Reporting on Diebold
Analysis:
While all three stations reported on the problems with the Barry county voting machines, this WOOD 8 story is the only one that looked at voting machine malfunctions beyond this particular case. In the story the WOOD 8 reporter notes that problems have been reported in Alaska, Ohio and Florida with machines made by the corporation Diebold. The reporter notes that he talked to a representative from Diebold who attributed the irregularities in each case to user error or incompatibility with other equipment. The Diebold representative is never heard form directly and the reporter does not ask any follow up questions.
Nor is much information provided about Diebold, despite the fact that they have generated a fair amount of controversy. Diebold has been at the center of a number of controversies dating back to before the 2004 election concerning problems and weaknesses in their computerized voting systems. There also was controversy surrounding Diebolds CEO Walden O’Dell, who previous to the 2004 election had told Republicans in a fund-raising letter that he is “committed to helping Ohio deliver its electoral votes to the president next year.”
This issue of voting machine malfunctions is, at least according to independent researchers such as Black Box voting.org or Ohio based professor Bob Fitrakis, tied into larger issues of election fraud and tampering. Despite having plenty of evidence to back up these claims of election fraud, the local news have been very reluctant to report on them, or if they do, its usually dismissed as partisan bickering.
Story:
WOOD 8 Newsreader Well, election day hit a big glitch in one West Michigan county.
WOOD 8 Newsreader #2 Brand new voting machines stopped working in Barry County. The cause is believed to be a glitch in a computer program. 24 Hour News 8 is live in Hastings now, where all the ballots had to be hand-counted. Dan
Reporter Yeah, thats right. This was literally a county-wide problem. Fifteen of the sixteen townships, as well as the city of Hastings were forced to hand count their results. And this comes after a federal law required the state to dole out money, and buy new voting machines for every county in the state.
A day later, and the votes are in. Clerks dropping of results at the Barry County HQ, the last step in what turned out to be a long night. The trouble came from machines like this one–twenty-six in all in Barry County. Its an optical scan voting machine. The ballot goes in, the machine records the vote. At the end of the night, clerks tally the final numbers and the machine prints out the results. Thats where the problem came to light.
Tom Emery (Hastings City Clerk) The first precinct that we looked at, one candidate got zero votes, but there were ninety write-ins out of 125 votes cast.
Reporter Forcing City Clerk Emery to do a double take.
Emery especially since the person who got zero votes was the person that I voted for, so I know the zero was wrong.
Reporter Heres a closer look in the Thornapple School Board race. The computer had both candidates with zero votes, and the total for write-ins was 35. The biggest problem, the county clerk says, was for races dealing with bond proposals.
Debbie Smith (Barry County Clerk) – To all of the printouts where there were any bond proposals showed a zero total for yes votes, and that it appears that the actual votes cast as yes were showing under the no total, and then the no total was not appearing on the tape anywhere.
Reporter At four thousand dollars apiece, the state bought each machine for the county after federal law required all states to use the same optical system. Tuesdays election was the first time Barry County used these particular optical scan machines. The county had used a previous model before without having any problems. Why the printouts were scrambled, for now at least, remains a mystery.
We talked with several other West Michigan election officials to see if they experienced similar problems, but all say everything went off without a hitch. We also spoke with a spokesman for the company that makes those optical scan machines, Diebold, he says the company is looking into the problem, but adds these machines are typically very reliable. Live in Hastings, Dan Bewley, 24 hour News 8.
Reporting on Iran’s Nukes
Analysis:
As with many news pieces on US foreign policy, the voices presented in the story are that of a government or military spokesperson. No Iranian voices are heard n the story, nor are any independent or international voices heard. Also, the statements made by the government spokesperson are not subjected to any critical scrutiny. Nor is any information given as to what the Iranian pronouncement that it has enriched uranium actually means. According to an article by scholar Juan Cole, the president of Iran announced that his country had enriched uranium to 3.5 percent, using a bank of 180 centrifuges. Cole notes that in order to build a nuclear weapon, uranium has to be enriched to 80%, far more than what Iran has achieved to date. Estimates vary widely amongst experts as to how long it will take Iran to develop a nuclear weapon. None of these expert voices are presented in the story, rather, the newsreader states simply that Iran has taken an important step for building an Atomic bomb, a statement that implies that Iranian nuclear weapons are imminent.
