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	<title>Andy Worthington &#187; Children in Guantanamo</title>
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	<link>http://www.andyworthington.co.uk</link>
	<description>Investigative journalist, author, filmmaker and Guantanamo expert</description>
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		<title>Christmas Thoughts for Omar Khadr, Still Held at Guantánamo</title>
		<link>http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/12/25/christmas-thoughts-for-omar-khadr-still-held-at-guantanamo/</link>
		<comments>http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/12/25/christmas-thoughts-for-omar-khadr-still-held-at-guantanamo/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 25 Dec 2011 13:14:41 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Andy Worthington</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Children in Guantanamo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Guantanamo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Military Commissions]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Omar Khadr]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Canada]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Military Commission]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/?p=15460</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[This Christmas, when so many of us spend time with our families, my thoughts are with Omar Khadr, a scapegoat in the &#8220;war on terror&#8221; for two countries &#8212; not just the United States, which has held him at Guantánamo for over nine years, but also Canada, his home. Seized at the age of 15 [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/khadr02-094.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-9877" title="Omar Khadr before his capture, and photographed in 2009 at Guantanamo by the International Committee of the Red Cross" src="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/khadr02-094.jpg" alt="" width="202" height="165" /></a>This Christmas, when so many of us spend time with our families, my thoughts are with <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2007/11/14/the-trials-of-omar-khadr-guantanamos-child-soldier/">Omar Khadr</a>, a scapegoat in the &#8220;war on terror&#8221; for two countries &#8212; not just the United States, which has held him at Guantánamo for over nine years, but also Canada, his home.</p>
<p>Seized at the age of 15 in Afghanistan, where he had been taken by his father, who was allegedly a fundraiser for al-Qaeda, Omar was abused by the US authorities at Bagram and then Guantánamo, and was then put forward for a war crimes trial, and he has also been neglected throughout his long ordeal by the Canadian government. Neither country cared that he was a juvenile prisoner when seized, and should have been rehabilitated rather then punished, as stipulated in the <a href="http://www2.ohchr.org/english/law/crc-conflict.htm" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www2.ohchr.org/english/law/crc-conflict.htm?referer=');">UN Optional Protocol to the Convention on the Rights of the Child on the involvement of children in armed conflict</a>, even though Canada, in particular, has stood up for the rights of child soldiers in other countries.</p>
<p>In October 2010, the Obama administration reached a particularly low point in its respect for the law, when Omar was obliged to <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2010/11/02/omar-khadr-jury-hammers-the-final-nail-into-the-coffin-of-american-justice/">agree to a plea deal</a> in his trial by Military Commission in exchange for a promise that, as a result, he would serve an eight-year sentence, with just one more year at Guantánamo followed by seven years back in Canada.<span id="more-15460"></span></p>
<p>In the plea deal, Omar accepted that he had thrown a grenade that killed a US soldier during the firefight that led to his capture in July 2002 (even though that may not have been true), and also agreed that he was an &#8220;alien unprivileged enemy belligerent,&#8221; who was guilty of war crimes because he was not entitled, under any circumstances, to be engaged in a combat situation with US forces, even though he was captured in a war zone in a country in which the US was at war.</p>
<p>This whole saga is disgraceful, but for the last two months what has been particularly distressing and disturbing is that Omar is still held at Guantánamo, even though, according to the terms of the plea deal, he was supposed to have been transferred to Canadian custody.</p>
<p>As the <em><a href="http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/world/worldview/despite-plea-bargain-deal-omar-khadr-to-spend-his-tenth-new-years-in-guantanamo/article2280409/" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.theglobeandmail.com/news/world/worldview/despite-plea-bargain-deal-omar-khadr-to-spend-his-tenth-new-years-in-guantanamo/article2280409/?referer=');">Globe and Mail</a></em> reported this week, John Norris, a member of Omar&#8217;s Canadian legal team, said of his client, “He’s frustrated, he wants to get on with his life.” The article also noted that both the US and Canadian governments are still claiming, as they did when the deadline passed on October 31, that &#8220;the delays are just part of a complicated process, that there is no willful foot-dragging,&#8221; as though they haven&#8217;t had a year to prepare.</p>
<p>Pentagon spokesperson Lt. Col. Todd Breasseale pointed out that, due to legislation passed by Congress, one problem is that the US defence secretary Leon Panetta &#8220;must ‘certify’ to Congress that Canada is a fit place to send a convicted terrorist, a nation not likely to permit him to attack the United States, and one that has control of its prisons.&#8221; The <em>Globe and Mail</em> added, &#8220;That hasn’t happened and Mr. Khadr can’t go anywhere until it does.&#8221; Lt. Col. Breasseale also explained that the Congressional imposition &#8220;restricts our ability to transfer detainees from GTMO for 30 days after we inform Congress of our intent to transfer the individual, but levies no requirements after the 30 days.&#8221;</p>
<p>This is a ridiculous situation, of course, as Canada can hardly be regarded as an unsafe country by all but the most paranoid and unhinged members of Congress, but the <em>Globe and Mail</em> claimed that this might be embarrassing for Leon Panetta, and described &#8220;the odd, and potentially embarrassing, requirement of formally certifying to Congress that a close ally could be trusted not to allow a convicted terrorist to attack American again.&#8221;</p>
<p>Ironically, the new National Defence Authorization Act, which has <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/12/10/terrorists-as-warriors-the-fatal-confusion-at-the-heart-of-the-war-on-terror/">caused great consternation</a> because of its deranged provision for the mandatory military custody of all terror suspects, &#8220;allows for transfers without certification in cases where a pre-trial agreement was signed,&#8221; as the <em>Globe and Mail</em> explained.</p>
<p>In the most alarming passage in the article, it was claimed that Omar&#8217;s plea deal &#8220;allowed for repatriation to Canada but didn’t explicitly guarantee it&#8221; &#8212; which strikes me as a rather casual revisionism, when the whole purpose of the plea deal was to guarantee Omar&#8217;s return to Canada &#8212; and this was followed by a quote from an unnamed US official, who stated bluntly, “Your country doesn’t want him back.&#8221;</p>
<p>Sadly, Omar&#8217;s lawyers are in the dark about his future. &#8220;I wish I knew, I wish they would tell us,” John Norris said. &#8220;So far we have received no word about a transfer date.”</p>
<p>The <em>Globe and Mail</em> noted that some legal experts believe Omar &#8220;has a strong case under Canadian law to seek release soon after he is repatriated,&#8221; and that, &#8220;[e]ven if he serves the usual one-third of his sentence, before being paroled, he could be free in 2013.&#8221; That, however depends on him being allowed to leave Guantánamo, and as was noted in an article in <em>The Lawyers Weekly</em>  on December 16, it was obviously no coincidence that, on the day that Omar became eligible for transfer to Canada, Public Safety Minister Vic Toews &#8220;told the House of Commons that Khadr had &#8216;voluntarily&#8217; pleaded guilty&#8221; to the charge of killing a US soldier. As a result, there are fears that the International Transfer of Offenders Act (ITOA), passed in 2004, under which Omar would be returned, could be conveniently amended under new legislation to give the minister &#8220;the ability to deny a Canadian offender the right to return if it would &#8216;endanger public safety.&#8217;&#8221;</p>
<p>Errol Mendes, a law professor at the University of Ottawa, spelled out these fears clearly, stating that he &#8220;fears the Harper government may play to its Conservative base, for whom Khadr is &#8216;hugely unpopular,&#8217; and let him &#8216;rot in hell&#8217; before allowing his return to Canada.&#8221;</p>
<p>Is this appropriate behaviour over nine years after Omar Khadr was first seized? I believe it is not, however much right-wingers in Canada ignore the fact that he was a child when seized, and seem to believe that he should be abandoned forever or stripped of his citizenship because of the perceived sins of his father. Omar has lost nearly half his life in Guantánamo, and has been imprisoned for longer than the whole of the Second World War, and it is time for him to be repatriated. He is, after all, a human being, despite the persistent attempts to dehumanize him. As John Norris explained, &#8220;His spirit is very strong. He&#8217;s a serious young man who&#8217;s working very hard on his studies in Canadian literature, geography and history. He&#8217;s also quite engaging.&#8221;</p>
<p>That has always been apparent to those who knew Omar, and it was made particularly obvious over a year ago, in <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2010/11/01/a-childs-soul-is-sacred-omar-khadrs-touching-exchange-of-letters-with-canadian-professor/">a report about his exchange of letters</a> with a literature professor in Canada, which, if you have the time, I recommend reading. As I explained at the time, the comments by Omar that I found the most moving were the following:</p>
<blockquote><p>Children’s hearts are like a sponge that will absorb what is around it, like wet cement, soft until it is sculptured in a certain way. A child’s soul is a sacred dough that must be shaped in a holy way.</p></blockquote>
<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Guantanamo-Files-Stories-Detainees-Americas/dp/0745326641" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.amazon.com/Guantanamo-Files-Stories-Detainees-Americas/dp/0745326641?referer=');"><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-3000" title="The Guantanamo Files" src="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/bookcover6200.jpg" alt="" width="126" height="179" /></a>Andy Worthington is the author of <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/the-guantanamo-files/" target="_self"><em>The Guantánamo Files: The Stories of the 774 Detainees in America&#8217;s Illegal Prison</em></a> (published by Pluto Press, distributed by Macmillan in the US, and available from Amazon &#8212; click on the following for the <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Guantanamo-Files-Stories-Detainees-Americas/dp/0745326641" target="_self" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.amazon.com/Guantanamo-Files-Stories-Detainees-Americas/dp/0745326641?referer=');">US</a> and the <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/Guantanamo-Files-Stories-Detainees-Americas/dp/0745326641" target="_self" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.amazon.co.uk/Guantanamo-Files-Stories-Detainees-Americas/dp/0745326641?referer=');">UK</a>) and of two other books: <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/stonehenge-celebration-subversion/" target="_self"><em>Stonehenge: Celebration and Subversion</em></a> and <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/battle-of-the-beanfield/" target="_self"><em>The Battle of the Beanfield</em></a>. To receive new articles in your inbox, please subscribe to my <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/feed/" target="_self">RSS feed</a> (and I can also be found on <a href="http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=738143803" target="_self" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=738143803&amp;referer=');">Facebook</a>, <a href="http://twitter.com/GuantanamoAndy" target="_self" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/twitter.com/GuantanamoAndy?referer=');">Twitter</a>, <a href="http://digg.com/aworthington" target="_self" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/digg.com/aworthington?referer=');">Digg</a> and <a href="http://www.youtube.com/user/AndyWorthington1?feature=mhum" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.youtube.com/user/AndyWorthington1?feature=mhum&amp;referer=');"> YouTube</a>). Also see my <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/06/01/guantanamo-the-definitive-prisoner-list-updated-for-2011-with-new-information-and-photos-from-wikileaks/" target="_self">definitive Guantánamo prisoner list</a>, updated in June 2011, &#8220;<a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/category/2002-2011-the-complete-guantanamo-files-new/">The Complete Guantánamo Files</a>,&#8221; a 70-part, million-word series drawing on files released by WikiLeaks in April 2011, and details about the documentary film, “<a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/outside-the-law-stories-from-guantanamo/" target="_self">Outside the Law: Stories from Guantánamo</a>” (co-directed by Polly Nash and Andy Worthington, and available on DVD <a href="http://www.spectacle.co.uk/catalogue_production.php?id=538" target="_self" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.spectacle.co.uk/catalogue_production.php?id=538&amp;referer=');">here</a> &#8212; or <a href="http://www.freewebstore.org/WorldCantWait/Andy_Worthingtons_Outside_the_Law__Stories_from_Guantanamo/p237374_3033886.aspx" target="_self" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.freewebstore.org/WorldCantWait/Andy_Worthingtons_Outside_the_Law_Stories_from_Guantanamo/p237374_3033886.aspx?referer=');">here</a> for the US). Also see my <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/guantanamo-habeas-results-the-definitive-list/" target="_self">definitive Guantánamo habeas list</a> and <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/category/a-chronological-list-of-guantanamo-articles/" target="_self">the chronological list of all my articles</a>, and, if you appreciate my work, feel free to <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/12/05/quarterly-fundraiser-please-help-me-raise-2500-to-continue-my-work-on-guantanamo/" target="_self">make a donation</a>.</p>
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		<title>An Extraordinary Interview with Former Guantánamo Child Prisoner Mohammed El-Gharani</title>
		<link>http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/12/16/an-extraordinary-interview-with-former-guantanamo-child-prisoner-mohammed-el-gharani/</link>
		<comments>http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/12/16/an-extraordinary-interview-with-former-guantanamo-child-prisoner-mohammed-el-gharani/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 16 Dec 2011 22:02:58 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Andy Worthington</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Children in Guantanamo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Guantanamo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Life after Guantanamo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Mohammed El-Gharani]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Chad]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Clive Stafford Smith]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Reprieve]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Sudan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Torture]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/?p=15421</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[When I began researching and writing about Guantánamo, nearly six years ago, one of the stories that seized my attention was that of Mohammed El-Gharani, a Chadian national, who had grown up with his parents in Saudi Arabia, and, after traveling to Pakistan to study, had been picked up in a random raid on a [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/mohammedelgharani.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-15422" title="Mohammed El-Gharani (aka el-Gorani), in a detail of the photo on his passport, when he was just 14, although he pretended to be 20, prior to his capture in Pakistan and his transfer to Guantanamo." src="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/mohammedelgharani.jpg" alt="" width="331" height="207" /></a>When I began researching and writing about Guantánamo, nearly six years ago, one of the stories that seized my attention was that of Mohammed El-Gharani, a Chadian national, who had grown up with his parents in Saudi Arabia, and, after traveling to Pakistan to study, had been picked up in a random raid on a mosque in Karachi &#8212; many hundreds of miles from the battlefields of Afghanistan &#8212; when he was just 14 years of age. I included his story in my book, <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/the-guantanamo-files/"><em>The Guantánamo Files</em></a>, and also introduced him to readers in my April 2008 article, &#8220;<a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2008/04/24/guantanamos-forgotten-child/">Guantánamo’s forgotten child: the sad story of Mohammed El-Gharani</a>.&#8221;</p>
<p>Mohammed was horribly abused in US custody, and was never held separately from the adult prisoners, even though that is a requirement of the <a href="http://www2.ohchr.org/english/law/crc-conflict.htm" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www2.ohchr.org/english/law/crc-conflict.htm?referer=');">Optional Protocol to the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child on the involvement of children in armed conflict</a>, which the US <a href="http://treaties.un.org/Pages/ViewDetails.aspx?src=TREATY&amp;mtdsg_no=IV-11-b&amp;chapter=4&amp;lang=en" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/treaties.un.org/Pages/ViewDetails.aspx?src=TREATY_amp_mtdsg_no=IV-11-b_amp_chapter=4_amp_lang=en&amp;referer=');">ratified</a> a year after his capture. The Optional Protocol also requires its signatories to promote “the physical and psychosocial rehabilitation and social reintegration of children who are victims of armed conflict,” and not to punish them &#8212; but in fact just three of the <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/06/11/wikileaks-and-the-22-children-of-guantanamo/">22 confirmed juvenile prisoners</a> held at Guantánamo (those under 18 when their alleged crimes took place) were ever held separately from the rest of the prisoners, and treated humanely.</p>
<p>Mohammed&#8217;s fortunes only finally turned in January 2009, when Judge Richard Leon, an appointee of George W Bush in the District Court in Washington D.C., <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2009/01/15/judge-orders-release-of-guantanamos-forgotten-child/">granted his habeas corpus petition and ordered his release</a>, after finding that the government&#8217;s claims &#8212; primarily, that he had traveled to Afghanistan for jihad &#8212; were based on statements made by a mentally unstable prisoner who had provided demonstrably false information against numerous other prisoners, confirming what I and other researchers had discovered in the files made available to the public, and preempting what has been made even more obvious in the classified military files <a href="http://wikileaks.org/gitmo/" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/wikileaks.org/gitmo/?referer=');">released by WikiLeaks</a> in April (on which <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/04/25/wikileaks-reveals-secret-guantanamo-files-exposes-detention-policy-as-a-construct-of-lies/">I worked as a media partner</a>). Mohammed had also been subjected to one of the most idiotic allegations of all, which Judge Leon also recognized as idiotic &#8212; namely, that, was a member of an al-Qaeda cell in London in 1998, when he was just 11 years old. As his lawyer, Clive Stafford Smith, explained in his book, <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Eight-OClock-Ferry-Windward-Side/dp/1568584091/" target="_self" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.amazon.com/Eight-OClock-Ferry-Windward-Side/dp/1568584091/?referer=');"><em>The Eight O’Clock Ferry to the Windward Side: Seeking Justice In Guantánamo Bay</em></a>, “he must have been beamed over to the al-Qaeda meetings by the Starship Enterprise, since he never left Saudi Arabia by conventional means.”<span id="more-15421"></span></p>
<p>Since the release of the WikiLeaks files, I have been analyzing them in depth for an ongoing 70-part, million-word series entitled, &#8220;<a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/category/2002-2011-the-complete-guantanamo-files-new/">The Complete Guantánamo Files</a>,&#8221; which confirms that Guantánamo is a house of cards, built on the dubious statements of the prisoners themselves, or their fellow prisoners, either in Guantánamo or in secret prisons run by the CIA, in which the use torture, coercion and bribery was rife.</p>
<p>Following Mohammed&#8217;s court victory, he was <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2009/06/11/guantanamos-youngest-prisoner-released-to-chad/">released in Chad</a> in June 2009, although he was imprisoned on his return, and was then effectively abandoned, as I reported <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2009/06/18/guantanamos-youngest-prisoner-mohammed-el-gharani-is-imprisoned-in-chad/">here</a>, <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2009/06/27/mohammed-el-gharani-guantanamos-youngest-prisoner-speaks-to-al-jazeera/">here</a> and <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2009/12/18/stranded-in-chad-mohammed-el-gharani-once-guantanamos-youngest-prisoner/">here</a>.</p>
<p>Now, however, the <a href="http://www.lrb.co.uk/v33/n24/mohammed-elgorani/diary" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.lrb.co.uk/v33/n24/mohammed-elgorani/diary?referer=');"><em>London Review of Books</em></a> has published an extraordinary article based on interviews with Mohammed (described as Mohammed el-Gorani) conducted by Jérôme Tubiana, who has reported regularly from Chad, Sudan and Rwanda, and whose book <a href="http://voyage.glenatlivres.com/livre/chroniques-du-darfour-9782723478311.htm" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/voyage.glenatlivres.com/livre/chroniques-du-darfour-9782723478311.htm?referer=');"><em>Chroniques du Darfour</em></a> was published last year. I&#8217;m cross-posting the article below, and I do hope that anyone interested in Guantánamo can find the time to read it, as Mohammed is a compelling interviewee &#8212; articulate, often funny, and sharp to comprehend the scale of the injustice to which he and the other Guantánamo prisoners were subjected.</p>
<p>Unflinchingly, he speaks of the hardship of his life as a foreign national in Saudi Arabia, the random nature of his capture in Pakistan, the unexpected brutality of his American captors on his transfer to Afghanistan, and the ways in which he and others fought back against this violence and tyranny in Guantánamo. He also speaks frankly about the difficulties of life after Guantánamo, and his brief escape to Sudan, which I had not heard mentioned before, and the article ends with notification that he has now left Chad for good, despite an agreement between the US and Chad which is supposed to guarantee that this poor young man, who was cleared of all wrongdoing by a US judge, is never allowed to leave the country.</p>
<p>I wish him the utmost success in his endeavors to find a new life.</p>
<h3>Diary<br />
By Mohammed el Gorani and Jérôme Tubiana, London Review of Books, December 15, 2011</h3>
<p>We met every afternoon for two weeks in N’Djamena. After the midday prayer, I would pick him up in a taxi at the shop he hoped to turn into a laundry. We ate fish and rice in my hotel room &#8212; he would have been recognised outside &#8212; and he just talked, beginning at the beginning.</p>
<p>I was born in 1986 in Saudi Arabia, in Medina, the Prophet’s city. My parents came from North Chad &#8212; I don’t know exactly where. They left Chad for Saudi because they believe that if you live in a holy place, it’s easier to go to paradise. They were nomads, from the Gorare tribe. When they arrived in Medina, they took the tribe’s name as our family name, so I’m called Mohammed el Gorani, ‘the Goran’. My parents were camel herders and always had to keep moving to find grass. But when they arrived in Medina, my father did a lot of different jobs: washing cars, working in a shop belonging to a Saudi &#8212; you can’t have a shop if you’re not Saudi. There’s a lot of stupid rules about foreigners in Saudi Arabia. When my parents tried to send me to school, they said: ‘Is he Saudi?’</p>
<p>‘No, Chadian.’</p>
<p>‘There are no places left. Come back next month &#8230;’</p>
<p>When I was eight, I went to a school run by a man from Chad. He taught anyone who couldn’t go to a Saudi school. I was there four years until my father got ill. Then my brother and I, we had to start working. We washed cars and sold in the street cold water, prayer mats and beads &#8212; you can make good money during the Pilgrimage and the Ramadan. I went every month to Mecca with kids from Sudan and Pakistan to sell to the pilgrims. If the police came, we ran away. We had to be careful. If they capture you, they take your money and your stuff. Sometimes they take you to prison and your father had to come and sign a paper. Thus we paid for hiring our house, for the electricity. We changed house seven or eight times, but we always had electricity and tap water. Not like here in Chad.</p>
<p>He became friends with a Pakistani boy who lived near him. We called him Ali.</p>
<p>When I got 14, Ali asked me: ‘How long are you going to keep washing cars?’ He knew I wanted to be a dentist. All my friends had teeth problems, but there wasn’t a good dentist for non-Saudis &#8212; they just pull your teeth out. Also foreigners have no way to study after high school. Ali had taught me some Urdu, his mother tongue: numbers, words you need for selling, anything that’s useful with Pakistani pilgrims. Ali told me: ‘You’re good at languages. If you could speak English, you could work in a hotel in Mecca.’ His brother spoke English and had a good job in a hotel. Ali told me about English and computer lessons in Pakistan. ‘Go to Karachi. My uncles and cousins will welcome you, you just need to pay the lessons.’ I told my parents, they refused. My uncles said, ‘You’re crazy!’ but they knew if I decided something I would do it. My goal when I went to Pakistan was to help my family &#8212; life was getting difficult.</p>
<p>Without telling anyone, I went to Jeddah to ask for a passport at the Chadian Consulate. The consulate guy told me: ‘You need to change your name and lie on your age.’ I needed to be 18 and I was only 14 or 15. ‘And you need to pay me baksheesh.’ I had enough money. Every day I gave a part of my earnings to my family and saved the rest in a powdered milk tin that I buried in front of the house. On my last day in Medina, I went to see my Uncle Abderahman. I couldn’t say goodbye openly, but in my heart it was goodbye. It was 1 a.m., not a normal time to visit, as I was planning to leave the same night. I took his hands in mine and kissed his head, like we do in our tradition. In the morning, he told my mum I must have left.</p>
<p>‘Maybe he went to Jeddah, like he does usually,’ she said.</p>
<p>‘No, this time he’ll go far away.’</p>
<p>I took a plane to Karachi. Even Ali was surprised. I called his cousins and they came to the airport. Ali’s uncle taught in his house: the lessons lasted six months, three months of English lessons, and three months of English and computer lessons. I planned to go home after those six months. But two months after my arrival, there was 9/11. I didn’t pay attention &#8212; I was very busy with my lessons. Every day, I woke up, went to school, ate lunch, played football with the neighbourhood kids, studied, prayed. Every Friday, I went to pray in a big mosque not far from the house. Most of the people praying there were Arabs, because the imam was Saudi and spoke a good Arabic. One Friday, at the beginning of the sermon, we saw a lot of soldiers surrounding the mosque. After the prayers, they started questioning the people. They were looking for Arabs. They asked me: ‘Saudi?’</p>
<p>‘No, Chadian.’</p>
<p>‘Don’t lie, you’re Saudi!’ It must have been because of my accent. They put me on a truck and covered my head with a plastic bag. They took me to a prison, and they started questioning me about al-Qaida and the Talibans. I had never heard those words.</p>
<p>‘What are you talking about?’ I said.</p>
<p>‘Listen, Americans are going to interrogate you. Just say you’re from al-Qaida, you went with al-Qaida in Afghanistan, and they’ll send you home with some money.’</p>
<p>‘Why would I lie?’</p>
<p>They hung me by my arms and beat me. Two white Americans, in their forties, arrived. They were wearing normal clothes. They asked: ‘Where is Osama bin Laden?’</p>
<p>‘Who’s that?’</p>
<p>‘You’re fucking with us? You’re al-Qaida, yes!’ They kept using the F-word.</p>
<p>I didn’t understand this word but I knew they were getting angry. A Pakistani was in the room, behind the Americans. When they asked if I was from al-Qaida, he nodded, to tell me to say yes. I wasn’t doing it, so he got mad. The Americans said: ‘Take him back!’ The Pakistani was furious: ‘They’re looking for al-Qaida, you have to say you’re al-Qaida!’ Then they put the electrodes on my toes. For ten days I had them on my feet. Every day there was torture. Some of them tortured me with electricity, others just signed a paper saying they had done it. One Pakistani officer was a good guy. He said: ‘The Pakistani government just want to sell you to the Americans.’ Some of us panicked, but I was kind of happy. I loved to watch old cowboy movies and believed that Americans were good people, like in the movies, it would be better with them than with the Pakistanis, we’d have lawyers. Maybe they’d allow me to study in the US, then send me back to my parents.</p>
<p>They started taking detainees away every night, by groups of twenty. We didn’t know where they were going to, but we thought the US. One day, it was my group’s turn. The Pakistanis took away our chains and gave us handcuffs ‘made in the USA’. I told the other detainees: ‘Look, we’re going to the US!’ I thought the Americans would understand that the Pakistanis had cheated them, and send me back to Saudi.</p>
<p>So my hands were tied in the back and a guard held me by a chain. We were twenty, with maybe fifteen guards. They covered our eyes and ears, so I couldn’t see much. When they took off our masks, we were at an airport, with big helicopters. Then the movie started. Americans shouted: ‘You’re under arrest, UNDER CUSTODY OF THE US ARMY! DON’T TALK, DON’T MOVE OR WE’LL SHOOT YOU!’ An interpreter was translating into Arabic. Then they started beating us &#8212; I couldn’t see with what but something hard. People were bleeding and crying. We had almost passed out when they put us in a helicopter.</p>
