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Report On Terrorism Prisoners Stonewalled
By , Mayborn Graduate Institute of Journalism
Posted on March 6, 2003, Printed on January 19, 2007
http://www.alternet.org/story/15317/
The officials who control what the world knows about
prisoners in the war on terror make writing to them sound routine and
simple. The Defense Department and the International Committee of the
Red Cross say they have delivered more than 5,000 letters to and from
the approximately 625 "enemy combatants" being held at the U.S.
naval base at Guantanamo Bay in Cuba.
Yet when a group of graduate students at the University of North Texas
in Denton wrote letters to 54 of those prisoners, the Red Cross and the
Defense Department both refused -- at least thus far -- to deliver their
mail. The letters, which sought basic information about the prisoners
for a news article, were part of an advanced reporting class project at
the university's Mayborn Graduate Institute of Journalism.
In keeping with the secrecy surrounding much of the war on terror, the
Defense Department has not identified any of the prisoners who have been
held and interrogated at Camp X-Ray and Camp Delta. Military officials
say only that the prisoners, most of whom were initially detained in Afghanistan,
are "enemy combatants" linked either to the Taliban, the former
religious leadership in Afghanistan, or to Osama bin Laden's al Qaeda
terrorism organization.
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld has told reporters that the prisoners
are "among the most vicious killers on the face of the earth."
UNT graduate journalism students identified 54 of those prisoners by name
and nationality from international news accounts, court records, and interviews
with families, lawyers and embassy officials in more than a dozen nations.
The students then wrote each prisoner a one-page letter and sent all the
letters to the Red Cross and the Defense Department, asking them to deliver
the mail. The letters, which were written in English and translated into
Arabic, requested basic information about the prisoners. The envelopes
addressed to the detainees were left unsealed so their contents could
be inspected.
"You are receiving this letter because we want to know the facts
surrounding your capture, detention and life at Camp Delta at Guantanamo
Bay, Cuba," the letters said. "We would be interested to know
what you were doing when apprehended by U.S. forces, what your daily life
is like in Camp Delta, and what your hopes for the future are. We would
like to know your views about the United States and Al Qaeda."
The Red Cross says it has delivered 3,300 personal letters to and from
the prisoners and their relatives during the last year -- "a precious
link," the organization says, to the outside world. But the Red Cross
refused to deliver letters to the prisoners the students had identified.
Frank Sieverts, assistant to the International Committee of the Red Cross'
chief of delegation in Washington, D.C., said Oct. 29 that the agency
can accept mail from families only. He suggested that the students attempt
delivery of the letters through the military.
The Defense Department operates an independent mail delivery system for
the prisoners. Military officials said in July that they had delivered
an additional 1,900 pieces of mail. More recent figures are not available.
"We ensure the detainees are allowed to write and receive letters,"
Army Reserve Master Sgt. Debra A. Tart is quoted as saying in an Armed
Forces Press Service article dated July 23, 2002.
"The detainees are not limited to our service. They can also send
and receive mail through the International Committee of the Red Cross."
The Defense Department has had the students' letters to the prisoners
for more than three months but has not said whether they will be delivered.
The letters were initially sent in November to Victoria Clarke, the assistant
secretary of defense for public affairs in Washington. Clarke's office
said she forwarded the package to Harold Heilsnis, the department's director
for public inquiry and analysis.
In an e-mail to Land, Heilsnis said he would "contact my colleagues
at the U.S. Southern Command to discuss the potential delivery that you
seek. I will then be back in touch with you as soon as possible after
that."
Heilsnis' e-mail was dated Nov. 25, 2002. Land made repeated unsuccessful
attempts to contact Heilsnis during December and January. In February,
Land again contacted Clarke and inquired about the letters.
"We have heard nothing. It has now been two months and we would like
to know where things stand," Land wrote in a letter. "All we
are asking the Department of Defense to do is deliver the mail -- just
as the Department has done hundreds if not thousands of times for others."
On Feb. 4, Heilsnis again said he would check with "my colleagues
at U.S. Southern Command regarding your specific request. I should have
an answer by tomorrow and will convey that to you." Neither Land
nor the students in the journalism class have heard anything more.
Heilsnis' letter also reiterated the department's unwillingness to release
information about the prisoners. "It is our policy that, due to operational
security considerations, we will not provide specific information on any
individuals detained in our ongoing war on terrorism," Heilsnis wrote.
"President Bush has established that all detainees in control of
the United States will be treated humanely and consistent with the Geneva
Convention." He further quoted Rumsfeld's assurance that "the
treatment of the detainees in Guantanamo Bay is proper, it's humane, it's
appropriate and it's fully consistent with international conventions."
The Geneva Conventions establish international rules governing, among
other aspects of battle, the treatment of prisoners of war. Article 71
states, "Prisoners of war shall be allowed to send and receive letters
and cards."
Although the Bush administration says Camp Delta prisoners are being treated
"consistent with the Geneva Convention," administration officials
have refused to categorize the detainees as "prisoners of war,"
instead labeling them "enemy combatants," a designation that
the international accord does not address.
