Sept. 11 suspects' treatment a focus in
Guantanamo hearing
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[May 31, 2016]
By Lacey Ann Johnson
FORT MEADE, Md. (Reuters) - A pre-trial
hearing for five Sept. 11 suspects began on Monday at Guantanamo Bay,
with prisoners' treatment expected to be a focus of the U.S. military
court sessions.
Forty-two motions are scheduled for the week-long hearing at the
Navy base in Cuba. They include multiple requests by defense lawyers
for evidence of how the five suspects were treated at secret Central
Intelligence Agency prisons.
James Connell, a defense lawyer, told Judge Army Colonel James Pohl
that medical records provided by the prosecution had been
insufficient, lacking personal identifying information and a
chronology of patient care.
"This is not the way that discovery is supposed to work ... the
medical records are actually extremely important," said Connell, who
represents Kuwaiti inmate Ammar al Baluchi, an alleged al Qaeda
money mover.
He is among five men suspected of conspiring to help hijackers slam
airliners into New York's World Trade Center, the Pentagon and a
Pennsylvania field on Sept. 11, 2001. Almost 3,000 people died in
the attacks.
Two Guantanamo prisoners unrelated to the Sept. 11 case could
testify to corroborate statements made in February by Yemeni
defendant Ramzi bin al Shibh. He has accused guards of using noises
and vibrations to torment him for years.
Bin al Shibh's lawyer, James Harrington, told the Associated Press
last week that Abu Zubaydah, a Palestinian not seen since his CIA
capture in 2002, has been called to testify about Bin al Shibh's
allegations.
A Somali inmate, Guleed Hassan Ahmed, also has been called as a
witness. Bin al Shibh is charged with wiring money from al Qaeda
leaders to the hijackers.
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Mustafa al Hawsawi, Ammar al Baluchi, Ramzi bin al Shibh, Walid Bin
Attash, and Khalik Sheikh Mohammad, pray at their arraignment in
this courtroom sketch reviewed and approved for release by a U.S.
military security official, at Guantanamo Bay Navy Base, Cuba, May
5, 2012. REUTERS/Janet Hamlin/Pool
Prison staff have denied Bin al Shibh's abuse allegations.
The case against the five suspects has been plagued by repeated
delays and is likely years from going to trial.
The hearing is being held at Guantanamo Bay. It was monitored over
closed-circuit television at a press room at Fort Meade, outside
Washington.
(Editing by Ian Simpson and Sandra Maler)
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