Guantanamo female guards file complaints against prohibition to touch detainees

Published January 28, 2015
In this file photo, a detainee is escorted by US military guards at the  Guantanamo Bay US Naval Base in Cuba. —AP
In this file photo, a detainee is escorted by US military guards at the Guantanamo Bay US Naval Base in Cuba. —AP

FORT MEADE: Some female guards at the Guantanamo Bay prison have filed equal opportunity complaints challenging court orders barring them from jobs that would require touching detainees while escorting them to hearings and attorney-client meetings, a military judge said Monday.

The two complaints filed with the Defence Department's Office of Diversity Management and Equal Opportunity complicate a dispute that stems from the detainees' assertion that their Muslim faith prohibits physical contact with females who are not their wives or relatives.

Some defence lawyers have argued that the government recently added women to the escort teams to humiliate the men and disrupt their ability to defend themselves.

Prosecutors have argued that barring women from escort duty would amount to gender discrimination.

The complaints were revealed Monday by Navy Captain J. Kirk Waits as he presided over a pretrial hearing for Abd al-Hadi al-Iraqi at the U.S. base in Cuba.

The Associated Press watched a closed-circuit video feed of the hearing at Fort Meade, near Baltimore.

Waits said he heard on Friday about the complaint in al-Hadi's case but hadn't seen it.

Waits issued an interim order in November barring female guards from the escort work with al-Hadi.

Defence attorneys want the judge to make the order final, with oral arguments scheduled later this week.

Army Col James Pohl, the judge in another U.S. Military Commissions case against the five defendants in the Sept 11 attacks, advised attorneys Monday that he learned Friday of a similar complaint challenging a ruling he made in January.

Waits said the discrimination complaint would have no bearing on proceedings in al-Hadi's case.

“This was a lawful judicial order by a qualified and properly detailed military judge to this commission,” he said. “I am not aware of any administrative equal opportunity grievance procedure that affords a person a cognizable avenue to challenge a judicial order such as this,” Waits said.

Military officials were considering a request from The Associated Press to review the complaints.

Al-Hadi is accused of being an Al Qaeda commander who organised deadly attacks on US and allied forces in Afghanistan. He faces up to life in prison if convicted of the alleged war crimes.

He appeared in court Monday wearing a white tunic, headdress and a long, gray beard.

All six defendants are being held at a top-secret Guantanamo unit known as Camp 7.

The unit houses about 15 men deemed “high-value detainees” by the Pentagon.

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