(Washington, DC) - The US Department of Justice should expedite
the review and provide education and other rehabilitation assistance for five detainees at Guantanamo who have been held
there since they were children, Human Rights Watch said today in a letter to
Attorney General Eric Holder. The detainees were brought to Guantanamo between the ages of 15 and 17, and have now been in detention there for more than six years.
"The United
States has consistently flouted its international obligations on the treatment of children in detention," said Jo Becker, children's rights advocacy director for Human Rights Watch. "Obama's
team should make these cases one of its first priorities."
The five detainees are:
Mohammed el Gharani
- a Chadian who was brought to Guantanamo at the age of 15. Although a federal court ruled in January 2009 that the government's evidence is too weak to justify el Gharani's continued confinement, he
remains in Guantanamo.
Mohammad Jawad - an Afghan brought to Guantanamo at the age of 16 or 17, who has
been charged with attempted murder by a military commission. He was reportedly subjected to torture and other abuse while in US custody, and has attempted suicide at least once.
Omar Khadr - a Canadian brought to Guantanamo at the age of 15, who has been charged with murder by a military commission.
Previously held in prolonged solitary confinement, he also reports having been subjected to torture and abuse.
Mohammad KhanTumani - a Syrian brought to
Guantanamo at the age of 17, who has as reportedly subjected to physical and psychological abuse . He has not been charged with an offense.
Fahd Abdullah Ahmed Ghazni - a
Yemeni brought to Guantanamo at the age of 17. Although he was cleared by the US government to leave Guantanamo more than a year ago, he remains in detention.
A woman who lost her relatives cries at the site of a collapsed residential building in the densely-populated Idi-Araba neighbourhood in Lagos, March 25, 2009. The death toll from the collapse ...