Mohamed Jawad | |
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Three months before capture.
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Born | c.1985 Miranshah, FATA, Pakistan |
Arrested | December 2002 Afghanistan Afghan police |
Released | August 24, 2009 |
Citizenship | Afghan |
Detained at | Baghram, Guantanamo |
Alternate name | Amir Khan, Mir Jan, Sakheb Badsha |
ISN | 900 |
Charge(s) | Attempted murder in violation of the law of war |
Mohamed Jawad (born c. 1985 in Miranshah, Pakistan), was accused of attempted murder before a Guantanamo military commission on charges that he threw a grenade at a passing American convoy on December 17, 2002. Jawad's family says that he was 12 years old at the time of his detention in 2002. The United States Department of Defense maintains that a bone scan showed he was about 17 when taken into custody.
Jawad insists that he had been hired to help remove landmines from the war-torn region, and that a colleague had thrown the grenade. He was held in extrajudicial detention first at the Bagram Theater Internment Facility and then at the Guantanamo Bay detention camp from 2003 until 2009. His Internment Serial Number was 900.
The military commission presiding judge ruled that Jawad's confession to throwing a grenade was inadmissible since it had been obtained through coercion after Afghan authorities threatened to kill him and his family. He was ordered released after a successful petition for a writ of habeas corpus before Judge Ellen Huvelle of the U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C. on July 30, 2009. On August 24, 2009 he was transported from Guantanamo Bay to Afghanistan.
Like many Afghans, Mohamed Jawad has no official record of his birth, and does not know his exact age. Human rights workers trying to establish a reliable estimate of his birth date consulted with his mother; she said that he was born six months after his father was killed during a battle near Khost in 1991. In an English-language Al Jazeera broadcast, one of his uncles said he was born four months after the battle where his father was killed, which he said occurred in 1990.