<p>We landed at another airstrip. It was night. Americans shouted: ‘Terrorists, criminals, we’re going to kill you!’ Two soldiers took me by my arms and started running. My legs were dragging on the ground. They were laughing, telling me: ‘Fucking nigger!’ I didn’t know what that meant, I learned it later. They took off my mask and I saw many tents on the airstrip. They put me inside one. There was an Egyptian (I recognised his Arabic) wearing a US uniform. He started by asking me: ‘When was the last time you saw Osama bin Laden?’ ‘Who?’ He took me by my shirt collar and they beat me again. During all my time at Bagram, I was beaten. Once it was like a movie &#8212; they came inside the tent with guns, shouting: WE CAUGHT THE TERRORISTS! And they put us in handcuffs. ‘Here are their guns!’ And they threw some Kalashnikovs onto the ground. ‘We’ve been fighting them, they killed a lot of people!’ All that was for cameras, which were held by men in uniforms. I was lying on the ground with the other prisoners. They brought dogs to scare us.</p>
<p>One day they started moving prisoners again. They picked you from your tent, put you naked, shaved your head and beard (I was too young to have a beard), then beat you. They dressed you with orange clothes, handcuffed you, and put gloves with no fingers on you, so you couldn’t open the handcuffs. ‘You guys are going to a place where there is no sun, no moon, no freedom, and you’re going to live there for ever,’ the guards told us, and laughed. They put you in completely black glasses and headphones, so that you couldn’t see or hear. With those on, you don’t feel the time. But I could hear when they were changing the guards, probably every hour. I must have spent five hours sitting on a bench, with another detainee in my back.</p>
<p>Then they put us in a plane &#8212; I don’t know what kind because I couldn’t see. As soon as you moved or talked, they beat you. They were shouting: IF YOU DON’T FOLLOW OUR ORDERS, WE’LL KILL YOU! I passed out. We had no water and no food. I woke up hearing voices shouting at me in different languages. They took me to my cell. I saw soldiers everywhere, and guns, like if it was war. There were big metal fences everywhere. We were in Guantánamo, in Camp X-Ray. It’s a prison without walls, without roofs &#8212; only fences. Nothing to protect you from the sun or the rain.</p>
<p>The sky was blue. Except for sky you couldn’t see anything. Later, when I was moved to Camp Delta, I could look by the windows. The camp was ringed with a green plastic sheet, but there were holes and I could see trees. And even the sea. I saw it even better, years later, when I was moved to Camp Iguana, where they put you before release. Through the plastic sheet, I saw the ocean, big ships and the guards swimming. Only in Iguana can you touch the sand.</p>
<p>In Camp Five as well, there was a window in my cell, but it was covered with brown tape. One day I was sitting, mad, sad, angry, and a woodpecker came and knocked, knocked until it broke the tape &#8212; a hole big as a coin. It did this to a lot of windows. It started doing it every day and the guards had to put new tape every day. Sometimes, they left the holes. I could see the cars, the soldiers, the sky, the sun, the life outside. We called the bird Woody Woodpecker.</p>
<p>For months, I didn’t know where I was. Some brothers said Europe. No, others told: ‘It’s the weather of Oman.’ Others told Brazil, also because of the weather. We arrived in February, but it was so hot in comparison to Kandahar. There we shivered night and day, especially when we were naked. After a few months, an interrogator told me: ‘We’re in Cuba.’ It was the first time I heard this name. ‘An island in the middle of the ocean. Nobody can run away from here and you’ll be here for ever.’ The older detainees knew of Cuba, but didn’t know there was an American base. I’d seen a lot of American movies, and arrested people always said: ‘I have the right to a lawyer!’ The interrogators laughed at me: ‘Not here in Guantánamo! You got no rights here!’</p>
<p>The night I arrived, I was still tired from the flight, I had a first interrogation. The old man started by saying: ‘We have two faces, one nice and one ugly. We don’t want to show you the ugly one.’ He carried on with questions: ‘What were you doing in Afghanistan? Are you from al-Qaida? Are you a Taliban? Have you been in training camps?’ My answers were just: no, no, no! He started to shout and he sent me back to my cell. I was tired and scared. Prisoners were tortured somewhere. When you heard them crying, you were really scared &#8212; you thought you’d be next.</p>
<p>In the beginning there were interrogations every night. They tortured me with electricity, mostly on the toes. The nails of my big toes fell off. Sometimes they hung you up like a chicken and hit your back. Sometimes they chained you, with your head on the ground. You couldn’t move for 16 or 17 hours. You peed on yourself.’</p>
<p>Suddenly he stopped. ‘I don’t see the benefit of telling you all that,’ he said. We had been talking for several days and he was tired. I called a taxi to take him home. ‘We are in the middle of our work,’ I said as he left, ‘it would be a pity to stop now.’ The next day, he agreed to carry on.</p>
<p>Sometimes they showed you the ugly face: torturing, torturing without asking questions. Sometimes I said, ‘Yes, whatever you ask, I’ll say yes,’ because I just wanted torture to stop. But the next day, I said: ‘No, I said yes yesterday because of torture.’ My first or second interrogator said to me: ‘Mohammed, I know you’re innocent but I’m doing my job. I have children to feed. I don’t want to lose my job.’</p>
<p>‘This is no job,’ I said, ‘this is criminal. Sooner or later you’re going to pay for this. Even in afterlife.’</p>
<p>‘I’m a machine &#8212; I ask you the questions they told me to ask, I bring them your answers. Whatever they are, I don’t care.’</p>
<p>Another guy told me: ‘We know you were doing bad stuff in Sudan.’</p>
<p>‘I’ve never been there.’</p>
<p>‘I know. But if you co-operate, I’ll bring you pizzas and McDonald’s. I know the food is bad here.’</p>
<p>Another one: ‘We know you were in London, working with al-Qaida, in 1993.’</p>
<p>‘You’re sure about this?’</p>
<p>He showed me a paper. ‘Look: ’93.’</p>
<p>‘You should be smart and say ’98 or ’99. In ’93, I was six.’ He laughed.</p>
<p>In the cells there were other kinds of torture. Above all they prevent you to sleep. They brought big vacuum cleaners to make a lot of noise. They put on music &#8212; I understood the words were bad words. At night, they switched on lights everywhere. If they saw you sleeping, they came shouting: WAKE UP! GET UP! Sometimes they put a sign on your door: NO SLEEP. Others had NO FOOD, NO EXERCISE, NO TALKING. In Camp Delta, they prevented you to sleep by moving you from your cell every hour. Every time, they came with handcuffs: DETAINEE, MOVE! It was bad, but thanks to the moving I was learning more English. I was picking up words from the guards and asked their meaning to the detainees who spoke English. But when the guards saw somebody was teaching me words, they would move one of us. I started stealing soap to write English words on the walls. I was hiding it under the door or in my shoes.</p>
<p>Mohammed often used words like ‘shit’ or ‘fuck’ and immediately apologised. ‘I learned soldiers’ English,’ he said.</p>
<p>I had even a song, a song I made in English. It’s called ‘Number Two’. At the beginning, they gave us a bucket to piss and shit. They told us to call ‘Number One’ or ‘Number Two’, and they would take out the bucket. We started to throw buckets of shit on the guards through the fence. It was quite easy. So we called any bad thing made to a guard a Number Two.</p>
<p>And when I sang it, every detainee in the corridor used to sing with me. And even some good guards.</p>
<p>Number Two, Number Two!<br />
I will never regret what I do!<br />
You will never forget it, Number Two!<br />
If you treat us as human, human beings,<br />
We will treat you as human, human beings!<br />
If you treat us as animals, so will we,<br />
We will treat you as animals!<br />
Number Two, Number Two, Number Two!</p>
<p>When the guards disrespected us, I told them: ‘Don’t make me sing “Number Two”.’</p>
<p>Did I tell you I was a bad boy in Guantánamo? They called me a troublemaker. There was a big sign on my door: NO CONVERSATION WITH 269. 269 was my number, but I didn’t like to be called 269. ‘Call me by my name!’ They started calling me Chris Tucker. Have you seen the movie Rush Hour, with Jackie Chan and Chris Tucker, a black actor? I bought it in the N’Djamena market after I was released. Everyone had a nickname in Guantánamo, even the guards, because most covered up their name on their uniform. When I asked their name, they said: ‘Don’t worry about it!’ I used to ask the good guards the names of the bad guards. When I knew the name of a bad guard, I started to call him it. I remember one, with blond hair, blue eyes, in his twenties &#8212; it was the first time I was seeing so many people with blond hair and blue eyes. ‘I know your name and I know where you’re from,’ I told him. ‘I’m going to get out someday and I’m gonna kick your ass!’ He looked at his name on his uniform &#8212; had he forgotten the tape to cover it? No.</p>
<p>‘How could you know my name?’</p>
<p>‘I know your name is &#8230;’ I don’t remember it today, but let’s say he was called Smith.</p>
<p>‘Don’t say that aloud!’</p>
<p>‘I know your city, I know your family, I know details!’ Actually, all I knew was his name and his city.</p>
<p>‘Who told you this?’</p>
<p>‘I won’t say. But one day I’m gonna go home and then you’ll see.’</p>
<p>He started walking in the block. I don’t think he slept that night. The next day he came back: ‘Brother!’</p>
<p>‘Oh, I’m a brother now &#8230;’ Normally, it’s the prisoners who called each other ‘brother’.</p>
<p>‘I know, I’ve been bad. I’ve got a lot of problems at home. But I don’t hate you.’</p>
<p>I learned in Guantánamo that there are really racist people. The guards were often calling me or other black people with the N-word. ‘Fucking nigger!’ One of the guards who called me so, I gave him a headbutt and I broke him a tooth. He was very young, between 20 and 25, as most of the guards. I did nothing the day he actually insulted me. But days after, I started joking with the guards. I wanted the one who had insulted me to trust me. There were two windows in the door, one up, to shackle your hands, the other down to shackle your feet. They didn’t open the door &#8212; we were so dangerous! I wanted the guard who had insulted me to come to the door and open the upper window. I called him: ‘Hey man, long time no see you!’</p>
<p>‘What do you want? You’re not angry anymore?’</p>
<p>‘No, come, let’s chat, open the window.’ He was an idiot. He opened. ‘See this!’ I said, and I knocked his nose. He was bleeding, I was laughing. The other guards sprayed me with pepper spray, something they used very often. It burns and makes it hard to breathe. It’s not the only guard I knocked on his face. I pissed on their faces too. I was a bad boy in Guantánamo.</p>
<p>Once, in 2005, one of our brothers was badly beaten in front of us. I sat in my room not speaking to anyone all day. During night shift, one of the good guards, a black guy from Louisiana, came to me. We called him Mike Tyson because he was a boxer. He used to bump my fist through the bars: ‘Wassup, Chris?’</p>
<p>‘If at least we’d done something bad, I could understand &#8230;’</p>
<p>‘Brother, look at my face!’ he said. ‘How long you’ve been here with Americans?’</p>
<p>‘Four years.’</p>
<p>‘I’ve been suffering 27 years, man! I know what it is. They put my brother in jail for no reason, instead of a white guy.’ Most of the people in jail in US are blacks, he told me. ‘My grandfather and my great-grandfather were in the situation you’re in now.’ He meant they were slaves, shackled like us.</p>
<p>He asked me a lot of questions about Islam. ‘Before I came to Guantánamo, the media told me Muslims hate us because of our way of life, our democracy.’ But when he came here, he saw that we Muslims respect each other and have no hate for people of other religions. He saw me reading the Quran and calling everyone to prayer. ‘You’re the youngest and the only black guy, and they listen to you! There’s no racism between you!’</p>
<p>We talked during one year. One night, I was asleep when I felt someone was hitting me with something. It was Tyson, with an ice cream. Sometimes he brought ice cream, chocolate or chips &#8212; he could be fired for that. He was laughing. I was happy to see him. ‘Man, I’m leaving tonight.’</p>
<p>‘Where?’</p>
<p>‘America! But as soon as I get to the US, I’m going to convert to Islam and leave the army.’ He shook my hand. ‘Good luck, my brother!’ He was the best of all the guards.</p>
<p>When the bad guards saw us sad and sick, they were happy. And I didn’t want that. Since I was little, I was always laughing, smiling, joking and I kept going in Guantánamo. They were telling me: ‘Why are you laughing?’</p>
<p>‘I’m happy!’</p>
<p>‘How can you be happy? You’re in jail.’</p>
<p>In fact he tried to kill himself several times. Once he cut his wrists on the metal door. Another time he tried to hang himself with clothes tied together.</p>
<p>Many detainees tried to commit suicide, but I don’t think they succeeded. Six died. I knew them &#8212; it’s so hard to believe that those six, especially, committed suicide. One day, an interrogator told me one brother died because he took more than a hundred pills. I was angry: ‘You’re the terrorists now,’ I said. ‘Why are you killing people?’</p>
<p>‘He took pills,’ the interrogator said.</p>
<p>‘You’re doing searches every day. How could he get those pills? Where could he hide them?’ He shut up. I was more and more angry. He asked the guard to handcuff me.</p>
<p>At the end of 2006, beginning of 2007, they opened a new camp &#8212; Camp Six. The guards told us: ‘You’ll have a big rec yard, football, TV. You’re going to be chillin’ like a villain!’ But there were a lot of lies. I was one of the first transferred there. The A/C was very very cold. I called the guard, politely: ‘Can I have a few words with you?’</p>
<p>After 30 minutes, he came: ‘’Bout what?’</p>
<p>‘The A/C is too cold.’</p>
<p>‘It’s cold out here too. It’s snowing.’</p>
<p>I said: ‘Brothers! This piece of shit wants to cause problems today.’</p>
<p>‘What? What do you call me now?’</p>
<p>One of my brothers said: ‘Let’s cover the A/C with paper.’ One hour a day, we were allowed to see our legal documents and to have paper to write letters. We had toothpaste &#8212; small and stinky, so we didn’t use it. I told my brothers: ‘Let’s paste paper on the A/C with toothpaste and water.’</p>
<p>We were 17 to do it. The A/C was blocked. The guard ordered: ‘269, TAKE IT DOWN!’ He was getting red from kicking the door. ‘Calm down,’ I said. ‘It’s bad for your heart! It’s snowing outside, and we don’t want the snow to get in.’</p>
<p>He radioed: ‘Control, it’s Foxtrot One!’</p>
<p>‘Go ahead, Foxtrot One!’</p>
<p>‘Cell 103 covering A/C!’</p>
<p>‘Not only me,’ I said. ‘102, 104, 105, 106.’ He repeated all the cell numbers.</p>
<p>A lieutenant came: ‘269!’</p>
<p>‘My name is Mohammed!’</p>
<p>‘Why are you covering the A/C?’</p>
<p>We knew that their rules said the temperature should be 78°. ‘Listen, your own book says it’s supposed to be 78°.’</p>
<p>‘How do you know?’</p>
<p>‘I’ve been here six years. I know the rules, it’s the same shit ever since we’ve been here.’</p>
<p>‘Same what? Don’t say shit!’</p>
<p>‘I’m speaking like you.’</p>
<p>BRING THE TEAM!</p>
<p>The team. Six guards wearing helmets, elbow pads, knee pads and gloves, like the riot police you see on TV. The first one carried a plastic shield. DETAINEE! LIE DOWN! CROSS YOUR FEET! DON’T RESIST THE TEAM! They want you on the belly, hands and feet crossed behind.</p>
<p>They hit me with the shield. I took one guy’s helmet and punched his face. They put me on the floor, beat me badly and shackled me. HANDS AND LEGS SECURE! I repeated: HANDS AND LEGS SECURE! I heard people laughing, even guards. DETAINEE! STOP TALKING! STOP RESISTING! It’s always like that: the team leader holds your head, and there’s one guard for each arm, and another for each leg. TEAM LIFT! They lift your body. TEAM PREPARE TO MOVE &#8230; TEAM MOVE! I was repeating everything. Someone said: ‘Come on, don’t make me laugh!’ Everything is filmed and they can be punished.</p>
<p>Once you’re out of your cell, they put you face down on the ground. PREPARING TO SEARCH! SEARCH RIGHT! They search the right side of your body. SEARCH LEFT! Then they searched my cell and pulled the paper off the A/C. The colonel arrived. I called him: ‘Come to see why we made trouble? See the temperature, it’s very cold. Believe me!’ It was night-time. In the morning they switched off the A/C. And we went to sleep. Two weeks later, my lawyer told me: ‘All your brothers in the camp learned what you did and thank you.’</p>
<p>At the end of 2004, civilian lawyers were finally allowed to visit the detainees. Among them was Clive Stafford Smith, the founder and director of Reprieve. Because Mohammed was a minor, he chose him as one of his first clients, but his trial didn’t take place until four years later. Sitting in a room with a big white phone, Mohammed heard Judge Richard J. Leon in Washington DC order his release.</p>
<p>He hoped to go home, to Medina, but the Saudi government didn’t want him back. Chad agreed to have him. In June 2009, a military plane dropped him at N’Djamena airport. He was jailed for eight days. When he was released, he was celebrated. ‘El Gorani Exults with His Relatives’ was the headline in the government daily ‘Le Progrès’. The picture shows him with uncles and cousins who had come from the desert to meet him. Then they went back to their camels.</p>
<p>He had no family in N’Djamena and shared a flat with seven other Gorans, all born in Saudi Arabia. He spent his days in front of a laptop, listening to ‘English for You’ or playing ‘Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?’ Sometimes he played football, but his back and stomach hurt, and he had problems with his vision. He needed medical treatment that wasn’t available in Chad. After months in N’Djamena, he wanted to leave. But the Chadians refused to give him a passport. In early 2010, after seven years, Chad and Sudan reopened their common border and he was able to leave.</p>
<p>As soon as the border opened, Sudanese brothers who had been released from Guantánamo called me: ‘Come, come!’ In April or May, I took a small bag, the court papers saying I was innocent and a few clothes. I gave all the rest to friends. I thought I’d never go back to Chad.</p>
<p>In Darfur, I found a space in a lorries convoy to Khartoum. Each lorry had maybe fifteen persons on the roof. Because of my back, I paid to sit in the cabin. We were over six hundred trucks. There were soldiers’ cars in front and next to the convoy, and helicopters above. There were checkpoints with armed men. I saw burned houses, broken trees, displaced people camps. The driver liked to talk: ‘I’ve been driving for 18 years, I know all the roads.’ He said it was a paradise before the war. We passed villages where nobody was living now. ‘That would have been a good place for a break, but it’s not safe. Without an escort, we would be killed.’ We met another convoy, as big as ours, coming the other way. In the evening, we learned it had been attacked by rebels.</p>
<p>When we got to Khartoum, I called my brothers Walid and Adel. They told me: ‘Your room is ready.’ A good room, with A/C, a bed, magazines, books. Soon after my arrival, Adel took me to hospital and paid for everything. They checked my eyes and told me I would need an operation, because of the coloured lights they put in my eyes during the interrogations in Guantánamo. They made me nice small square glasses. They did X-ray for my back, and I had an appointment to see the doctor later. But then &#8230;</p>
<p>He crossed his hands as if handcuffed. One evening, as he was going home, two Sudanese security agents picked him up in a car and held a gun to his head.</p>
<p>‘Why are you here?’</p>
<p>I showed them my stomach pills. ‘Medical care. Look.’</p>
<p>‘We know, but we were told to take you to jail.’ It was better than Guantánamo, but it was still a prison. I was with another prisoner, a man from Darfur &#8212; they accused him of being a rebel but he told me he wasn’t.</p>
<p>In the morning, I took all my pills and I passed out. They took me to hospital. In the evening, I asked to go to the toilets and I escaped by the window. I ran all night. I was bare feet, my feet were bleeding. They had taken everything &#8212; my shoes, my new glasses. I came to a big market. I found people from my tribe and told them everything had been stolen from me. They helped me get back to Chad. My trip to Sudan had been useless.</p>
<p>His parents came to visit him from Saudi Arabia and brought him new glasses. He married the daughter of a friend of his uncle. And finally, a few months ago, he got out of Chad.</p>
<p>When he was still in N’Djamena, talking to me, I asked the US Embassy if they kept tabs on him. Official reply: ‘We asked the Chadian government to treat him according to international human rights standards.’ But a US diplomat told me in confidence that he was the object of a ‘classified agreement between the governments of the US and Chad’. The US asked Chad not to let him leave the country, and to inform them if he ever did. ‘Twenty-five per cent of the detainees released from Guantánamo have contacted or re-contacted Islamist networks,’ the diplomat said.</p>
<p>We were almost a thousand in Guantánamo. Now less than two hundred remain. Where did they all go, if they’re all terrorists, if they’re all killers? They’re free, most of them back in their country. If I ever leave Chad, I’d like to go to court against the US.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Guantanamo-Files-Stories-Detainees-Americas/dp/0745326641" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.amazon.com/Guantanamo-Files-Stories-Detainees-Americas/dp/0745326641?referer=');"><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-3000" title="The Guantanamo Files" src="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/bookcover6200.jpg" alt="" width="126" height="179" /></a>Andy Worthington is the author of <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/the-guantanamo-files/" target="_self"><em>The Guantánamo Files: The Stories of the 774 Detainees in America&#8217;s Illegal Prison</em></a> (published by Pluto Press, distributed by Macmillan in the US, and available from Amazon &#8212; click on the following for the <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Guantanamo-Files-Stories-Detainees-Americas/dp/0745326641" target="_self" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.amazon.com/Guantanamo-Files-Stories-Detainees-Americas/dp/0745326641?referer=');">US</a> and the <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/Guantanamo-Files-Stories-Detainees-Americas/dp/0745326641" target="_self" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.amazon.co.uk/Guantanamo-Files-Stories-Detainees-Americas/dp/0745326641?referer=');">UK</a>) and of two other books: <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/stonehenge-celebration-subversion/" target="_self"><em>Stonehenge: Celebration and Subversion</em></a> and <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/battle-of-the-beanfield/" target="_self"><em>The Battle of the Beanfield</em></a>. To receive new articles in your inbox, please subscribe to my <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/feed/" target="_self">RSS feed</a> (and I can also be found on <a href="http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=738143803" target="_self" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=738143803&amp;referer=');">Facebook</a>, <a href="http://twitter.com/GuantanamoAndy" target="_self" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/twitter.com/GuantanamoAndy?referer=');">Twitter</a>, <a href="http://digg.com/aworthington" target="_self" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/digg.com/aworthington?referer=');">Digg</a> and <a href="http://www.youtube.com/user/AndyWorthington1?feature=mhum" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.youtube.com/user/AndyWorthington1?feature=mhum&amp;referer=');"> YouTube</a>). Also see my <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/06/01/guantanamo-the-definitive-prisoner-list-updated-for-2011-with-new-information-and-photos-from-wikileaks/" target="_self">definitive Guantánamo prisoner list</a>, updated in June 2011, &#8220;<a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/category/2002-2011-the-complete-guantanamo-files-new/">The Complete Guantánamo Files</a>,&#8221; a 70-part, million-word series drawing on files released by WikiLeaks in April 2011, and details about the documentary film, “<a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/outside-the-law-stories-from-guantanamo/" target="_self">Outside the Law: Stories from Guantánamo</a>” (co-directed by Polly Nash and Andy Worthington, and available on DVD <a href="http://www.spectacle.co.uk/catalogue_production.php?id=538" target="_self" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.spectacle.co.uk/catalogue_production.php?id=538&amp;referer=');">here</a> &#8212; or <a href="http://www.freewebstore.org/WorldCantWait/Andy_Worthingtons_Outside_the_Law__Stories_from_Guantanamo/p237374_3033886.aspx" target="_self" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.freewebstore.org/WorldCantWait/Andy_Worthingtons_Outside_the_Law_Stories_from_Guantanamo/p237374_3033886.aspx?referer=');">here</a> for the US). Also see my <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/guantanamo-habeas-results-the-definitive-list/" target="_self">definitive Guantánamo habeas list</a> and <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/category/a-chronological-list-of-guantanamo-articles/" target="_self">the chronological list of all my articles</a>, and, if you appreciate my work, feel free to <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/12/05/quarterly-fundraiser-please-help-me-raise-2500-to-continue-my-work-on-guantanamo/" target="_self">make a donation</a>.</p>
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		<title>The Complete Guantánamo Files: WikiLeaks and the Prisoners Released in 2007 (Part Two of Ten)</title>
		<link>http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/12/06/the-complete-guantanamo-files-wikileaks-and-the-prisoners-released-in-2007-part-two-of-ten/</link>
		<comments>http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/12/06/the-complete-guantanamo-files-wikileaks-and-the-prisoners-released-in-2007-part-two-of-ten/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 06 Dec 2011 21:55:11 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Andy Worthington</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[2002-2011: THE COMPLETE GUANTANAMO FILES (*NEW*)]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Afghans in Guantanamo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Children in Guantanamo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Guantanamo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Hunger strikes in Guantanamo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Qala-i-Janghi massacre]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Saudis in Guantanamo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Tajiks in Guantanamo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[WikiLeaks]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[WikiLeaks and the Guantanamo Prisoners Released in 2007]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Yemenis in Guantanamo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Abd al-Razaq al-Sharikh]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Abdul Aziz al-Oshan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Abdul Rauf Aliza]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Abu Zubaydah]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Afghans]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Al-Qaeda]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ali al-Tayeea]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Bijad al-Atabi]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[CIA torture prisons]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Fahed al-Harazi]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Hunger strikes]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ibn al-Shaykh al-Libi]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Khalid al-Bawardi]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Mehrabanb Fazrollah]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Mishal Saad al-Rashid]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Mohammed al-Qahtani]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Muqit Vohidov]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Osama bin Laden]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Recidivism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Rukniddin Sharopov]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Sadeq Mohammed Said Ismail]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Saudis]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Sharqawi Abdu Ali al-Hajj]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Tajiks]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Taliban]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Tora Bora]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Torture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Yahya al-Sulami]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Yasim Basardah]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Yemenis]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Yousef al-Shehri]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/?p=15187</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Please support my work! Freelance investigative journalist Andy Worthington continues his 70-part, million-word series telling, for the first time, the stories of 776 of the 779 prisoners held at Guantánamo since the prison opened on January 11, 2002. Adding information released by WikiLeaks in April 2011 to the existing documentation about the prisoners, much of [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/wikileaksgitmofiles.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-12492" title="WikiLeaks logo for its release of previously classified military files relating to the prisoners held at Guantanamo  Bay, Cuba" src="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/wikileaksgitmofiles.png" alt="" width="314" height="158" /></a></p>
<h3>Please support my work!</h3>
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<p><strong><em>Freelance investigative journalist Andy Worthington continues his 70-part, million-word series telling, for the first time, the stories of 776 of the 779 prisoners held at Guantánamo since the prison opened on January 11, 2002. Adding <a href="http://wikileaks.org/gitmo/" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/wikileaks.org/gitmo/?referer=');">information released by WikiLeaks</a> in April 2011 to the existing documentation about the prisoners, much of which was already covered in Andy’s book <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/the-guantanamo-files/">The Guantánamo Files</a> and in the archive of articles on <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/">his website</a>, the project will be completed in spring 2012.</em></strong></p>
<p><strong><em></em></strong><strong><em>This is Part 32 of the 70-part series. </em></strong><strong><em>399 stories have now been told. See the entire archive </em></strong><a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/category/2002-2011-the-complete-guantanamo-files-new/"><strong><em>here</em></strong></a><strong><em>.</em></strong></p>
<p>In late April, I worked with WikiLeaks as a media partner for the <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/04/25/wikileaks-reveals-secret-guantanamo-files-exposes-detention-policy-as-a-construct-of-lies/">publication of thousands of pages</a> of classified military documents &#8212; the Detainee Assessment Briefs &#8212; relating to almost all of the 779 prisoners held at Guantánamo since the prison opened on January 11, 2002. These documents drew heavily on the testimony of the prisoners themselves, and also on the testimony of their fellow inmates (either in Guantánamo, or <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2010/06/15/un-secret-detention-report-part-one-the-cias-high-value-detainee-program-and-secret-prisons/">in secret prisons run by or on behalf of the CIA</a>), whose <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/04/25/wikileaks-reveals-secret-guantanamo-files-exposes-detention-policy-as-a-construct-of-lies/">statements are unreliable</a>, either because they were subjected to torture or other forms of coercion, or because they provided false statements in the hope of securing better treatment in Guantánamo.</p>
