Metering is ON
suntimes

Thursday, February 23, 2012

Chicago lawyers call on Obama to close Guantanamo

Story Image

FILE - In this Jan. 11, 2002 file photo, released by the U.S. Department of Defense, detainees wearing orange jump suits sit in a holding area as military police patrol during in-processing at the temporary detention facility Camp X-Ray on Guantanamo Bay U.S. Naval Base in Cuba. British spies escaped immediate criminal charges over torture complicity Thursday, but the country's top prosecutor ordered a new investigation into claims that intelligence shared with Moammar Gadhafi's regime led to the torture or rendition of Libyans. Prosecutors have been investigating claims of mistreatment by detainees who were eventually sent to the United States prison in Guantanamo, Cuba. Most of the torture allegations come from terror suspects who were either initially held in Pakistan and Afghanistan, or sent to other countries such as Morocco for interrogation. (AP Photo/U.S. Navy, Shane T.McCoy, File)

storyidforme: 24204245
tmspicid: 8902600
fileheaderid: 4003989

Updated: February 16, 2012 8:33AM



Shawalie Khan doesn’t know when — or if — he’ll ever go home again.

He is one of the 171 men still detained in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, out of the 779 prisoners who have been held at the U.S. military prison over the last decade.

And like other detainees, Khan remains locked up even though he was cleared of wrongdoing by a U.S. military tribunal.

“He’s there because a single paid informant said he was al-Qaida, and that was enough back then, in 2002, to send you to Guantanamo,” said Len Goodman, a Chicago-based attorney who represents Khan.

Goodman, along with two other Chicago attorneys who have represented detainees on a pro-bono basis, spoke Saturday at a forum at the Corboy Law Center at Loyola University’s Water Tower Campus on the 10th anniversary of the prison’s opening in early 2002. The attorneys called on President Barack Obama to close the facility, as he pledged to do three years ago.

Andrew Moss, a Chicago-based attorney who has represented three detainees, said the public has a skewed view of who is held there.

“The biggest misconception is that it’s filled with al-Qaida terrorists,” he said.

Khan is a poor farmer from near Kandahar, Afghanistan, and, like many other rural Afghans, doesn’t know his actual birthdate. But he is in his 40s and has a family, who are desperate for him to return, Goodman said.

Though Khan is largely illiterate, the case against him centers on him supposedly once having an incriminating note containing information about explosive devices — but the note wasn’t preserved by the government, Goodman said.

Goodman, who has been to Guantanamo four times, said the prisoners have none of the fundamental rights afforded to even those charged with murder in the U.S.

“Our [domestic] prisons are filled with people who have done all kinds of horrible things,” said Moss, who has been to Washington 20 times to work on Guantanamo cases. “But the reality is we let most of those guys out, and we don’t keep them under these kinds of conditions. They can be visited by their families. They can make phone calls. They’re not tortured. . . . Most of these guys [in Guantanamo] are not accused of anything like that.”

The panelists Saturday also called for a more transparent and fair justice system for the detainees there.

Latest News Videos
© 2011 Sun-Times Media, LLC. All rights reserved. This material may not be copied or distributed without permission. For more information about reprints and permissions, visit www.suntimesreprints.com. To order a reprint of this article, click here.

Comments  Click here to view or make a comment