearances | |
Reports and legal developments | |
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