Story:
WXMI Newsreader- Condoleezza Rice asked the international community to help Iran stay in line. It comes after Irans president announced that they have enriched uranium, an important step for building an atomic bomb. Iran has been ordered more than once to stop experimenting. Rice says its clear they are not listening.
Condi Rice I do think that the security council will need to take into consideration this move by Iran and that it will be time when it reconvenes on this case for strong steps to make certain that we maintain the credibility of the international community on this issue.
Newsreader – Iran says that their program is peaceful and for civilian power.
Glossing Over Murder in Colombia
Analysis:
Both stories were rather short and according to our monitoring work, this was the first time this issue was mentioned in local TV news coverage. The WZZM story started The University of Michigan is welcoming Coca Cola to its campus. University officials dropped Coke purchases in December over the pop companys labor practices in India and Colombia. Today U of M officials said they were satisfied with plans for investigations into the soft drink companys practices. Michigan was one of twelve schools in the boycott against Coca Cola. The WOOD 8 story was about the same length but did note that the specific complaints about Coca Cola that In Columbia labor groups have accused the company in conspiring with right wing paramilitary groups to harass and harm workers.
Both stories ignored the fact that this boycott was the result of a campaign organized not by university administrators but by students. This effort, entitled “Campaign To Boycott Killer Coke!” is part of an ongoing effort to hold Coke accountable for its pratices in Colombia and elsewhere. This was not mentioned in the TV stories, nor was it mentioned that the University ended the boycott against the wishes of the students who had organized the boycott effort, or that the nationwide coalition of groups that make up the Killer Coke campaign were still calling for boycotts. Also not presented in the TV stories were the actual specifics of the claims against Coke. The WZZM 13 story totally glossed over this point merely stating that there were problems with Cokes companys labor practices. The WOOD 8 story was more detailed in that is noted that Coke had ties to Paramilitary groups in Colombia. According to the Killer Coke campaign, eight union organizers at Colombian Coke bottling plants have been killed by Paramilitary groups, and Hundreds of other Coke workers have been tortured, kidnapped and/or illegally detained. The WZZM 13 piece does mention that complaints have been leveled at Cokes plants in Inda as well but does not give any specifics. According to an article by Michael Blanding of the Nation, Coke bottling plants in India have lead to polluted and depleted water supplies.
Story:
WOOD 8 Newsreader – University of Michigan will buy Coca Cola again. U of M has agreed to resume the purchase of Coca Cola products. At least 12 schools that had joined a coke-boycott. They stopped buying Coca Cola products for vending machines in residence halls, cafeterias and campus restaurants on January 1st over allegations that the company commits human rights and environmental abuses overseas. In Columbia labor groups have accused the company in conspiring with right wing paramilitary groups to harass and harm workers.
—————————————-
WZZM 13 Newsreader The University of Michigan is welcoming Coca Cola to its campus. University officials dropped Coke purchases in December over the pop companys labor practices in India and Colombia. Today U of M officials said they were satisfied with plans for investigations into the soft drink companys practices. Michigan was one of twelve schools in the boycott against Coca Cola.
President Bush Blames Saddam Hussein for Iraq Violence
Analysis:
This story fails to consult any sources to verify President Bush’s claims about the situation in Iraq. Does President Bush provide any proof that “terrorists” and “former regime elements” are behind the violence in Iraq? The viewer would not know based on this excerpt, nor does WOOD TV 8 provide any independent investigation of this claim.
Story:
WOOD 8 Newsreader – President Bush blames Saddam Hussein for much of the violence in Iraq-not the US presence there. In his third speech in Iraq this month, he said insurgents are using Saddam’s tactics as they kill and terrorize Iraqis and exploit sectarian divisions.
