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.


Pair of bombings hours apart kill 8, wound 23 in southwest Pakistan

Pair of bombings hours apart kill 8, wound 23 in southwest Pakistan
Updated 18 September 2025

Pair of bombings hours apart kill 8, wound 23 in southwest Pakistan

Pair of bombings hours apart kill 8, wound 23 in southwest Pakistan
  • Two security personnel were killed, 23 injured in first attack in southwestern Turbat district, say police
  • Hours later, another car bomb exploded near Afghan border in southwestern city of Chaman, killing six

QUETTA, Pakistan: A pair of car bombings hours apart in Pakistan’s insurgency-hit southwest killed at least eight people and wounded about two dozen others on Thursday, officials said.

The first attack occurred in Turbat, a district in Balochistan province, when a suicide bomber rammed a vehicle into a security convoy, police official Elahi Bakhsh said. Two security personnel were killed, and 23 others were wounded in the attack, he said.

Hours later, another car bomb exploded near the Afghan border in the southwestern city of Chaman, killing six people, said government administrator Imtiaz Ali.

No group claimed responsibility for the attack. 

The latest attack came two weeks after a suicide bomber blew himself up outside a stadium as supporters of a nationalist party were leaving a rally near Quetta city, killing 13 people.

Pakistan has seen a surge in militant violence in recent years, with most attacks claimed by the Pakistani Taliban, who are known as Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan, or TTP. 

The outlawed Baloch Liberation Army and other separatist groups also often stage attacks in Balochistan. The province has long been the scene of a insurgency, with separatists demanding independence from the central government.


Pakistani sound engineer Taurees Habib reveals he won Grammy this year for Hollywood flick

Pakistani sound engineer Taurees Habib reveals he won Grammy this year for Hollywood flick
Updated 18 September 2025

Pakistani sound engineer Taurees Habib reveals he won Grammy this year for Hollywood flick

Pakistani sound engineer Taurees Habib reveals he won Grammy this year for Hollywood flick
  • Taurees Habib discloses he won Grammy in February for Best Score Soundtrack for Visual Media
  • This makes him second Pakistani to bag a Grammy, with singer Arooj Aftab winning the trophy in 2022 

ISLAMABAD: Sound engineer Taurees Habib recently announced he became the second Pakistani to ever clinch a Grammy award for his work in the Hollywood film “Dune: Part Two,” making him the only sound engineer from the country to win the prestigious trophy. 

Though the award was announced earlier this year in February, Habib, who hails from Karachi, had not revealed it publicly. He shared the news via a post on Facebook on Tuesday, saying he was excited to see the golden gramophone award finally arrive at his residence. 

Dune: Part Two is a science fiction film that features a stellar Hollywood cast starring Timothee Chalamet, Zendaya, Rebecca Ferguson, Javier Bardem, Josh Brolin, Austin Butler and Christopher Walken. Habib’s trophy bears the engraving: “Taurees Habib, Engineer. Best Score Soundtrack for Visual Media — 2024, Dune: Part Two (Hans Zimmer).”

“I’m so incredibly honored to have received this for my work on Dune: Part 2, and to be the first Pakistani to receive this for engineering and only the second Pakistani ever to win a Grammy,” Habib wrote on Facebook, sharing a picture of his with the award. 

“It’s crazy to walk into my living room and see this thing just sitting there.”

Habib paid tribute to other members on the team for Dune, crediting their hard work for bringing German composer Hans Zimmer’s vision to life. 

He also uploaded a separate video on Instagram, sharing with his followers the moment he unboxed the award at home. 

“So something happened this February, and I haven’t really talked about it,” Habib says in the video. “It felt like one of those things that’d be better to show than tell about.”

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Habib can be seen pulling the award out of the box in the video and setting it down on the table, simply pointing to it. 

This makes him the second Pakistani to win a Grammy award. Brooklyn-based Pakistani vocalist Arooj Aftab scored her first Grammy in 2022 when she won the prestigious trophy for her song “Mohabbat” in the Best Global Performance category.

However, no other sound engineer from Pakistan has ever won a Grammy. 


Pakistan hopes US removal of Syria sanctions would increase bilateral trade, investment opportunities

Pakistan hopes US removal of Syria sanctions would increase bilateral trade, investment opportunities
Updated 18 September 2025

Pakistan hopes US removal of Syria sanctions would increase bilateral trade, investment opportunities

Pakistan hopes US removal of Syria sanctions would increase bilateral trade, investment opportunities
  • US President Donald Trump formally ordered sanctions against Syria lifted in June this year
  • Pakistan’s finance minister meets Syrian envoy to discuss strengthening bilateral trade and ties

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb hoped the removal of US sanctions on Syria would help open bilateral trade and investment opportunities in the country, the Finance Division said on Thursday. 

