Mohamed Jawad

How Judge Huvelle Humiliated The Government In Guantánamo Case

31.7.09

On Thursday, as I reported in a separate article, “As Judge Orders Release Of Tortured Guantánamo Prisoner, Government Refuses To Concede Defeat,” District Court Judge Ellen Segal Huvelle granted the habeas corpus petition of Mohamed Jawad, one of Guantánamo’s youngest prisoners, seized when he was just a teenager. That article provides detailed background on the [...]

Former Insider Shatters Credibility of Military Commissions

11.7.09

On Wednesday, I reported how Retired Rear Admiral John D. Hutson, the former Judge Advocate General of the US Navy from 1997 to 2000, had delivered compelling testimony to a Senate Armed Services Committee hearing on “legal issues regarding military commissions and the trial of detainees for violations of the law of war,” explaining why [...]

A Child At Guantánamo: The Unending Torment of Mohamed Jawad

1.6.09

In all the recent hysteria about the supposed dangers posed by the remaining 240 prisoners at Guantánamo, it has been easy to forget that sensible appraisals of the number of individuals with any meaningful connection to terrorism have long indicated that no more than a few dozen of those still held should be regarded as [...]

Binyam Mohamed’s Plea Bargain: Trading Torture For Freedom

25.3.09

So a closely guarded secret — that a tortured man was offered a plea bargain in exchange for his silence, in a kangaroo court dreamt up by powerful men with utter contempt for the law — is finally out of the bag. The tortured man is, of course, Binyam Mohamed, the British resident whose 18-month [...]

The Talking Dog interviews Darrel Vandeveld, former Guantánamo prosecutor

21.2.09

I don’t often cross-post articles from other sites, but my good friend the Talking Dog has just posted an interview with Darrel Vandeveld, the former prosecutor in Guantánamo’s Military Commissions, whose resignation in September, and declaration, last month, in the habeas corpus case of the Afghan prisoner Mohamed Jawad demonstrated, with a marvelous clarity, how [...]

The Tale of Two Tortured Teenagers (in Bagram and Guantánamo)

21.1.09

On Monday, as Barack Obama prepared for his inauguration, and even though George W. Bush had already made his last speech to the nation, hearings resumed at Guantánamo in the cases of a number of prisoners facing trial by Military Commission, the novel and much-criticized system of trials for terror suspects that was conceived by [...]

Torture Taints the Case of Guantánamo Prisoner Mohamed Jawad

16.1.09

In a previous article, I reported at length on an extraordinary declaration submitted to a Washington D.C. court on January 13 for the habeas corpus review of Mohamed Jawad, an Afghan prisoner at Guantánamo. The declaration, by Lt. Col. Darrel Vandeveld, a former prosecutor in Guantánamo’s Military Commission trial system, who resigned in September 2008, [...]

Former Guantánamo Prosecutor Condemns “Chaotic” Trials in Case of Teenage Torture Victim

14.1.09

On January 13, in a declaration submitted to a Washington D.C. District Court in the case of Guantánamo prisoner Mohamed Jawad, Lt. Col. Darrel Vandeveld, a former prosecutor in the Military Commission trial system, delivered perhaps the most blistering attack on the US military’s detention program by a former member of the Pentagon’s team to [...]

The Dying Days of the Guantánamo Trials

8.1.09

With less than two weeks until the Bush administration leaves office, Andy Worthington, author of The Guantánamo Files: The Stories of the 774 Detainees in America’s Illegal Prison, reports on developments — or the lack of them — during the last month in the Military Commissions, the much-criticized trial system for “terror suspects” that was [...]

Torture, Preventive Detention and the Terror Trials At Guantánamo

1.12.08

In the real world outside the US Naval Base at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, Barack Obama’s pledge to close Guantánamo and scrap the Military Commissions (the system of trials for “terror suspects” that was established in the wake of the 9/11 attacks) has provoked a rare outburst of frenzied media coverage. With no concrete plans announced [...]

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Andy Worthington

Investigative journalist, author, filmmaker and Guantanamo expert
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