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Attorneys sue to keep 10 migrants, including Pakistani, out of Guantanamo Bay

Attorneys sue to keep 10 migrants, including Pakistani, out of Guantanamo Bay
In this photo reviewed by US military officials, flags fly at half-staff at Camp Justice in Guantanamo Bay Naval Base in Cuba on Aug. 29, 2021. (AP/File)
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Updated 02 March 2025

Attorneys sue to keep 10 migrants, including Pakistani, out of Guantanamo Bay

Attorneys sue to keep 10 migrants, including Pakistani, out of Guantanamo Bay
  • Out of 10, seven men are from Venezuela, others from Afghanistan, Bangladesh and Pakistan
  • As per the lawsuit, Afghan and Pakistani migrants came to US fleeing threats from Taliban 

Civil rights attorneys sued the Trump administration Saturday to prevent it from transferring 10 migrants detained in the US to Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and filed statements from men held there who said they were mistreated there in conditions that of one of them called “a living hell.”

The federal lawsuit came less than a month after the same attorneys sued for access to migrants who were already detained at the naval base in Cuba after living in the US illegally. Both cases are backed by the American Civil Liberties Union and filed in Washington.

The attorneys also filed statements translated from Spanish into English from two men still held at Guantanamo Bay, four men held there in February and sent back to Venezuela, and a Venezuelan migrant sent back to Texas. 

The men said they were kept in small, windowless cells, with lights on around the clock, hindering sleep, and had inadequate food and medical care. One man reported attempting suicide there, and two said they knew of others’ attempts. The men said migrants were verbally and physically abused by staffers.

“It was easy to lose the will to live,” said Raul David Garcia, a former Guantanamo detainee sent back to Venezuela. “I had been kidnapped in Mexico before, and at least my captors there told me their names.”

Another former detainee sent back to Venezuela, Jonathan Alejandro Alviares Armas, reported that fellow detainees were sometimes denied water or “tied up in a chair outside our cells for up to several hours” as punishment, including for protesting conditions.

“Guantanamo is a living hell,” he said.

In another, separate federal lawsuit filed in New Mexico, a federal judge on Feb. 9 blocked the transfer of three immigrants from Venezuela being held in that state to Guantanamo Bay.
Trump says Guantanamo Bay can hold thousands of ‘the worst’.

The White House and the Defense and Homeland Security departments did not immediately respond to emails Saturday seeking comment about the latest lawsuit. The two agencies are among the defendants.

Trump has promised mass deportations of immigrants living in the US illegally and has said Guantanamo Bay, also known as “Gitmo,” has space for up to 30,000 of them.

He also has said he plans to send “the worst” or high-risk “criminal aliens” to the base in Cuba. The administration has not released specific information on who is being transferred, so it is not clear what crimes they are accused of committing in the US and whether they have been convicted in court, or merely been charged or arrested.

At least 50 migrants have been transferred already to Guantanamo Bay, and the civil rights attorneys believe the number now may be about 200. They have said it is the first time in US history that the government has detained noncitizens on civil immigration charges there. For decades, the naval base was primarily used to detain foreigners associated with the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.

A separate military detention center once held 800 people, but that number has dwindled to 15, including 9/11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed. Critics have said for years that the center is notorious for poor conditions for detainees. A 2023 report from a United Nations inspector said detainees faced “ongoing cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment,” though the US rejected much of her criticism.

Migrants say they were tortured or threatened before coming to the US

The 10 men involved in the latest lawsuit came to the US in 2023 or 2024, seven from Venezuela, and the others from Afghanistan, Bangladesh and Pakistan.

The lawsuit said the Afghan and Pakistani migrants were fleeing threats from the Taliban, and two of the Venezuelans had been tortured by the government there for their political views. One of the Venezuelans, Walter Estiver Salazar, said government officials kidnapped him after he refused to follow an order to cut off his town’s electricity.

“The officials beat me, suffocated me, and eventually shot me,” he said. “I barely survived.”

Salazar said he had been convicted in the US of driving under the influence, “which I deeply regret,” while another of the Venezuelans said charges against him tied to a domestic dispute had been dropped. 