<p>The documents were compiled by the Joint Task Force at Guantánamo (JTF GTMO), which operates the prison, and were based on assessments and reports made by interrogators and analysts whose primary concern was to “exploit” the prisoners for their intelligence value. They also include input from the Criminal Investigative Task Force, created by the DoD in 2002 to conduct interrogations on a law enforcement basis, rather than for “actionable intelligence.”</p>
<p>My ongoing analysis of the documents began in May, with a five-part series, “<a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/category/wikileaks-the-unknown-prisoners-of-guantanamo/">WikiLeaks: The Unknown Prisoners of Guantánamo</a>,” telling the stories of 84 prisoners, released between 2002 and 2004, whose stories had never been told before. This was followed by a ten-part series, “<a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/category/wikileaks-and-the-guantanamo-prisoners-released-from-2002-to-2004/">WikiLeaks and the Guantánamo Prisoners Released from 2002 to 2004</a>,” in which I revisited the stories of 114 other prisoners released in this period, adding information from the Detainee Assessment Briefs to what was already known about these men and boys from press reports and other sources. This was followed by another five-part series, “<a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/category/wikileaks-and-the-guantanamo-prisoners-released-after-the-tribunals-2004-to-2005/">WikiLeaks and the Guantánamo Prisoners Released After the Tribunals, 2004 to 2005</a>,” dealing with the period from September 2004 to the end of 2005, when 62 prisoners were released.<span id="more-15187"></span></p>
<p>This, as I explained, was the period in which, after the prisoners won a spectacular victory in the Supreme Court in June 2004, in <a href="http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/scripts/getcase.pl?court=US&amp;vol=000&amp;invol=03-334" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/scripts/getcase.pl?court=US_amp_vol=000_amp_invol=03-334&amp;referer=');"><em>Rasul v. Bush</em></a>, when the Supreme Court granted them habeas corpus rights (in other words, the right to ask an impartial judge why they were being held), lawyers were allowed to meet the prisoners for the first time, and the secrecy that was required for Guantánamo to function as an interrogation center beyond the law was finally broken.</p>
<p>However, although the Bush administration allowed habeas petitions to proceed, Congress attempted to strip the prisoners of their habeas rights in the <a href="http://www.pegc.us/detainee_act_2005.html" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.pegc.us/detainee_act_2005.html?referer=');">Detainee Treatment Act</a> in 2005, and the administration also responded to the Supreme Court’s ruling with its own inferior version of habeas, the Combatant Status Review Tribunals, <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2007/07/03/guantanamo-whistleblowers-lt-col-stephen-abraham-is-not-the-first-insider-to-condemn-the-kangaroo-courts/">a sham process</a> designed to rubber-stamp their designation as “enemy combatants” who could be held indefinitely.</p>
<p>With just 38 prisoners cleared for release after the CSRTs, another review process &#8212; the annual Administrative Review Boards &#8212; took over, reviewing whether prisoners still had ongoing intelligence value, and whether they still posed a threat to the US. These were essentially the decisions being taken by JTF GTMO and CITF, and they reveal how, in the “War on Terror,” prosecuting criminals (the few genuine terror suspects in Guantánamo) and holding soldiers off the battlefield until the end of hostilities had largely given way to the strange mixture of threat assessments and intelligence assessments that fill the Detainee Assessment Briefs.</p>
<p>With 260 prisoners profiled in the first 20 parts of this project, the next ten-part series, &#8220;<a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/category/wikileaks-and-the-guantanamo-prisoners-released-in-2006/">WikiLeaks and the Guantanamo Prisoners Released in 2006</a>,&#8221; covered the stories of the 111 prisoners released in 2006 (and the three who died at the prison in June 2006), almost all of whom were freed because of political maneuvering rather than anything to do with justice, as is the case with this latest ten-part series, dealing with the 124 prisoners released in 2007, including two more who died without ever having been charged or tried.</p>
<p>I also hope that readers will reflect on the problems of over-classification that have been thoroughly chronicled in the preceding series analyzing the Detainee Assessment Briefs. My analysis to date has established repeatedly that even patently innocent prisoners seized by mistake were regarded as a “low risk,” rather than as no risk at all, and it is important for readers to bear in mind that the entire process of detaining and processing prisoners and exploiting them for their supposed intelligence was shot through with a drive to conclude that they were all a threat, and to overlook the distressing fact that most of them were seized in <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2009/05/27/guantanamo-and-the-many-failures-of-us-politicians/">a largely random manner</a>, mostly by America’s Afghan and Pakistan allies, at a time when substantial bounty payments were widespread, and were never subjected to anything that resembled an adequate screening process.</p>
<p>And then, of course, as I have outlined above, and as is revealed extensively in the files, they were trapped in a prison where officials, in their ill-conceived desire for &#8220;actionable intelligence,&#8221; ended up attempting to justifying their detention either by coercing or bribing the prisoners themselves, or their fellow prisoners, to come up with allegations that could be passed off as plausible, whether or not there was any substance to them at all.</p>
<h3>The Complete Guantánamo Files: WikiLeaks and the Prisoners Released in 2007 (Part Two of Ten)</h3>
<p><strong>Yahya Al Sulami (ISN 66, Saudi Arabia) Released July 2007</strong></p>
<p>As I explained in Chapter 5 of <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/the-guantanamo-files/"><em>The Guantánamo Files</em></a>, Yahya al-Sulami (also identified as al-Silami), who was 22 years old at the time of his capture, <a href="http://projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/66-yahya-samil-al-suwaymil-al-sulami" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/66-yahya-samil-al-suwaymil-al-sulami?referer=');">said in Guantánamo</a> that he had been teaching the Koran in Afghanistan. I also explained that he was one of many prisoners who came under particular suspicion because he did not have a passport at the time, as the US authorities had realized that those who attended training camps did not have passports because they were required to hand them in at guest houses before training. However, this inevitably meant that those who did not have passports for other reasons &#8212; either because they were lost, stolen or abandoned in the rush to leave a hostile environment, or because they were entrusted to others in an attempt to find a legitimate way to leave Afghanistan &#8212; were automatically regarded as liars, whether or not this was the case. As I also explained, al-Sulami said that he was given a contact in a village near Khost by a friend in Mecca, where he taught the Koran for four months, but was clearly regarded as lying when he said that he lost his passport in a river while following a group of Afghan refugees to the Pakistani border.</p>
<p>As <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2007/07/19/who-are-the-16-saudis-released-from-guantanamo/">I also explained at the time of his release</a>, he was one of 30 prisoners accused of being bodyguards for Osama bin Laden, as one of a group of prisoners who became known as &#8220;the Dirty Thirty,&#8221; although the origin of the allegations was not made clear. In Guantánamo, al-Sulami denied a claim by the US authorities that all 30 were bodyguards, and “were told the best thing they could tell US forces when interrogated was they were in Afghanistan to teach the Koran,” and also refuted another allegation, which he said was made by a Yemeni prisoner whom he described as “mentally unstable and on medication” (presumably Yasim Basardah, known as <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/04/25/wikileaks-reveals-secret-guantanamo-files-exposes-detention-policy-as-a-construct-of-lies/">the most notoriously unreliable informant in Guantánamo</a>), in which he was “identified as the Emir of a group of 10-15 fighters guarding a river crossing leading to the Tora Bora camp.”</p>
<p>In the documents released by WikiLeaks in April 2011, the file relating to al-Sulami was a &#8220;Recommendation for Continued Detention Under DoD Control (CD),&#8221; <a href="http://wikileaks.org/gitmo/prisoner/66.html" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/wikileaks.org/gitmo/prisoner/66.html?referer=');">dated August 11, 2006</a>, in which it was noted that he was born in February 1979, and was &#8220;in good health.&#8221;</p>
<p>In telling his story, based largely on his own account, the Joint Task Force noted that, after graduating from high school in 1999, he &#8220;attended the Religious Institute in Mecca,&#8221; and, after graduating from there, &#8220;decided to teach Islam to non-Arabs in accordance with various religious decrees that had been issued by religious scholars.&#8221; In &#8220;approximately August 2001,&#8221; he flew to Karachi, with the assistance of a man named Khalid al-Muslih, who, he said, he &#8220;had met while studying at the Holy Mosque in Mecca&#8221; (although an analyst described him as &#8220;possibly an al-Qaida facilitator&#8221;).</p>
<p>On arrival in Karachi, he said, he contacted the Dar al-Ifta (the House of Religious Affairs),&#8221; and &#8220;informed them of his plan to teach the Koran in Afghanistan.&#8221; He then &#8220;crossed into Afghanistan via the Miram Shah border crossing and proceeded to Khost,&#8221; where a man named Muhammad al-Afghani (also described by an analyst as &#8220;a possible al-Qaida facilitator&#8221;) took him to a mosque, where, he said, he stayed for four and a half months, teaching the Koran to children.</p>
<p>He &#8220;denie[d] receiving any type of military training&#8221; during this period, and said that, once the war in Afghanistan started, he &#8220;contacted al-Afghani and requested that he arrange for [his] return to Saudi Arabia.&#8221; Al-Afghani then &#8220;introduced [him] to two Afghan guides who led [him] and 30 other Arabs from Khost back [sic] to Pakistan.&#8221; He &#8220;stated that the group he was with traveled for six days in the mountains before they arrived in Pakistan,&#8221; and, after crossing the border near Parachinar, were seized by Pakistani border guards.</p>
<p>After being held in a Pakistani jail in Peshawar, he was transferred to US custody at  the Kandahar Detention Facility on December 27, 2001, and was sent to Guantánamo on January 14, 2002, allegedly for the following reasons: &#8220;To provide background information on members of the group with whom detainee was captured, To provide information on the tactics and logistics of the Al-Qaida fighters in Afghanistan from 2000 until the fall of Tora Bora [and] The effect of the civil war on the Afghanistan educational infrastructure.&#8221;</p>
<p>However, as I explained in my article, “<a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/05/01/how-to-read-wikileaks-guantanamo-files/">How to Read WikiLeaks’ Guantánamo Files</a>” (originally published on <a href="http://www.wikileaks.org/gitmo/" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.wikileaks.org/gitmo/?referer=');">WikiLeaks’ website</a> when the Guantánamo files were first published, as part of my work liaising between WikiLeaks and its media partners):</p>
<blockquote><p>[T]he “Reasons for Transfer” included in the documents, which have been repeatedly cited by media outlets as an explanation of why the prisoners were transferred to Guantánamo, are, in fact, lies that were grafted onto the prisoners’ files after their arrival at Guantánamo. This is because, contrary to the impression given in the files, no significant screening process took place before the prisoners’ transfer. As Chris Mackey, a senior interrogator who worked in Afghanistan, explained in <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Interrogators-Inside-Secret-Against-Qaeda/dp/0316871125" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.amazon.com/Interrogators-Inside-Secret-Against-Qaeda/dp/0316871125?referer=');">a book that he wrote about his experiences</a> (<em>The Interrogators</em>), every prisoner who ended up in US custody had to be sent to Guantánamo, even though the majority were not even seized by US forces, but were seized by their Afghan and Pakistani allies at a time when <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2009/05/27/guantanamo-and-the-many-failures-of-us-politicians/">substantial bounty payments</a> for “Al-Qaida and Taliban suspects” were widespread.</p></blockquote>
<p>In assessing his story, the Task Force described his &#8220;claim of traveling to Afghanistan to teach the Koran&#8221; as &#8220;highly suspect,&#8221; although their rationale for doubting him was questionable. Firstly, it was noted that &#8220;[t]he only language [he] speaks is Arabic; however, he claims that without a translator, he taught to children who only spoke Pashtu.&#8221; This analysis rather shamefully ignores the fact that the Koran, regarded as the literal word of God, is taught and learned in Arabic regardless of whether those learning it are actually Arabic speakers.</p>
<p>Another reason for disputing al-Sulami&#8217;s story was that one of the men seized with him apparently &#8220;stated that a prison warden instructed the members of [his] group, when they were captured, to claim they were in Afghanistan to teach the Koran,&#8221; although this, to be honest, was the kind of reasoning used in the 17th century witch hunts, and it made it impossible for a genuine teacher of the Koran to establish that he was not a liar.</p>
<p>Most alarmingly, however, the main allegations against al-Sulami came, as I suspected, from Yasim Basardah, the most notoriously unreliable witness in Guantánamo &#8212; and also from another unreliable witness, a well-known victim of torture. Basardah &#8220;reported numerous times that detainee was the commander of approximately 15 fighters responsible for guarding a river crossing leading to a Tora Bora camp,&#8221; although no one else said he was, and he &#8220;also stated that detainee had become one of [Osama bin Laden]&#8216;s bodyguards while [he] was at Tora Bora.&#8221;</p>
<p>This was a typical allegation, as the group of men of which al-Sulami was a part were described as the &#8220;Dirty Thirty,&#8221; and were all regarded initially as bin Laden bodyguards, although, on close inspection, these claims all seem to have been made either by Basardah or by other prisoners who were tortured, and whose statements are therefore unreliable. Alarmingly, in al-Sulami&#8217;s case, an analyst noted that Basardah had &#8220;stated that detainee was a bodyguard on only one occasion,&#8221; and added, crucially, &#8220;In every interview where [Basardah] was questioned on detainee, [he] has changed his story. Detainee&#8217;s identity as a bodyguard has not been substantiated through other known sources.&#8221;</p>
<p>Basardah also &#8220;speculated that detainee probably received special mission training,&#8221; and &#8220;stated that there was a special group at Al-Farouq that trained and then disappeared,&#8221; with &#8220;[a]dditional special training for the group&#8221; being &#8220;conducted at the Kandahar Airport.&#8221; He also &#8220;stated that detainee once possessed a computer disc showing this training,&#8221; and that he &#8220;knows important people in Yemen and Afghanistan,&#8221; but as the analyst&#8217;s comments reveal (above and beyond what is known of Basardah&#8217;s general unreliability), all of the above is worthless because he couldn&#8217;t even maintain a coherent story when it came to conjuring up information about al-Sulami.</p>
<p>The torture victim who also apparently identified al-Sulami was Abdu Ali al-Haji Sharqawi (ISN 1457, still held, and also identified as Sharqawi Abdu Ali al-Hajj), who was <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2010/04/23/judge-rules-yemenis-detention-at-guantanamo-based-solely-on-torture/">tortured</a> in Jordan and in CIA facilities in Afghanistan. His worthless claim was that he &#8220;believed detainee went to Afghanistan after 11 September 2001&#8243; (he didn&#8217;t), and he also said that he &#8220;believed detainee was part of Hamzah al-Qaiti&#8217;s  group in Kabul,&#8221; because he &#8220;saw him at al-Qaiti&#8217;s guesthouse.&#8221; Al-Sulami said that he hadn&#8217;t been in Kabul, but, instead of believing him, the authorities persuaded an Egyptian, Fadel Roda al-Waleeli (ISN 663, <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/08/15/wikileaks-and-the-guantanamo-prisoners-released-from-2002-to-2004-part-eight-of-ten/">released in July 2003</a>, and also identified as Reda Fadel El-Weleli), &#8220;met detainee once in Bagram,&#8221; prompting an analyst to claim, &#8220;This corroborates [Sharqawi]&#8216;s placement of detainee in the Kabul area, which is located near Bagram.&#8221;</p>
<p>In conclusion, the Task Force claimed that al-Sulami &#8220;continue[d] to hide his true activities while in Afghanistan, such as in which cities and guesthouses he stayed,&#8221; adding, &#8220;Further exploitation is necessary to assess [his] true threat and intelligence potential.&#8221; As the Task Force explained, &#8220;Due to the lack of available information about detainee,&#8221; JTF-GTMO determined that he was &#8220;at least medium intelligence value,&#8221; and that he posed &#8220;a medium risk, as he may pose a threat to the US, its interests and allies.&#8221; It was also noted that he was &#8220;assessed as a high threat from a detention perspective,&#8221; because his &#8220;overall behaviour ha[d] been non-compliant and sometimes hostile to the guard force and staff.&#8221;</p>
<p>As a result, Rear Adm. Harry B. Harris Jr., the commander of Guantánamo at the time, updating a recommendation for his continued detention at Guantánamo (dated September 19, 2005), repeated that recommendation, although it was also noted, &#8220;If a satisfactory agreement can be reached that ensures continued detention and allows access to [al-Sulami] and/or to exploited intelligence, [he] can be Transferred Out of DoD Control (TRO).&#8221; This was particularly significant because, in a key passage in his file, it was stated, &#8220;After the 2002 Saudi delegation visit, [he] was identified by the Saudi Mabahith as one of the seventy-seven Saudi nationals of low intelligence and law enforcement value to the US Government, but whom the Saudi Government would attempt to prosecute if transferred to their custody from JTF-GTMO.&#8221; Even so, it took another 11 months for an agreement to be reached that led to his repatriation, when he was put through the Saudi government’s extensive rehabilitation program.</p>
<p><strong>Abd Al Razaq Al Sharikh (ISN 67, Saudi Arabia) Released September 2007</strong></p>
<p><a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/abdalrazaqalsharikh.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-15190" title="Abd al-Razaq al-Sharikh, in a photo included in the classified US military documents (the Detainee Assessment Briefs) released by WikiLeaks in April 2011. " src="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/abdalrazaqalsharikh.jpg" alt="" width="189" height="184" /></a>As I explained in Chapter 5 of <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/the-guantanamo-files/"><em>The Guantánamo Files</em></a>, Abd al-Razaq al-Sharikh (also identified as Abdulrazzaq al-Sharikh, and Abd al-Razaq al-Sharekh), who was only 16 years old when he arrived in Afghanistan in late 2000, was the younger brother of another juvenile prisoner, Abdulhadi al-Sharikh (ISN 231, released in September 2007), who was only 17 at the time of his capture. In Guantánamo, <a href="http://projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/67-abd-al-razaq-abdallah-hamid-ibrahim-al-sharikh" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/67-abd-al-razaq-abdallah-hamid-ibrahim-al-sharikh?referer=');">al-Sharikh said</a> that he wanted to fight in Chechnya, where another brother had been killed, but explained that, although he wanted to &#8220;go over there so I can die and meet up with him,&#8221; a friend advised him that he &#8220;wouldn&#8217;t last one day&#8221; in Chechnya, and suggested that he went to Afghanistan instead.</p>
<p>Al-Sharikh also admitted training at Al-Farouq (the main training camp for Arabs, associated with Osama bin Laden in the years before 9/11), and serving on the Taliban front lines with Pakistani members of the militant group Jaish-e-Mohammed, but insisted that he never fired a weapon at anyone, and that there was little activity until after 9/11, when the Northern Alliance attacked them so hard that they retreated. In his tribunal, he was not questioned about whether he was at Tora Bora, which was taken to be a significant sign of militancy, and said that, instead, he went to Khost via Kandahar, and then crossed into Pakistan, where he was arrested with two Pakistani guides.</p>
<p>As I also explained, in my articles, &#8220;<a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2008/11/22/the-pentagon-cant-count-22-juveniles-held-at-guantanamo/">The Pentagon Can’t Count: 22 Juveniles Held at Guantánamo</a>,&#8221; and &#8220;<a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/06/11/wikileaks-and-the-22-children-of-guantanamo/">WikiLeaks and the 22 Children of Guantánamo</a>,&#8221; despite being a juvenile at the time of his capture, al-Sharikh was not treated differently from the adult population at Guantánamo, according to the <a href="http://www2.ohchr.org/english/law/crc-conflict.htm" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www2.ohchr.org/english/law/crc-conflict.htm?referer=');">Optional Protocol to the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child on the involvement of children in armed conflict</a>, which stipulates that juvenile prisoners &#8212; those under 18 at the time their alleged crime takes place &#8212; “require special protection,” and obliges its signatories to promote “the physical and psychosocial rehabilitation and social reintegration of children who are victims of armed conflict.”</p>
<p>At the time of his release, <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2007/09/11/guantanamo-the-stories-of-the-16-saudis-just-released/">I told more of his story</a>, explaining how he said that, in Saudi Arabia, “The Muslim scientists, or clergymen, were telling me to fight in Afghanistan. They convinced me to fight there, and told me how to get there, so I went.” Turning to the circumstances of his capture, he denied an allegation that he was “captured by Pakistan police while traveling with a group of Arabs and Afghanis, some of whom were security guards for Osama bin Laden,” saying, “This is not true. When I went to Pakistan, I only had two people with me. When I was turned over, they captured the Arab and Pakistani people. When they sent me to prison, I was taken along with the other group.” He added that he had traveled with two Pakistani guides, and that, after surrendering, he was met by a representative of the Saudi government, who knew of him because “I am from a very well known family.” Despite assurances from the representative that he would help him return to Saudi Arabia, however, he was then handed over to US forces.</p>
<p>In the documents released by WikiLeaks in April 2011, the file relating to al-Sharikh was a &#8220;Recommendation for Continued Detention Under DoD Control (CD),&#8221; <a href="http://wikileaks.org/gitmo/prisoner/67.html" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/wikileaks.org/gitmo/prisoner/67.html?referer=');">dated August 6, 2007</a>, in which he was identified as Abd al-Razzaq al-Sharikh, and it was noted that he was born in January 1984, and was &#8220;in good health.&#8221;</p>
<p>In telling his story, based largely on his own account, the Joint Task Force noted that he &#8220;completed one year of high school and then sold honey outside various mosques near his parents’ home&#8221; in Riyadh, but, in early 2000 (when he was mistakenly identified as being 18 years old, even though he was only 16), his brother, identified as Abd Abdallah Ibrahim Latif al-Sharakh (aka Abbad), &#8220;was killed while participating in jihad in Chechnya.&#8221; It was noted that he &#8220;looked up to Abbad and when he heard that Abbad was killed, he became zealous to join the jihad and martyr himself.&#8221;</p>
<p>Al-Sharikh stated that he &#8220;was not recruited by any organization and did not become a member of Al-Qaida,&#8221; and, instead, &#8220;decided to travel to Afghanistan (AF) on his own initiative and at the suggestion of his brother’s friends,&#8221; who &#8220;approached [him] at his brother’s funeral and encouraged him to travel to Afghanistan because the living conditions and training opportunities were better there than in Chechnya.&#8221; His brother&#8217;s friends arranged for him to travel with another individual (perhaps because of his age), and in early December 2000, the two flew to Karachi, and then on, via the Taliban&#8217;s office in Quetta, to Kandahar, and a compound near Kandahar airport, where al-Sharikh spent a week before training at Al-Farouq.</p>
<p>He said that he spent a few months training, and then traveled to &#8220;a location a short distance behind the front line at Bagram,&#8221; where he &#8220;rotated between the front and secondary battle lines for approximately eight or nine months until the Bagram line fell to the Northern Alliance and the order came to retreat.&#8221; He and four other individuals then &#8220;started back to Kandahar, but because of Coalition bombing, they diverted to Khost,&#8221; where he stayed &#8220;for approximately ten days before he heard that all Arabs needed to make their way to Pakistan.&#8221; He then set off for Pakistan on foot with two Afghans, presumably as guides, and said that, after eight days, he &#8220;joined a group of 20 to 30 other Arabs who hiked to Pakistan through the Tora Bora Mountains.&#8221;</p>
<p>It was also noted that, on December 15, 2001, the day after this group arrived in Parachinar, they were seized by the Pakistani authorities. The Task Force claimed that he was apprehended &#8220;with a group of 31 other Arabs, which consisted mostly of [Osama bin Laden] bodyguards, but this was not necessarily a reliable assessment, as will be noted below. The group was then transferred to a prison in Peshawar, where al-Sharikh was held until he was transferred to Kandahar on December 26, 2001. He was sent to Guantánamo on January 17, 2002, on the spurious basis that it was to &#8220;provide information about the following: Terrorist recruitment of Muslim foreign nationals attending the Hajj in Saudi Arabia.&#8221;</p>
<p>In assessing his story, the Task Force was dubious about his claim that he was not a member of Al-Qaida, claiming that, as well as traveling to Afghanistan and taking part in training and combat, as he acknowledged, he had also been &#8220;selected by senior Al-Qaida leaders&#8221; for a terrorist attack on the Prince Sultan Air base (PSAB) in Saudi Arabia, and had &#8220;also acknowledged having been present at Tora Bora during meetings of senior Al-Qaida commanders during the battle.&#8221;</p>
<p>It was also noted that he had &#8220;reported about his brother,&#8221; and had &#8220;provided much of what [was] known about [his] timeline,&#8221; but &#8220;continue[d] to omit specific details regarding [his brother]&#8216;s activities and his associates at Tora Bora.&#8221; Moreover, the Task Force claimed that he had &#8220;not acknowledged being a UBL [Osama bin Laden] bodyguard or a member of UBL’s security detail,&#8221; and noted that he had &#8220;provided very little information of value about UBL, Sayf al-Adl, or other senior Al-Qaida figures to whom he had access, and it is not clear whether he has no valuable information about them or if he is deliberately withholding important information.&#8221;</p>
<p>In seeking to justify its claims, the Task Force drew on some distinctly dubious witnesses. One was <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2010/04/06/abu-zubaydah-tortured-for-nothing/">Abu Zubaydah</a> (ISN 10016, still held), the supposed &#8220;high-value detainee&#8221; for whom the US torture program was specifically developed, who said that he recalled al-Sharikh and his brother paying for specialized training, and another was Ibn al-Shaykh al-Libi (ISN 212, but never held at Guantánamo), a particularly important “high-value detainee,” who was the emir of the Khaldan training camp until it was closed by the Taliban in 2000, after he refused to allow it to be taken over by Osama bin Laden. Al-Libi&#8217;s torture in Egypt in 2002 led to a false confession that Al-Qaida operatives had been meeting with Saddam Hussein to discuss obtaining chemical and biological weapons, which was then <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2010/03/22/seven-years-of-war-in-iraq-still-based-on-cheneys-torture-and-lies/">used to justify the invasion of Iraq</a>, even though al-Libi retracted it. Sent back to Libya after <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2009/06/18/world-exclusive-new-revelations-about-the-torture-of-ibn-al-shaykh-al-libi/">several years in secret CIA prisons</a>, al-Libi <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2009/05/10/ibn-al-shaykh-al-libi-has-died-in-a-libyan-prison/">died in Gaddafi’s Abu Salim prison in May 2009</a>, reportedly by committing suicide, although observers believed that he had been killed.</p>
<p>Despite his conflict with bin Laden, al-Libi was described as &#8220;a trusted Al-Qaida senior trainer and commander,&#8221; and it was claimed that, &#8220;while providing explosives training at Al-Farouq in April 2001, he was directed by senior Al-Qaida operative Abu Hafs al-Masri to provide specialized training to two Saudi nationals named Akrima and Hammam&#8221; &#8212; identified as the aliases of al-Sharikh and his brother &#8212; and that he &#8220;provided the training at a special site for three days,&#8221; after which they were &#8220;to conduct attacks against a US military base in Saudi Arabia.&#8221;</p>
<p>Another dubious witness, and well known as an unreliable witness in Guantánamo, was Abd al-Hakim Bukhari (ISN 493, released in September 2007), who, ludicrously, was described as an &#8220;[a]ssessed Al-Qaida operative,&#8221; even though he had been imprisoned and tortured by Al-Qaida as an alleged spy. Bukhari apparently identified al-Sharikh and his brother &#8220;as having connections to terrorist cells in the US and the United Kingdom.&#8221;</p>
<p>Another even more unreliable witness was Yasim Basardah (ISN 252, released), a Yemeni known as <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/04/25/wikileaks-reveals-secret-guantanamo-files-exposes-detention-policy-as-a-construct-of-lies/">the most prolific and unreliable witness in Guantánamo</a>, who claimed that al-Sharikh was &#8220;a jihadist from Saudi Arabia who belonged to the Mehjin Center (camp of fighters) in Tora Bora,&#8221; and &#8220;further stated&#8221; that Yahya al-Salmi (ISN 66, also identified as al-Sulami, see above) &#8220;became the leader of the Mehjin Center after Mehjin died, and that [al-Sharikh] was [his] deputy. He also claimed that al-Sharikh, along with al-Sulami, &#8220;commanded approximately 15 fighters responsible for guarding a river crossing leading to a Tora Bora camp.&#8221;</p>
