New York, Dec 18 : The U.S. military has detained more than 200 Afghan teenagers who
were captured in the war for about a year at a time at a military prison next to
Bagram Airfield in Afghanistan, the United States has told the United
Nations.
The U.S. State Department characterized the detainees held since
2008 as "enemy combatants" in a report sent every four years to the United
Nations in Geneva updating U.S. compliance with the U.N. Convention on the
Rights of the Child.
The U.S. military had held them "to prevent a
combatant from returning to the battlefield," the report said.
A few are
still confined at the Detention Facility in Parwan, which will be turned over to
the Afghan government, it said. "Many of them have been released or transferred
to the Afghan government," said the report, distributed this week.
Most
of the juvenile Afghan detainees were about 16 years old, but their age was not
usually determined until after capture, the U.S. report said.
If the
average age is 16, "This means it is highly likely that some children were as
young as 14 or 13 years old when they were detained by U.S. forces," Jamil
Dakwar, director of the American Civil Liberties Union's human rights program,
said.
"I've represented children as young as 11 or 12 who have been at
Bagram," said Tina M. Foster, executive director of the International Justice
Network, which represents adult and juvenile Bagram detainees.
"I
question the number of 200, because there are thousands of detainees at Parwan,"
Foster said. "There are other children whose parents have said these children
are under 18 at the time of their capture, and the U.S. doesn't allow the
detainees or their families to contest their age."
Dakwar also criticized
the length of detention, a year on average, according to the U.S.
report.
"This is an extraordinarily unacceptably long period of time that
exposes children in detention to greater risk of physical and mental abuse,
especially if they are denied access to the protections guaranteed to them under
international law," Dakwar said.
The U.S. State Department was called
for comment on the criticism, and a representative said they were seeking an
officer to reply.
The previous American report four years ago provided a
snapshot of the focus of the U.S. military's effort in the endgame of the Bush
presidency after years of warfare and anti-terrorism campaigns. In 2008, the
U.S. said it held about 500 juveniles in Iraqi detention centers and then had
only about 10 at the Bagram Airfield in Afghanistan. A total of some 2,500
youths had been detained, almost all in Iraq, from 2002 through 2008 under the
Bush administration.
Barack Obama campaigned for the presidency in 2008
in part on winding down active U.S. involvement in the Iraq War, and shifting
the military focus to Afghanistan. The latest figures on under-18 detainees
reflect the redeployment of U.S. efforts to Afghanistan.
Because the teen
detainees were not charged with any crime, "a detainee would generally not be
provided legal assistance." They were allowed to attend open hearings and defend
themselves, and a personal advocate was assigned to each detainee, the report
said.
"These are basically sham proceedings," Foster said. "The personal
representatives don't do anything different for the child detainees than they do
for the adults, which is nothing."
The report added that "the purpose of
detention is not punitive but preventative: to prevent a combatant from
returning to the battlefield."
It cited a 2004 U.S. Supreme Court case,
Hamdi vs. Rumsfeld, as establishing that "the law of armed conflict permits the
United States to detain belligerents until the end of hostilities without
charging such individuals with crimes, because they are not being held as
criminals facing future criminal trial."
The U.S. military is fighting
irregular forces — al-Qaida, the Taliban, and an array of similar shadowy
insurgent or terrorist groups. So it is not clear when "hostilities" would ever
formally end, since there is no declaration of war and no enemy government to
defeat. Only the United States can decide when it deems a conflict to be over,
in those circumstances.
Foster said that the teens seized are not in
uniform or even typically taken in combat.
"We're not talking about
battlefield captures, we're talking about people who are living at home, and
four or five brothers might be taken together. It might take them a year or more
to figure out that one of them was younger than 18, to determine the identities
of these kids," she said.
In January, the State Department will send a
delegation to Geneva to present the report to the U.N.'s Committee on the Rights
of the Child, and to answer any further questions the U.N. committee members may
have.
Ends
SA/EN
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» US: 200 teens have been detained in Afghan war
US: 200 teens have been detained in Afghan war
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