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Abdul Jabar is a citizen of Afghanistan who was held in detention in the American Bagram Collection Point, north of Kabul.[1][2] Abdul Jabar was a taxi driver who was held in a cell near fellow taxi driver Dilawar, who was handed over to American custody following a rocket attack on Firebase Salerno. Jabar reported hearing Dilawar's cries and experiencing similar abuse.
The New York Times reported, on March 3, 2003.[2][3]
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Jabar told the New York Times that he saw Dilawar experiencing difficulty, and counseled him not to struggle, that it was routine for captives to be isolated, shackled, and deprived of sleep for their first two weeks in captivity, but, if he could survive that, he would then be transferred to communal cells where he would be allowed to sit down.
Jabar told the New York Times that approximately 100 captives were held in the communal cells.
He has been released.[citation needed]
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