<p>The claim that al-Sharikh &#8220;stated he witnessed a meeting held in Tora Bora,&#8221; which included various Al-Qaida leaders, prompted an analyst to note that it was &#8220;unlikely [he] would be allowed to witness a high-level meeting if he did not hold a position of authority or trust among the senior Al-Qaida commanders at Tora Bora.&#8221;</p>
<p>Some of the allegations above may well have been true, but it was disturbing how many were produced by notoriously unreliable witnesses, and how few came from al-Sharikh himself. Nevertheless, it was clear that there were reasons to regard him as suspicious, because, as the Task Force also noted, &#8220;Prior to the visit of a Saudi government delegation to JTF-GTMO in 2002, the Saudi government provided information about 37 detainees whom they designated as high priority. Detainee was number one on that list.&#8221;</p>
<p>In conclusion, he was assessed as being &#8220;of high intelligence value,&#8221; and of posing &#8220;a high risk, as he is likely to pose a threat to the US, its interests, and allies.&#8221; It was also noted that he was &#8220;assessed to be a low threat from a detention perspective,&#8221; because his &#8220;overall behavior ha[d] been mostly compliant and rarely hostile to the guard force and staff,&#8221; and, as a result, Rear Adm. Mark H. Buzby, the commander of Guantánamo at the time, updating a recommendation for his continued detention at Guantánamo (dated August 3, 2006), repeated that recommendation, and it is unclear why he was released the next month.</p>
<p>After his release, and after he had been put through the Saudi government’s extensive rehabilitation program, the Pentagon claimed that al-Sharikh became involved in providing support to terrorists. In May 2009, the Pentagon produced a fact sheet, “Former Guantánamo Detainee Terrorism Trends” (<a href="http://abcnews.go.com/images/Politics/guantanamo_recidivism_list_090526.pdf" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/abcnews.go.com/images/Politics/guantanamo_recidivism_list_090526.pdf?referer=');">PDF</a>), in which it was claimed that he had been &#8220;arrested in September 2008 for supporting terrorism,&#8221; although this was not listed as “confirmed” but only as “suspected.” No further information has been provided to justify this claim, and it may be that he was included because, in February 2009, one of his brothers, Abdulmohsin al-Sharikh, was <a href="http://www.saudigazette.com.sa/index.cfm?method=home.regcon&amp;contentID=2009020428379" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.saudigazette.com.sa/index.cfm?method=home.regcon_amp_contentID=2009020428379&amp;referer=');">listed</a> as one of Saudi Arabia&#8217;s 85 most wanted terror suspects.</p>
<p><strong>Khalid Al Bawardi (ISN 68, Saudi Arabia) Released November 2007</strong></p>
<p><a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/khalidalbawardi.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-15191" title="Khalid al-Bawardi (aka Khaled al-Bawardi), in a photo from the Daily Telegraph after his release." src="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/khalidalbawardi.jpg" alt="" width="290" height="182" /></a>As I explained in Chapter 5 of <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/the-guantanamo-files/"><em>The Guantánamo Files</em></a>, Khalid al-Bawardi, who was 24 years old at the time of his capture, <a href="http://projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/68-khalid-saud-abd-al-rahman-al-bawardi" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/68-khalid-saud-abd-al-rahman-al-bawardi?referer=');">told his tribunal at Guantánamo</a> the most complete tale of being a missionary, which he related with a superior moral tone that was both pompous and convincing. He explained that he took a vacation from his job with the Chamber of Commerce, and went to Pakistan to find people who were receptive to the idea of dawa, which he described as correcting the mistakes of Muslims who have &#8220;strayed from the path of righteousness.&#8221;</p>
<p>He then gave his tribunal a lecture on Jamaat al-Tablighi, the vast missionary organization, saying that, although he met Tablighi representatives in Pakistan, &#8220;They have certain procedures that they are tied down by and the procedures they follow are wrong in our religion. Their work is good and it&#8217;s correct but they make some mistakes,&#8221; adding, &#8220;You are not able to understand this or get a whole clear picture because you don&#8217;t have a complete picture of Jamaat-al-Tablighi. Besides that, you have to know Islam to know what is right and what is wrong.&#8221;</p>
<p>Having decided to work on his own, he said he traveled around Pakistani villages with a guide, correcting people&#8217;s mistakes (particularly to do with raised graves and good luck charms), and then went to Kabul, where the people were more in need of his help. When the war started, he was advised to leave the country, and, after explaining that he suspected that his landlord stole his bag, which contained his passport, he described a difficult journey to the border, in which a man who gave him a lift in a car &#8220;forcefully told me to get out&#8221; in the desert, and a young Afghan who took him into his house also asked him to leave &#8220;I told him I wanted this and that and he said he was poor and that he couldn&#8217;t help me,&#8221; he said. After finding a guide, he was arrested crossing the border.</p>
<p>In the documents released by WikiLeaks in April 2011, the file relating to al-Bawardi was a &#8220;Recommendation for Continued Detention Under DoD Control (CD),&#8221; <a href="http://wikileaks.org/gitmo/prisoner/68.html" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/wikileaks.org/gitmo/prisoner/68.html?referer=');">dated October 6, 2006</a>, in which it was noted that he was born in November 1972, and was &#8220;in good health.&#8221;</p>
<p>In telling his story, based largely on his own account, the Joint Task Force noted that, after quitting school, he &#8220;became a telephone operator and receptionist in the Riyadh Chamber of Commerce,&#8221; and then, after about a year, &#8220;quit work and sold vegetables for a few months.&#8221; On an unknown date, he traveled to Dubai, &#8220;to conduct missionary work and teach the Koran,&#8221; and at some point &#8220;read an old fatwa&#8221; issued by a sheikh, which &#8220;directed all pious men to travel abroad and perform missionary work in underdeveloped Islamic countries,&#8221; which he took to mean places such as Afghanistan or Pakistan. Pointing out that &#8220;there was no mention of jihad in the fatwa,&#8221; he said he chose to travel to Pakistan, and flew to Karachi in approximately May 2001.</p>
<p>On arrival, he said that he met an Afghan named Muhammad, who offered to be his guide. He said he &#8220;spent approximately one month in the Karachi area teaching the Koran in small unnamed villages,&#8221; while Muhammad translated for him. In approximately June or July 2001, Muhammad told him &#8220;they could do great work in Afghanistan and suggested they go there,&#8221; and he and Muhammad then traveled to Kabul, where he &#8220;facilitated discussion groups on Islam for four months,&#8221; but, in October 2001, &#8220;after the air war started,&#8221; he &#8220;decided go back to Saudi Arabia and left Kabul without Muhammad.&#8221;</p>
<p>Essentially telling the same story he later told his tribunal at Guantánamo, he said that, after &#8220;seeking out someone to help him leave Afghanistan, [he] returned to his apartment in Kabul to find all of his possessions, including his passport, stolen in his absence.&#8221; He then set off for Pakistan &#8220;by car, but his Afghani driver left him somewhere on the road between Kabul and the Pakistan border in fear of being seen with an Arab.&#8221; He then &#8220;walked for some time before reaching a small village where he stayed for three or four weeks.&#8221; Sometime in November 2001, with an Afghan guide, he &#8220;left on foot for the border,&#8221; but, on the way, &#8220;ran into and joined a larger group of 10 to 23 male refugees heading toward Pakistan.&#8221; He said that he traveled with this group for about a week until they were seized by Pakistani border officials, and added that he &#8220;was held for a few days in a Pakistani jail and questioned by Saudi officials,&#8221; and then, on December 27, 2001, was transferred to US custody.</p>
<p>He was sent to Guantánamo on January 14, 2002, and the Task Force provided the following explanation, which, unusually, added analysis from Guantánamo to the spurious information compiled in Afghanistan: &#8220;Detainee&#8217;s transfer was likely due to the perceived association between him and the 30 UBL [Osama bin Laden] bodyguards, Al-Qaida members, and Taliban fighters with whom he was arrested. However, initial reports suggested he was able to provide information on the following: Effect of the civil war on religion and ethnicity as they affect regional security issues.&#8221;</p>
<p>In assessing his story, the Task Force claimed that he was &#8220;utilizing a cover story passed to him while in a Pakistani prison,&#8221; noting that a fellow prisoner had &#8220;stated that a prison warden instructed members of [his] captured group to claim they were in Afghanistan to teach the Koran,&#8221; and adding that it was assessed that he &#8220;continue[d] to hide his true activities.&#8221; To reach these conclusions, however, the Task Force relied on a number of dubious witnesses.</p>
<p>One was Yasim Basardah (ISN 252, released), well known as <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/04/25/wikileaks-reveals-secret-guantanamo-files-exposes-detention-policy-as-a-construct-of-lies/">the most prolific and unreliable witness in Guantánamo</a>, who &#8220;stated detainee trained at Al-Qaida&#8217;s Al-Farouq Camp for three weeks, two months before the US bombing campaign started in October 2001,&#8221; and &#8220;also identified detainee as fighting in the Quodous area&#8221; (noted by an analyst as &#8220;a likely reference to the center in Tora Bora commanded by Al-Qaida member Abdul Qadoos&#8221;) &#8220;and as being in charge of determining where to dig caves and bunkers.&#8221;</p>
<p>Another unreliable witness was Mohammed al-Qahtani (ISN 63, still held, and also identified as Maad al-Qahtani), who said he &#8220;met detainee in Tora Bora.&#8221; An analyst described al-Qahtani as &#8220;a confirmed Al-Qaida operative with direct ties to senior Al-Qaida leadership, including UBL [Osama bin Laden] and Khalid Shaykh Muhammad,&#8221; but he is more generally known as <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2009/01/20/bush-era-ends-with-guantanamo-trial-chiefs-torture-confession/">the most notorious victim of torture in Guantánamo</a>.</p>
<p>It was also claimed that variations on his name had been found on various documents seized in raids on houses connected with Al-Qaida, and this led to a far-fetched claim that he &#8220;may have been an Al-Qaida facilitator,&#8221; because a &#8220;variation of [his] alias, Abu Khalid al-Tamimi, [was] the same as that used by a facilitator of a 1998 suicide plot against a US tanker ship in the Straits of Gibraltar.&#8221;</p>
<p>In conclusion, he was assessed as being &#8220;of medium intelligence value,&#8221; and of posing &#8220;a medium risk, as he may pose a threat to the US, its interests and allies.&#8221; He was also &#8220;assessed as a high threat from a detention perspective,&#8221; because his &#8220;overall behavior ha[d] been semi-compliant but mostly hostile to the guard force and staff.&#8221; As a result, Rear Adm. Harris, updating a previous recommendation for his continued detention at Guantánamo (dated October 15, 2005), repeated that recommendation, although, crucially, he added, &#8220;If a satisfactory agreement can be reached that ensures continued detention and allows access to [al-Bawardi] and/or to exploited intelligence, [he] can be Transferred Out of DoD Control (TRO),&#8221; although it took another 13 months for that agreement to be reached, and for him to be repatriated, to be put through the Saudi government’s extensive rehabilitation program.</p>
<p>In an interview in January 2010, al-Bawardi spoke to the <a href="http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/middleeast/saudiarabia/7105454/Recruits-seek-out-al-Qaedas-deadly-embrace-across-a-growing-arc-of-jihadist-terror.html" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/middleeast/saudiarabia/7105454/Recruits-seek-out-al-Qaedas-deadly-embrace-across-a-growing-arc-of-jihadist-terror.html?referer=');"><em>Daily Telegraph</em></a>, and claimed that he had, in fact, traveled to Afghanistan for jihad. As the article noted, &#8220;Bored, depressed and stuck in a dead-end job, Khaled al-Bawardi spent just a few hours watching jihadi videos to convince himself that he wanted to fight for militant Islam. It took another six years in Guantánamo Bay, plus a year in religious rehab in Saudi Arabia, to realize there might be better career options.&#8221;</p>
<p>Al-Bawardi said, “When I was young, I thought these people were angels and we had to follow them. Now, though, I can see between right and wrong.” The article also stated, &#8220;Quietly-spoken, and dressed in a traditional Arab robe and keffiya, Mr. Bawardi is an alumnus of the Prince Mohammed bin Nayef Centre for Counselling and Care outside Riyadh, where for the last two years, batches of former Guantánamo inmates have undergone religious &#8216;deprogramming&#8217; in exchange for their liberty.&#8221; The article also noted differing points of view about the program, stating that, &#8220;although there is widespread agreement that the battleground lies as much in the mind as in the streets, mountains or deserts, debate remains as to whether Saudi-style rehab programmes are the right answer. Critics contend that the Prince Mohammed project’s softly-softly approach is simply a way for Saudi’s rulers to sweep dissent under the carpet, and that it is far too easy for inmates to simply pretend they have reformed. Its backers, though, say there is little alternative &#8212; punishment, after all, is a limited sanction against a movement that thrives on martyrdom.&#8221; In contrast, &#8220;Saudi officials maintain that only a tiny minority of the programme’s 120 former Guantanamo inmates are known to have reoffended &#8212; while the rest are, they claim, helping to combat the spread of Al-Qaida’s ideology. Defeating that, they point out, is the only sure route to vanquishing Al-Qaida permanently.&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Sadeq Mohammed Said Ismail (ISN 69, Yemen) Released June 2007</strong></p>
<p><a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/sadeqmohammedsaid.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-15192" title="Sadeq Mohammed Said Ismail (aka Sadeq Mohammed Saeed), in a photo from the Yemen Observer after his release." src="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/sadeqmohammedsaid.jpg" alt="" width="216" height="237" /></a>In &#8220;<a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/the-guantanamo-files-website-extras-9-seized-in-pakistan-part-one/">The Guantánamo Files: Website Extras (9) – Seized in Pakistan (Part One)</a>&#8221; and in <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2007/06/20/two-tunisians-and-four-yemenis-leave-guantanamo-at-least-one-abdullah-bin-omar-faces-torture-in-his-homeland/">an article at the time of his release</a>, I explained how, according to <a href="http://projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/69-sadeq-muhammad-said-ismail" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/69-sadeq-muhammad-said-ismail?referer=');">his account at Guantánamo</a>, Ismail (also identified as Sadeq Mohammed Said), who was born in 1982, and was therefore 19 years old at the time of his capture, was accused of traveling to Afghanistan in May 2001 and serving as a courier for the Taliban. Although he had been injured in an aerial bombing attack near Khost, and was captured after crossing the border into Pakistan, the US authorities managed to claim, based on an unsubstantiated allegation, presumably from another prisoner, that he was captured in Tora Bora, during the showdown in November and December 2001 between Al-Qaida and Taliban forces, and the US military and their Afghan proxies, when Osama bin Laden and the senior leadership of Al-Qaida slipped away across the unguarded border to Pakistan.</p>
<p>In the documents released by WikiLeaks in April 2011, the file relating to Ismail was a brief &#8220;Administrative Review Board Input,&#8221; <a href="http://wikileaks.org/gitmo/prisoner/69.html" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/wikileaks.org/gitmo/prisoner/69.html?referer=');">dated November 12, 2004</a>, in which Brig. Gen. Jay W. Hood, the commander of Guantánamo at the time, recommended to his military review board that he be &#8220;transferred to the control of another country for continued detention (TRCD).&#8221;</p>
<p>Little information was provided in this document, although it was noted that, according to the Task Force&#8217;s assessment, he &#8220;traveled to Afghanistan for the purpose of receiving military training; however, he claims to have received no training.&#8221; The allegation that he was a courier was also mentioned, as it was claimed that, &#8220;While in Afghanistan, [he] participated in escort or courier operations between Kandahar and Kabul for the Taliban for several months until the US bombing campaign began in the area.&#8221;</p>
<p>The Tora Bora allegation was not mentioned, but it was noted that the Task Force assessed him &#8220;as being very deceptive, as he ha[d] not been forthcoming during debriefings,&#8221; was &#8220;very uncooperative,&#8221; and gave &#8220;conflicting information.&#8221;</p>
<p>It was also noted that, in his &#8220;Most Recent JTF GTMO Assessment, signed on 6 September 2003,&#8221; which also recommended his transfer to the control of another country for continued detention, he was assessed as being of low intelligence value and a medium threat. Despite the recommendation for his transfer, however, he was not released for another two years and seven months, and three years and nine months after he was first recommended for transfer.</p>
<p>After his return from Guantánamo, in an interview with <a href="http://gulfnews.com/news/gulf/yemen/i-don-t-know-why-i-was-arrested-and-released-1.207532" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/gulfnews.com/news/gulf/yemen/i-don-t-know-why-i-was-arrested-and-released-1.207532?referer=');"><em>Gulf News</em></a> following his release from four months in Yemeni detention on October 12, 2007, he told reporter Nasser Arrabyee that &#8220;he did not know why he was arrested in the first place, and why he was released.&#8221; Identified as Sadeq Mohammad Saeed, he told a different story abut his capture, claiming that he &#8220;was arrested along with his compatriots in Afghanistan from a hospital where he was undergoing treatment for injuries he suffered in a battle more than six years ago.&#8221;</p>
<p>Arrabyee explained that, just hours after arriving at his home in Ibb city, &#8220;he was receiving visitors who came for a welcome ceremony,&#8221; and was dressed &#8220;in smart traditional Yemeni clothes and sporting a long beard.&#8221; His brothers &#8220;were introducing him to those who came to the house, many of whom were strangers.&#8221; Some were relatives of other Guantánamo prisoners. She noted that, although he &#8220;was initially reluctant to speak to the journalists,&#8221; he &#8220;gave in after some persuasion by his brothers and spoke to <em>Gulf News</em>,&#8221; focusing on what he called a &#8220;letter to the Americans and the world,&#8221; in which, with some defiance, he &#8220;said he and his companions were engaged in &#8216;jihad&#8217; since they left [their] homes and families and would continue doing so as long as they live.&#8221; That may have been bravado, to be honest, although it may also have got him labeled as a suspected recidivist by the US authorities.</p>
<p>Explaining more, he said, &#8220;I traveled to Pakistan and from there to Afghanistan and then I joined one of the Taliban battlelines.&#8221; As Arrabyee described it, he &#8220;refused to delve into the bodily abuses he suffered while in Guantánamo, but spoke about abuses against religion inflicted on all detainees,&#8221; and said, &#8220;The abuses targeted religion, reviling God, and Prophet Mohammad (PBUH) and his companions and the believers. Some brothers were subjected to psychological and physical torture because they were Muslims. There were a lot of abuses, and it is enough to say they were directed at Allah, his prophet and the believers.&#8221;</p>
<p>He added that &#8220;he was not sure of his future plans,&#8221; and explained, &#8220;I cannot say anything right now. I&#8217;m still a stranger on this land, I&#8217;m a new-born, I cannot say I can do this and that.&#8221; Arrabyee noted that he &#8220;traveled to Afghanistan before completing his secondary school.&#8221;</p>
<p>In a final rhetorical flourish that can only have alarmed the US authorities, fearful of retribution and unable to understand the desire of some Muslims to fight in other Muslim countries, one of his brothers, Rashad Mohammad Saeed, who had traveled to Afghanistan for jihad, said, &#8220;Let the Americans know that jihadists are respected in their nations and they are not killers or criminals.&#8221; As <em>Gulf News</em> put it, &#8220;he exhorted Muslims to rise in revolt against the Bush administration which spends billions of dollars to destroy Taliban and Al-Qaida,&#8221; saying, &#8220;These attempts are only making the Taliban and Al-Qaida stronger and stronger.&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Mishal Saad Al Rashid (ISN 74, Saudi Arabia) </strong><strong>Released December 2007</strong></p>
<p>As I explained in Chapter 2 of <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/the-guantanamo-files/"><em>The Guantánamo Files</em></a>, and in <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2008/01/07/who-are-the-ten-saudis-just-released-from-guantanamo/">an article at the time of his release</a>, Mishal Saad al-Rashid (misidentified by his captors as Mesh Arsad al-Rashid), who was 21 years old at the time of his capture, was typical of numerous men captured and sent to Guantánamo, in his insistence that he went to Afghanistan, over a year “before any problem happened in America,” to help the Taliban fight General Dostum and Ahmed Shah Massoud of the Northern Alliance.</p>
<p>He was confused that the Northern Alliance had formed a coalition with the United States, as the only coalition that he knew of was between the Northern Alliance and Russia. Although this misconception, repeated by several other prisoners, was partly due to the propaganda issued by pro-Taliban sheikhs in Saudi Arabia, it also had some basis in fact, at least in the case of Dostum, who had fought with the Russians during the Soviet invasion, before switching sides in the early 1990s.</p>
<p>In <a href="http://projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/74-mesh-arsad-al-rashid" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/74-mesh-arsad-al-rashid?referer=');">his tribunal at Guantánamo</a>, al-Rashid accepted an allegation that he was a member of the Taliban (but not Al-Qaida), and also acknowledged that he had received military training in Afghanistan. He was one of several hundred Taliban fighters who surrendered after the fall of Kunduz, believing that they would be freed after handing over their weapons, but who discovered, instead, that they were to be imprisoned in Qala-i-Janghi, a fortress run by General Dostum. After the prisoners were tied up and taken for questioning, some of them, fearing that they were about to be killed, staged an uprising, which was put down by the Northern Alliance, backed up by US and British Special Forces, and supported by American bombing raids, in which the majority of the prisoners were killed. In the end, a week after the uprising began, 86 survivors emerged from the basement, who had survived being bombed and flooded.</p>
<p>At Guantánamo, when asked about the &#8220;uprising,&#8221; al-Rashid, who was injured in his thigh and shoulder, said, &#8220;What uprising? We didn&#8217;t do any uprising. We had given up our weapons, so how could we be part of an uprising? They [Dostum's troops] were the ones that had the weapons. We tried to defend ourselves but we couldn&#8217;t, because they had all the weapons.&#8221; He added that accusing men who were tied up of using weapons was a sure sign of the &#8220;betrayal&#8221; that had taken place in the fort.</p>
<p>In the documents released by WikiLeaks in April 2011, the file relating to al-Rashid was a &#8220;Recommendation for Continued Detention Under DoD Control (CD),&#8221; <a href="http://wikileaks.org/gitmo/prisoner/74.html" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/wikileaks.org/gitmo/prisoner/74.html?referer=');">dated April 28, 2007</a>, in which it was noted that he was born in 1980, and was &#8220;in good health.&#8221;</p>
<p>In telling his story, based largely on his own account, the Joint Task Force noted that he attended elementary school but &#8220;acquired no further formal education,&#8221; and, from 1995 to 2000, worked as a guard at a palace. Around March 2000, he responded to a fatwa &#8220;telling Muslims to support the Taliban in Afghanistan against the NA [Northern Alliance],&#8221; and also &#8220;heard about religious persecution of Muslims in Afghanistan,&#8221; and, as a result, he quit his job and traveled to Qatar, intending to take a flight to Pakistan. For reasons that were not explained, he and a new friend he met en route were unable to fly to Pakistan, and so they returned to Saudi Arabia, where they succeeded in taking a flight to Islamabad instead. They then made their way to Peshawar, where &#8220;they spoke with a Pakistani about their desire to travel to Afghanistan to join the Taliban,&#8221; and he &#8220;helped them cross the border into Afghanistan and escorted them to a Taliban house in Kandahar.&#8221;</p>
<p>He attended training at Al-Farouq (the main training camp for Arabs, associated with Osama bin Laden in the years before 9/11), and was then &#8220;assigned to the reserve lines (secondary line) for several months.&#8221; He then traveled to the front lines in the Khawaja Ghar region, where, with other Arabs, he fought alongside the Taliban. After the Taliban withdrew (as the Northern Alliance advanced), he and others retreated to a Taliban house in Kunduz, where his commander, Mullah Thaker, told the them to surrender and said that &#8220;they would be allowed to return to their country.&#8221; It is not known whether Thaker knew this to be untrue, but after surrendering, they were taken to Qala-i-Janghi, where he &#8220;was shot in the left leg and under his right arm.&#8221;</p>
<p>After he and the other survivors were moved to General Dostum&#8217;s prison at Sheberghan, he was transferred to the US prison at Kandahar airport on December 29, 2001, and was sent to Guantánamo on February 13, 2002, on the spurious basis that it was to &#8220;provide information on the following: The uprising in Mazar-e-Sharif [and] Taliban membership.&#8221;</p>
<p>In assessing his story, the Task Force noted that he had &#8220;denied having knowledge of any of the detainees that ha[d] identified him,&#8221; had &#8220;failed to provide any detailed information concerning his activities and associates while in Afghanistan,&#8221; and had &#8220;provided inconsistent information about his personal history.&#8221; Nevertheless, there was nothing about his story to demonstrate that he was anything more than a simple foot soldier, but the Task Force managed to come up with an alternative account from Ali al-Tayeea (ISN 111, released in January 2009), a talkative Iraqi known as one of the most unreliable witnesses in Guantánamo.</p>
<p>Al-Tayeea claimed that al-Rashid &#8220;worked with wireless communication systems,&#8221; and &#8220;reported that detainee was responsible for transporting trainees between Kabul and Al-Farouq, and served as Abd al-Hadi al-Iraqi&#8217;s liaison when he came to the camp (al-Iraqi, ISN 10026, who was moved to Guantánamo in 2007, and is still held, was described as &#8220;one of [Osama bin Laden]&#8216;s closest commanders and the person in charge of non-Afghan Taliban troops and Al-Qaida fighters that made up the 55th Arab Brigade on the Afghanistan northern front&#8221;). Al-Tayeea also stated that al-Rashid &#8220;reportedly collected intelligence on trainees and soldiers for al-Iraqi and that the two men had frequent contact.&#8221;</p>
<p>To be fair, although an analyst noted that &#8220;[t]his reporting indicate[d] detainee had direct access to al-Iraqi and served in a significant role in UBL&#8217;s 55th Arab Brigade, possibly as a counterintelligence officer,&#8221; the analyst also noted that al-Rashid&#8217;s &#8220;close association to al-Iraqi&#8221; was &#8220;uncorroborated by other sources and require[d] further exploitation,&#8221; although anyone reading just the start of the 10-page file would not have known this, as, in an &#8220;executive summary,&#8221; it was stated simply that he &#8220;may have served as a counterintelligence or intelligence officer,&#8221; and &#8220;may have served as a liaison for senior Al-Qaida leader Abd al-Hadi al-Iraqi at the Al-Farouq Training Camp.&#8221;</p>
<p>In conclusion, the Task Force assessed him as being &#8220;of high intelligence value,&#8221; and of posing &#8220;a high risk, as he is likely to pose a threat to the US, its interests and allies,&#8221; although one reason for regarding him as a risk was because he had cursed an interrogator during a session in 2003. While this was not actually indicative of anything but frustration, an analyst claimed that, &#8220;While this can be construed as only rhetoric, it also denotes the detainee&#8217;s inclination to continue to wage or support jihad in the future.&#8221; Al-Rashid was also &#8220;assessed to be a medium threat from a detention perspective,&#8221; because his &#8220;overall behaviour ha[d] been semi-compliant and rarely hostile to the guard force and staff.&#8221; As a result, Rear Adm. Harris, updating a previous recommendation for his continued detention at Guantánamo (dated April 14, 2006), repeated that recommendation, although he was released just eight months later, to be put through the Saudi government’s extensive rehabilitation program.</p>
<p><strong>Rukniddin Sharopov (ISN 76, Tajikistan) Released February 2007</strong></p>
<p><a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/rukniddinsharopov.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-15193" title="Rukniddin Sharopov, in a photo taken before his capture." src="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/rukniddinsharopov.jpg" alt="" width="176" height="184" /></a>As I explained in <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2007/08/23/tajiks-released-from-guantanamo-sentenced-to-17-years-in-prison/">an article after his release</a>, Rukniddin Sharopov, who was born in 1981 (although the US authorities initially stated that he was born in 1973), <a href="http://projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/76-rukniddin-fayziddinovich-sharipov" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/76-rukniddin-fayziddinovich-sharipov?referer=');">claimed in Guantánamo</a> that, because he wanted to earn some money, he agreed to “serve for the army of Tajikistan’s government.” He said that he believed that he would be serving in Lajerg in Tajikistan, but was “tricked” into fighting with the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU), a close ally of the Taliban in the fight against the Northern Alliance in northern Afghanistan, and serving in Afghanistan instead. He explained that, in Lajerg, he found himself in a camp run by the IMU, where his passport was taken away from him, and one of the organization’s leaders, a man called Rostum, “told him it was better if he went into the military.” As a result, he said, he was sent to Afghanistan to fight with the Taliban against General Dostum’s Uzbek faction of the Northern Alliance.</p>