The men’s attorneys allege that many of the people who have been sent to Guantanamo Bay do not have serious criminal records or even any criminal history.

Four Venezuelans said they had been falsely accused of being gang members based on their tattoos, including one who said his tattoo was of a Catholic rosary.

Transfer to Guantanamo violates constitutional right, attorneys say.

The latest lawsuit contends that the transfers violate the men’s right to due legal process, guaranteed by the Fifth Amendment to the US Constitution.

The lawsuit also argues that federal immigration law bars the transfer of non-Cuban migrants from the US to Guantanamo Bay; that the US government has no authority to hold people outside its territory; and the naval base remains part of Cuba legally. The transfers are also described as arbitrary.

Their first lawsuit, filed Feb. 12, said Guantanamo Bay detainees had “effectively disappeared into a black box” and couldn’t contact attorneys or family. The Department of Homeland Security said they could reach attorneys by phone.

One of the formerly detained Venezuelans, Yoiker David Sequera, said he was permitted to make one phone call to the ACLU, but when he asked to speak with his family, he was told “it was not possible.”

 A current detainee, Tilso Ramon Gomez Lugo, said that for two weeks he was not able to communicate “with anyone in the outside world” until he was allowed to make a single call to attorneys.

The lawsuit also argues that Guantanamo Bay “does not have the infrastructure” to hold even the 10 men. Garcia said a part of the base for migrants like him known as Camp 6, where he was confined, seemed “prepared at the last minute” and was “not even finished.”

“It was freezing, and I felt like chicken trapped in an incubator,” he said.


Pakistan bans TLP religio-political party under Anti-Terrorism Act after violent clashes

Pakistan bans TLP religio-political party under Anti-Terrorism Act after violent clashes
Updated 5 sec ago

Pakistan bans TLP religio-political party under Anti-Terrorism Act after violent clashes

Pakistan bans TLP religio-political party under Anti-Terrorism Act after violent clashes
  • Violent clashes between Tehreek-e-Labbaik Pakistan and police took place in Punjab earlier this month during a planned protest march
  • Known for street mobilization and confrontational politics, TLP has repeatedly staged mass sit-ins and marches to Islamabad since 2017

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s interior ministry on Friday notified a ban on the Tehreek-e-Labbaik Pakistan (TLP) religiopolitical party, declaring it a proscribed organization under the Anti-Terrorism Act.

The development came a day after the federal cabinet unanimously approved a summary to ban the party following violent clashes between TLP supporters and law enforcement personnel, mainly in the country’s most populous Punjab province, earlier this month. The party said its march toward Islamabad was for peaceful purposes and was intended to culminate in a sit-in outside the US Embassy in Islamabad to demonstrate solidarity with Gaza.

The Punjab government announced last Friday it had formally approved a recommendation to ban the TLP and sent it to the federal government for final enforcement. Punjab’s move came days thousands of TLP supporters clashed with police on the outskirts of Lahore on their way to Islamabad. The clashes killed five people, including two policemen, and injured more than 100 cops and dozens of protesters.

On Thursday, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif presided over a meeting of the federal cabinet in which the interior ministry had submitted the summary to ban the TLP on behalf of the Punjab government, according to Sharif’s office. Senior Punjab government officials took part in the cabinet meeting, which was briefed on the “violent and terrorist” activities of the TLP across the country.

“The federal government has reasonable grounds to believe that Tehreek-e-Labbaik Pakistan (TLP) is connected with and concerned in terrorism,” the Pakistani interior ministry said in a notification issued on Friday.

“Therefore, in exercise of the powers conferred by Section 11B(1)(a) of the Anti-Terrorism Act, 1997, the federal government hereby orders Tehreek-e-Labbaik (TLP) to be a proscribed organization for the purpose of the Act.”

This is not the first time the government has decided to ban the TLP. The federal government outlawed the group in April 2021 under the same Anti-Terrorism Act, following a wave of violent anti-France protests that left several police officers dead.

However, the ban was lifted just months later in November 2021, after Islamabad negotiated a deal with the party to end its march toward the capital.