US President Donald Trump signed an executive order in June to dismantle a web of sanctions against Syria more than six months after the overthrow of Bashar Assad. Syria welcomed the move, saying it would likely unlock investments for the conflict-hit country. The Syrian government had been under heavy US financial penalties that predated the outbreak of a civil war in the country in 2011.

Dr. Ramez Alraee, Syria’s ambassador to Pakistan, called on Aurangzeb at the Finance Division to discuss matters of mutual interest, the finance ministry said. Talks focused on further strengthening longstanding fraternal ties between Pakistan and Syria and exploring avenues for enhanced bilateral cooperation.

“Welcoming the Ambassador, the Finance Minister appreciated the improving situation in Syria and the gradual return to normalcy,” the Finance Division said. “He expressed the hope that the removal of sanctions by the United States would help Syria reintegrate into the international system and open up opportunities for investment and bilateral trade.”

The Pakistani minister assured Dr. Alraee of Islamabad’s “full support” in every way, noting that the people of both countries share bonds of affection and empathy. 

The Syrian ambassador thanked Pakistan for extending diplomatic support following Israel’s airstrikes targeting the Middle Eastern country in June, the Finance Division said. He thanked Islamabad for sending humanitarian aid for Syria following the 2023 earthquake which wreaked havoc in the Middle Eastern country and Turkiye. 

“Ambassador Alraee reaffirmed his commitment to promoting bilateral trade and commerce between the two countries and emphasized the importance of facilitating exchanges of official and business delegations to further strengthen economic and people-to-people ties,” the Finance Division said. 

Like it does with most Middle Eastern countries, Pakistan enjoys close relations with Syria rooted in shared faith and culture. Pakistan and Syria formally established bilateral relations in December 1949. 


Saudi-Pakistan defense pact can help Islamabad stabilize economy, increase exports—analysts

Saudi-Pakistan defense pact can help Islamabad stabilize economy, increase exports—analysts
Updated 18 September 2025

Saudi-Pakistan defense pact can help Islamabad stabilize economy, increase exports—analysts

Saudi-Pakistan defense pact can help Islamabad stabilize economy, increase exports—analysts
  • Pakistan, signed defense pact on Wednesday pledging aggression against one country would be treated as attack on both
  • Defense analyst says could buy JF-17 Thunder fighter jets from Pakistan amid increasing bilateral defense collaboration

KARACHI: Pakistan’s recent defense pact with can help Islamabad stabilize its economy via increased jobs, sharing of technology and exports to the Kingdom, defense and economic experts said on Thursday. 

Pakistan and on Wednesday signed a “Strategic Mutual Defense Agreement” pledging that aggression against one country would be treated as an attack on both, a move that will enhance joint deterrence and strengthen decades of military and security cooperation. The accord comes at a time of extreme volatility in the Middle East, where prolonged conflicts have heightened fears of wider instability, reinforcing the urgency Gulf states place on stronger security and defense partnerships.

It also takes place as Pakistan looks to escape a prolonged macroeconomic crisis that forced it to secure loan packages from the International Monetary Fund (IMF). has bailed Pakistan out of financial troubles over the years, extending loans to the South Asian country and providing it oil against deferred payments. 

Mushahid Hussain Syed, former chairperson of the Senate Standing Committee on Defense, noted that enhanced defense ties between the two allies could have positive implications for Pakistan’s economy. 

“Yes, both Muslim brotherly countries are leveraging their respective strengths in this historic pact: Pakistan’s military capability and ’s economic strength,” Syed told Arab News.

Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif has attempted to increase Pakistan’s GDP and sought help from IMF loans to keep Pakistan’s fragile economy afloat. Pakistan, which exported goods and services worth $32 billion last fiscal year, holds an exhibition in Karachi every two years to increase its defense and military exports. 

The JF-17 Thunder, a multi-role fighter jet co-developed by Pakistan and China, is one such fighter jet that was showcased in the exhibition last year.

Syed said it was likely the Kingdom could buy the fighter jets from Pakistan. 

“ has close ties with China so JF-17 Thunder sales can also be on the agenda, given the triangular Pakistan-KSA-China partnership,” Syed said. 

Asked if Pakistan could expect some economic relief from the Kingdom in the form of deferred oil payments and loans going forward, Syed said it “should be expected.”

“KSA has helped out Pakistan economically in the past,” he said. 

Khurram Schehzad, adviser to Pakistan’s finance minister, did not respond to Arab News’ queries. 

’FERTILE LAND, LABOR AND REMITTANCES’

Khaqan Najeeb, former finance adviser to Pakistan’s finance ministry, said the pact had formalized decades of ties and opened space for deeper trade and investment between Pakistan and . 

“For , Pakistan offers fertile land, skilled labor and potential food security links,” Najeeb noted. “For Pakistan, Riyadh is its top remittance source and a critical investor,” he added. 

He said the defense agreement is in line with ’s Vision 2030 program and gives Pakistan a chance to stabilize its economy “through jobs, capital, and technology.” 