<p>He then explained that he was a passenger on a truck containing Uzbek soldiers &#8212; not Taliban, as alleged by the US authorities &#8212; who surrendered to Dostum’s forces in a compound in Khawaja Ghar, near the border with Tajikistan, and added that, although he had no criminal record in Tajikistan, he believed that this might cause a problem for him in his home country. “This is one thing the interrogators told me,” he said. “The interrogator told me it would be a problem for me if I went back to Tajikistan because I was with the Uzbek community.” He denied receiving training at Lajerg, as, he said, he had received some mandatory training in Tajikistan, and he added that he didn’t like to shoot guns and that at the camp he collected wood for the fire. “I never fought before and I am not going to fight after this. I have never fought in my life,” he stated.</p>
<p>After his capture, he was taken to Qala-i-Janghi, a fort in the northern city of Mazar-e-Sharif, and was one of only 86 men &#8212; out of a total of around 450 foreign fighters &#8212; who survived a notorious massacre in the fort. This followed an uprising by a number of the prisoners, who feared that they were about to be shot. He said that he did not take part in the uprising, but was in the basement when it was flooded by the Northern Alliance and the US Special Forces, and that some soldiers untied his hands and “put something around my injury.”</p>
<p>In the documents released by WikiLeaks in April 2011, the file relating to Sharopov was an &#8220;Update Recommendation to Transfer to the Control of Another Country for Continued Detention (TRCD),&#8221; <a href="http://wikileaks.org/gitmo/prisoner/76.html" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/wikileaks.org/gitmo/prisoner/76.html?referer=');">dated August 3, 2005</a>, in which he was identified as Rukniddin Sharipov, and was noted that he was born in September 1981, and was &#8220;in good health,&#8221; although it was also noted that he &#8220;complained of chest pain a few times,&#8221; although there had &#8220;not been findings on chest X-rays,&#8221; and that he &#8220;was on a hunger strike in Oct 02.&#8221;</p>
<p>In telling his story, based largely on his own account and mostly corresponding with what he told his tribunal at Guantánamo, the Joint Task Force noted that he was sent to school in Pakistan &#8220;when he was five and remained there until age 15,&#8221; and then &#8220;attended Government Degree College, where he studied Civics, Pashtu, and History.&#8221; He apparently &#8220;stated he returned to Isfara when he and a friend, Tsabit Vakhidov&#8221; (ISN 90, see below, also identified as Muqit Vohidov and Wahldof Abdul Mokit) and another friend, identified only as Farad, &#8220;were recruited for service with the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU),&#8221; described by the US authorities as &#8220;a Tier 1 counterterrorism target, defined as terrorist groups, especially those with state support, that have demonstrated the intention and the capability to attack US persons or interests.&#8221;</p>
<p>He apparently said that the three of them &#8220;left Isfara by train destined for Russia to find work,&#8221; but &#8220;[w]hile they were at the train station in Dushanbe,&#8221; they &#8220;met a man by the name of Rostam who recruited them to join what they believed to be the Tajikistan military,&#8221; and &#8220;told them that they would be paid USD $300 a month in wages if they joined.&#8221; After they agreed, they went to Tavildara, also in Tajikistan, where they &#8220;arrived at an Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU) training camp.&#8221;</p>
<p>There, he said, there were about 200 soldiers, and, after he received a few days&#8217; military training, &#8220;he stood guard at the main gate of the camp.&#8221; He and the others were then flown to Kunduz &#8220;in helicopters provided by the Tajikistan government,&#8221; although he &#8220;did not know where he was flying,&#8221; and was only told that &#8220;he was going to a warmer place.&#8221; He added that he believed he arrived in Afghanistan sometime after Ramadan in 2000.</p>
<p>When it came to the circumstances of his capture, it was stated that he traveled with other IMU fighters from Kabul to Mazar-e-Sharif,&#8221; but were told to surrender to Dostum&#8217;s forces just before arriving. The Task Force noted that he &#8220;was present at the Mazar-e-Sharif prison uprising,&#8221; and also noted that he stated that he &#8220;had his hands tied behind his back and was on his knees when fighting started in the prison.&#8221; He added that he &#8220;began to run and was wounded,&#8221; and &#8220;received three shrapnel wounds on his right foot.&#8221; It was also noted, &#8220;During the fighting, he went back to the house and went into the basement where there were many other Pakistani and Arabic-speaking prisoners. Only one of the prisoners in the basement had a Kalashnikov. [He] heard that Dostum&#8217;s forces threw a grenade into the house, [which] killed some of the prisoners in the basement and injured others. [He] spent about 5-6 days in the basement.&#8221;</p>
<p>He was sent to Guantánamo on January 14, 2002, on the spurious basis that it was to &#8220;provide information on the following: Detainee may be able to provide general to specific information on the training and relocation of Tajik youth into Afghanistan to fight with the Taliban [and] Detainee may be able to provide general to specific information on the unit that formed the Uzbek movement in Mazar-e-Sharif.&#8221;</p>
<p>In assessing his story, the Task Force noted that he had &#8220;admitted being an IMU member,&#8221; and assessed that he and Vakhidov &#8220;were both recruited to join the IMU prior to leaving their homes,&#8221; because, although both men &#8220;stated that they were headed for &#8216;Russia&#8217; to seek jobs,&#8221; neither &#8220;had a specific destination in Russia.&#8221; It was also claimed that Sharopov &#8220;did not explain where they got finances to take the train,&#8221; and It was &#8220;much more likely that someone in their village recruited them and that &#8216;Rostam&#8217; was scheduled to meet with them on the train and escort them to the Tajikistan training camp.&#8221;</p>
<p>This may have been so, but it still didn&#8217;t demonstrate that Sharopov was anything more than a simple foot soldier. The Task Force concluded that he was only &#8220;of low intelligence value,&#8221; and only posed &#8220;a medium risk, as he may pose a threat to the US, its interests and allies,&#8221; although officials also claimed that he had been &#8220;indoctrinated into the Islamic extremist ideology and knowingly joined the IMU for jihadist purposes,&#8221; which I do not believe had been established. It was also noted that his &#8220;overall behavior pattern ha[d] been compliant with spikes in aggression, with the most reports coming from harassment of the guard force.&#8221; As a result, Brig. Gen. Hood recommended his transfer to continued detention in Tajkistan, even though it was also noted that he was &#8220;a fugitive from Tajikistan and [was] wanted for violating Tajikistan&#8217;s laws and international orders,&#8221; which indicated that he would be treated very poorly if repatriated.</p>
<p>Sure enough, after his release, Sharopov and Muqit Vohidov (aka Tsabit Vakhidov) were tried and sentenced to 17 years in “high-security penal colonies” (aka labor camps) for “serving as mercenaries in Afghanistan” and aiding the Taliban by fighting for the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU), and for taking part in “illegal border crossing.” After passing sentence, the Supreme Court judge, Musammir Uroqov, said that both men had maintained their innocence, and added, “In their last words, they said they didn’t expect such consequences for acts they committed.” However, according to <a href="http://www.rferl.org/featuresarticle/2007/08/d4848eb4-f67f-46f3-8693-0c003b1d9fdb.html" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.rferl.org/featuresarticle/2007/08/d4848eb4-f67f-46f3-8693-0c003b1d9fdb.html?referer=');">RFE/RL</a>, the judge was satisfied that “investigations carried out in Vohidov and Sharopov’s native Isfara region proved that both men [had] been involved with the banned Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan.”</p>
<p>In June 2010, as <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2010/07/07/calls-for-review-of-punitive-sentences-for-ex-guantanamo-tajiks/">I explained here</a>, the <a href="http://iwpr.net/report-news/review-urged-ex-guantanamo-tajiks" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/iwpr.net/report-news/review-urged-ex-guantanamo-tajiks?referer=');">Institute for War &amp; Peace Reporting</a> revisited the story, explaining how the men’s families had been campaigning for a review of the verdict, and how prosecutors were possibly prepared to review the case. Although arguments were made that the sentence was justified because the men “committed acts that violate national law,” it was also noted that the time they served in Guantánamo was not taken into account during the sentencing.</p>
<p>Moreover, as I explained, other observers remained deeply critical, and their insights reflected badly not only on the Tajik authorities but also on the US government. As the IWPR article explained, Payam Foroughi, until recently a human rights officer with the OSCE in Tajikistan, “believes due process was not followed,” pointing out that the men “had not enough, or any, time to sufficiently and seriously discuss and properly prepare their case with a lawyer &#8212; and one of their choice &#8212; prior to their court hearing.” He also believed that the court “should have probed further into the allegation that Vohidov and Sharopov willingly became members of the IMU,” adding, “If anything, the evidence points to them having been victims of human trafficking.”</p>
<p>Criticism of the US came, inadvertently, from the judge in the men’s trial in 2007, who told IWPR, “We could not determine, even from the defendants, on what legal basis they were detained at and released from Guantánamo. We could not get hold of any documents. So we reached a verdict based on the documents that we had.” Highlighting this problem more explicitly, a local lawyer told IWPR that “the lack of documentation from Guantánamo was a recurring problem in countries to which detainees are repatriated.” He might have added that in most countries the authorities’ response was to let the men go.</p>
<p>In August 2011, <a href="http://www.rferl.org/content/activistis_and_lawyers_call_on_tajikistan_to_release_ex-guantanamo_detainees/24296602.html" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.rferl.org/content/activistis_and_lawyers_call_on_tajikistan_to_release_ex-guantanamo_detainees/24296602.html?referer=');">RFE/RL reported</a> that, for the 20th anniversary of Tajikistan&#8217;s independence, on September 9, 2011, human rights activists and lawyers were calling on the Tajik president to consider releasing the two former Guantánamo prisoners as part of an amnesty, noting, &#8220;Some 8,000 prisoners are expected to be set free to mark the occasion. Unofficial estimates suggest there are currently 13,000 people imprisoned in Tajikistan. There have been 11 amnesties in Tajikistan over the past 20 years. In the most recent, in November 2009, some 10,000 prisoners were released.&#8221;</p>
<p>The article stated, &#8220;Human Rights Watch, two prominent American lawyers, and a legal expert from Columbia University in New York have sent letters to Tajik President Emomali Rahmon making the case for Rukniddin Sharopov&#8217;s and Abdumuqit Vohidov&#8217;s release.&#8221; Chicago-based attorney Matthew J. O&#8217;Hara wrote, &#8220;It is my expert opinion that a great injustice has been done on the two.&#8221; He explained that it was probable that the two men &#8220;did not traverse the international border by will,&#8221; and, as RFE/RL added, &#8220;Sharopov and Vohidov maintain that they have never killed anyone, or been involved in terrorist activities or acts of violence.&#8221;</p>
<p>In their letter, Human Rights Watch <a href="http://en.trend.az/regions/casia/tajikistan/1916697.html" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/en.trend.az/regions/casia/tajikistan/1916697.html?referer=');">stated</a>, &#8220;Neither US, nor Tajik authorities provided any sound evidences of Sharopov&#8217;s and Vokhidov&#8217;s belonging to terrorist activity and crimes. We hope that the forthcoming amnesty law will also cover ex-prisoners of the Guantanamo Bay, who were accused of murder, and hope that Vokhidov&#8217;s and Sharopov&#8217;s appeals for amnesty will be carefully examined.&#8221; However, there has been no further news since August 2011.</p>
<p><strong>Mehrabanb Fazrollah (ISN 77, Tajikistan) Released February 2007</strong></p>
<p><a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/mehrabanbfazrollah.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-15194" title="Mehrabanb Fazrollah, in a photocopied photo included in the classified US military documents (the Detainee Assessment Briefs) released by WikiLeaks in April 2011." src="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/mehrabanbfazrollah.jpg" alt="" width="174" height="199" /></a>In &#8220;<a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/the-guantanamo-files-website-extras-the-qala-i-janghi-massacre/">The Guantánamo Files: Website Extras (1) – The Qala-i-Janghi Massacre</a>,&#8221; I explained how Mehrabanb Fazrollah, who was 39 years old at the time of his capture, was subjected to <a href="http://projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/77-mehrabanb-fazrollah" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/77-mehrabanb-fazrollah?referer=');">a particularly thin set of allegations</a> in Guantánamo: that he traveled to Afghanistan in April 2001, that he “admitted to fighting with the Taliban,” and that he was captured with a Kalashnikov and ammunition.</p>
<p>In the documents released by WikiLeaks in April 2011, the file relating to Fazrollah  was an &#8220;Update Recommendation for Transfer to the Control of Another Country with Conditions (TWC), Subject to the Conclusion of an Acceptable Transfer Agreement,&#8221; <a href="http://wikileaks.org/gitmo/prisoner/77.html" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/wikileaks.org/gitmo/prisoner/77.html?referer=');">dated August 28, 2005</a>, in which he was also identified as Mehrabon Faizulloh Odinaev, and it was noted that he was born in October 1962, and was &#8220;in good health.&#8221;</p>
<p>In telling his story, based largely on his own account, it was noted that he served in the Russian Army from 1981 to 1983 (but did not serve in Afghanistan), and then &#8220;received training as a bus driver and an auto mechanic,&#8221; but &#8220;also worked at an oil refinery, on a collective farm producing cotton, and in a fruit delivery business.&#8221; From 1992 to 1994, during the Tajik civil war, he lived in Afghanistan for three months, and then &#8220;became a refugee and moved to a refugee camp near the Kunduz airport.&#8221; After the civil war he returned to Dushanbe, and, in 2000, &#8220;sent his ten-year old son with a group of Tajik youths&#8221; to study at a madrassa in Karachi.</p>
<p>In March or April 2001, he said, he decided to visit his son. Traveling to Pakistan via Afghanistan, he spent a week with old friends, and &#8220;continued his travels with stops in Kunduz and Kabul.&#8221; After locating his son in May, he spent a month with him and then set off back for Tajikistan. However, he said that he was unable to find anyone to help him cross the river to get back to Tajikistan (which was a dangerous and illegal crossing), so he remained in an Afghan village until early November 2001, when he &#8220;decided to depart for Kunduz because the Northern Alliance arrived and were arresting people who did not have identification.&#8221; There, he said, he stayed in a refugee camp for ten days, but was then picked up by Northern Alliance troops.</p>
<p>They told him that &#8220;they would bring him and several others to a safe place,&#8221; but, instead, took them to Qala-i-Janghi, an ancient fort in the possession of the warlord General Rashid Dostum, where he survived the massacre that resulted after some of the hundreds of prisoners started an uprising, fearing that they were about to be shot. He was one of 86 survivors, who hid in a basement where they were bombed and flooded, but no mention was made of it in his file. He was then moved to Dostum&#8217;s prison at Sherberghan, before being transferred to US custody at the Kandahar detention facility. He was sent to Guantánamo on May 10, 2002, on the spurious basis that it was to &#8220;provide information on the following: The prison uprising at Mazar-e-Sharif, Tajiki refugees residing in Afghanistan [and] A madrassa in Karachi, PK.&#8221;</p>
<p>In assessing his story, the Task Force provided a conflicting account to his own, noting that he was &#8220;assessed as a low-level member of the Islamic Movement of Tajikistan (IMT), which is allied with the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU),&#8221; and also noting that he &#8220;admitted he fought alongside the Taliban against Northern Alliance forces and fled after the collapse of the Taliban.&#8221; The IMU was described by the US authorities as &#8220;a Tier 1 counterterrorism target, defined as terrorist groups, especially those with state support, that have demonstrated the intention and the capability to attack US persons or interests,&#8221; but even so, he was regarded as not being of major significance.</p>
<p>The Task Force also claimed that he had &#8220;not been forthright during debriefings,&#8221; and regarded his story of visiting his son as &#8220;a cover story,&#8221; but in conclusion he was only assessed as being &#8220;of low intelligence value,&#8221; and of posing &#8220;a medium risk, as he may pose a threat to the US, its interests and allies.&#8221; It was also noted that he was &#8220;assessed as a low threat from a detention perspective,&#8221; because his &#8221;overall behavior ha[d] been non-hostile and compliant,&#8221; and, as a result, Maj. Gen. Hood, updating a recommendation for his &#8220;Transfer to the Control of Another Country for Continued Detention&#8221; (dated May 5, 2004), recommended him for transfer with conditions, although he was not released for another year and a half.</p>
<p><strong>Fahed Al Harazi (ISN 79, Saudi Arabia) Released September 2007</strong></p>
<p><a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/fahedalharazi.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-15195" title="Fahed al-Harazi, in a photocopied photo included in the classified US military documents (the Detainee Assessment Briefs) released by WikiLeaks in April 2011." src="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/fahedalharazi.jpg" alt="" width="176" height="200" /></a>In Chapter 2 of <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/the-guantanamo-files/"><em>The Guantánamo Files</em></a>, I explained how Fahed al-Harazi, who was 23 years old at the time of his capture, <a href="http://projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/79-fahed-al-harazi" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/79-fahed-al-harazi?referer=');">was accused</a> of travelling to Afghanistan in March 2001 and &#8212; with remarkable speed &#8212; becoming a trainer at Al-Farouq, the main training camp for Arabs, associated with Osama bin Laden in the years before 9/11.</p>
<p>in <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2007/09/11/guantanamo-the-stories-of-the-16-saudis-just-released/">an article at the time of his release</a>, I expanded on his story, noting that, although he had secured legal representation by the time he was released, he had refused to meet his lawyers, and had also refused to take part in either his tribunal or his review boards, so that the allegations against him went unanswered. While the first set of allegations &#8212; that he traveled to Afghanistan in March 2001 “to fight the jihad,” attended “an Al-Qaida affiliated camp,” fought on the front lines against the Northern Alliance, and was wounded in Qala-i-Janghi &#8212; seem plausible, the additional claims &#8212; that he was actually a trainer at Al-Farouq, and that his name was found on a document at the “Military Committee al-Mujahideen Affairs Office,” which contained “nominees for the Al-Qaida Trainers Preparation Center” &#8212; appeared more dubious.</p>
<p>In the documents released by WikiLeaks in April 2011, the file relating to al-Harazi was a &#8220;Recommendation for Continued Detention Under DoD Control (CD),&#8221; <a href="http://wikileaks.org/gitmo/prisoner/79.html" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/wikileaks.org/gitmo/prisoner/79.html?referer=');">dated June 19, 2007</a>, in which he was also identified as Fahd al-Harazi, and it was noted that he was born in November 1978, and was &#8220;in good health.&#8221;</p>
<p>In telling his story, based largely on his own account, the Joint Task Force noted that he &#8220;completed at least 15 years of school,&#8221; although he &#8220;held no job after graduation, but spent his time with &#8216;non-religious&#8217; friends.&#8221; However, he regularly &#8220;attended a masque next door to his residence in Mecca,&#8221; and there &#8220;met a Pakistani named Abdul Jalil who told [him] he needed to go and fight in jihad.&#8221; Another individual, named Majid, then &#8220;told [him] that they both could go to Afghanistan and then return to Saudi Arabia after only a short time,&#8221; and he &#8220;managed their travel, obtained Pakistani visas, and paid for all travel expenses.&#8221; In March 2001, they flew to Karachi, and then on to Quetta, Kandahar and Kabul.</p>
<p>In Kabul, he said, he and Majid &#8220;attended two weeks of military training, which consisted of instruction on small arms and grenades,&#8221; and were then sent to Kunduz. They &#8220;arrived at a Taliban guesthouse in Kunduz the first week in May 2001,&#8221; and al-Harazi said that &#8220;[b]etween five and 20 Taliban soldiers were resting at this guesthouse at various times.&#8221; After a week, he &#8220;and his two associates traveled to the second line, about three miles to the rear of the Taliban front lines.&#8221; He &#8221;claimed he went to the front lines on five or six occasions with his AK-47 but never fired his weapon nor did he see any fighting,&#8221; and remained on the lines until he was instructed to retreat to Kunduz (he said this was late August 2001, but it was almost certainly November).</p>
<p>Two weeks later, the Taliban surrendered to the Northern Alliance, and he &#8220;was told they could surrender and were guaranteed safe travel through Mazar-e-Sharif, AF, to Herat, AF,&#8221; but Northern Alliance forces under the warlord General Rashid Dostum apparently captured him and others on November 24, 2001, and took them to Qala-i-Janghi, where a massacre of prisoners took place, after some of them staged an uprising, fearing that they were about to be shot.</p>
<p>As the Task Force described it in al-Harazi&#8217;s file, &#8220;After one night in captivity, the prisoners revolted leading to the deaths of members of the Northern Alliance forces and CIA officer Johnny &#8216;Mike&#8217; Spann.&#8221; Al-Harazi &#8220;was shot in the arm during the uprising,&#8221; and he and 86 others that &#8220;survived the assaults hid in the basement until they were re-captured about a week later,&#8221; after the basement had been bombed and flooded. He was taken to General Dostum&#8217;s prison at Sheberghan, and was turned over to US control on approximately December 28, 2001. He was sent to Guantánamo on February 7, 2002, on the spurious basis that it was to &#8220;provide information on the following: Taliban training capabilities, Training Course for Trainers at Al-Farouq Training Camp [and] Routes of ingress and egress from Afghanistan.&#8221;</p>
<p>In assessing his story, the Task Force decided that he was lying, although their reasons for doing so were questionable. One unreliable witness, Abdu Ali al-Haji Sharqawi (ISN 1457, still held, and also identified as Sharqawi Abdu Ali al-Hajj), is <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2010/04/23/judge-rules-yemenis-detention-at-guantanamo-based-solely-on-torture/">a victim of torture</a> in Jordan and in secret CIA custody in Afghanistan, and there might therefore be doubts abut the truth of his statement that, after being shown a photo of al-Harazi, he &#8220;identified [him] as Hassan al-Makki, who attended the class at Al-Farouq Training Camp to become an instructor.&#8221; To back this up, it was noted that the same name, Hassan al-Makki, &#8220;was found on a list of participants for a course entitled &#8220;Training Course for Trainers,&#8221; held at Al-Farouq from September to December 2000,&#8221; in which it was stated that al-Makki &#8220;traveled to Afghanistan in 1999, attended the trainer&#8217;s course, and worked as a trainer at Al-Farouq.&#8221; It was also &#8220;indicated&#8221; that al-Makki &#8220;was residing in the airport complex for the duration of training,&#8221; which an analyst took to mean &#8220;the Al-Qaida guesthouse located at Kandahar airport.&#8221;</p>
<p>The problem with these claims, of course, is that it is by no means clear that the man from Mecca who adopted the alias Hassan was actually al-Harazi, even if that was an alias he used, as others from Mecca might also have chosen that name, and it is no more reassuring that David Hicks (ISN 2, released May 2007), &#8220;stated detainee went by the name Khalid and was a trainer of the basic training course at Al-Farouq,&#8221; because it is well-known that Hicks lied under pressure, and, in any case, although he allegedly identified al-Harazi as a trainer at Al-Farouq, presumably under prompting, he gave him the wrong name.</p>
<p>Also of significance is al-Harazi&#8217;s claim that he did not attend Al-Farouq and, instead, attended a camp outside Kabul, which he described as &#8220;not a typical training camp where many people attended, but rather a small residence utilizing very old, primitive weapons.&#8221; In an attempt to tie him to a loftier role than being a mere foot soldier, it was then stated that he was perhaps the Hassan identified by Ibrahim Bin Shakaran (ISN 587, a Moroccan <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/08/11/wikileaks-and-the-guantanamo-prisoners-released-from-2002-to-2004-part-seven-of-ten/">released in July 2004</a> and also identified as Brahim Benchekroun), who &#8220;stated that an individual named Hassan was in charge of physical training at a privately-owned Libyan paramilitary camp located in Kabul.&#8221;</p>
<p>Obviously under pressure, another prisoner, Fahd al-Sharif (ISN 215, released in November 2007), described al-Harazi as his cousin, &#8220;as they are both named al- Sharif and both come from Mecca.&#8221; This was ridiculous, as al-Harazi was not called al-Sharif, but there was more. He also &#8220;reported that other JTF-GTMO detainees refer[red] to detainee as Abu Barak,&#8221; and &#8220;separately mentioned the name Abu Barak as a trainer in the poisons training course that [he] attended.&#8221; According to Fahd al-Sharif, &#8220;Abu Barak taught at the Derunta Camp, Khaldan Camp, and Abu Musab al-Suri&#8217;s Camp.&#8221; An analyst noted that Fahd al-Sharif was &#8220;the only source who ha[d] associated the names al-Sharif and Abu Barak to [sic] detainee,&#8221; and also noted that he &#8220;identified Abu Barak as an Egyptian, not a Saudi,&#8221; but went on to claim that, since al-Sharif &#8220;identified detainee and a poisons trainer with the same alias from approximately the same time period (1999 &#8211; 2000), it is possible detainee is the poisons trainer. However, no other information is available to corroborate this assessment.&#8221;</p>
<p>If this was not enough shallow innuendo, it was also noted that Yasim Basardah (ISN 252, released), a Yemeni well known as <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/04/25/wikileaks-reveals-secret-guantanamo-files-exposes-detention-policy-as-a-construct-of-lies/">the most prolific and unreliable witness at Guantánamo</a>, &#8220;stated detainee was a member of an Arab group fighting the Northern Alliance in Taloqan,&#8221; which no one else claimed, and John Walker Lindh (ISN 1, but never held at Guantánamo, because he is an American citizen) apparently &#8220;photo-identified detainee as Hassan,&#8221; under unknown circumstances, although, as the &#8220;American Taliban,&#8221; he was subjected to torture by his own countrymen before his trial in 2002, which makes his testimony worthless. Lindh apparently said he &#8220;first saw him during the retreat from the front lines,&#8221; and &#8221;believed [he] was an administrator because he carried a walkie-talkie during the retreat and was responsible for keeping people in the rear motivated.&#8221; Despite there being no reason for believing this statement, an analyst noted that &#8220;possession of a walkie-talkie and role as a motivator indicate a leadership position among the fighters.&#8221;</p>
<p>In other dubious statements, Said al-Zahrani (ISN 204, released in July 2007) &#8220;stated detainee was known as Abu Hassan,&#8221; and said he &#8220;saw [him] at the front lines and in the &#8216;big kitchen,&#8217; which another detainee described as a large dining area.&#8221; Al-Zahrani also apparently &#8220;indicated that detainee spent 10 days in a large house in Kunduz with 90 others during the retreat.&#8221; In another account, Mohammed al-Qahtani (ISN 63, still held), <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2009/01/20/bush-era-ends-with-guantanamo-trial-chiefs-torture-confession/">the most notorious torture victim at Guantánamo</a>, &#8220;detainee [was] a mujahid from Jeddah&#8221; (he was actually from Mecca, as has been made clear) &#8220;who was involved with an unspecified Kandahar mujahideen group.&#8221;</p>
<p>In other dubious statements, Humud al-Jadani (ISN 230, released in July 2007), who is emerging in these files as another unreliable witness, &#8220;reported detainee was present at the Al-Farouq Training Camp, the frontlines, a Kandahar guesthouse, and the Hamza al-Ghamdi Guesthouse in Kabul in 2000.&#8221;</p>
<p>In assessing his story, the Task Force also noted that, &#8220;Prior to a 2002 visit to JTF-GTMO, Mabahith [the Saudi intelligence service] designated detainee as a high priority detainee,&#8221; stating that he &#8220;left Saudi Arabia on 29 October 1999, with Turkey listed as his final destination.&#8221; Mabahith also &#8220;indicated they had information indicating detainee received training at Al-Farouq,&#8221; and noted that he &#8220;was on the Saudi government&#8217;s &#8220;watch and arrest list&#8221; for his trip to Afghanistan.&#8221; An analyst also noted that Mabahith had &#8220;no record of detainee returning after his 1999 travel to Turkey.&#8221;</p>
<p>This may indicate that some of the information gathered by the US authorities was true, although much of it was emblematic of the desperation, which runs through the files, and which fuels attempts to prove, time and again, and often in conditions of abuse or torture, that prisoners were more significant than they appeared to be. In conclusion, the Task Force assessed al-Harazi as being &#8220;of medium intelligence value,&#8221; and of posing &#8220;a high risk, as he is likely to pose a threat to the US, its interests and allies.&#8221; He was also &#8220;assessed as a high threat from a detention perspective,&#8221; because his &#8220;overall behavior ha[d] been semi-compliant and sometimes hostile to the guard force and staff.&#8221; As a result, Rear Adm. Mark H. Buzby, the commander of Guantánamo, updating a recommendation for his &#8220;Continued Detention with Transfer Language&#8221; (dated May 26, 2006), recommended him for continued detention without any discussion of transfer. Nevertheless, he was released just three months later, to be to be put through the Saudi government’s extensive rehabilitation program.</p>
