Bin Laden driver describes treatment at Guantanamo

Wed Jul 16, 2008 8:41am BST
 
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By Jim Loney

GUANTANAMO BAY U.S. NAVAL BASE, Cuba (Reuters) - Osama bin Laden's former driver took the stand on Tuesday at the U.S. military war court where he faces trial next week and described isolation, sleep deprivation and sexual impropriety during nearly seven years of captivity.

It was the first time prisoner Salim Hamdan, who challenged President George W. Bush and won, testified before the war court at the remote U.S. Navy base in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. Hamdan's lawsuit led the U.S. Supreme Court in 2006 to strike down the original military tribunal system created by Bush.

In Washington on Tuesday, the Justice Department urged a federal judge to allow the trial of Hamdan, a Yemeni in his late 30s, to go forward, opposing a request by Hamdan's lawyers to halt it based on last month's landmark Supreme Court ruling which extended some constitutional rights to the detainees.

If his trial goes ahead, it will be the first before the U.S. war court at the base, where prison camps were set up to hold terrorism suspects captured after the September 11 attacks on the United States by al Qaeda militants in 2001.

In pre-trial hearings this week, Hamdan's lawyers are asking the court to exclude their client's statements from trial due to "coercive" tactics of interrogators.

Hamdan took the stand wearing a traditional white headdress and white gown under a Western-style beige suit jacket. He appeared detached and sombre.

His lawyer, Charles Swift, walked his client through his captivity from his capture in Afghanistan in November 2001, where he said he was beaten, to his years at Guantanamo where he reluctantly described how a female interrogator had touched him while soldiers stood nearby.

"She came very close with her whole body towards me," Hamdan said through an interpreter, his eyes downcast at times.  Continued...

 
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