Bush – Today, some Americans are asking why Iraqi people are having such a hard time building a democracy. The reason is that the terrorists and former regime elements are exploiting the wounds inflicted under Saddam’s tyranny.
Length: 38 seconds
Framing the Minimum Wage Debate
Analysis:
This story frames the issue of the minimum wage by reinforcing the perception that minimum wage earners are primarily young people or people In entry level positions. The fact that 40% of the people earning the minimum wage are the sole breadwinner in their families is brushed aside at the beginning of the story as the reporter focuses exclusively on student workers. A spokesperson from Calvin college is interviewed on the impact that raising the wages paid to student workers will have on the school budget. While the school administrator notes that this increased cost may cause cuts to be made in other places, the costs of the new minimum wage are never put in relation to the total school budget. It is noted that the increase will cost the college $ 250,000. The total budget of Calvin College is approximately 83 million a year. That means this cost increase represents .3% of the total school budget.
Also worth pointing out is the misleading bar graph included in this story. By starting the vertical axis at $5 rather than 0, the graph gives the impression that the minimum wage increase is actually greater than it really is. Also problematic is that the values on the vertical axis go from 5 to 7 to 8, using the same distance to represent two different values.
Story:
WZZM 13 Newsreader For the first time in nine years thousands of Michigan workers will get a raise. Today the governor signed a minimum wage increase into law. Itll go from five dollars and fifteen cents an hour, to six dollars and ninety five cents an hour in October of this year. Then, in July of 2007, it will increase again to seven fifteen, and in July on 2008, it will go up to seven forty and hour. Thats a total increase of two dollars and twenty-five cents. WZZM 13s Amy fox has more on what the change will mean for one segment of our society, colleges and universities.
Reporter Juliet, according to the group Michigan Needs a Raise, forty percent of workers who earn minimum wage are the sole bread winners for their families, meaning most are not. But that doesnt mean they cant use the money.
Reporter Luke Eising works at the cafeteria in Calvin College.
Luke Eising (college student) A lot of times I do, its called beverage salad, I carry milks and stuff, uh, run line.
Reporter He and his fellow student workers earn just more than the minimum wage.
Student worker I earn 5.65 for now.
Reporter Theyre happy to know theyll get a raise, 6.95 starting in October.
Luke Eising – Sounds pretty good to me, I wont lie. I like the idea.
Reporter Almost fifteen hundred Calvin students work on Campus, which means their raise will cost the school quite a bit.
Henry DeVries (Calvin Vice President of Finance) The minimum case scenario for Calvin next year will be about two hundred and twenty five thousand dollars, and that would be if we simply raise anyone whos below minimum wage to the minimum wage on the first of October. If we raise the entire wage scale by one point eight, a dollar eighty, then this could mean about a million and a half to about a million and three quarter dollars next year.
Reporter Which could mean cuts in other areas. Calvin vice President Henry DeVries says the school still needs to decide just how much of a raise all students earning more than the minimum wage will get, he realizes the importance of helping students afford higher education.
Melanie Venema (student worker) I use all this money as much as I can to pay my tuition and my rent and stuff here.
Reporter So these student workers are thankful for the minimum wage raise.
Reporter Governor Granholm will be in West Michigan tomorrow evening to attend a rally regarding the minimum wage at the Kent-Ionia labor council. Shell also be live on WZZM 13 News at Six.
Total time: 2 minutes, 26 seconds
Immigration March brings out thousands
Analysis:
Even though the focus of the march is on House bill 4437, no details of the legislation were provided by channel 8. The Channel 8 reporter only referred to the legislation as a bill to deal with illegal immigration and border security. But the legislation is more complicated than those 2 issues and those issues are not addressed in the coverage.