<p><strong>Muqit Vohidov (ISN 90, Tajikistan) Released February 2007</strong></p>
<p><a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/muqitvohidov.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-15196" title="Muqit Vohidov (left) with Rukniddin Sharopov, during their trial in Tajikistan in August 2007 (Photo: RFE/RL)." src="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/muqitvohidov.jpg" alt="" width="302" height="226" /></a>As I explained in <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2007/08/23/tajiks-released-from-guantanamo-sentenced-to-17-years-in-prison/">an article after his release</a>, Muqit Vohidov (also identified as Wahldof Abdul Mokit), who was born in 1981 (although the US authorities initially stated that he was born in 1969), <a href="http://projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/90-sobit-valikhonovich-vakhidov" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/90-sobit-valikhonovich-vakhidov?referer=');">said in Guantánamo</a> that he had been tricked into joining the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU), a close ally of the Taliban in the fight against the Northern Alliance in northern Afghanistan. In his tribunal, he explained that he was unaware that he was being recruited to join the IMU, and thought that he was going to be joining the Tajik army instead. He added that the man who lied to him about it –- and to three others in his group –- was a man called Rostum, presumably the same man identified by his friend Rukniddin Sharopov (ISN 76, see above) as a regional leader of the IMU. He also said that he was not previously aware that there were any Uzbeks in Tajikistan, and added that his passport was taken away by a man called Zakir, who was surrounded by armed men who made it clear that they would shoot him if he asked too many questions, and was then flown by helicopter to Afghanistan in January 2001.</p>
<p>He said that he then spent time at three IMU offices in Afghanistan &#8212; including offices in Kunduz and Kabul &#8212; and wanted to escape but couldn’t, and added that he eventually found a teacher at a madrassa who told him that he would be able to escape from Mazar-e-Sharif, so he went there, spent three months trying to escape, and was then captured by General Dostum’s forces in November 2001. He admitted carrying a Kalashnikov when he was a guard at the madrassa, but denied an allegation that he fought against US forces. When asked how he was arrested, he said that he was in a room with three other people &#8212; two he did not know and one doctor &#8212; when “Somebody knocked on the door, I opened it and this person came and said, ‘Who are you?’ I told him I was a Tajik, and then he arrested me.”</p>
<p>He also called Sharopov as a witness, who confirmed his story about their recruitment, but was unable to verify what had happened to him after he had left the IMU. Sharopov added that he and Vohidov had survived the Qala-i-Janghi massacre, where hundreds of prisoners, held in a Northern Alliance fort run by General Rashid Dostum after surrendering, were killed after some of them staged an uprising, fearing that they were about to be shot. Sharopov also explained that both he and Vohidov were then held in a prison in Sheberghan that was also run by General Dostum, until they were transferred to US custody.</p>
<p>In the documents released by WikiLeaks in April 2011, the file relating to Sharopov was an &#8220;Update Recommendation to Transfer to the Control of Another Country for Continued Detention (TRCD),&#8221; <a href="http://wikileaks.org/gitmo/prisoner/90.html" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/wikileaks.org/gitmo/prisoner/90.html?referer=');">dated August 3, 2005</a>, in which he was identified as Sobit Abdumukit Vitalikonovich Vakidov, Sabit Farad Tsabit Vokidov and Abdul Mochid Sobid Wahedof, and it was noted that he was born in September 1981, and was &#8220;in good health.&#8221;</p>
<p>In telling his story, based largely on his own account and mostly corresponding with what he told his tribunal at Guantánamo, the Joint Task Force noted that, &#8220;Prior to his recruitment into theIMU, [he] ran a distribution business.&#8221; Describing the events that led to his capture, it was noted that he and Rukniddin Sharopov (identified as Sharipov), described as &#8220;one of his best friends,&#8221; left Tajikistan and &#8220;were on a train to Russia to find better jobs when they met a man named Rustam, who offered them a military job in Dushanbe, Tajikistan.&#8221; He said that they &#8220;both accepted this offer,&#8221; although he added that he &#8220;believe[d] Rustam &#8216;tricked&#8217; [them] because they thought they would be working with the government of Tajikistan&#8217;s Army and not the IMU.&#8221; An analyst described Rustam as &#8220;probably an IMU recruiter,&#8221; and it was noted that the IMU was described by the US authorities as &#8220;a Tier 1 counterterrorism target, defined as terrorist groups, especially those with state support, that have demonstrated the intention and the capability to attack US persons or interests.&#8221;</p>
<p>Vohidov proceeded to explain that, in January 2001, he attended an IMU camp located in Tavildara, although he claimed he &#8220;did not receive any training at this facility,&#8221; and said that after ten days &#8220;helicopters ferried approximately two hundred IMU fighters to Afghanistan,&#8221; including he and Sharopov &#8220;who flew on separate helicopters.&#8221; They were taken to Kunduz, but Vohidov said he then &#8220;attended a Madrassa in Kabul for approximately five to six months,&#8221; where he met a man named Sharifullah &#8220;who offered to get [him] back to Tajikistan if [he] accompanied him to the IMU office at Mazar-e-Sharif,&#8221; where he &#8220;worked as a supply clerk in the office and was responsible for the food.&#8221; He was seized in Mazar-e-Sharif in November 2001 and taken to Qala-i-Janghi, described as the &#8220;site of the uprising in which CIA Agent Michael Spahn [sic] was killed,&#8221; even though he claimed he &#8220;was not at the prison during the uprising.&#8221; He was sent to Guantánamo on January 14, 2002, on the spurious basis that it was to &#8220;provide information on the following: Practice of bringing youths into Afghanistan from Tajikistan, Madrassa detainee attended [and] Non-governmental organization (NGO) DOSF.&#8221;</p>
<p>In assessing his story, the Task Fprce identified the &#8220;madraassa&#8221; that Vohidov said he attended in Kabul as being an IMU facility, and also claimed that in Mazar-e-Sharif he worked at the &#8220;intelligence office for Sharafuddin Sharafat, former Taliban Intelligence chief at Mazar-e-Sharif and the current ACM [anti-coalition militia] leader.&#8221; It was also claimed that Vohidov &#8220;met Sharafat during his five to six-month stay in Kabul.&#8221;</p>
<p>In conclusion, the Task Force assessed him as being &#8220;of low intelligence value,&#8221; and of posing &#8220;a medium risk, as he may pose a threat to the US, its interests and allies.&#8221; It was also noted that his behavior was &#8220;assessed as somewhat compliant.&#8221; As a result, Brig. Gen. Hood recommended his transfer to continued detention in Tajkistan, even though it was also noted that he was &#8220;a fugitive from Tajikistan and [was] wanted for violating Tajikistan&#8217;s laws and international orders,&#8221; which indicated that he would be treated very poorly if repatriated.</p>
<p>After his release, Vohidov &#8212; and Rukniddin Sharopov &#8212; were sentenced to 17 years in “high-security penal colonies” (aka labor camps) for “serving as mercenaries in Afghanistan” &#8212; where they were accused of aiding the Taliban by fighting for the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU) &#8212; and for taking part in “illegal border crossing.” After passing sentence, the Supreme Court judge, Musammir Uroqov, said that both men had maintained their innocence, and added, “In their last words, they said they didn’t expect such consequences for acts they committed.” However, according to <a href="http://www.rferl.org/featuresarticle/2007/08/d4848eb4-f67f-46f3-8693-0c003b1d9fdb.html" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.rferl.org/featuresarticle/2007/08/d4848eb4-f67f-46f3-8693-0c003b1d9fdb.html?referer=');">RFE/RL</a>, the judge was satisfied that “investigations carried out in Vohidov and Sharopov’s native Isfara region proved that both men [had] been involved with the banned Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan.&#8221;</p>
<p>In June 2010, as <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2010/07/07/calls-for-review-of-punitive-sentences-for-ex-guantanamo-tajiks/">I explained here</a>, the <a href="http://iwpr.net/report-news/review-urged-ex-guantanamo-tajiks" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/iwpr.net/report-news/review-urged-ex-guantanamo-tajiks?referer=');">Institute for War &amp; Peace Reporting</a> revisited the story, explaining how the men’s families had been campaigning for a review of the verdict, and how prosecutors were possibly prepared to review the case. Although arguments were made that the sentence was justified because the men “committed acts that violate national law,” it was also noted that the time they served in Guantánamo was not taken into account during the sentencing.</p>
<p>Moreover, as I explained, other observers remained deeply critical, and their insights reflected badly not only on the Tajik authorities but also on the US government. As the IWPR article explained, Payam Foroughi, until recently a human rights officer with the OSCE in Tajikistan, “believes due process was not followed,” pointing out that the men “had not enough, or any, time to sufficiently and seriously discuss and properly prepare their case with a lawyer &#8212; and one of their choice &#8212; prior to their court hearing.” He also believed that the court “should have probed further into the allegation that Vohidov and Sharopov willingly became members of the IMU,” adding, “If anything, the evidence points to them having been victims of human trafficking.”</p>
<p>Criticism of the US came, inadvertently, from the judge in the men’s trial in 2007, who told IWPR, “We could not determine, even from the defendants, on what legal basis they were detained at and released from Guantánamo. We could not get hold of any documents. So we reached a verdict based on the documents that we had.” Highlighting this problem more explicitly, a local lawyer told IWPR that “the lack of documentation from Guantánamo was a recurring problem in countries to which detainees are repatriated.” He might have added that in most countries the authorities’ response was to let the men go.</p>
<p>In August 2011, <a href="http://www.rferl.org/content/activistis_and_lawyers_call_on_tajikistan_to_release_ex-guantanamo_detainees/24296602.html" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.rferl.org/content/activistis_and_lawyers_call_on_tajikistan_to_release_ex-guantanamo_detainees/24296602.html?referer=');">RFE/RL reported</a> that, for the 20th anniversary of Tajikistan&#8217;s independence, on September 9, 2011, human rights activists and lawyers were calling on the Tajik president to consider releasing the two former Guantánamo prisoners as part of an amnesty, noting, &#8220;Some 8,000 prisoners are expected to be set free to mark the occasion. Unofficial estimates suggest there are currently 13,000 people imprisoned in Tajikistan. There have been 11 amnesties in Tajikistan over the past 20 years. In the most recent, in November 2009, some 10,000 prisoners were released.&#8221;</p>
<p>The article stated, &#8220;Human Rights Watch, two prominent American lawyers, and a legal expert from Columbia University in New York have sent letters to Tajik President Emomali Rahmon making the case for Rukniddin Sharopov&#8217;s and Abdumuqit Vohidov&#8217;s release.&#8221; Chicago-based attorney Matthew J. O&#8217;Hara wrote, &#8220;It is my expert opinion that a great injustice has been done on the two.&#8221; He explained that it was probable that the two men &#8220;did not traverse the international border by will,&#8221; and, as RFE/RL added, &#8220;Sharopov and Vohidov maintain that they have never killed anyone, or been involved in terrorist activities or acts of violence.&#8221;</p>
<p>In their letter, Human Rights Watch <a href="http://en.trend.az/regions/casia/tajikistan/1916697.html" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/en.trend.az/regions/casia/tajikistan/1916697.html?referer=');">stated</a>, &#8220;Neither US, nor Tajik authorities provided any sound evidences of Sharopov&#8217;s and Vokhidov&#8217;s belonging to terrorist activity and crimes. We hope that the forthcoming amnesty law will also cover ex-prisoners of the Guantanamo Bay, who were accused of murder, and hope that Vokhidov&#8217;s and Sharopov&#8217;s appeals for amnesty will be carefully examined.&#8221; However, there has been no further news since August 2011.</p>
<p><strong>Abdul Rauf Aliza (ISN 108, Afghanistan) Released December 2007</strong></p>
<p>In Chapter 9 of <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/the-guantanamo-files/"><em>The Guantánamo Files</em></a>, and in <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2007/12/22/the-stories-of-the-afghans-just-released-from-guantanamo-intelligence-failures-battlefield-myths-and-unaccountable-prisons-in-afghanistan-part-one/">an article at the time of his release</a>, I explained how Abdul Rauf Aliza was <a href="http://projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/108-abdul-rauf-aliza" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/108-abdul-rauf-aliza?referer=');">seized in November 2001</a> during the fall of Kunduz, the last Taliban stronghold in northern Afghanistan, and was held, with thousands of other men, in a filthy, overcrowded prison in Sheberghan run by General Rashid Dostum, one of the leaders of the anti-Taliban Northern Alliance. He was then transferred to the US prison at Kandahar airbase with nine other Afghan prisoners.</p>
<p>One of the nine, Jan Mohammed (ISN 17), a baker from Helmand province who had been forcibly conscripted by the Taliban, was <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/07/06/wikileaks-and-the-guantanamo-prisoners-released-from-2002-to-2004-part-two-of-ten/">one of the first prisoners to be released from Guantánamo</a> in October 2002. After his release, he explained that the decision to transfer him to Kandahar came about because some of Dostum’s men “told US soldiers that he and nine others were senior Taliban officials.” “They came and took ten strong-looking people,” <a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2002/oct/30/guantanamo.afghanistan" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.guardian.co.uk/world/2002/oct/30/guantanamo.afghanistan?referer=');">he told the journalist David Rohde</a>. “Only one of those ten was a Talib.”</p>
<p>It’s probable that the solitary Taliban member transferred to Kandahar with Jan Mohammed was Abdul Rauf Aliza, who was, at some point, more accurately identified by the US authorities as Mullah Abdul Rauf, a Taliban troop commander. Although Aliza claimed that he was conscripted by the Taliban, who said they would take his land if he refused, and insisted that he only worked for them as a cook, several released Afghans explained to the journalist Ashwin Raman that Mullah Abdul Rauf was one of three Taliban commanders in northern Afghanistan held in Guantánamo. They told Raman that he had not been so cautious with his identity while detained in Camp X-Ray, when he “repeatedly pleaded with the Americans to let many of the detainees free,” saying, “These are no Talibs, I am the real Talib.”</p>
<p>In the documents released by WikiLeaks in April 2011, the file relating to Abdul Rauf Aliza was an &#8220;Administrative Review Board Input,&#8221; <a href="http://wikileaks.org/gitmo/prisoner/108.html" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/wikileaks.org/gitmo/prisoner/108.html?referer=');">dated October 26, 2004</a>, in which Brig. Gen. Hood recommended to his military review board that he be &#8220;transferred to the control of another country for continued detention (TRCD).&#8221;</p>
<p>In this document, it was noted that, according to the Task Force&#8217;s assessment, he was &#8220;associated with several Taliban commanders and leaders in Afghanistan (AF) including Mullah Agha Jon Akhund, Mullah Ubaidullah Akhund, and Muhammed A. Fazl&#8221; (ISN 7, also identified as Mullah Fazil, and described by an analyst as &#8220;the Chief of Staff for the Taliban, as well as military commander for 2500 to 3000 Taliban soldiers&#8221;). It was also noted that he &#8220;accurately identified Mullah Ubaidullah Akhund as the Taliban Defense Minister and logistics supervisor,&#8221; that he &#8221;personally knew and accurately identified Taliban Commander Mullah Agha Jon Akhund,&#8221; and that, &#8220;[d]espite his claims of being a low-level Taliban foot soldier and food supplier, [he] managed to become closely associated with several senior level Taliban commanders and leaders.&#8221;</p>
<p>It was also noted that Shardar Khan (ISN 914, <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/10/25/the-complete-guantanamo-files-wikileaks-and-the-prisoners-released-in-2006-part-nine-of-ten/">released in October 2006</a>) &#8220;identified detainee&#8221; and former Taliban governor Khairullah Khairkhwa (ISN 579, still held) as &#8220;two cell block leaders attempting to instigate and influence the rest of the cell blocks to disregard orders, make noise, refuse food, and commit suicide,&#8221; to which an analyst again raised doubts, noting, &#8220;For a simple Taliban foot soldier and bread deliverer, detainee manage[d] to exhibit leadership qualities by conducting speeches and instilling fear into those who cooperate with JTF GTMO personnel.&#8221; The analyst also noted that Khairkhwa &#8220;identified the detainee as a possible military leader, military commander, or possibly even as a mayor of Khost.&#8221;</p>
<p>In other passages, it was stated that he had &#8220;admitted involvement in the production and sales of opium, as well as association with criminal elements within the Taliban and the Northern Alliance,&#8221; and it was noted that, although he had been &#8220;cooperative with his debriefers,&#8221; his accounts &#8220;remain[ed] vague and inconsistent when questioned on high-level Taliban leadership or topics of a sensitive nature,&#8221; to which an analyst added that, although he was &#8220;substantially exploited,&#8221; there were &#8220;several intelligence gaps that remain[ed] in his story, such as his involvement and knowledge concerning Taliban communications operations, associations with other JTF GTMO detainees, and his opium business.&#8221; It was also noted, &#8220;After serving three tours with Taliban, it does not seem plausible that the detainee was not promoted and given a more important duty than a mere bread deliverer.&#8221;</p>
<p>The last of these many major hints that Abdul Rauf Aliza was more than he appeared to be was a note that &#8220;[t]he name Mullah Abdul Rauf, detainee&#8217;s reference name, was located on a list of factions and leaders within the Taliban as a corps commander in Herat,&#8221; to which an analyst noted, &#8220;Several high level Taliban JTF GTMO detainees also identified detainee as a Taliban troop commander,&#8221; but added, &#8220;However, detainee does have similar physical characteristics to [Mullah Fazil], which may cause his misidentification.&#8221;</p>
<p>In conclusion, despite all the doubts highlighted above, it was also noted that, in his &#8220;Most Recent JTF GTMO Assessment, signed on 29 March 2004,&#8221; which also recommended his transfer to the control of another country for continued detention, he was assessed as being of low intelligence value and a medium threat,&#8221; even though it was also noted that, although he &#8220;ha[d] been generally cooperative, he ha[d] evaded answering questions regarding his role and leadership within the Taliban,&#8221; and even though, &#8220;due to recent findings that [he] may have had a more important role within the Taliban than previously thought, [his] intelligence value ha[d] been updated from low to medium.&#8221; Despite the recommendation for his transfer, however, he was not released for another three years and two months, and three years and nine months after he was first recommended for transfer.</p>
<p>In August 2010, <a href="http://www.thedailybeast.com/newsweek/2010/08/02/taliban-seeks-vengeance-in-wake-of-wikileaks.html" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.thedailybeast.com/newsweek/2010/08/02/taliban-seeks-vengeance-in-wake-of-wikileaks.html?referer=');"><em>Newsweek</em></a> reported that Abdul Rauf Aliza had escaped from prison on his return, had rejoined the Taliban, and was threatening collaborators with the US and the Afghan authorities in Kabul. As the article described it, &#8220;One short handwritten note, shown to <em>Newsweek</em>, said: &#8216;We have made a decision for your death. You have five days to leave Afghan soil. If you don’t, you don’t have the right to complain.&#8217; The screed, written on the letterhead of Mullah Mohammed Omar’s defunct Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan, bore the signature of Abdul Rauf Khadim, a senior Taliban official and former inmate at the American lockup in Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, who had been released into &#8212; and subsequently escaped from &#8212; Kabul’s custody last year.&#8221;</p>
<p>In April 2011, <a href="http://www.thedailybeast.com/newsweek/2011/04/10/the-dirty-dozen.html" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.thedailybeast.com/newsweek/2011/04/10/the-dirty-dozen.html?referer=');"><em>Newsweek</em></a> reported that Khadim (described as Maulvi Abdul Rauf Khadim) &#8220;commanded Mullah Omar’s elite mobile reserve force,&#8221; until his initial capture, &#8220;fighting regime opponents all over Afghanistan.&#8221; After he &#8220;convinced his jailers that he wanted only to go home and tend his farm,&#8221; and was repatriated, he {e]scap[ed] from house arrest in Kabul, [and] fled to Pakistan.&#8221; The article continued, &#8220;Today he’s the shadow governor of southern Uruzgan province and a potential rival to [Abdul Qayyum] Zakir ([ISN 8] who was <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/11/22/the-complete-guantanamo-files-wikileaks-and-the-prisoners-released-in-2007-part-one-of-ten/">freed from Gitmo at the same time</a>) for the insurgency’s top slot, with a loyal following of fighters at the heart of the US military surge in neighboring Kandahar and Helmand provinces.&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Abdul Aziz Al Oshan (ISN 112, Saudi Arabia) Released September 2007</strong></p>
<p>In Chapter 2 of <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/the-guantanamo-files/"><em>The Guantánamo Files</em></a>, I explained how Abdul Aziz al-Oshan (also identified as Abdul Aziz al-Khaldi), who was 22 years old at the time of his capture, <a href="http://projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/112-abdul-aziz-saad-al-khaldi" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/112-abdul-aziz-saad-al-khaldi?referer=');">said in Guantánamo</a> that he was a student who went to Afghanistan to rescue his brother, but was seized by the Northern Alliance, and was one of hundreds of prisoners sent to Qala-i-Janghi, a fort near Mazar-e-Sharif, where he survived a massacre that took place after some of the prisoners staged an uprising, fearing that they were about to be shot. When asked in his tribunal about the &#8220;uprising,&#8221; he said, &#8220;You are talking about the uprising. They called it an uprising and it&#8217;s not; it&#8217;s some kind of massacre. I was even wounded while I was there.&#8221;</p>
<p>in <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2007/09/11/guantanamo-the-stories-of-the-16-saudis-just-released/">an article at the time of his release</a>, I explained how he had recently come to prominence when a poem he had written was included in <a href="http://www.uiowapress.org/books/2007-fall/falpoefro.html" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.uiowapress.org/books/2007-fall/falpoefro.html?referer=');"><em>Poems From Guantánamo: The Detainees Speak</em></a>, an anthology of Guantánamo prisoners&#8217; poetry compiled by law professor Marc Falkoff, who was the attorney for a number of Yemeni prisoners, and he had also written <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2007/07/23/guantanamos-library-adding-insult-to-injury/">a perceptive and critical analysis</a> of the library facilities at Guantánamo, which revealed how he was gentle, softly-spoken, literate and with a wry sense of humor that five and a half years in Guantánamo could not extinguish. I also told more of his story, based on his account &#8212; which began with an explanation of how, after taking his final exam at university, he went to Afghanistan to find his brother Saleh (who was also captured, but <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/09/03/wikileaks-and-the-guantanamo-prisoners-released-after-the-tribunals-2004-to-2005-part-two-of-five/">released in July 2005</a>), in order to persuade him to return to Saudi Arabia.</p>
<p>Caught up, in late November 2001, in the fall of Kunduz, the last Taliban bastion in the north of Afghanistan, he was “tied down and taken with other detainees” to Qala-i-Janghi. In Guantánamo, he explained to his tribunal that, although he had not been involved in any kind of military training and had not raised arms against either the Northern Alliance or the US-led coalition, he was afraid of being tortured, because he had previously been tortured in Afghanistan.</p>
<p>“When I was first captured,” he said, “it was the Afghani police there. They were threatening me and torturing me. If I didn’t say that I was from Al-Qaida or Taliban I was tortured. I went to Kandahar and I was tortured there. The guy was speaking English saying ‘Al-Qaida? Taliban? Al-Qaida? Taliban?’ Evidence of the torture is that they broke my tooth which was fixed here.” He added, “Once I arrived here, things were a little better. There was no torture or things like that but, because of what happened in the past I was dwelling on the fact that, are these people treating me good and they are going to come back and torture me again?”</p>
<p>In the documents released by WikiLeaks in April 2011, the file relating to al-Oshan was a &#8220;Recommendation for Continued Detention Under DoD Control (CD),&#8221; <a href="http://wikileaks.org/gitmo/prisoner/112.html" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/wikileaks.org/gitmo/prisoner/112.html?referer=');">dated June 19, 2007</a>, in which he was identified as Abd al-Aziz Sad Muhammad Awshan al-Khalidi, Abdul Aziz Bin Saad, and Abdul A. Mohammed, and it was noted that he was born in September 1979, and was &#8220;in good health.&#8221;</p>
<p>In telling his story, based largely on his own account, the Joint Task Force noted that he was &#8220;one exam away from finishing his four-year college degree&#8221; in Islamic studies at the Imam Muhammad Ibn Saud Islamic University in his hometown of Riyadh, when he decided to travel to Afghanistan. The Task Force also noted that he &#8220;was not married and lived with his parents through college,&#8221; and that he &#8220;received a stipend of 800 Saudi riyals (SAR) per month from the Saudi government for attending the university,&#8221; and also that, because he &#8220;was the only student with a car, he charged people money to take them places,&#8221; and &#8220;also received money from his parents.&#8221;</p>
<p>The Task Force further explained that he &#8220;was still in Saudi Arabia when the 11 September 2001 attacks occurred,&#8221; and that he &#8220;believed the attacks violated Islamic ethics because the Koran states it is wrong to kill innocent people.&#8221; This seemed to be particularly important, as did a statement that he &#8220;was not personally recruited, but heard from friends about fatwa (religious decrees) urging young men to fight abroad,&#8221; and also &#8220;overheard other Saudis talking about the conflicts in Chechnya and Afghanistan, and read newspaper articles detailing the suffering of Muslims in those countries.&#8221; It was also noted that he read a well-known fatwa &#8220;calling on people to &#8216;defend the Muslims and Islamic nations&#8217; against the Northern Alliance (NA) troops of Massoud and Dostum.&#8221;</p>
<p>In spite of noting that he &#8220;was not personally recruited,&#8221; the Task Force claimed that, in November 2001, he &#8220;decided to travel to Afghanistan,&#8221; not only &#8220;to find his brother,&#8221; but also &#8220;to fight the jihad.&#8221; Al-Oshan apparently &#8220;financed his own trip,&#8221; which was unusual, as most jihadists traveled with the assistance of facilitators, who made their arrangements for them, and traveled via Syria and Iran (rather than flying to Karachi and then traveling via Quetta, as was typical for jihadi recruits).</p>
<p>When they reached the border, the border guards &#8220;instructed a taxi driver to take them to a guesthouse in Herat,&#8221; and gave them contact details. After one night in Herat, they apparently traveled to Kabul, where, it was claimed, they &#8220;stayed at an unidentified guesthouse for about a week because &#8216;the front lines were full,&#8217;&#8221; even though it was not even remotely likely that new arrivals would have been allowed to travel immediately to the front lines on arrival.</p>
<p>He then reportedly traveled to Kunduz with two other men, staying at an unidentified guesthouse, where, it was claimed, he was shown how to use an AK-47, and then traveled to the front line, where he stayed for six days &#8220;without seeing any combat action since the mountains acted as a buffer between them and the NA [Northern Alliance].&#8221; He and the others then retreated, and walked back to the guest-house in Kunduz. He then apparently &#8220;left during the night with a group of others going to Mazar-e-Sharif,&#8221; presumably to surrender, but &#8220;Dostum&#8217;s troops apprehended them and took them to the Qala-i-Janghi Prison.&#8221;</p>
<p>Based on his account, the Task Force described the uprising as follows: &#8220;On 25 November 2001, shooting erupted within the walls of the prison, and detainee was shot in his thigh and back. Other prisoners dragged him into the basement of the prison. Dostum&#8217;s forces pumped gasoline into the basement and ignited it; they later flooded the basement with water. After about one week, the Red Cross arrived and transported all the surviving prisoners to Sheberghan Prison.&#8221;</p>
<p>From Sheberghan, US forces took him to their prison at Kandahar, and he was sent to Guantánamo on January 14, 2002, on the spurious basis that it was to &#8220;provide information on the following: Training and tactics of front line Taliban fighters.&#8221;</p>
<p>In assessing his story, the Task Force focused primarily on his family ties, rather than on any information corroborating the claims that he had been on the front lines in Afghanistan, which, as I noted above, drew only on his own statements, possibly extracted under duress. One of his brothers, Isa (aka <a href="http://edition.cnn.com/2004/WORLD/meast/07/21/saudi.johnson/index.html" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/edition.cnn.com/2004/WORLD/meast/07/21/saudi.johnson/index.html?referer=');">Eissa al-Aushan</a>), was described as &#8220;the deceased leader of a Riyadh Al-Qaida cell responsible for the.kidnapping and murder of a US contractor, <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Marshall_Johnson,_Jr." onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Marshall_Johnson_Jr.?referer=');">Paul Johnson, Jr.</a>,&#8221; and &#8220;was killed in a July 2004 gunfight with Saudi security forces.&#8221;</p>
