500 Muslim youths detained in Iraq; 10 in Afghanistan

Chronological age has nothing to do with intellect and no amount of PC spin or they are just kids rhetoric will change the fact that none of them are being held for skipping school.

By PETER JAMES SPIELMANN, 20 May 2008, (AP) The U.S. military is holding about 500 juveniles in detention centers in Iraq, and has about 10 detained at the U.S. base at Bagram, Afghanistan, the United States has told the United Nations.
-The same UN which allows the murder of non muslim children globally without batting an eye.

A total of 2,500 youths under the age of 18 have been detained, almost all in Iraq, for periods up to a year or more in President Bush’s anti-terrorism campaign since 2002, the United States reported last week to the U.N.’s Committee on the Rights of the Child.
-Notice the US makes no attempt to hide the numbers.

Civil liberties groups such as the International Justice Network and the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) denounced the detentions as abhorrent, and a violation of U.S. treaty obligations.
-The same ACLU that rarely speaks out for muslim womens rights, against islamic honor killings, or slavery as practiced in muslim lands-that ACLU?

In the periodic report to the United Nations on U.S. compliance with the Convention on the Rights of the Child, the United States confirmed that “as of April 2008, the United States held about 500 juveniles in Iraq.”
-Totally despicable after this many years we should have ten times that number. We should have also arrested their recruiters, trainers and facilitators. None of these little darlings just woke up one day and decided to go jihad. Their parents should also beheld as responsible.

“The juveniles that the United States has detained have been captured engaging in anti-coalition activity, such as planting Improvised Explosive Devices, operating as lookouts for insurgents, or actively engaged in fighting against U.S. and Coalition forces,” the U.S. report said.
-So arresting them was actually kind, they should be dead.
The majority are believed to be 16 or 17 years old. In the United States a 17-year-old can enlist in the U.S. army, with parental consent.
-Many Islamic parents give consent to go jihad at far younger ages.

The report said that of the total of 2,500 juveniles jailed since 2002, all but 100 had been picked up in Iraq. Of the remainder, most were swept up in Afghanistan.

The U.S. military says it has held eight juveniles, ages 13-17, at Guantanamo since the detention center opened in 2002.
-Bet they are real popular with the afghans and chechens.

“It remains uncertain the exact age of these individuals, as most of them did not know their date of birth or even the year they were born,” the report says. But U.S. military doctors who evaluated them believed that three were under age 16.
-And already married to a bearded follower of old mohammed, allahu ackberries

Six were released and two are now adults facing war-crimes charges.

Canadian Omar Khadr, now 21, was captured in July 2002 and is charged with murder for allegedly throwing a grenade that killed a U.S. Special Forces soldier. Mohammed Jawad, an Afghan who the military says is about 23, faces charges of attempted murder for a 2002 grenade attack that wounded two U.S. soldiers.
-I am not feeling sorry for them even if they are now the prison bitches.

In Afghanistan, “as of April 2008, there are approximately 10 juveniles being held at the Bagram Theater Internment Facility as unlawful enemy combatants,” the report said.

In Bagram, a U.S. military spokesman, Marine 1st Lt. Richard K. Ulsh, told the AP on Sunday: “At any time there are up to 625 detainees being held at the Bagram Theater Internment Facility. There are no detainees being held under the age of 16 and, without getting into specifics due to the frequent fluctuation in the number of detainees being held, we can tell you that there are currently less than 10 detainees being held under the age of 18.”

Civil liberties groups were outraged.
-Ironic considering their silence on Islamic atrocities.

“It’s shocking to me that the U.S. government has not figured out a way to keep children out of adult prisons. It’s outrageous, and it is not making us any safer, I can say that about Afghanistan from personal experience,” Tina M. Foster, the executive director of the International Justice Network, said Sunday.

Her group brought lawsuits on behalf of the Guantanamo detainees in 2006, and has taken on the cases of adult detainees in Bagram. She said the U.S. military does not release the names of juveniles it is holding in Bagram, so her group is trying to learn who they are by finding Afghan relatives.
-She wouldn’t like these little darlings so much if they had met her on the back streets of londonstan.

“It is shocking to know that the U.S. is holding hundreds of juveniles in Iraq and Afghanistan, and even more disturbing that there is no comprehensive policy in place that will protect their rights as children,” Jamil Dakwar, director of the American Civil Liberties Union’s Human Rights Program, said in a statement. “Juveniles and former child soldiers should be treated first and foremost as candidates for rehabilitation and reintegration into society, not subjected to further victimization.”
-Victims my ass, these little bastards should have been shot and left to die in the dirt, just like the other tens of thousands of jihadis. They are so far below trash they look up to worms.

“Although age is not a determining factor in whether or not we detain an individual under the law of armed conflict, we go to great lengths to attend to the special needs of juveniles while they are in detention,” the U.S. report said.
-I wonder if that means they do not let the chechens near the kids, cruel if so, allah liked little boys, its all good under islam.

According to the ACLU, the lack of protections and consideration for the juvenile status of detainees violates the obligations of the U.S. under the Optional Protocol on the Involvement of Children in Armed Conflict that the U.S. ratified in 2002, as well as universally accepted international norms.
-The ACLU playing the morality card is ridiculous.

The U.N. Committee on the Rights of the Child is scheduled to question the U.S. delegation on its compliance with its obligations on May 22 in Geneva.
-Can’t wait for that one.

The U.N. Convention on the Rights of the Child was adopted by the General Assembly in 1989, with backing at the time from the U.S. government of President Bill Clinton, and with strong lobbying from then-first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton, who now is competing for the Democratic Party presidential nomination with Barack Obama.
-Everyone makes a mistake now and then.

Associated Press writer Fisnik Abrashi contributed to this report from Kabul, Afghanistan.

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