Viewers do here from one of the marchers and one of the organizers on channel 8. The issues that are addressed are that families would be separated if the legislation went through and that people who have a relationship with undocumented migrants would also be at risk of arrest. The channel 8 story has Rep. Pete Hoekstra speaking first, since he supported the House bill, and his comments are focused on border security. What is interesting is that channel 8 doesn’t ask why so many people are willing to risk coming into the country without papers in the first place, nor the fact that many people took the day off from work to participate in the march. Another thing to think about is the fact that most people that were there are Spanish speaking, so the local news was limited in who they could speak to for perspective. How much more coverage could be provided if there were bi-lingual reporters or at least translators for the reporters?
Story:
WOOD 8 Newsreader A lot of activity in the streets of Grand Rapids this afternoon. Thousands of people protesting proposed changes to immigration laws. 24 hour News 8 political reporter Rick Albin joining us live from Calder Plaza now, Rick.
Reporter Well with the warm sun and the bright blue sky as a background, thousands of people started marching from Calder, er, rather from Garfield Park here to Calder Plaza. They were objecting to changes that many believe will take place in immigration laws, but despite what they believe, in Washington its much less clear. What Washington may ultimately do is far less certain than the objections that the big group expressed here today.
Reporter With signs and flags and chants they hit the streets. The message is clear, no to house bill 4437. Thats a bill the lower chamber passed to deal with illegal immigration and border security.
Peter Hoekstra What the house passed was we passed border security, put a tremendous number of additional resources on our southern and northern borders to ah provide us with a higher degree of assurance that we are only letting people into the country who were going to come here legally.
Reporter But the house bill is more stringent than at least one in the senate and does not include a temporary or guest worker provision, something Hoekstra would like to see. The house bill would make being here illegally a criminal offence, and that concerns the organizer of todays event.
Gloria Berdezco (Protest organizer) – Everybody who has relationships with undocumented people, they are going to be criminalized together with the undocumented people. That will mean separated families in the whole countries.
Reporter 4437 would also provide penalties for employers who hire undocumented workers. But the question of what to do with an estimated ten to fifteen million people already here illegally creates a lot of passion.
Protester – A lot of people would have to back to their countries, and yeah, were not criminals so, we dont want that because in the first place we came here because its a free country.
Reporter Literally in the time that story was on the air, we have learned that the Senate judiciary committee has approved some type of immigration language. Now thats just the judiciary committee, itll still have to go to the full Senate and very likely will have to go to a conference committee with that house bill that we mentioned. But that action did take place in the past five minutes or so, and 24 hour News eight will continue to stay on top of this story to bring you those details and tell you exactly what the outcome will be. Live on the Calder Plaza, Rick Albin, 24 hours News 8.
Total time: 2 minutes 31 seconds
Presenting Propaganda as News
Analysis:
This piece starts by asking the question of “imagine what it must be like for those folks who have to live amid all that chaos.” One would expect that after asking this question, the story would focus on the lives of ordinary Iraqis, possibly interviewing a few of them. Rather, the story proceeds by reporting that two public service announcements are running on Iraqi TV praising Iraqi police and condemning the “terrorists.” The reporter is unable to say who made the PSA’s, saying that they might be “the work of US contractors who have been commissioned to influence public opinion” but that “the Pentagon wont say.” The story then jumps to a clip of Vice President Dick Cheney saying “If theyre (the Democrats) competent to fight this war then I ought to be singing on American Idol.” It should be pointed out that American Idol is a show on FOX 17, so this clip is essentially product placement for FOX 17 programming. The piece ends with a mention that Russia provided Iraq with intelligence before the US invasion. No context or details are provided on this point.
This piece is essentially three unrelated topics pertaining to Iraq thrown together in one news story. The only unifying factor is that non of these three topics address the question that the news story starts with,”what is life like for the people of Iraq?”
Story:
WXMI Newsreader At least fifty more people have been reported killed in Iraq including two US soldiers. On a more positive note, Iraqs president predicts a new unity government could be in place by the end of the month. FOX 17s Grant Rampy is at the Pentagon tonight with the latest.