<p>It was also noted that he was &#8220;assessed to have an uncle named Saud Muhammad Abd al-Aziz al-Awshan,&#8221; described as &#8220;a Saudi-based terrorist financier associated with the Philippines-base Moro Islamic Liberation Front,&#8221; although whether either of these connections actually impacted on him was not provable, and was certainly not sufficient to justify an analyst&#8217;s claim that, because &#8220;Al-Qaida recruitments often occur within family groups,&#8221; his &#8220;close relationships with several Al-Qaida members likely exposed him to Al-Qaida propaganda, and possibly to direct recruitment.&#8221; The analyst also claimed that &#8220;[t]hese relationships likely also indicate a high level of loyalty toward Al-Qaida.&#8221;</p>
<p>When it came to the most relevant relationship, with Salman Mohammed (ISN 121, <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/09/25/the-complete-guantanamo-files-wikileaks-and-the-prisoners-released-in-2006-part-two-of-ten/">released in December 2006</a>, and also identified as Sulaiman al-Oshan), who was the brother he traveled to rescue, the Task Force described Mohammed as &#8220;a mujahid with the 55th Arab Brigade,&#8221; and noted that he &#8220;was on a list of thirty-seven detainees whom the Saudi Ministry of Interior General Directorate of Investigations (Mabahith) designated as high priority before a Saudi delegation visit to JTF-GTMO in 2002.&#8221;</p>
<p>This, again, was nothing more than guilt by association, and despite their best efforts, interrogators could also not get Mohammed to incriminate his brother. What was reported instead was that, although Mohammed &#8220;corroborated detainee&#8217;s approximate date of arrival at the front lines,&#8221; he &#8220;provided conflicting accounts as to why detainee traveled to Afghanistan, first claiming that he did not know, and later stating that detainee came to retrieve [him].&#8221;</p>
<p>The most relevant passage in the file did not involve how his brothers were perceived by the Saudi authorities, but how <em>he</em> was regarded, and it was noted, &#8220;In July 2002, a delegation from Saudi Arabia visited JTF-GTMO and interviewed detainee. Detainee was identified as of low intelligence and law enforcement value to the US, and unlikely to pose a terrorist threat to the US or its interests. Furthermore,the Saudi delegation indicated that the Government of Saudi Arabia would be willing to take custody of detainee for possible prosecution as soon as the US determined it no longer wanted to hold him.&#8221;</p>
<p>In conclusion, the Task Force assessed him as being &#8220;of medium intelligence value,&#8221; and of posing &#8220;a high risk, as he is likely to pose a threat to the US, its interests and allies,&#8221; which seemed like an exaggerated assessment, especially as he was also &#8220;assessed as a low threat from a detention perspective,&#8221; because his &#8220;overall behavior ha[d] been compliant and non-hostile to the guard force and staff.&#8221; As a result, Rear Adm. Harry H. Harris Jr., the commander of Guantánamo at the time, updating a recommendation for continued detention with transfer language (dated March 31, 2006), recommended him for continued detention without transfer language, although no reason was given. Even so, he was released three months later, to be put through the Saudi government&#8217;s extensive rehabilitation program.</p>
<p><strong>Yousef Al Shehri (ISN 114, Saudi Arabia) Released November 2007</strong></p>
<p><a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/yousefalshehri.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-15197" title="Yousef al-Shehri, photographed before his capture." src="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/yousefalshehri.jpg" alt="" width="161" height="213" /></a>In a footnote to Chapter 9 of <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/the-guantanamo-files/"><em>The Guantánamo Files</em></a>, I explained how Yousef al-Shehri, who was just 16 years old at the time of his capture, <a href="http://projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/114-yussef-mohammed-mubarak-al-shihri" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/114-yussef-mohammed-mubarak-al-shihri?referer=');">was seized</a> between Mazar-e-Sharif and Kunduz with 120 other suspected fighters. I also explained how his cousin, Abdul Salam al-Shehri (ISN 132, <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/09/25/the-complete-guantanamo-files-wikileaks-and-the-prisoners-released-in-2006-part-two-of-ten/">released in June 2006</a>), who was just 17 years old at the time of his capture, and who had hidden in the basement during the Qala-i-Janghi massacre, thought he was dead. He was then <a href="http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/info/AMR51/174/2006" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.amnesty.org/en/library/info/AMR51/174/2006?referer=');">transported</a> to a prison in Sheberghan run by the Northern Alliance commander General Rashid Dostum, where he spent six weeks in horribly overcrowded conditions, surrounded by the dead and dying, before being transferred to US custody.</p>
<p>Although al-Shehri &#8212; like the other juveniles at Guantánamo (<a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/06/11/wikileaks-and-the-22-children-of-guantanamo/">at least 22 in total</a>) &#8212; should have been rehabilitated rather than punished, according to America’s obligations under the <a href="http://www2.ohchr.org/english/law/crc-conflict.htm" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www2.ohchr.org/english/law/crc-conflict.htm?referer=');">Optional Protocol to the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child on the involvement of children in armed conflict</a>, which the US <a href="http://treaties.un.org/Pages/ViewDetails.aspx?src=TREATY&amp;mtdsg_no=IV-11-b&amp;chapter=4&amp;lang=en" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/treaties.un.org/Pages/ViewDetails.aspx?src=TREATY_amp_mtdsg_no=IV-11-b_amp_chapter=4_amp_lang=en&amp;referer=');">ratified on December 23, 2002</a>, only three juveniles were ever treated differently from the adult prisoners (as described in “<a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/08/26/wikileaks-and-the-guantanamo-prisoners-released-from-2002-to-2004-part-ten-of-ten/">WikiLeaks and the Guantánamo Prisoners Released from 2002 to 2004 (Part Ten of Ten)</a>”).</p>
<p>As I explained in <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2007/11/12/innocents-and-foot-soldiers-the-stories-of-the-14-saudis-just-released-from-guantanamo/">an article at the time of his release</a>, al-Shehri&#8217;s suffering at Guantánamo became particularly pronounced when he took part in a prison-wide hunger strike, involving as many as 200 prisoners, in the summer of 2005. In July 2005, and again in January 2006, his weight, which had been 141 pounds when he arrived at Guantánamo in February 2002, <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2009/06/10/guantanamos-hidden-history-shocking-statistics-of-starvation/">dropped to just 97 pounds</a>, and his lawyers, who visited him in October 2005, said that he was “emaciated and had lost a disturbing amount of weight,” adding that he was “visibly weak and frail” and “had difficulty speaking because of lesions in his throat that were a result of the involuntary force-feeding” to which he had been subjected.</p>
<p>In the documents released by WikiLeaks in April 2011, the file relating to al-Shehri was a &#8220;Recommendation for Continued Detention Under DoD Control (CD),&#8221; <a href="http://wikileaks.org/gitmo/prisoner/114.html" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/wikileaks.org/gitmo/prisoner/114.html?referer=');">dated July 21, 2006</a>, in which he was identified as Yusif Muhammad Mubarak al-Shihri, and it was noted that he was born in September 1985 (and was therefore just 16 at the time of his capture), and was &#8220;in good health.&#8221;</p>
<p>In telling his story, based largely on his own account, the Joint Task Force noted that he left school sometime in 2000, and then &#8220;sold fruit, vegetables and honey from a cart on the side of the road for approximately two months in Riyadh, Jeddah and Mecca&#8221; until a man named Muhammad al-Qosi convinced him to go to Pakistan. There he met another Saudi, Abdul Aziz, and reportedly spent two and a half months in Karachi with him, at a mosque, until Abdul Aziz told him that &#8220;it was their duty to participate in jihad with the Taliban in Afghanistan.&#8221;</p>
<p>In April 2001, they &#8220;traveled to Kabul, where they spoke with the Taliban and stated they wanted to fight,&#8221; and &#8220;were given directions to a Taliban guesthouse,&#8221; where they were separated. Al-Shehri then traveled with three Arabs and approximately 30 Afghans to a compound in Kunduz, commanded by Mullah Thacker, and then, with seven Afghans, he was sent to an Arab unit on the front lines at Khawaja Ghar, where he &#8220;spent approximately four or five months at a support center close to the front.&#8221; Although his commander, Abu Muath, gave him &#8220;one day of training on grenades and the Kalashnikov,&#8221; he reportedly &#8220;transported food and bullets to the front line and helped bury the dead.&#8221;</p>
<p>After the US-led invasion, when &#8220;the fighting on the front lines became intense&#8221; (in November 2001), al-Shehri and his group were instructed to withdraw from the front lines to Kunduz. After two weeks, his commander informed him that &#8220;Mullah Thaker had ordered a withdrawal to Kandahar,&#8221; and he and others &#8220;traveled in cars and trucks to Mazar-e-Sharif, AF, where Northern Alliance commander Dostum&#8217;s men stopped the trucks and ordered the fighters to surrender their weapons.&#8221; They were then taken to Qala-i-Janghi, where he survived the massacre, and he was then taken to Dostum&#8217;s prison at Sheberghan, where he was held for a month and a half. He was then taken to Kandahar by US forces, and was sent to Guantánamo on January 16, 2002, on the spurious basis that it was to &#8220;provide information on the following: Personalities and replacement operations of the Arab element that supported the Northern Taliban forces (assessed to be referring to UBL&#8217;s [Osama bin Laden's] 55th Arab Brigade).&#8221;</p>
<p>In assessing his story, the Task Force stated that he was &#8220;historically uncooperative during debriefings, and his truthfulness [was] often in doubt.&#8221; It was also claimed that there were unexplained holes in his timeline, which &#8220;afforded him the opportunity to attend training at Al-Farouq [the main training camp for Arabs], which he probably completed prior to supporting the Taliban and al-Qaida on the front lines.&#8221;</p>
<p>Whether or not he was anything more than a basic foot soldier was actually open to question, as the Task Force was preoccupied by his &#8220;familial ties to a significant Al-Qaida member&#8221;; namely, &#8220;his older brother Saad Muhammad Mubarak al-Shihri aka Abdul Rahman al-Najdi aka Abu Uthman al-Shahri&#8221; who was apparently &#8220;an official spokesman for Al-Qaida and on Saudi Arabia&#8217;s most wanted list in November 2005.&#8221;</p>
<p>The Task Force also noted that he had &#8220;shown his willingness to martyr himself while at JTF-GTMO,&#8221; adding, &#8220;Should he be released, he would probably seek the opportunity to do so,&#8221; and explaining that he had &#8220;sent a letter to his family telling them of his wish to be a martyr.&#8221; It was also noted that, on May 18, 2006, he had tried to commit suicide &#8212; or, as the Task Force put it, had &#8220;committed self-harm by attempting to overdose on prescribed medication.&#8221; The fact that suicide was not even remotely regarded as a form of martyrdom by jihadists appeared to have eluded the Task Force.</p>
<p>In conclusion, the Task Force assessed him as being &#8220;of medium intelligence value,&#8221; and of posing &#8220;a high risk, as he is likely to pose a threat to the US. its interests and allies.&#8221; He was also &#8220;assessed as a moderate threat from a detention perspective,&#8221; because his &#8220;overall behavior ha[d] been non-compliant and sometimes hostile with the guard force and staff.&#8221; Providing specific details, the Task Force noted that, on December 10, 2004, &#8220;he became violent during an interview session,&#8221; when he &#8220;threw books at his interviewer, flipped a table, and attempted to head butt a guard,&#8221; and that, on August 18, 2005, &#8220;while assigned to the detainee hospital, [he] was denied a request to be unrestrained during prayer call,&#8221; and &#8220;[h]e and the other detainees became upset and began pulling out their IV&#8217;s and brandishing them as weapons, throwing thermometers, and grabbing med packs containing syringes and anything else that could be used as a weapon.&#8221;</p>
<p>As a result of the above, Rear Adm. Harris, updating a recommendation that he retained in DoD control (dated June 10, 2005), recommended him for continued detention, although, crucially, it was also noted, &#8220;If a satisfactory agreement can be reached that ensures continued detention and allows access to [al-Shehri] and/or to exploited intelligence, [he] can be Transferred Out of DoD Control (TRO).&#8221; It took another 16 months for that agreement to be reached, when he was released.</p>
<p>After his release, al-Shehri was processed through the Saudi government’s extensive rehabilitation program, but in February 2009 he was included as one of eleven former Guantánamo prisoners in <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saudi_list_of_most_wanted_suspected_terrorists" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saudi_list_of_most_wanted_suspected_terrorists?referer=');">a list of the Saudi government’s 85 most wanted militants</a>, all of whom had allegedly left Saudi Arabia and in October 2009 it was <a href="http://www.news24.com/World/News/Saudi-Militants-came-via-Yemen-20091018" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.news24.com/World/News/Saudi-Militants-came-via-Yemen-20091018?referer=');">reported</a> that he and another man, Raed al-Harbi, had been killed in a shootout with Saudi authorities after they entered the country from Yemen, disguised as women, and &#8220;planning to carry out attacks.&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Bijad Al Atabi (ISN 122, Saudi Arabia) Released July 2007</strong></p>
<p>In Chapter 2 of <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/the-guantanamo-files/"><em>The Guantánamo Files</em></a>, I explained how Bijad al-Atabi (also identified as al-Otaibi), who was 30 years old at the time of his capture, <a href="http://projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/122-bijad-thif-allah-al-atabi" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/122-bijad-thif-allah-al-atabi?referer=');">was accused</a> of being an assistant commander in Al-Qaida&#8217;s Arab Brigade, and I added more information in <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2007/09/11/guantanamo-the-stories-of-the-16-saudis-just-released/">an article at the time of his release</a>, in which I explained that, in Guantánamo, he was accused of stating that he traveled to Afghanistan to fight with the Taliban, that he was trained at a camp near Kabul, and that he fought on the front lines until ordered to surrender to Northern Alliance commander General Dostum at Mazar-e-Sharif.</p>
<p>He was then imprisoned in Qala-i-Janghi, a fort where hundreds of men were killed in a massacre, after some of them started an uprising against their captors, fearing that they were about to be killed. He was one of 86 men who survived in the basement of the fort for a week, despite being bombed and flooded.</p>
<p>In the documents released by WikiLeaks in April 2011, the file relating to al-Atabi was a &#8220;Recommendation for Continued Detention Under DoD Control (CD),&#8221; <a href="http://wikileaks.org/gitmo/prisoner/122.html" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/wikileaks.org/gitmo/prisoner/122.html?referer=');">dated January 22, 2007</a>, in which he was identified as Bijad D. al-Atavi and Bajad Dhayfallah Hawaymal al-Ruqi al-Utaybi, and it was noted that he was born in August 1971, and was &#8220;in good health.&#8221;</p>
<p>In telling his story, based largely on his own account, the Joint Task Force noted that at the age of eight, his father died and he began working on the family farm while also attending school. From 1988 to 1997, he &#8220;worked as a guard with the Saudi National Security Force, where [his] duties included guarding movement sponsored television, telecommunication, electric, and food processing facilities.&#8221; He said that he &#8220;did not receive and firearms training, but was armed with a Belgian rifle.&#8221; From 1997 to 1999, he &#8220;returned home to work on the family farm.&#8221;</p>
<p>He was, he said, &#8220;inspired to fight jihad&#8221; after listening to a fatwa issued by a well-known sheikh, but spoke to another sheikh who told him that Osama bin Laden &#8220;was not a good Muslim and to avoid Al-Qaida.&#8221; Nevertheless, he then spoke to an Afghan who gave him information about how to get to Afghanistan and where to stay,&#8221; and, on May 25, 2000, &#8220;traveled alone to Jalalabad,&#8221; via Dubai and Peshawar. There, he said, he was taken to the university, where he stayed with the brother of an individual he had met while traveling from Peshawar to Jalalabad. After a few days, he went to Kabul, where he &#8220;stayed in the Wazir Akbar Khan area at a Taliban guesthouse&#8221; for a week, and was then taken to the front lines outside Kabul, where he &#8220;received training on the AK-47 rifle and hand grenades for approximately two to three weeks at a small unknown Taliban training camp.&#8221; He said that he &#8220;never fought during his time on the frontlines,&#8221; and also said that &#8220;Al-Qaida attempted to recruit [him], but [he] refused.&#8221;</p>
<p>Al-Atabi further stated that he was on the frontlines until late July or early August 2000, but added that, during one of his regular trips from the frontlines to the Taliban guesthouse (&#8220;for rest&#8221;), he &#8220;was injured in an automobile accident and taken to a hospital in Kabul,&#8221; where he remained for up to six weeks. In October 2000, approximately, he was transferred to a hospital in Lahore, Pakistan, where he &#8220;received additional surgery and physical therapy on his hand.&#8221; He also explained that the Taliban &#8220;paid for some of [his] medical bills, and [he] paid the balance.&#8221; He then &#8220;remained in Lahore at a Taliban guesthouse until approximately  February 2001, when he returned to Kabul and stayed in a guesthouse for about a month, and then traveled to Qarabagh, where he stayed at another guesthouse until approximately mid-April 2001.</p>
<p>He then &#8220;traveled to and fought in the Khawaja Ghar region of Afghanistan&#8221; until he &#8220;was told the Taliban reached an agreement with General Dostum&#8221; of the Northern Alliance. This was described as being &#8220;approximately mid-October 2001,&#8221; although it was actually in November. He then &#8220;traveled to Mazar-e-Sharif in a convoy where he was detained on approximately 23 November 2001 by Northern Alliance (NA) forces and taken to the Qala-i-Janghi prison.&#8221; Al-Atabi&#8217;s comments about the massacre were not noted, but an analyst stated, &#8220;Over 70 JTF-GTMO detainees surrendered to General Dostum&#8217;s troops in late November 2001. Dostum&#8217;s forces took the prisoners to the Qala-i-Janghi prison located outside Mazar-e-Sharif, on 24 November 2001. After one night in captivity, the prisoners revolted leading to the deaths of NA forces and CIA operative Johnny &#8216;Mike&#8217; Spann. Detainee and other JTF-GTMO detainees, who survived the revolt, withdrew to a basement in the compound until they were recaptured , approximately one week later.&#8221;</p>
<p>On December 29, 2001, after being held in Sheberghan prison, also run by Dostum, for four weeks, al-Atabi was transferred to the US prison at Kandahar airport. He was sent to Guantánamo on January 20, 2002, on the spurious basis that it was to &#8220;provide information on the following: Taliban organization, leadership, equipment and procedures [and] Taliban training camp in the vicinity of Taloqan.&#8221;</p>
<p>In assessing his story, the Task Force described him as &#8220;a member of Al-Qaida and a sub-commander in [Osama bin Laden]&#8216;s 55th Arab Brigade,&#8221; and while the former was the normal exaggerated description of any Arab fighting the Northern Alliance, the latter claim came only from one witness, Ali al-Tayeea (ISN 111, released in January 2009), who was well-known within Guantánamo circles as an unreliable witness. Al-Tayeea apparently identified al-Atabi as Abjad Dhaif Allah (aka Abu Umar), and also &#8220;photo-identified [him] as Abu Omar al-Nejdi, but stated [his] real name [was] Bujaad Daif Allah,&#8221; which an analyst regarded as &#8220;a variant of [his] name.&#8221; He claimed that al-Atabi &#8220;was an al-Qaida explosives and weapons expert who received extensive training,&#8221; and &#8220;was a mid-level commander, well known to Al-Qaida fighters,&#8221; who &#8220;fought on the Kabul and Khawaja Ghar fronts,&#8221; and also claimed he &#8220;was on the North Line for a long time and was Abu Tarub&#8217;s sub-commander in the Bilal Group of the Arab Brigade.&#8221;</p>
<p>Furthermore, with reference to Abd al-Hadi al-Iraqi, (described as having &#8220;primary operational command of the former 55th Arab Brigade, [and] serving as [Osama bin Laden]&#8216;s military commander in the field&#8221;), al-Tayeea claimed that al-Atabi &#8220;knew Abd al-Hadi al-Iraqi very well because [he] always went to al-Iraqi&#8217;s office.&#8221; He added that he &#8220;saw [al-Atabi] twice with al-Iraqi and also saw [him] with information needed on the North Line,&#8221; and &#8220;believe[d] detainee was a very important person.&#8221;</p>
<p>Even if al-Tayeea was correct to identify al-Atabi as a sub-commander, it did not follow that he was &#8220;a very important person,&#8221; but what made al-Tayeea&#8217;s statement dubious was not only his track record, but also the fact that there was no other reliable verification for his story. Muhammad al-Adahi (ISN 33, still held), apparently &#8220;also photo-identified detainee as Abu Omar al-Najdi, a sub-commander to Abu Turab,&#8221; but this smacks of a coerced statement, or one produced simply to make life easier, as al-Adahi, a Yemeni who accompanied his sister to Afghanistan for her marriage, never went anywhere near the front lines where al-Atabi was reportedly a sub-commander.</p>
<p>Others recognized al-Atabi, but none of them claimed that he had a command position. Abd al-Rahman al-Umari (ISN 199, a Saudi who died in Guantánamo in May 2007, and was also identified as Abdul Rahman al-Amri) &#8220;identified detainee as Abu Omar who was at the Rabei position in Kabul,&#8221; Said al-Zahrani (ISN 204, released in July 2007) &#8220;identified detainee as Abu Omar who fought on the frontlines&#8221;) and correctly &#8220;believed [he] was wounded in a castle near Mazar-e-Sharif&#8221;), and John Walker Lindh (ISN 1, although he was never held at Guantánamo, because he was a US citizen), &#8220;thought the detainee depicted in a photograph shown to him was Abu Umar, a Saudi from Najd, SA.&#8221; Lindh apparently also &#8220;said Abu Umar had been in Afghanistan for a long time, &#8216;maybe even in the 80s, fighting against the USSR,&#8217;&#8221; and &#8220;recalled seeing detainee on the backlines near Takhar, AF, and Kunduz, AF, after the retreat.&#8221; He added that he &#8220;thought detainee had been killed.&#8221; An analyst noted, &#8220;If detainee is the individual identified by Lindh, [he] has withheld details of his background story,&#8221; but it seems more likely that it was Lindh, presumably under duress, who was making things up.</p>
<p>The Task Force also noted that &#8220;[v]ariations of detainee&#8217;s name and aliases ha[d] been recovered in Al-Qaida associated documents,&#8221; recovered during house raids, but this kind of claim is particularly dubious. More significant was a note stating that, &#8220;Prior to the Saudi delegation visit in 2002, the Saudi Ministry of Interior General Directorate of Investigations (Mabahith) provided information on 37 detainees whom they designated as being high priority. Detainee was eighteenth on the list.&#8221;</p>
<p>Mabahith also &#8220;noted detainee was on the Saudi movement&#8217;s &#8216;watch and arrest&#8217; list due to information they received reporting detainee&#8217;s death in Mazar-e- Sharif and the possibility of someone else using detainee&#8217;s passport,&#8221; which, of course, was nothing to do with him, but what was most significant was that, &#8220;After the Saudi delegation visit, detainee was assessed by Mabahith&#8221; not as being &#8220;high priority,&#8221; but &#8220;as one of the 77 Saudi nationals of low intelligence or law enforcement value to the US Government, but of whom [sic] the Saudi Government would attempt to prosecute if transferred to their custody from JTF-GTMO.&#8221;</p>
<p>In conclusion, he was assessed as being &#8220;of medium intelligence value,&#8221; and of posing &#8220;a high risk, as he is likely to pose a threat to the US, its interests and allies.&#8221; It was also noted that he was &#8220;assessed to be a medium threat from a detention perspective,&#8221; because his &#8220;overall behaviour ha[d] been non-compliant and hostile toward the guard force and staff.&#8221; As a result, Rear Adm. Harris, updating a recommendation for his continued detention (dated October 24, 2005), repeated that recommendation, without any acknowledgement of the Saudis&#8217; description of al-Atabi as being &#8220;of low intelligence or law enforcement value to the US Government.&#8221; However, six months later, he was released, to be put through the Saudi government’s extensive rehabilitation program.</p>
<p><strong>Also see <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/11/22/the-complete-guantanamo-files-wikileaks-and-the-prisoners-released-in-2007-part-one-of-ten/">Part One</a> of this series.</strong></p>
<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Guantanamo-Files-Stories-Detainees-Americas/dp/0745326641" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.amazon.com/Guantanamo-Files-Stories-Detainees-Americas/dp/0745326641?referer=');"><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-3000" title="The Guantanamo Files" src="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/bookcover6200.jpg" alt="" width="126" height="179" /></a>Andy Worthington is the author of <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/the-guantanamo-files/" target="_self"><em>The Guantánamo Files: The Stories of the 774 Detainees in America&#8217;s Illegal Prison</em></a> (published by Pluto Press, distributed by Macmillan in the US, and available from Amazon &#8212; click on the following for the <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Guantanamo-Files-Stories-Detainees-Americas/dp/0745326641" target="_self" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.amazon.com/Guantanamo-Files-Stories-Detainees-Americas/dp/0745326641?referer=');">US</a> and the <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/Guantanamo-Files-Stories-Detainees-Americas/dp/0745326641" target="_self" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.amazon.co.uk/Guantanamo-Files-Stories-Detainees-Americas/dp/0745326641?referer=');">UK</a>) and of two other books: <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/stonehenge-celebration-subversion/" target="_self"><em>Stonehenge: Celebration and Subversion</em></a> and <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/battle-of-the-beanfield/" target="_self"><em>The Battle of the Beanfield</em></a>. To receive new articles in your inbox, please subscribe to my <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/feed/" target="_self">RSS feed</a> (and I can also be found on <a href="http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=738143803" target="_self" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=738143803&amp;referer=');">Facebook</a>, <a href="http://twitter.com/GuantanamoAndy" target="_self" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/twitter.com/GuantanamoAndy?referer=');">Twitter</a>, <a href="http://digg.com/aworthington" target="_self" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/digg.com/aworthington?referer=');">Digg</a> and <a href="http://www.youtube.com/user/AndyWorthington1?feature=mhum" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.youtube.com/user/AndyWorthington1?feature=mhum&amp;referer=');"> YouTube</a>). Also see my <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/06/01/guantanamo-the-definitive-prisoner-list-updated-for-2011-with-new-information-and-photos-from-wikileaks/" target="_self">definitive Guantánamo prisoner list</a>, updated in June 2011, &#8220;<a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/category/2002-2011-the-complete-guantanamo-files-new/">The Complete Guantánamo Files</a>,&#8221; a 70-part, million-word series drawing on files released by WikiLeaks in April 2011, and details about the documentary film, “<a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/outside-the-law-stories-from-guantanamo/" target="_self">Outside the Law: Stories from Guantánamo</a>” (co-directed by Polly Nash and Andy Worthington, and available on DVD <a href="http://www.spectacle.co.uk/catalogue_production.php?id=538" target="_self" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.spectacle.co.uk/catalogue_production.php?id=538&amp;referer=');">here</a> &#8212; or <a href="http://www.freewebstore.org/WorldCantWait/Andy_Worthingtons_Outside_the_Law__Stories_from_Guantanamo/p237374_3033886.aspx" target="_self" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.freewebstore.org/WorldCantWait/Andy_Worthingtons_Outside_the_Law_Stories_from_Guantanamo/p237374_3033886.aspx?referer=');">here</a> for the US). Also see my <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/guantanamo-habeas-results-the-definitive-list/" target="_self">definitive Guantánamo habeas list</a> and <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/category/a-chronological-list-of-guantanamo-articles/" target="_self">the chronological list of all my articles</a>, and, if you appreciate my work, feel free to <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/12/05/quarterly-fundraiser-please-help-me-raise-2500-to-continue-my-work-on-guantanamo/">make a donation</a>.</p>
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			<wfw:commentRss>http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/12/06/the-complete-guantanamo-files-wikileaks-and-the-prisoners-released-in-2007-part-two-of-ten/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
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		<title>No End to the Shameful Treatment of Omar Khadr</title>
		<link>http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/11/02/no-end-to-the-shameful-treatment-of-omar-khadr/</link>
