- Shakhrukh Hamiduva
Shakhrukh Hamiduva (born in 1983 in
Kokand ,Uzbekistan ) is a citizen ofUzbekistan , held inextrajudicial detention in theUnited States Guantanamo Bay detention camp s, inCuba . [http://www.dod.mil/news/May2006/d20060515%20List.pdf list of prisoners (.pdf)] , "US Department of Defense ",May 15 ,2006 ] His detainee ID number is 022.The Department of Defense reports he was born onDecember 13 ,1983 , in Kokan , Uzbekistan.CSRT-Yes [http://www.defenselink.mil/pubs/foi/detainees/csrt/Set_47_3130-3248.pdf#70 Summarized transcripts (.pdf)] , from
Sahkhrukh Hamiduva 's "Combatant Status Review Tribunal " – pages 70–80]:""'a. The detainee is associated with forces that are engaged in hostilities against the United States or its coalition partners.:#"Originally from Uzbekistan, the detainee traveled to
Kabul ,Afghanistan viaDushanbe ,Tajikistan , andKonduz , Afghanistan.:#"The detainee spent one and a half years in anIslamic Movement of Tajikistan camp near Dushanbe, Tajikistan.:#"The detainee willingly became a soldier in theMujahideen Army.:#"The detainee traveled to Afghanistan to participate injihad against theRussia ns and the Northern Alliance.:#"The detainee had anAK-47 while at the camp near Dushanbe, Tajikistan.:#"The leader of the Islamic Movement of Tajikistan is also the leader of theIslamic Movement of Uzbekistan .:#"The Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan is a designated foreign terrorist organization.:#"The detainee was captured by the Northern Alliance inMazar-E-Sharif sic.Testimony
Hamiduva told his Tribunal he was a refugee who fled Uzbekistan to avoid religious persecution. His father, five uncles, and his older brothers had all been arrested. He fled Uzbekistan as a teenager, lived for a while in a refugee camp in Tajikistan, and later lived in another refugee camp in Northern Afghanistan.
The camps he lived in in Tajikistan were refugee camps, not training camps. He did not know of any training camps, or of any militants or extremists visiting the refugee camp.
When he left Uzbekistan he was too young to have gone through his mandatory service in the Uzbek army. He never joined any other military group, and had never received any medical training, or ever owned any weapons.
A mentor near his Afghan refugee camp owned a garage and taught him to drive, and, after working for him for a while, he bought a car and started to work as a taxi driver.
After the U.S. invasion of Afghanistan he was able to seek out
United Nations refugee workers, who assured him they would be able to help him safely return to Uzbekistan. They issued him a travel document. He was driving north, in his taxi, with five or six Afghans, who were returning toMazari Sharif , when he was captured and his taxi was seized. The Afghans were let go, but he was transferred to American custody.After a month and a half of interrogation and investigation, with the help of his UN documents, his interrogators told him they were confident that he was who he said he was, and he would be released, but, to his surprise, he was transferred to Guantanamo.
Hamiduva said he had not been treated well in Guantanamo, so he had not been cooperative with his interrogators. He had been subjected to
sleep deprivation , and camp authorities had been withholding medical care from him. In addition, he had seen the Guantanamo guards administer brutal beatings to other detainees, breaking their arms and legs.Witnesses
Hamiduva had reqested witnesses. The Tribunal's President determined that several of the witnesses were relevant, but the State Department could not find them. They were determined to be "not reasonably available."
Orange uniform
Sahkhrukh Hamiduva's Tribunal officers asked him to explain why he was wearing an orange uniform -- the uniform issued to Guantanamo captives regarded as "non-compliant".
Habeas petition
Shakhrukh Hamiduva has had a
habeas corpus petition filed on his behalf.cite news
url=http://docs.justia.com/cases/federal/district-courts/district-of-columbia/dcdce/1:2008mc00442/131990/251/0.pdf
title=Guantanamo Bay Detainee Litigation -- doc 251
publisher=United States Department of Justice
author=
date=2008-08-08
accessdate=2008-08-12
quote= ]References
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