Reporter Well lately weve heard a lot more bad news than good from that part of the world; imagine what it must be like for those folks who have to live amid all that chaos. Many Iraqis dont have to wait for the evening news to see evidence of the war raging all around them, they need only step outside. But new public service announcements running on Iraqi TV try to cast the violence in a new light. In this PSA, a small boy speaks with pride about his father, a police officer.
PSA (Translated) The other day he was caught between innocent Iraqis and the terrorists. He used all his bullets to finish all the criminals off.
Reporter The ads closes, our police officers are the knights of Iraq, a second message salutes Iraqs diversity warning terrorist cant divide us. Its unclear whether this is the work of US contractors who have been commissioned to influence public opinion, the Pentagon wont say. Then there is this ad, which makes use of a childs simple drawings, a young voice addresses insurgents asking
PSA (translated) Why do you hate your country? We have no electricity at school because you destroyed the power house. At home we have no heating because you bombed the oil pipelines. Youre greedy and selfish and dont care about us children or our families.
Reporter With no sign that the recent wave of violent attacks here is about to die down, the White House is firing back at critics. To democrats who accuse the administration of incompetence, the vice president jokes
Cheney If theyre competent to fight this war then I ought to be singing on American Idol.
Reporter And a stunning disclosure today has officials here scratching their heads. A new report suggests, Russian spies gave US secrets to Saddam Hussein before the war began. Its intelligence he reportedly ignored, still, questions abound. How did the Russians get the intel, and why did they pass it along? At the Pentagon, Grant Rampy, FOX 17 News at 10.
Total Time: 2 minutes 5 seconds
Media Coverage of the War in Iraq
This weekend marks the 3rd anniversary of the beginning of the US War/Occupation of Iraq. GRIID has been monitoring this coverage from the beginning and is pleased to join forces with Media Channel and United for Peace and Justice to demand better news coverage of the war in Iraq. Recent polling indicates that the majority of Americans are in favor of a withdraw of US troops with growing opposition to the war. However, the local news media continues to provide inadequate coverage of what is happening in Iraqi. It is of vital importance that citizens communicate to the local news outlets with the following talking points:
The U.S. news media has an obligation to reflect on the role it has played in building a pro-war consensus with false and deceptive reporting, what TIME magazine calls mili-tainment and group think in the pervasive use of conservative pundits and experts led by current and former government officials, and virtually no coverage of extensive civilian casualties and the suffering of Iraqi society because of the U.S. occupation.
The coverage remains one-sided All about us and excludes anti-war voices from citizens and anti-war groups all over the world.
We need to hear more from the Iraqi people!
Reports That Question Official Claims – We need more aggressive reporting, not just official stenography just repeating official sources.
Independent Assessments of Political Developments – Lets hear from international experts, not just pro-war pundits.
Stop Sanitizing the war show the American people what the consequences of war really are.
Follow-up on Corruption Investigations – There have been reports on billion-dollar financial scandals to defense contractors, but little follow-up. How is our tax money being squandered? Tell us.
Previous GRIID Iraq War Studies
Searching for the Smoking Gun 2003
Reporting Official Positions 2004
Violence, Soldier Deaths and Omissions 2005
PDF of data for 2006
Contact:
Grand Rapids Press
Mike Lloyd
Phone #: (616) 222-5455
WOOD TV 8
News Director: Patti McGettigan
Phone #: 771-9366
E-mail: patti.mcgettigan@woodtv.com
WXMI FOX 17
News Director: Tim Dye
Phone #: (616) 364-1717
E-mail: tdye@wxmi.com
WZZM 13
News Director: Tim Geraghty
Phone #: (616) 785-1313
E-mail: tgeraght@wzzm.gannett.com
War Reporting Still Mostly Stenography

Analysis:
This story is about defense Secretary Donald Rumsfelds press conference in which he criticizes media coverage of the violence in Iraq following the bombing of a Shiite Mosque. In the story, Rumsfeld’s voice is theonly one presented. The does the reporter present any critical look at Rumsfelds statement in piece. The defense secretary doesnt just disagree with reports that Iraq is on the cusp of civil war, he says that these reports give heart to terrorists and discourage those that hope for success in Iraq, a statement which infers an anti-US agenda on the part of these reports. Rather than challenge that claim, the FOX 17 story essentially affirms it by following Rumfeld’s comment with Its not just reporters. No other voices are presented in the story and other than some poll numbers, no background information is presented as well.
