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April 28, 2011 03:04 pm PDT

Controversy over publication of Gitmo teen rape victim ID'd in Wikileaks dump

The Daily Telegraph this week published 759 of the leaked Guantnamo files from WikiLeaks, which had not been redacted. One document they published today "includes the full name of a boy detained at Guantnamo who, according to the file, was raped at the age of 15, just prior to being transferred to the camp." The boy was never charged with any crime. US forces captured him in Afghanistan just days after he'd reportedly been sexually assaulted and kidnapped by a group of 11 Afghan men, in a village near his family's home. The US military brought the boy to Guantnamo Bay as a prisoner "because of his possible knowledge of Taliban resistance efforts and local leaders." They held him as a prisoner there for more than a year, despite knowing he was innocent. The Telegraph seems to take the same position as Wikileaks: the public has a right to know the fullest array of facts exposing the horror and human rights abuses at Gitmo. Other publications, like the Guardian (which was not a direct recipient from Wikileaks, after finding itself more or less at odds with Julian Assange) published the boy's Guantnamo file, but blacked out details of his sexual assault. More at journalism.co.uk. (Via Greg Mitchell at The Nation)...


Original Link: http://feeds.boingboing.net/~r/boingboing/iBag/~3/BLTR_E0e0kY/controversy-over-pub.html

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