Donate today and get a free, signed copy of David Sirota's New York Times bestseller The Uprising: An Unauthorized Tour of the Populist Revolt Scaring Wall Street and Washington
ZoomZoom InZoom OutPrintDiscuss
News > June 12, 2006

Postmark Guantánamo

Why is the Pentagon keeping prisoners’ mail from their lawyers?

By Christopher Hayes

After the U.S. Senate voted last year to strip Guantánamo detainees of the right to habeas corpus, you’d think it would have dashed the hopes of the desperate prisoners that the world’s greatest deliberative body would prove their salvation. But Saifullah Paracha is apparently an eternal optimist. In March, after 18 months in Guantánamo, Paracha, 58, decided to write a letter to 98 U.S. senators describing his plight. The senators haven’t responded, though it’s hard to blame them. They don’t know the letters exist. The Department of Defense won’t release them for delivery.

“He lived in the United States,” says Paracha’s lawyer G. T. Hunt. “He’s a pro-American person. He believes in American justice. He believes that if he can get a hearing he’ll get out.”

In 1986, after studying and working in New York for 16 years, Paracha moved back to Pakistan, to Karachi where he and his wife raised four children and he managed several business ventures. In July 2003, Paracha traveled to Bangkok for what he thought was a meeting about a business opportunity. He never made it out of the airport. Masked men abducted him, taking him to Bagram Air Force Base in Afghanistan where he was interrogated and, according to Hunt, imprisoned in a cell with no toilet. His family spent a month with no idea of his whereabouts, until the International Committee of the Red Cross notified them he was in U.S. custody. After a year in Bagram, he was sent to Guantánamo in September 2004.

The United States believes that both Paracha and his son Uzair aided several Pakistani men alleged to be al Qaeda operatives. In November, Uzair was convicted in federal court of providing the operatives with “material support” and now faces up to 75 years in jail. Uzair maintains his innocence. He says he was an unwitting accomplice, merely helping his father’s business associates with their U.S. immigration papers. Saifullah says he does have a relationship with the alleged terrorists, but only knew the men as investors, not al Qaeda operatives. Unlike his son, he hasn’t been afforded an opportunity to make his case in court.

The rules guiding attorney/client correspondence at Guantánamo are frustratingly vague, lawyers for the detainees say, and the processing delays are maddening. Mail routinely arrives six months after it’s been sent, if it arrives at all. “For months I sent him letters and he sent me letters and they were all just impounded,” Hunt says. “Now, I think my letters get through but they take their sweet time about it.”

The ostensible reason for the backlog is security. “The attorney/client communications go to a secure facility, which happens to be here in Washington,” Hunt says. “And they can’t leave there until the government clears it and says it’s not sensitive and not classified.”

In order to read Paracha’s correspondence, Hunt must go to the secure location—”a grim featureless office, with blinds drawn 24 hours a day”—where he’s allowed to read Paracha’s letters to him before placing them back in a safe. Last month he saw the 98 letters, painstakingly copied in longhand, which Paracha had sent to him to review and distribute. But Hunt was told he couldn’t remove them from the safe. He can’t disclose what’s in the letters—”it’s a state secret,” he quips—but says “the person with the right authority could sit down, take a glance at them and then say, ‘OK they can go out.’ “

A Pentagon spokesperson wouldn’t comment directly on Paracha’s letters but said that over a six-month span in 2005, there were 10,000 pieces of mail sent to or from detainees. The detainees are “in close contact with family and friends if they choose to be,” the spokesperson said.

After Hunt sent an email to his fellow Guantánamo lawyers about the detained letters, several of them contacted their senators to inform them they had mail the Pentagon wasn’t letting them read.

This prompted an indignant letter from Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.), who wrote to Rumsfeld on June 5, asking if the Department of Defense has a “written or unwritten policy prohibiting all persons detained at Guantánamo Bay from writing to, or communicating in any manner with, Members of Congress?”

If so, “please explain what legal authority supports such a policy.”