Story:
FOX 17 Newsreader – Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld said reporters are exaggerating the possibility of civil war in Iraq. Today he accused the media of overstating the seriousness of the current situation in Iraq. Following the terrorist attack on that Shiite Mosque and hundreds of retaliation killings that followed. He based his accusation on military reports that say the level isn’t growing.
Rumsfeld – A steady stream of errors all seem to be of a nature to inflame the situation and to give heart to the terrorists and to discourage those that hope for success in Iraq.
Newsreader – But it’s not just reporters; Iraqi officials and the US ambassador to Iraq have all gone on record saying conditions are ripe for civil war. And according to a new poll released today by the Washington Post, 80 percent of Americans now believe that civil war is likely, that’s across partisan lines.
Total Time: 48 seconds
Guantanamo Detainee Information
Analysis:
The story is based on an Associated Press request to get government documents declassified on the identity of the prisoners being held at Guantanamo Bay since the later part of 2001. Hundreds of pages of documents were released on who was being held in the prison under the category of enemy combatant, which the US administration says deprives the prisoners of Geneva Convention prisoner of war protections. A US military spokesperson said that personal information on detainees was withheld solely to protect detainee privacy and their own security. No one else was cited in this story, just an excerpt from a testimony from one of the prisoners.
As you can see more than half of the original AP story was omitted from the Press version. The major points of that content were that more details on some of the detainees and more commentary from the US military on why they wanted to keep the names classified. There is one sentence in the original AP story that reads Human-rights monitors say keeping identities of prisoners secret can lead to abuses and deprive their families of information about their fate. According to the Center for Constitutional Rights, a group that has been providing legal counsel to detainees “The evidence shows the government’s despicable torture of detainees has produced worthless information. Since the majority of detainees are not even affiliated with Al Qaeda, it is no wonder that they have few relevant facts to provide. After four years of illegal detentions and abuse, the government has failed to prove a legal, moral or security rationale for these actions. The new revelations confirm this failure, and it is time for comprehensive scrutiny and accountability of the Guantánamo detentions. Readers should ask themselves why the issue of prisoner abuse was omitted from the story, especially when the US military claims were to protect the prisoner privacy and security.
Story:
Detainee information released
By MIRANDA LEITSINGER and BEN FOX
GUANTÁNAMO BAY NAVAL BASE, Cuba The Pentagon says he had a rocket-propelled grenade launcher in his house.
Zahir Shah says he had only a rifle for protection against a cousin in a family feud and the only time he shot anything was when he hunted with a BB gun.
“What are we going to do with RPGs?” he asks, adding: “The only thing I did in Afghanistan was farming. … We grew wheat, corn, vegetables and watermelons.”
Shah’s is one of hundreds of stories contained in thousands of pages of transcripts released Friday by the Pentagon after four years of secrecy about exactly who it was holding in the U.S. military prison at Guantánamo Bay. A Freedom of Information Act lawsuit by The Associated Press forced the Pentagon to release the documents, which contain the names, hometowns and other information about detainees that the Bush administration had previously not made public.
A federal judge rejected administration arguments that releasing the identities would violate detainees’ privacy and could endanger them and their families.
The names were scattered throughout 5,000 pages of hearings transcripts, but no complete list was given and it was unclear how many names the documents contained. In most of the transcripts, the person speaking is identified only as “detainee.” Names appear only when court officials or detainees refer to people by name.
The men were mostly captured during the 2001 U.S.-led war that drove the Taliban from power in Afghanistan and sent Osama bin Laden deeper into hiding, and the newly released documents shed light on some of the detainees’ explanations.
Most of the Guantánamo Bay hearings were held to determine whether the detainees were “enemy combatants.”
