Both this Mohammed Irfan, and another Pakistani named Mohammed Irfan (ISN # 101) were repatriated to Pakistan in the fall of 2004, and released from Pakistani custody on
June 282005.[10]
An elderly man who was struck by a debilitating stroke in 1986.[16]
His son was hired by
Abdurahim Wardak to supervise a government armory. American forces captured him for maintaining this armory. Nasrat Kahn was captured after protesting his son's capture.[17]
Accused of firing rockets at an American base.[45]
Claims he hated the Taliban, and was a follower of the current Governor, who chased out the Taliban in the fall of 2001.
Accused of having documents from the
Jamiat Dawa in his home, when he was captured.[46]
Said the Jamiat Dawa documents date back to when his brother fought Afghanistan's Soviet occupiers, and that the Jamiat Dawa dissolved fifteen years ago.
Named inconsistently on the official lists of names.[35][36]
Captive 1037, the middle-aged father from Tajikistan, was captured in November 2001, and survived the
riot at Mazari Sharif.[49]
Captive 1037, the youth from Pakistan, was captured on
May 52003, one month after he immigrated to Afghanistan to join the Afghan Army, because he had visited a house once owned by a rebel commander.[50]
According to the official lists Captive 1037 is an Afghan.[35][36]
Claimed he was captured after an act of self-defense, where he defended himself from a crazed drug addict, who had killed his brother, and that the Northern Alliance soldiers who captured him made up the allegations in order to earn a bounty for his capture from the Americans.
Allegedly knew
Bow Audin [sic], a grocer, who the
Hamid Karzai government appointed to be a police official, who was suspected of selling black market arms.
Told both his Tribunal, and his Board that he suspected he was detained in a case of mistaken identity. His real name was Zain Al Abedin, not Jumma Jan.[74]
The failure to find the witnesses he requested have been cited as examples of a lack of seriousness on the part of the Bush administration to give captives a meaningful opportunity to challenge the evidence against them.[78]
His detention has been cited as an example of the Bush administration claiming to hold as "captured on the battlefield" captives who were merely inconvenient allies.[76]
Alleged that documents found on his property tied him to the Taliban.[79]
Claims he was working in Iran during the Taliban regime. Claims a fleeing Taliban members car broke down on his property, and that the document cames from that car.[80]
Claims he set up a co-educational school when he returned to Afghanistan following the Taliban's collapse — something he would have been punished for under the Taliban.[80]
Both this Mohammed Irfan, and another Pakistani named Mohammed Irfan (ISN # 101) were repatriated to Pakistan in the fall of 2004, and released from Pakistani custody on
June 282005.[10]
An elderly man who was struck by a debilitating stroke in 1986.[16]
His son was hired by
Abdurahim Wardak to supervise a government armory. American forces captured him for maintaining this armory. Nasrat Kahn was captured after protesting his son's capture.[17]
Accused of firing rockets at an American base.[45]
Claims he hated the Taliban, and was a follower of the current Governor, who chased out the Taliban in the fall of 2001.
Accused of having documents from the
Jamiat Dawa in his home, when he was captured.[46]
Said the Jamiat Dawa documents date back to when his brother fought Afghanistan's Soviet occupiers, and that the Jamiat Dawa dissolved fifteen years ago.
Named inconsistently on the official lists of names.[35][36]
Captive 1037, the middle-aged father from Tajikistan, was captured in November 2001, and survived the
riot at Mazari Sharif.[49]
Captive 1037, the youth from Pakistan, was captured on
May 52003, one month after he immigrated to Afghanistan to join the Afghan Army, because he had visited a house once owned by a rebel commander.[50]
According to the official lists Captive 1037 is an Afghan.[35][36]
Claimed he was captured after an act of self-defense, where he defended himself from a crazed drug addict, who had killed his brother, and that the Northern Alliance soldiers who captured him made up the allegations in order to earn a bounty for his capture from the Americans.
Allegedly knew
Bow Audin [sic], a grocer, who the
Hamid Karzai government appointed to be a police official, who was suspected of selling black market arms.
Told both his Tribunal, and his Board that he suspected he was detained in a case of mistaken identity. His real name was Zain Al Abedin, not Jumma Jan.[74]
The failure to find the witnesses he requested have been cited as examples of a lack of seriousness on the part of the Bush administration to give captives a meaningful opportunity to challenge the evidence against them.[78]
His detention has been cited as an example of the Bush administration claiming to hold as "captured on the battlefield" captives who were merely inconvenient allies.[76]
Alleged that documents found on his property tied him to the Taliban.[79]
Claims he was working in Iran during the Taliban regime. Claims a fleeing Taliban members car broke down on his property, and that the document cames from that car.[80]
Claims he set up a co-educational school when he returned to Afghanistan following the Taliban's collapse — something he would have been punished for under the Taliban.[80]