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sad sally

(2,627 posts)
Thu Jan 12, 2012, 11:50 PM Jan 2012

Hamidullah Khan was 13 when he disappeared from Pakistan in 2008. He is still locked up in an Afghan

Jail. America's legacy? A war on terror across Battlefield Earth, waged by a democratic nation willing to lock up people indefinitely without ever charging them of a crime.
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It didn't take long before one of the incentives offered to coax the Taliban to the negotiating table came to light: last week the Guardian carried reports of American plans to release several high-ranking Taliban leaders from Guantánamo Bay. They include Mullah Khair Khowa, a former interior minister, Noorullah Noori, a former governor in northern Afghanistan and maybe, just maybe, the former army commander Mullah Fazl Akhund – if a third country, perhaps Qatar, will accept custody of him.
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But it forces into light other shaming questions about the conduct of the so-called war on terror; and in particular about those thousands of men, women and children, many innocent of any crime even by the US authorities' own admission, who were "rendered" and remain trapped in prisons across the world.

Hamidullah Khan was just 13 when he disappeared from South Waziristan, in Pakistan. I met his father, Wakeel Khan, on a recent trip to Islamabad. He told me with pride that Hamidullah was a "very good-looking boy" and showed me pictures. He said his son could be quite absent-minded, but worked very hard at school: his dream was to become a doctor.
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After a year, the Red Cross finally tracked down Hamidullah and passed a letter to his family saying he was being held in Bagram prison in Afghanistan. Despite American assurances that the prisoners there are treated well, fresh allegations of abuse surfaced this weekend.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2012/jan/09/victims-of-war-on-terror?du



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Hamidullah Khan was 13 when he disappeared from Pakistan in 2008. He is still locked up in an Afghan (Original Post) sad sally Jan 2012 OP
k&r phasma ex machina Jan 2012 #1
K&R Solly Mack Jan 2012 #2
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