That classification, Bush administration lawyers say, deprives the detainees of Geneva Conventions prisoner-of-war protections and allows them to be held indefinitely without charges.
“Personal information on detainees was withheld solely to protect detainee privacy and for their own security,” said Lt. Cmdr. Chito Peppler.
Text from the original article ommitted from the Grand Rapids Press version:
Human-rights monitors say keeping identities of prisoners secret can lead to abuses and deprive their families of information about their fate. About 490 prisoners are being held at Guantánamo Bay; only 10 have been charged with a crime.
In some cases, even having the name didn’t clarify the identity. In one document, the tribunal president asks a detainee if his name is Jumma Jan. The detainee responds that no, his name is Zain Ul Abedin.
In another document, a detainee identified as Abdul Hakim Bukhary denies he is a member of al-Qaida but acknowledges he traveled from his native Saudi Arabia to Afghanistan to fight U.S. forces and says he met bin Laden about 15 years ago while fighting Russians in Afghanistan.
He praises his captors for running a good prison. “Prisoners here are in paradise,” he says. “American people are very good. Really. They give us three meals. Fruit juice and everything!” Still, he says, he wants to return to his family.
It was not clear whether Shah and Bukhary are still being held. The documents do not name all current and former Guantánamo Bay detainees. And even when detainees are named, the documents do not make clear whether they have since been released.
The documents contain the names of some former prisoners, such as Moazzam Begg and Feroz Ali Abbasi, both British citizens. A handwritten note shows Abbasi pleading for prisoner-of-war status.
Documents released last year also because of an Associated Press Freedom of Information Act lawsuit included transcripts of 317 hearings, but had the detainees’ names and nationalities blacked out. The current documents are the same ones; this time, uncensored.
A U.S. military spokesman at Guantánamo Bay said the Pentagon was uneasy about handing over the transcripts.
He said the Defense Department remains concerned that the disclosure “could result in retribution or harm to the detainees or their families.”
Buz Eisenberg, a lawyer for a detainee, said he hopes the uncensored documents can help clear his client. “We have been trying to litigate a case without ever knowing what the allegations were that the government claimed justified his continued detention,” Eisenberg said.
Eisenberg did not want to name his client because he had not asked the man for permission. The documents could shed light on the scope of an insurgency still battling U.S. troops in Afghanistan, in part by detailing how Muslims from many countries wound up fighting alongside the Taliban there.
Abdul Gappher, an ethnic Uighur, says he traveled from China to Afghanistan, passing through Pakistan and Kyrgyzstan, in June 2001 to “get some training to fight back against the Chinese government.” But he denied doing anything against the United States. He was captured in Pakistan and said Pakistani police officers “sold us to the U.S. government.”
U.S. District Judge Jed Rakoff of New York ruled in favor of the AP last week, a major development in a protracted legal battle. In the ongoing litigation, the AP has also asked the Pentagon to release a complete list of all detainees ever held at the prison on a U.S. Navy base in eastern Cuba.
Some of the testimony seemed bound to embarrass the military. Abbasi complains that on two occasions, military police officers had sex in front of him, while others tried to feed him “a hot plate of pork,” food banned by the Islamic faith.
Some, he said, misled him into praying north toward the United States rather than toward Mecca as Muslims are required to do. Like the other detainees, Abbasi wasn’t allowed to see classified evidence against him. He repeatedly cited international law in arguing that he was unfairly classified as an enemy combatant.
An Air Force colonel whose identity remains blacked out would have none of it. “Mr. Abbasi, your conduct is unacceptable and this is your absolute final warning. I do not care about international law. I do not want to hear the words international law again. We are not concerned about international law,” the colonel says. Then he has Abbasi removed from the courtroom.
Last year, Judge Rakoff ordered the government to ask each detainee whether he or she wanted personal identifying information to be turned over to the AP as part of the lawsuit.
Of 317 detainees who received the form, 63 said yes, 17 said no, 35 returned the form without answering and 202 declined to return the form.