Press Article: Hicks Tied Up and Beaten

Error message

  • Deprecated function: Return type of DBObject::current() should either be compatible with Iterator::current(): mixed, or the #[\ReturnTypeWillChange] attribute should be used to temporarily suppress the notice in require_once() (line 7 of /usr/home/documentafterliv/public_html/sites/all/modules/contrib/eck/eck.classes.inc).
  • Deprecated function: Return type of DBObject::next() should either be compatible with Iterator::next(): void, or the #[\ReturnTypeWillChange] attribute should be used to temporarily suppress the notice in require_once() (line 7 of /usr/home/documentafterliv/public_html/sites/all/modules/contrib/eck/eck.classes.inc).
  • Deprecated function: Return type of DBObject::key() should either be compatible with Iterator::key(): mixed, or the #[\ReturnTypeWillChange] attribute should be used to temporarily suppress the notice in require_once() (line 7 of /usr/home/documentafterliv/public_html/sites/all/modules/contrib/eck/eck.classes.inc).
  • Deprecated function: Return type of DBObject::valid() should either be compatible with Iterator::valid(): bool, or the #[\ReturnTypeWillChange] attribute should be used to temporarily suppress the notice in require_once() (line 7 of /usr/home/documentafterliv/public_html/sites/all/modules/contrib/eck/eck.classes.inc).
  • Deprecated function: Return type of DBObject::rewind() should either be compatible with Iterator::rewind(): void, or the #[\ReturnTypeWillChange] attribute should be used to temporarily suppress the notice in require_once() (line 7 of /usr/home/documentafterliv/public_html/sites/all/modules/contrib/eck/eck.classes.inc).

News artice from The Australian concerning David Hicks, an Australian accused of being a Taliban fighter and his detention at Guantanamo.

Doc_type: 
Other
Doc_date: 
Thursday, May 20, 2004
Doc_rel_date: 
Wednesday, December 29, 2004
Doc_text: 

May 1 9 •04 01:56p.Corporate Mana 97 3132 p . 4 guntLAssiffrd The Australars: Hicks 'tied up and beaten' 20niay04 I Page 1 of 3
RELEASED IN FULL Ly n
THE AUSTRALIAN
Print this page
Hicks 'tied up and beaten'
By Rory Callinart, Swat Valley, Pakistan
zomayo4

US soldiers had something special in mind for David Hicks when they began to interrogate him in a
Northern Alliance prison in Mazar-e-Sharif. Afghanistan, in Decombor 2001.
First, the "white boy" wastied up, both hands and feet.
Then the beating started, according to a Taliban supporter who was Hicks's c.elimate in Afghanistan
and in the US military prison in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. Hicks was bashed at least three times in
two-hour sessions by soldiers using bare fists.

Shah Mohammed. 22, was released last year after spending three months in a cell next to Hicks in
Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
Speaking at his home in the Pakistani village of Alla Dand Dheri this week, Shah said he
remembered well seeing Hicks being beaten. His revelations came as the first US soldier court­martialled over prisoner abuse ii. Iraq pleaded guilty.

Shah was one of hundreds of Taliban prisoners who were subjected to similar brutal interrogation
sessions in the Northern Alliance-nm prison.
Inside the prison, he noticed there was one detainee the American interrogators were particularly
angry about.
The detainee was Hicks, the Australian who had joined the Taliban forces and been captured at a
Northern Alliance checkpoint.
Although there is not evidence Hicks was mistreated in Guantanamo Bay, what Shah saw in the
interrogation rooms at Mazar-e-Sharif appears to contradict claims made by Foreign Minister
Alexander Downer that there was no evidence that Hicks had been mistreated during his time In US
captivity.

A spokesman for Mr Downer said yesterday the US had provided assurances Hicks had not been
mistreated while in US custody, not only while in Guantanamo Bay.
The spokesman said if there we, o new allegations that Hicks had been mistreated, the Government
would examine them.
But so far, he said, no evidence had been produced and Hicks had not made any complaint when
visited again by Australian consular officials last week. Unlike Hicks, Shah is able to speak about his
experiences, The 22-year-old baker was released back to Pakistan last year after being classified as
posing "no threat to the United States military and its Interests in Afghanistan and Pakistan".