Authorities say police are now searching for TLP leader Saad Rizvi, who went into hiding after the clashes erupted on Oct. 13, when protesters tried to remove shipping containers placed by police to block roads to halt their rally.

Officials have said the demonstrators had been determined since Oct. 10 to stage a pro-Palestinian rally outside the US Embassy in Islamabad, and police repeatedly came under attack by the demonstrators with batons, rocks and guns.

TLP’S RISE

The TLP, led by its chief Saad Hussain Rizvi, is known for its street mobilization and confrontational politics. The party has repeatedly staged mass sit-ins and marches to Islamabad since its rise in 2017. Previous protests have often turned violent, resulting in extended clashes with police and days-long disruption of traffic on key highways leading to the capital.

TLP has its ideological roots in Barelvi Islam, a mainstream sect traditionally seen as moderate but for which blasphemy is a red line. It was formed in 2015 by Rizvi’s wheelchair-bound father, Khadim Hussain Rizvi, known for his fiery speeches and harsh criticism of political opponents.

The party started making waves in 2016 when it protested the execution of Mumtaz Qadri, a bodyguard who assassinated the governor of Punjab over his stance on blasphemy.

The TLP bagged 2.2 million votes in the 2018 national elections, mostly from the easter Punjab province, and won two provincial seats in southern Sindh. It also emerged as the third-largest party in Punjab, behind former prime minister Imran

Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) and ex-premier Nawaz Sharif’s Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N).

According to Gallup Pakistan, over 2.89 million people voted for the far-right party in the 2024 national elections, 0.76 million more compared to the 2018 polls.


At Islamabad summit, PM showcases Pakistan as regional tri-junction for enhanced cooperation

At Islamabad summit, PM showcases Pakistan as regional tri-junction for enhanced cooperation
Updated 39 min 9 sec ago

At Islamabad summit, PM showcases Pakistan as regional tri-junction for enhanced cooperation

At Islamabad summit, PM showcases Pakistan as regional tri-junction for enhanced cooperation
  • Pakistan’s coastline makes its ports key transit points, linking China, Central Asia and the broader Middle East
  • Shehbaz Sharif says Islamabad also investing in digital infrastructure to catch up with 4th industrial revolution

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Friday underscored Pakistan’s strategic position as a regional tri-junction connecting China, Central Asia and the Middle East, emphasizing the country’s potential to drive greater trade, transport and digital cooperation across the wider region.

Sharif’s comments came during his address with attendees at a regional transport ministers’ conference in Islamabad, which brought together officials from neighboring countries to discuss infrastructure, trade and cross-border cooperation.

The prime minister said Pakistan’s long coastline makes its ports key transit points on the Maritime Silk Road, a maritime section of the historic Silk Road that connected Asia, Indian subcontinent, Arabian Peninsula and Africa, and Europe.

“Our geography links the warm waters of the Arabian Sea and the Arabian Gulf, traversing the majestic Karakoram and Himalayan [mountain] range and flowing through the timeless Indus Valley,” he said.

“We are at the confluence of China, the Eurasian land bridge and the Middle East — a unique tri-junction of economic corridors connecting China, Central Asia and the broader Middle East.”

The summit comes at a time when Pakistan is trying boost trade and investment by establishing itself as a regional transit hub. In recent years, Islamabad has undertaken several trade, regional connectivity and energy initiatives such as the

Uzbekistan-Afghanistan-Pakistan Railway Framework Agreement, the Istanbul-Tehran-Islamabad corridor, and the CASA-1000 and TAP-500 electricity transmission projects.

Sharif shared that his government has been working on these initiatives to enhance regional connectivity, adding that these projects offer a “great opportunity” to revolutionize cross-border trade.

“I am confident that these mega projects would synergize the economic strength of regional countries and usher in a new era of enhanced trade, economic cooperation and energy collaboration in the region, and of course, beyond,” the Pakistan premier said.

Pakistan has also been prioritizing digital trade platforms and e-port integration to create seamless, paperless and efficient flows, boosting efficiency, transparency and competitiveness.

In today’s digital age, Sharif noted, connectivity is not just limited to roads, railways and air links, but it has also evolved into data, innovation, research and development, and technological integration.