The 54 prisoners identified by the class come from 16 nations: Afghanistan,
Australia, Bahrain, Canada, Egypt, England, France, Germany, Jordan, Kuwait,
Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, Sweden, Tajikistan and Turkey.
Some of the men detained at the naval base at Guantanamo Bay have provided
intelligence material that has been of "enormous value" to U.S.
military officials, according to an Armed Forces Press Service report
last month. Many prisoners identified by the students, according to published
reports, have operated or trained in bin Laden's camps or have other ties
to terrorism.
In recent months, however, questions have been raised about whether all
the prisoners at Camp Delta are as dangerous as the government says. The
Los Angeles Times recently reported that dozens of prisoners "have
no meaningful connection" to terrorism and were imprisoned "over
the objections of intelligence officers in Afghanistan who had recommended
them for release."
The Associated Press described one released prisoner, who claimed to be
105, as a "shriveled old man ... unable to answer simple questions,"
and a second, who claimed to be 90, as a "wizened old man with a
cane." Yet another prisoner, according to Agence France-Press, a
French news agency, is a reporter with al Jazeera television, the so-called
Arab CNN.
In interviews with students late last year, some of the prisoners' relatives
and attorneys also raised questions about the detentions.
The family of Murat Kurnaz, for example, said in a telephone interview
from Germany that the 20-year-old detainee is a devout Muslim with no
military training who traveled to Pakistan solely to study the Quran.
Rabiye Kurnaz said through a translator that her son had been in Pakistan
for two months and was trying to return when U.S. forces detained him.
"He was asked for more money when he wanted to buy his ticket. Since
he had no money, he was sold to Americans," she said. The students
were unable to corroborate her assertion.
Rabiye Kurnaz said her family had received three letters and two postcards
but had heard nothing from her son since June. She said she had seen photographs
of him, however, "with his hands tied, tape on mouth, kneeling and
eyes isolated." She said she had been told that the interrogation
of her son could be lengthy and that "the procedures could last a
couple of years."
Bernhard Docke, Murat Kurnaz's attorney in Germany, said his client had
wanted to join the Taliban but, for reasons that are unclear, could not.
"German investigators found no links between Murat and the Taliban,"
Docke said. "Murat hoped to get involved with the Taliban but he
didn't manage to. He was a wannabe."
A relative of a Kuwaiti prisoner also raised questions about why his brother
has been detained. In a telephone interview from Kuwait, Mansour Kamel
said his brother Abdullah Kamel is disabled and lacks the ability to be
a soldier. He said he last heard from his brother, one of a dozen Kuwaitis
being detained, in August.
"He can't be a terrorist," Mansour Kamel said. "He can't
even use his hands. He has no fingers on his hands. He was injured by
a booby trap during the Persian Gulf War. I have the papers to prove that
the Kuwait government excused him from military service because of his
handicap. I have pictures of his hands."
Mansour Kamel says he's confident that his brother will be absolved of
any connection with terrorism -- if only the United States will allow
an outside review of his case. "I'm not asking for my brother's release,
just for his case to be heard in court," he said. "They will
see what he has told them is the truth."
The future for Abdullah Kamel and Murat Kurnaz, like that of more than
600 other men at Camp Delta, remains uncertain. Indefinite detention and
uncertainty are beginning to take their toll, according to news reports.
More than a dozen prisoners have attempted suicide so far.
Steven Watt, an attorney with the Center for Constitutional Rights in
Washington, said he "expects the detainees to be held for the duration
of the hostilities" -- and Bush administration officials have said
the war on terror may last for years. The rights center, which represents
four Camp Delta detainees, has been waging a thus far losing legal battle
to have the "enemy combatants" reclassified as prisoners of
war.
Bo Eriksson is a Swedish Embassy official who has been to Guantanamo Bay
and has spoken with his country's only Camp Delta prisoner, Mehdi-Mohammad
Ghezali. He declined to reveal details of his conversation with Ghezali
but said he believes that the prisoners should not be held indefinitely
without being charged.
"They are well-fed and well-looked-after generally," Eriksson
said in a telephone interview. "We have no complaints except maybe
that they are still being detained. It's been ... a year now. They need
either to prosecute them, send them home to be prosecuted or release them."
Kurnaz has written several cards to his family through the Red Cross.
In one dated March 2, 2002, he expressed his uncertainty about the future.
"I am fine with God's protection, but I don't know when I am going
to return," he said in a note written in Turkish and translated for
the students into English. "God knows best, and whatever he says,
will happen to us."
This article is based on information gathered by an advanced reporting
class at the Mayborn Graduate Institute of Journalism at the University
of North Texas in Denton. F. Mitchell Land, Ph.D., the professor of record
for the class, oversaw the project, which was directed by graduate students
Dan Malone and Gene Zipperlen.
Other students who contributed to this report are Joshua Baugh, Kathryn
R. Clark, Sonya Cole, Seth Gonzales, Kwami Koto, Christina Koutalis, Molly
McCullough, Jon O'Guinn, Carey Ostergard, Nikela Pradier and Mark Saffold.
Graduate student Maike Rode and Gulden Wyatt were translators.
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