His village is about 320km north of Islamabad, In Pakistan's remote North West Frontier Province.
Set at the base of steep rocky hills on the banks of a picturesque mountain stream, the village
seems a long way from the terror of the Mazar-e-Sharif prison and the wire cages of Guantanamo
Bay. But Shah's memory of his own incarceration and what happened to fellow inmates such as
Hicks Is only too clear.
Speaking this week In his uncle's spartan but neatly kept living room, he told of dearly seeing Hicks being taken away and beaten during Interrogation sessions in prison at Mazar-e-Sharif. UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF STATE REVIEW AUTHORITY: HARRY R MELONE DATE/CASE ID: 30 NOV 20_04 200303827
http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/printpagcAUP4n§tsswiED 19/05/2004
DOS-000734
F.. 611¦Essime
Mag 19 04 01:57p Corporate Management-202 797 3 1
, • 7-

UNCLASSIFIED
The Australian: Hicks 'tied up and beaten' 20may04 ]-Pagc 2 of 3
"He (Hicks) was very angry about the Americans capturing innocent people," Shah said, speaking
through an interpreter,
But the Americans were also angry. "lie was beaten," Shah said.
'They were saying to him, did you meet Osama (bin Laden). what was your relationship with this or
that Taliban figure.
"The other detainees would be tied up with rope on one hand and ono foot, but Hicks they tied up
b^th is•sriAs !1,1 ht th !rg "
Shah said it was because Hicks was a "white boy".
"There were three two-hour sessions. They used their fists. Three or four Americans in uniform," he
said.
'The Northern Affiance would come and get the prisoners and go and give them to the Americans.
Then the Americans would hand them back to the Northern Alliance to put them back into their
cells."
Shah said he knew the beatings were going on because he could see through a window into one of
the interrogation rooms.
Ho said the Americans filmed the beatings and the interrogations.
His comments raise questions about the claims that Australian officials are not aware of any
evidence of Hicks being mistreated during his captivity.
If people are going to make allegations against other people of human rights abuses, they need to
come up with the evidence," Mr Downer told journalists on Monday.
"They need to come up with the evidence, not just smear people and suggest that something
appalling has happened without providing the evidence,"
Shah said he was willing to travel to Australia to give that evidence, although he was worried about
how he might be treated.
Flicices Adelaide lawyer, Stephen Kenny, said yesterday Mal allegations of abuse against enemy
combatants were now "so overwhelming° that there needed to bo a "full and proper" inquiry into the
treatment of prisoners in Afghanistan and Guantanamo Bay.
"It is absolutely vital now that the Australian Government immediately demand copies of that video
and that they be made public so that people can see the truth of these matters," Mr Kenny said.
Mr Kenny said he was seeking instructions from Mr Hicks to confirm his co-operation in any
"property instituted" inquiry into abuse of terror suspects arrested In Afghanistan.
Mr Kenny first raised allegations last week that Mr Hicks was abused, but is constrained from
detailing specific Incidents.
1 can confirm that David Hicks told me on the very first occasion 1 saw him of a number of
allegations of mistreatment towards himself and other prisoners, the details of which I cannot
reveal."
Mr Shah still has his own demons to deal with. however.
He said he did not fight and was only a simple baker who made bread for the Taliban.
He was captured by villagers and sold to the Northern Alliance for $5000 after the fail of the Taliban.

http://www.thcaustralian.news.cOm.au/prile SSMIBDo.hitTli 19/05/2004

DOS-000735
May 19 04 01:57p.Corporate Management.202 797 3132 UNCLASSIFIED• • The Australian: Hick's 'tied up and beaten' 1 20may04- Page 3 of 3 F. •
His interrogation occurred under similar Conditions to that of Mr Hicks in the crowded prison and interrogation centre.
He said that during the three me. Iths he spent in a cell beside Mr Hicks in Guantanamo Bay, he did not see the Australian suffer any obvious brutality.
But he said he himself was regularly drugged — treatment that left him mentally unstable and prompted him to try to kill himself.
Mr Hicks, however, appeared to be co-operating with the guards. Mr Shah said.
"Ho would make friends with them. They would come and chat and say 'why did you go to Afghanistan? It was another form of interrogation."
Mr Shah laughed, however, at suggestions from other released prisoners that Mr Hicks had abandoned Islam during his lengthy incarceration in Camp X-Ray. He was a good Muslim," he said.
Mr Hicks would spend his days praying, reading the Koran and exercising.
privacy.(The Australian

http://www.theaustralian.news.com.aulprinMaiitqgp.html 19/05/2004
DOS-000736

Doc_nid: 
6092
Doc_type_num: 
75