On the bottom of the letter, Leahy scrawled in pen: “Is this really happening!”

Paracha must be asking himself the same question.

Christopher Hayes is the Washington Editor of the Nation and a former senior editor of In These Times. Read more of his work at www.chrishayes.org.

More information about Christopher Hayes
  • subscribe to print magazine

  • Reader Comments

    This is extremely troubling.........................who among use is next ???.....

    Posted by Redhorse on Jun 12, 2006 at 4:14 AM

    HORSE

    Last week two brown-skinned BRITISH guys were arrested in London UK, at 4 in the morning, by NBC equipped SWAT teams, one was shot through the shoulder, lucky man, it could have been worse !

    BOTH were released after a WEEK..

    Fortunately for British Society, we have not YET descended quite so low as GWB’s America. BUT THEY are working on it....

    Horse, my advice to you is to, somehow, get OFF the internet—which can be self-indulgent, as you know, --- and get out and about with your neighbours or WHOEVER , and register your disagreement with all this shit.
    (EDIT That was VERY badly put !  I’m still ON the net, but also DO things ...)

    I use the Net for information, sustenance, support, but I DO get out there, too.

    Every little person counts, so when I go to a local pressconference of ‘blabla’, it was 19 not 18 supporters, and when 25000 of us demonstrated in Cherbourg against the nukes, it was not 24999.

    Add us all together----- Hmmmm !

    Posted by frog on Jun 12, 2006 at 4:24 PM

    Frog.....I do agree...this .net thing is excellent for research.............most of my time is in the streets.......basically what I see happening is a slow decline into acceptance ; people are very afraid.....propaganda....news media....................but I am personally very optimistic..................true

    Posted by Redhorse on Jun 12, 2006 at 5:36 PM

    I love how you “liberals” are always on the side of enemy.  Why is that?  Why are you “liberals” traitors?  Most of you libs should be rounded up and jailed for helping the enemy.  Unreal....

    No wonder you libs keep losing elections.

    lol....

    PS - I hope you libs keep it up for the mid-term elections, that way you help us win again.  lol… lmao…

    Posted by tina1 on Jun 12, 2006 at 5:42 PM

    Tina...from what I have read of your comments...you want everybody locked up...that’s your answer for everything...................and Scorp thinks I’m a Stalinist....................’ toon...loony..........loonytoon.! ! !
    AND STOP DROOL’IN ALL OVER THE WEBPAGE ; SOMEBODIES GOT TOO CLEAN THAT CRAP OFF THE PAGE.........DAMN .!  !…

    Posted by Redhorse on Jun 12, 2006 at 6:08 PM
  • extended discussion >>>Continued...

    Discussions with more than 5 comments are continued on our special discussion page to encourage continuity and ease of use. There are currently 47 posts.

Join Here
Member Login

Forgot password?

Article Appeared in this Issue

Full contents
Past issues

Also by Christopher Hayes
  • The New Road to Serfdom
    Over the course of 500 pages in The Shock Doctrine, Naomi Klein documents the moments of chaos and disruption that allow a small coterie of experts to swoop in and administer what's invariably called "bitter medicine," "painful reforms" or "shock therapy"
  • Who’s Afraid of Democracy?
    Believing that "people are rational as consumers and irrational as voters," many conservatives would favor free markets without democracy
  • What We Learn When We Learn Economics
    Is a little economics a dangerous thing?
  • The Abramoff Babies
    Like the "Watergate Babies" of 1974, the new Democratic Congress will have to pick between sustanative or procedural reforms.
  • The Good War on Terror
    How the Greatest Generation helped pave the road to Baghdad
  • Economic Populism Proves Popular
    To thwart legislation that put caps on payday lending rates, Republican lawmakers in Oregon had to pass it

Donate now
and get a
free, signed copy
of David Sirota's New York Times bestseller The Uprising: An Unauthorized Tour of the Populist Revolt Scaring Wall Street and Washington

Popular Discussions