“Pakistan is investing in digital infrastructure to ensure that we are adequately equipped to catch up with the fourth industrial revolution around the globe,” he said.

Sharif noted that 60 percent of his country’s population ages between 15 and 30 years, which can be turned into its greatest asset if they are provided with ample opportunities in the fields of information technology, artificial intelligence, and vocational training.

“We don’t have black gold, but we have our youth as our greatest asset, which will become the harbinger of Pakistan’s speedy progress and prosperity in times to come,” he added.


Over 1,000 Chinese, Indians, Pakistanis enter Thailand from Myanmar after scam hub raid

Over 1,000 Chinese, Indians, Pakistanis enter Thailand from Myanmar after scam hub raid
Updated 24 October 2025

Over 1,000 Chinese, Indians, Pakistanis enter Thailand from Myanmar after scam hub raid

Over 1,000 Chinese, Indians, Pakistanis enter Thailand from Myanmar after scam hub raid
  • Sprawling cyberscam hubs, where fraudsters swindle victims through online cons, have flourished along Myanmar’s loosely governed border during years-long civil war
  • While some scammers are trafficked into the often-fortified compounds, experts say others work voluntarily in hopes to earn more in the multibillion-dollar illicit industry

Bangkok: More than 1,000 people, mostly Chinese, have fled from Myanmar into Thailand this week, Thai authorities said on Friday, after the Myanmar military raided one of the country’s largest scam centers.

Sprawling cyberscam hubs, where fraudsters swindle victims through online cons, have flourished along Myanmar’s loosely governed border during its years-long civil war.

While some scammers are trafficked into the often-fortified compounds, experts say others work voluntarily, hoping to earn more in the multibillion-dollar illicit industry than they can at home.

Thailand’s Tak provincial office said 1,049 people had crossed from Myanmar into Mae Sot district from Wednesday to Friday morning — up from the 677 who had fled the KK Park scam compound as of Thursday morning.

Nationals from India, Pakistan, Vietnam, Myanmar, Thailand and more than a dozen other countries were among them, the office said in a statement.

Thailand’s Immigration Bureau said most of the arrivals were Chinese and men.

Myanmar’s junta said Monday it raided KK Park, located just across the border from Thailand, and seized Starlink satellite Internet devices.

An AFP investigation revealed last week that the use of the devices had grown rapidly at the compounds in recent months.

Elon Musk’s SpaceX, which operates Starlink, said Wednesday that it had disabled more than 2,500 Starlink Internet devices at Myanmar’s scam centers.

Sawanit Suriyakul Na Ayutthaya, deputy governor of Tak province, told AFP on Friday that authorities believed most of those who had entered Thailand were from KK Park, but they were still investigating.

He said Thursday that the arrivals would be screened to determine whether they were victims of human trafficking.

Otherwise, they could be prosecuted for illegal border crossing, he said.

Footage from public broadcaster Thai PBS on Thursday showed people using foam boxes to float across the river to Thailand.

“I was sleeping when I heard loud knocking and people shouting at us in Chinese,” a Thai woman told the broadcaster. “They were carrying guns.”

Authorities in Tak released an image showing a group of men sitting on the ground beside luggage and a line of Thai security personnel.


Pakistan’s Punjab warns of rise in smog levels in coming days

Pakistan’s Punjab warns of rise in smog levels in coming days
Updated 24 October 2025

Pakistan’s Punjab warns of rise in smog levels in coming days

Pakistan’s Punjab warns of rise in smog levels in coming days
  • The statement came as Lahore ranked the most polluted city in the world at around 12pm on Friday, with an air quality index of 217
  • Vulnerable populations, including children, elderly and people with pre-existing health conditions, are at high risk, authority says

ISLAMABAD: The Provincial Disaster Management Authority (PDMA) in Pakistan’s Punjab province has warned of a rise in smog levels in major cities in the coming days, citing stable and dry weather conditions.

Cold, heavy air traps pollutants, including vehicle emissions, industrial smoke and dust, from November to mid-December. The seasonal crisis is often exacerbated by crop residue burning and lasts until February.