Asked if Pakistan was expected to receive an investment pledge from , similar to the US which had secured a pledge of $600 million from the Kingdom earlier this year, Najeeb pointed out that Islamabad and Riyadh had signed agreements worth $2.8 billion in October 2024. 

The finance expert, however, warned that transforming those agreements into “real projects” was a challenge for Pakistan amid the country’s regulatory and fiscal strains. 

“Effective follow-throughs can move the relationship beyond short-term bailouts toward a durable, security-backed economic partnership,” Najeeb noted. 

PAKISTAN STOCKS RALLY

Buoyed by the defense pact, investor confidence surged in Pakistan’s stock market during trading on Thursday. Pakistan’s benchmark KSE-100 Index rose by over one percent and closed at a record 157,953 points, with analysts attributing the rally to Wednesday’s pact. 

“The market touched all-time high after Pak-Saudi pact which is likely to ease (Islamabad’s) financial burden as Pak-Saudi relations improve,” Ahsan Mehanti, CEO at Arif Habib Commodities, told Arab News.

He said investors were expecting Pakistan to receive economic support from following the pact. 

Leading brokerage house Topline Securities agreed.

“The bulls stampeded across the trading floor today as the local bourse surged on the back of a landmark development— the signing of the Strategic Mutual Defense Agreement (SMDA) between and Pakistan,” Topline Securities said in a statement. 


Pakistan approves $390 million plan to build 1,350 km rail track from Balochistan mines

Pakistan approves $390 million plan to build 1,350 km rail track from Balochistan mines
Updated 18 September 2025

Pakistan approves $390 million plan to build 1,350 km rail track from Balochistan mines

Pakistan approves $390 million plan to build 1,350 km rail track from Balochistan mines
  • Reko Diq mine in southwestern Pakistan is considered one of world’s largest untapped deposits of copper and gold
  • Economic Coordination Committee seeks updates on project’s implementation by March 2026, says Finance Division

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s top economic decision-making body on Thursday approved a bridge financing proposal worth $390 million to build a 1,350 kilometer railway track to transport exports from mines in the southwestern Balochistan province, the Finance Division said in a statement. 

The Reko Diq mine, located in Pakistan’s largest and poorest Balochistan province, is among the world’s biggest untapped deposits of copper and gold, with the project estimated to generate $90 billion over the next 37 years. Long stalled by legal disputes and political wrangling, the project was revived after a 2022 settlement with Canada’s Barrick Gold. The Canadian company owns a 50 percent stake in the mine while the governments of Pakistan and the province of Balochistan own the other 50 percent. 

Pakistan Railways Minister Hanif Abbasi told Arab News this week that the Reko Diq Mining Company (RDMC), a joint venture between Canada’s Barrick Gold and Pakistan’s federal and Balochistan governments, had agreed to provide $390 million bridge financing for a railway track from Rohri in Sindh to Nokundi in Balochistan province. He said the project would transport one million tons of copper annually, which otherwise would require over 28,000 truckloads each year.

The ECC held a meeting chaired by Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb and attended by senior officials at the Finance Division on Thursday to consider various proposals for the mine. 

“The ECC [Economic Coordination Committee] also considered a summary submitted by the Ministry of Railways regarding a rail development agreement and bridge financing agreement with the Reko Diq Mining Company, for the provision of bridge financing amounting to USD 390 million to lay a 1,350 km railway track for transporting large volumes of export material from the mines in Balochistan,” the Finance Division said after the meeting. 

It said the ECC approved the proposal and directed the railways ministry to share the agreement’s document with the Finance Division for appraisal. It also instructed the railways ministry and the finance ministry to submit an update to the ECC by March 2026 on the project’s execution and implementation. 

Aurangzeb noted that the ECC’s approvals signified the government’s “firm commitment” to moving ahead with the project, saying it had the potential to transform Balochistan’s economic landscape. 

“The Reko Diq Project will not only unlock one of the world’s largest undeveloped copper-gold deposits but also catalyze job creation, infrastructure development, and long-term socio-economic uplift across the region,” Aurangzeb said, according to the Finance Division. 

Islamabad has touted the mine as a potential driver of growth and foreign exchange earnings, especially as it looks to escape a prolonged macroeconomic crisis that drained its financial resources and triggered a balance of payments crisis. 

While progress on Reko Diq marks a breakthrough for Pakistan’s mining sector and overall economic development, its location underscores the security and political challenges that have long dogged investment in the province.

Balochistan, which borders Iran and Afghanistan, has for decades faced a separatist insurgency. Armed groups have repeatedly attacked government facilities, the military, and infrastructure tied to foreign investment, including Chinese projects under the multi-billion-dollar China-Pakistan Economic Corridor. Insurgents say they are fighting for greater control over the province’s resources and for independence, while the state has described such attacks as terrorism threatening national stability.