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Samoud Khan

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(Redirected from Mousauwal Compound)

Samoud Khan (also known as Sammoud Khan, or Commander Sammoud) is an Afghan former militia commander from Logar Province.[1][2] He is said to have been a pro-American commander.[3]

Mousauwal Compound

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Samoud's Mousauwal Compound is notorious for its many young men having been detained, sexually abused and forced to work:

  • Asadullah Rahman, the youngest Guantanamo detainee, recounted being apprehended in Samoud's compound when it was raided by American troops.[1] Asadullah Rahman described being sold into servitude to Samoud, when he was about ten years old. By day he worked in Samoud's kitchen. Asadullah said that, by night, he was forced to perform sexual services for Samoud's men.[1]
  • Naqib Ullah was 14 when he was kidnapped, raped and enslaved in Samoud's compound.[4]
  • During his Combatant Status Review Tribunal a young Guantanamo detainee named Habib Rahman, who acknowledged working as a cook for Samoud, told his Tribunal that they could ask Samoud their questions himself, as he was still a prisoner in Bagram.[citation needed]
  • Another Guantanamo detainee, Mohabet Khan, said he was forcibly conscripted into Samoud's forces shortly before Samoud's compound was captured by the Americans.[citation needed]
  • A third Guantanamo detainee, Shardar Khan acknowledged working as a bodyguard for Samoud.[2] He testified that Samoud's local enemy was another militia leader named Abdul Ali, who had murdered Samoud's son.[citation needed]

The San Francisco Chronicle quoted Mohammed Sabir, a local police official who confirmed that "Commander Samoud" was not associated with the Taliban, that he was a simple criminal who terrorized the nearby villages, and whose gang numbered about thirty men.[1]

In 2003, an Afghan, Mohammed Khan, was detained in Guantanamo because of his knowledge of Samoud Khan's whereabouts.[citation needed]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d Sonia Verma (13 February 2004). "Boy, 12, recounts days as terror inmate: Youngest captive spent 17 months detained, a year at Guantanamo". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved 22 July 2009.
  2. ^ a b "Details of some hearings involving Guantanamo detainees". Jamaica Observer. 5 March 2006. Retrieved 22 July 2009. [dead link]
  3. ^ (Gopal 2014, p. 138)
  4. ^ Heidi Blake, Tim Ross, Conrad Quilty Harper, WikiLeaks: children among the innocent captured and sent to Guantanamo, Telegraph.co.uk, 26 April 2011

Bibliography

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