Lahore, a city of around 14 million people and the capital of Pakistan’s most populous Punjab province, this month began using anti-smog guns for the first time in an effort to reduce airborne pollutants.

On Friday, the PDMA said calm wind pattern, lower temperatures and humidity may prevent pollutants from dispersing and causing thick layers of smog in Lahore, Gujranwala, Sheikhupura, Kasur, Nankana Sahib, Faisalabad, Multan, Bahawalpur, Rahim Yar Khan, Bahawalnagar and Khanpur districts.

“The rise in smog levels may trigger an increase in respiratory illnesses, asthma cases, and other pollution-related health problems,” the authority said.

“Vulnerable populations, including children, the elderly, and people with pre-existing health conditions, are at high risk.”

The statement came as Lahore ranked the most polluted city in the world at around 12pm on Friday, with an air quality index (AQI) of 217, according to air quality monitor IQ Air.

Poor air quality can cause reduced visibility on roads, leading to a surge in traffic accidents, according to the PDMA. Outdoor activities can also be disrupted.

“Clear any hindrances on road to ensure smooth traffic flow,” it directed district administrations.

“Ensure sufficient staffing round-the-clock in DEOCS (district emergency operations centers) for effective coordination and coordinate with PDMA and all relevant departments to ensure a unified prompt response. Ensure accurate and timely dissemination of information on safety measures and evacuation plans through electronic and social media.”


At UN, Pakistan voices concern over rising Islamophobia worldwide, urges respect for diversity

At UN, Pakistan voices concern over rising Islamophobia worldwide, urges respect for diversity
Updated 24 October 2025

At UN, Pakistan voices concern over rising Islamophobia worldwide, urges respect for diversity

At UN, Pakistan voices concern over rising Islamophobia worldwide, urges respect for diversity
  • Pakistani representative says the ‘weaponization of religion’ and marginalization of minorities not only violate human rights but also endanger development and peace
  • The international community must act with solidarity and ‘moral clarity’ to counter these dangerous trends, hold perpetrators accountable, Counsellor Saima Saleem says

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan on Friday voiced concern over rising Islamophobia worldwide at an interactive dialogue at the United Nations (UN), demanding world action and urging respect for diversity.

The Interactive Dialogue with Special Rapporteur on Minority Issues is an event held within the UN General Assembly’s Third Committee, where states and experts discuss the rights and protections of minority groups.

Recent dialogues have featured discussions on rising Islamophobia, the impact of discriminatory policies for minorities in certain countries, and the need for greater protection and promotion of minority rights. 

Speaking at the dialogue, Saima Saleem, a counsellor at Pakistan’s UN mission, said that respect for diversity and protection of minorities are indispensable for achieving peace, justice and inclusive development.

“We are gravely concerned over the rising tide of Islamophobia, intolerance and right-wing extremism targeting minorities, particularly Muslims worldwide,” she was quoted as saying by Pakistan’s UN mission.

“The weaponization of religion for political ends, the vilification of entire communities, and the systematic marginalization of Muslims in some regions are deeply alarming.”

Pakistan has played a leading role in raising global awareness about Islamophobia through its diplomatic efforts, particularly at the UN and the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC), highlighting that anti-Muslim sentiment not only undermines social harmony but also fuels extremism and hate crimes.

In 2022, the efforts by Islamabad, along with the OIC, led to the UN’s designation of March 15 as the International Day to Combat Islamophobia, marking a significant step toward global acknowledgment of this issue. Through these efforts, Pakistan continues to champion tolerance, coexistence and the right of Muslims everywhere to practice their faith without fear or prejudice.

Saleem said the “weaponization of religion” and systematic marginalization of minorities not only violate human rights but also endanger inclusive development and international peace.

The collective task of the international community is to transform diversity into strength, and difference into mutual respect, according to the Pakistani representative.

“The international community must act with solidarity and moral clarity to counter these dangerous trends, hold perpetrators accountable, and reaffirm that respect for diversity is a universal obligation, not a selective choice,” she said, pledging that

Islamabad would continue to play its role in promoting understanding, dialogue and peaceful coexistence among faiths and cultures.