		<comments>http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/11/02/no-end-to-the-shameful-treatment-of-omar-khadr/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 02 Nov 2011 22:51:52 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Andy Worthington</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Children in Guantanamo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Guantanamo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Military Commissions]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Omar Khadr]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Canada]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Child prisoners]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Military Commission]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Torture]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/?p=14637</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[This week, Omar Khadr, the Canadian citizen and former child prisoner, was supposed to leave Guantánamo after nine years and three months in US custody. No one thought that Khadr would return to Canada as a free man, as he has another seven years to serve in a Canadian jail as part of a plea [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/omarkhadrcanada.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-14638" title="A campaigner asks for the repatriation of Guantanamo prisoner Omar Khadr to Canada." src="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/omarkhadrcanada.jpg" alt="" width="298" height="263" /></a>This week, <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2007/11/14/the-trials-of-omar-khadr-guantanamos-child-soldier/">Omar Khadr</a>, the Canadian citizen and former child prisoner, was supposed to leave Guantánamo after nine years and three months in US custody.</p>
<p>No one thought that Khadr would return to Canada as a free man, as he has another seven years to serve in a Canadian jail as part of <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2010/10/26/the-betrayal-of-omar-khadr-and-of-american-justice/">a plea deal he made at Guantánamo</a> a year ago, but it was reasonable to expect that he would be transferred to Canadian custody this week, as the plea deal was for an eight-year sentence &#8212; with one year to be served in Guantánamo, followed by seven in Canada.</p>
<p>However, as <a href="http://blogs.canada.com/2011/10/28/khadr-transfer-could-take-18-months/" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/blogs.canada.com/2011/10/28/khadr-transfer-could-take-18-months/?referer=');">Canada.com</a> explained last Friday, &#8220;It could be as many as 18 months before Omar Khadr steps foot in Canada even though he becomes eligible for transfer from Guantánamo Bay on Monday&#8221; (October 31).</p>
<p>Throughout this entire story, the behavior of the United States government, first under President Bush, and then under President Obama, has been disgraceful. Khadr was abused, and was never rehabilitated according to the <a href="http://www2.ohchr.org/english/law/crc-conflict.htm" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www2.ohchr.org/english/law/crc-conflict.htm?referer=');">Optional Protocol to the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child on the involvement of children in armed conflict</a>, which stipulates that juvenile prisoners &#8212; those under 18 at the time their alleged crime takes place &#8212; “require special protection,” and obliges its signatories to promote “the physical and psychosocial rehabilitation and social reintegration of children who are victims of armed conflict.”<span id="more-14637"></span></p>
<p>In addition, Khadr was put forward for a trial by military commission &#8212; a war crimes trial &#8212; even though he was a child at the time of his capture, even though it is not clear that he had killed a US soldier by throwing a grenade, as alleged, and even though the entire premise of the trial was wrong.</p>
<p>It was deeply disturbing that the US government was willing to suggest to the world that those who raise arms against US forces in wartime, and in a country where the US is engaged in a war, can actually be defined as war criminals, even if their only target is members of the US military.</p>
<p>And yet this, of course, is exactly what happened to Khadr, when, a year ago, he signed the plea deal that was supposed to guarantee his release, in which he admitted to being an &#8220;alien unprivileged enemy belligerent,&#8221; who had no right, under any circumstances, to engage in combat with US military forces, and who, as a result of doing so, was a war criminal.</p>
<p>That was shocking enough, and it was no more reassuring that, on October 31, 2010, Khadr was <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2010/11/02/omar-khadr-jury-hammers-the-final-nail-into-the-coffin-of-american-justice/">given a 40-year sentence</a> by a military jury after a week of hearings at Guantánamo. This was supposed to reassure supporters of Guantánamo and the military commissions that Obama was tough on terrorism, while the plea deal was supposed to send the message to critics of Guantánamo that he was fair. However, from the point of view of fairness and the law, the entire process was an abomination, and represents a low point for US justice and for any reputation for fairness that President Obama hoped to bring to his Presidency.</p>
<p>For Khadr, the plea deal was obviously supposed to be a lifeline, which is what makes the news from Canada so upsetting. The Canadian government&#8217;s behavior has been shameful ever since Khadr was first captured. Intelligence agents were <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/06/08/video-andy-worthington-discusses-the-omar-khadr-film-you-dont-like-the-truth-on-press-tv/">sent to interrogate him</a>, even though that was a clear violation of his rights, given the disturbing circumstances of his confinement in Guantánamo, and <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2010/08/25/lawlessness-haunts-omar-khadrs-blighted-war-crimes-trial-at-guantanamo/">a series of challenges in the Canadian courts</a> culminated in the Supreme Court ruling that the government had indeed failed to protect Khadr’s rights, although the Court refused to order the government to seek his return, and the government responded by ignoring the ruling.</p>
<p>Now, however, the signs are that the Canadian government looks set to fail Khadr again. Canada.com noted that the closest the government had come to guaranteeing that Khadr would be coming back to Canada to serve the rest of his sentence was &#8220;a diplomatic note between US and Canadian officials,&#8221; which stated that the Harper government  was “inclined to favourably consider” a request for Khadr&#8217;s transfer back to the country of his birth.</p>
<p>Several weeks ago, Khadr&#8217;s Canadian lawyers confirmed that &#8220;the transfer process had been initiated,&#8221; but Michael Patton, a spokesman for Public Safety Minister Vic Toews, said that securing the return of a prisoner from another country was a “big process.” He explained that the Correctional Service had to &#8220;determine whether the applicant is eligible for a transfer,&#8221; then the government holding the prisoner had to agree to it, and then the Correctional Service had to &#8220;put together a recommendation to the Minister who must review and approve it.&#8221;</p>
<p>Patton said, “These files normally take about 18 months to come to a decision,” and Canada.com claimed that Khadr’s case was &#8220;unlikely to be expedited or treated differently,&#8221; even though the government has obviously had an entire year to prepare for Khadr&#8217;s return.</p>
<p>In the <em><a href="http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/world/in-omar-khadrs-legal-saga-a-new-chapter-begins/article2215216/" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.theglobeandmail.com/news/world/in-omar-khadrs-legal-saga-a-new-chapter-begins/article2215216/?referer=');">Globe and Mail</a></em>, Paul Koring discussed other options, noting that the Harper government could &#8220;approve and quickly facilitate&#8221; Khadr&#8217;s return, possibly within months, if he were to &#8220;agree to abandon any further constitutional challenges,&#8221; according to &#8220;lawyers familiar with his case.&#8221;</p>
<p>On the other hand, some lawyers told the <em>Globe and Mail</em> that Khadr could be free &#8220;in less than a year if he takes his case again to the Canadian courts.&#8221; These lawyers believe Khadr could challenge both his war crimes conviction and the sentence he was given, on the basis that &#8220;both were illegal under international law.&#8221;</p>
<p>Koring noted that a constitutional challenge by Khadr &#8220;could embarrass the government and force public disclosure of the role its agents played&#8221; in his interrogations at Guantánamo, although it would also &#8220;cast him again in the spotlight,&#8221; which might be damaging for his cause in Canada. This is because part of the basis for Khadr&#8217;s shameful treatment has been that many Canadians have been prepared to ignore his immense ill-treatment by making him the object of punishment for the perceived sins of his father, Ahmed Khadr, who allegedly raised funds for Osama bin Laden.</p>
<p>As Paul Koring also noted, &#8220;the Harper government has so far shown no interest in getting Mr. Khadr freed or back in Canada.&#8221; This shameful situation must end as soon as possible, and Khadr, I believe, should be freed on his return to Canada, as a gesture of support from a government that shamefully abandoned him for the best part of a decade.</p>
<p>Khadr&#8217;s release from Guantánamo will also focus attention once more on what should be an abiding source of shame for Barack Obama, but has been largely overlooked &#8212; the continued presence of 171 prisoners at Guantánamo, even though <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2010/06/11/does-obama-really-know-or-care-about-who-is-at-guantanamo/">the government conceded</a>, after a year-long review in 2009, that it did not wish to hold over half of these men.</p>
<p>With their release <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2010/12/28/with-indefinite-detention-and-transfer-bans-obama-and-the-senate-plumb-new-depths-on-guantanamo/">blocked by Congress</a>, and by <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/09/24/us-injustice-laid-bare-as-afghan-in-guantanamo-loses-his-habeas-appeal/">judges in the Court of Appeals</a> in Washington D.C., who have gutted habeas corpus of all meaning when it comes to the Guantánamo prisoners, Omar Khadr&#8217;s release would also remind the world of some of these other men, unjustly overlooked as the 10th anniversary of the opening of Guantánamo approaches.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Guantanamo-Files-Stories-Detainees-Americas/dp/0745326641" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.amazon.com/Guantanamo-Files-Stories-Detainees-Americas/dp/0745326641?referer=');"><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-3000" title="The Guantanamo Files" src="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/bookcover6200.jpg" alt="" width="126" height="179" /></a>Andy Worthington is the author of <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/the-guantanamo-files/" target="_self"><em>The Guantánamo Files: The Stories of the 774 Detainees in America&#8217;s Illegal Prison</em></a> (published by Pluto Press, distributed by Macmillan in the US, and available from Amazon &#8212; click on the following for the <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Guantanamo-Files-Stories-Detainees-Americas/dp/0745326641" target="_self" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.amazon.com/Guantanamo-Files-Stories-Detainees-Americas/dp/0745326641?referer=');">US</a> and the <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/Guantanamo-Files-Stories-Detainees-Americas/dp/0745326641" target="_self" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.amazon.co.uk/Guantanamo-Files-Stories-Detainees-Americas/dp/0745326641?referer=');">UK</a>) and of two other books: <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/stonehenge-celebration-subversion/" target="_self"><em>Stonehenge: Celebration and Subversion</em></a> and <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/battle-of-the-beanfield/" target="_self"><em>The Battle of the Beanfield</em></a>. To receive new articles in your inbox, please subscribe to my <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/feed/" target="_self">RSS feed</a> (and I can also be found on <a href="http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=738143803" target="_self" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=738143803&amp;referer=');">Facebook</a>, <a href="http://twitter.com/GuantanamoAndy" target="_self" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/twitter.com/GuantanamoAndy?referer=');">Twitter</a>, <a href="http://digg.com/aworthington" target="_self" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/digg.com/aworthington?referer=');">Digg</a> and <a href="http://www.youtube.com/user/AndyWorthington1?feature=mhum" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.youtube.com/user/AndyWorthington1?feature=mhum&amp;referer=');"> YouTube</a>). Also see my <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/06/01/guantanamo-the-definitive-prisoner-list-updated-for-2011-with-new-information-and-photos-from-wikileaks/" target="_self">definitive Guantánamo prisoner list</a>, updated in June 2011, &#8220;<a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/category/2002-2011-the-complete-guantanamo-files-new/">The Complete Guantánamo Files</a>,&#8221; a 70-part, million-word series drawing on files released by WikiLeaks in April 2011, and details about the documentary film, “<a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/outside-the-law-stories-from-guantanamo/" target="_self">Outside the Law: Stories from Guantánamo</a>” (co-directed by Polly Nash and Andy Worthington, and available on DVD <a href="http://www.spectacle.co.uk/catalogue_production.php?id=538" target="_self" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.spectacle.co.uk/catalogue_production.php?id=538&amp;referer=');">here</a> &#8212; or <a href="http://www.freewebstore.org/WorldCantWait/Andy_Worthingtons_Outside_the_Law__Stories_from_Guantanamo/p237374_3033886.aspx" target="_self" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.freewebstore.org/WorldCantWait/Andy_Worthingtons_Outside_the_Law_Stories_from_Guantanamo/p237374_3033886.aspx?referer=');">here</a> for the US). Also see my <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/guantanamo-habeas-results-the-definitive-list/" target="_self">definitive Guantánamo habeas list</a> and <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/category/a-chronological-list-of-guantanamo-articles/" target="_self">the chronological list of all my articles</a>, and, if you appreciate my work, feel free to <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/09/05/quarterly-fundraiser-help-me-raise-2500-for-my-work-on-guantanamo-and-torture/" target="_self">make a donation</a>.</p>
<p>As published exclusively on the website of the <a href="http://www.fff.org/comment/com1111a.asp" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.fff.org/comment/com1111a.asp?referer=');">Future of Freedom Foundation</a>.</p>
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		<title>The Complete Guantánamo Files: WikiLeaks and the Prisoners Released in 2006 (Part Eight of Ten)</title>
		<link>http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/10/20/the-complete-guantanamo-files-wikileaks-and-the-prisoners-released-in-2006-part-eight-of-ten/</link>
		<comments>http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/10/20/the-complete-guantanamo-files-wikileaks-and-the-prisoners-released-in-2006-part-eight-of-ten/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 20 Oct 2011 21:30:07 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Andy Worthington</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[2002-2011: THE COMPLETE GUANTANAMO FILES (*NEW*)]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Afghans in Guantanamo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Algerians in Guantanamo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[British prisoners in Guantanamo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Children in Guantanamo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Egyptians in Guantanamo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Guantanamo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Guantanamo suicides]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Russians in Guantanamo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Saudis in Guantanamo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[WikiLeaks]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[WikiLeaks and the Guantanamo Prisoners Released in 2006]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Yemenis in Guantanamo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Abdul Salaam]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Abdullah Al Qahtani]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Afghans]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Al-Qaeda]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ala Salim]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Albania]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Algerians]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Bagram]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[British prisoners]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Deaths in Guatanamo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Egypt]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Fethi Boucetta]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Jamal Kiyemba]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Khudaidad]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Qadir Khandan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Rashid al-Uwaydah]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Recidivism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Salah Ahmed al-Salami]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Saudis]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Shams Ullah]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Taliban]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Uganda]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Zakirjan Asam]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Please support my work! Freelance investigative journalist Andy Worthington continues his 70-part, million-word series telling, for the first time, the stories of 776 of the 779 prisoners held at Guantánamo since the prison opened on January 11, 2002. Adding information released by WikiLeaks in April 2011 to the existing documentation about the prisoners, much of [...]]]></description>
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<p><strong><em>Freelance investigative journalist Andy Worthington continues his 70-part, million-word series telling, for the first time, the stories of 776 of the 779 prisoners held at Guantánamo since the prison opened on January 11, 2002. Adding <a href="http://wikileaks.org/gitmo/" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/wikileaks.org/gitmo/?referer=');">information released by WikiLeaks</a> in April 2011 to the existing documentation about the prisoners, much of which was already covered in Andy’s book <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/the-guantanamo-files/">The Guantánamo Files</a> and in the archive of articles on <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/">his website</a>, the project will be completed in time for the 10th anniversary of the prison’s opening on January 11, 2012.</em></strong></p>
<p><strong><em>This is Part 28 of the 70-part series. 348 stories have now been told. See the entire archive <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/category/2002-2011-the-complete-guantanamo-files-new/">here</a>.</em></strong></p>
<p>In late April, I worked with WikiLeaks as a media partner for the <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/04/25/wikileaks-reveals-secret-guantanamo-files-exposes-detention-policy-as-a-construct-of-lies/">publication of thousands of pages</a> of classified military documents &#8212; the Detainee Assessment Briefs &#8212; relating to almost all of the 779 prisoners held at Guantánamo since the prison opened on January 11, 2002. These documents drew heavily on the testimony of the prisoners themselves, and also on the testimony of their fellow inmates (either in Guantánamo, or <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2010/06/15/un-secret-detention-report-part-one-the-cias-high-value-detainee-program-and-secret-prisons/">in secret prisons run by or on behalf of the CIA</a>), whose <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/04/25/wikileaks-reveals-secret-guantanamo-files-exposes-detention-policy-as-a-construct-of-lies/">statements are unreliable</a>, either because they were subjected to torture or other forms of coercion, or because they provided false statements in the hope of securing better treatment in Guantánamo.</p>
<p>The documents were compiled by the Joint Task Force at Guantánamo (JTF GTMO), which operates the prison, and were based on assessments and reports made by interrogators and analysts whose primary concern was to “exploit” the prisoners for their intelligence value. They also include input from the Criminal Investigative Task Force, created by the DoD in 2002 to conduct interrogations on a law enforcement basis, rather than for “actionable intelligence.”</p>
<p>My ongoing analysis of the documents began in May, with a five-part series, “<a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/category/wikileaks-the-unknown-prisoners-of-guantanamo/">WikiLeaks: The Unknown Prisoners of Guantánamo</a>,” telling the stories of 84 prisoners, released between 2002 and 2004, whose stories had never been told before. This was followed by a ten-part series, “<a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/category/wikileaks-and-the-guantanamo-prisoners-released-from-2002-to-2004/">WikiLeaks and the Guantánamo Prisoners Released from 2002 to 2004</a>,” in which I revisited the stories of 114 other prisoners released in this period, adding information from the Detainee Assessment Briefs to what was already known about these men and boys from press reports and other sources. This was followed by another five-part series, “<a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/category/wikileaks-and-the-guantanamo-prisoners-released-after-the-tribunals-2004-to-2005/">WikiLeaks and the Guantánamo Prisoners Released After the Tribunals, 2004 to 2005</a>,” dealing with the period from September 2004 to the end of 2005, when 62 prisoners were released.<span id="more-14543"></span></p>
<p>This, as I explained, was the period in which, after the prisoners won a spectacular victory in the Supreme Court in June 2004, in <a href="http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/scripts/getcase.pl?court=US&amp;vol=000&amp;invol=03-334" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/scripts/getcase.pl?court=US_amp_vol=000_amp_invol=03-334&amp;referer=');"><em>Rasul v. Bush</em></a>, when the Supreme Court granted them habeas corpus rights (in other words, the right to ask an impartial judge why they were being held), lawyers were allowed to meet the prisoners for the first time, and the secrecy that was required for Guantánamo to function as an interrogation center beyond the law was finally broken.</p>
<p>However, although the Bush administration allowed habeas petitions to proceed, Congress attempted to strip the prisoners of their habeas rights in the <a href="http://www.pegc.us/detainee_act_2005.html" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.pegc.us/detainee_act_2005.html?referer=');">Detainee Treatment Act</a> in 2005, and the administration also responded to the Supreme Court’s ruling with its own inferior version of habeas, the Combatant Status Review Tribunals, <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2007/07/03/guantanamo-whistleblowers-lt-col-stephen-abraham-is-not-the-first-insider-to-condemn-the-kangaroo-courts/">a sham process</a> designed to rubber-stamp their designation as “enemy combatants” who could be held indefinitely.</p>
<p>With just 38 prisoners cleared for release after the CSRTs, another review process &#8212; the annual Administrative Review Boards &#8212; took over, reviewing whether prisoners still had ongoing intelligence value, and whether they still posed a threat to the US. These were essentially the decisions being taken by JTF GTMO and CITF, and they reveal how, in the “War on Terror,” prosecuting criminals (the few genuine terror suspects in Guantánamo) and holding soldiers off the battlefield until the end of hostilities had largely given way to the strange mixture of threat assessments and intelligence assessments that fill the Detainee Assessment Briefs.</p>
<p>With 260 prisoners profiled in the first 20 parts of this project, this latest ten-part series covers the stories of the 111 prisoners released in 2006 (and the three who died at the prison in June 2006) and readers will, I hope, realize that almost all of these prisoners were freed because of political maneuvering rather than anything to do with justice. The largest groups released by nationality in 2006 were Saudis (45 in total &#8212; 15 in May 2006, 14 in June and 16 in December) and Afghans (35 in total &#8212; 7 in February, 5 in August, 16 in October and 7 in December).</p>
<p>I also hope that readers will reflect on the problems of over-classification that have been thoroughly chronicled in the preceding series analyzing the Detainee Assessment Briefs. My analysis to date has established repeatedly that even patently innocent prisoners seized by mistake were regarded as a “low risk,” rather than as no risk at all, and it is important for readers to bear in mind that the entire process of detaining and processing prisoners and exploiting them for their supposed intelligence was shot through with a drive to conclude that they were all a threat, and to overlook the distressing fact that most of them were seized in <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2009/05/27/guantanamo-and-the-many-failures-of-us-politicians/">a largely random manner</a>, mostly by America’s Afghan and Pakistan allies, at a time when substantial bounty payments were widespread, and were never subjected to anything that resembled an adequate screening process.</p>
<p>For further information, also see <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/09/19/the-complete-guantanamo-files-wikileaks-and-the-prisoners-released-in-2006-part-one-of-ten/">Part One</a> (which contained eleven stories about prisoners from a variety of countries, mostly captured in Afghanistan, and including Yasser al-Zahrani, who died in Guantánamo in June 2006), and <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/09/25/the-complete-guantanamo-files-wikileaks-and-the-prisoners-released-in-2006-part-two-of-ten/">Part Two</a> (which featured another eleven stories, mostly of prisoners who survived the Qala-i-Janghi massacre in northern Afghanistan in November 2001). <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/09/27/the-complete-guantanamo-files-wikileaks-and-the-prisoners-released-in-2006-part-three-of-ten/">Part Three</a> featured another eleven stories, including some examples of prisoners who &#8220;returned to the battlefield&#8221; after their release, and the story of a Libyan prisoner whose fie is full of statements made by other Libyans, including Abdelhakim Belhaj, now active as a commander of the Libyan rebels, who were subjected to extraordinary rendition and torture in secret CIA prisons. <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/10/03/the-complete-guantanamo-files-wikileaks-and-the-prisoners-released-in-2006-part-four-of-ten/">Part Four</a> told eleven more stories, of prisoners seized, for a variety of reasons, crossing from Afghanistan to Pakistan after the US-led invasion in October 2001, and <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/10/06/the-complete-guantanamo-files-wikileaks-and-the-prisoners-released-in-2006-part-five-of-ten/">Part Five</a> featured more of those stories, including four accounts of the Uighurs, Muslims from China&#8217;s oppressed Xinjiang province, who persuaded the US they were held by mistake, but had to wait until 2006 to be freed, when they were resettled in Albania, and not in the US, which accepted that it could not return them to China, but refused to allow them to live in America. <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/10/10/the-complete-guantanamo-files-wikileaks-and-the-prisoners-released-in-2006-part-six-of-ten/">Part Six</a> involved more stories of Saudis and Afghans, including the particularly unfortunate story of a Saudi-born Uighur, who was tortured by Al-Qaida for allegedly plotting to assassinate Osama bin Laden, liberated from a Taliban prison, and then sent to Guantánamo. <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/10/16/the-complete-guantanamo-files-wikileaks-and-the-prisoners-released-in-2006-part-seven-of-ten/">Part Seven</a> featured more Saudis, a Yemeni, two Kazakhs, an Iranian and some Afghans, including some prisoners with serious mental health issues (and one juvenile prisoner), and the sad &#8212; and unresolved &#8212; story of Mani al-Utaybi, another of the three prisoners who died in June 2006, and this part features more mental health issues, another juvenile, three men sent to live in Albania because it was not safe for them to be returned to their home countries, and the last of the three prisoners who died in June 2006. Also see <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/10/25/the-complete-guantanamo-files-wikileaks-and-the-prisoners-released-in-2006-part-nine-of-ten/">Part Nine</a> and <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/10/31/the-complete-guantanamo-files-wikileaks-and-the-prisoners-released-in-2006-part-ten-of-ten/">Part Ten</a>.</p>
<h3>The Complete Guantánamo Files: WikiLeaks and the Prisoners Released in 2006 (Part Eight of Ten)</h3>
<p><strong>Abdullah Al Qahtani (ISN 652, Saudi Arabia) Released May 2006</strong></p>
<p><a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/abdullahalqahtani.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-14544" title="Abdullah al-Qahtani, in a photo made available by Cageprisoners." src="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/abdullahalqahtani.jpg" alt="" width="186" height="236" /></a>In Chapter 14 of <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/the-guantanamo-files/"><em>The Guantánamo Files</em></a>, I explained how, after his release, Abdullah al-Qahtani, who was 22 years old at the time of his capture, told the newspaper <em>Asharq Alawsat</em> that, in Afghanistan, he had taken part in the Taliban&#8217;s military conflict, which he described as &#8220;skirmishes with the Russians and allies such as Ahmad Shah Massoud,&#8221; and also said that, after the US-led invasion began, he and a number of other Arabs negotiated a surrender with the Northern Alliance, and were surprised when they were handed over to the Americans.&#8221; In contrast, the Pentagon&#8217;s limited allegations are <a href="http://projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/652-abdullah-hamid-al-qahtani" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/652-abdullah-hamid-al-qahtani?referer=');">here</a>.</p>
<p>In the documents released by WikiLeaks in April 2011, the file relating to al-Qahtani was a &#8220;Recommendation [for] Transfer to the Control of Another Country for Continued Detention (TRCD),&#8221; <a href="http://wikileaks.ch/gitmo/prisoner/652.html" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/wikileaks.ch/gitmo/prisoner/652.html?referer=');">dated December 3, 2004</a>, in which he was also identified as Abdulla Hamid al-Qahtani and Abdullah Mohammed, born in 1979, and it was also noted that he had latent TB, in common with many of the prisoners, but refused therapy &#8220;after three treatments.&#8221; It was also noted that he had &#8220;been seen for tooth decay&#8221; and &#8220;had a left 5th metatarsal fracture (foot) noted on x-ray after ankle injury,&#8221; for which he &#8220;received therapy&#8221; &#8212; for &#8220;chronic ankle pain.&#8221;</p>
<p>In telling his story, the Joint Task Force noted that, after one year of high school, &#8220;he worked for his father in a family owned business,&#8221; and then, in January 2001, met Abdallah Aiza al-Matrafi (ISN 5, released in December 2007, and also identified as Abdul Aziz al-Matrafi) who was identified as &#8220;the national director of Al-Wafa in Afghanistan/Pakistan.&#8221; A Saudi-based charity which was demonstrably involved in humanitarian work in Afghanistan, Al-Wafa was also regarded as a front for terrorism, and was blacklisted by the US, and defined by the Intelligence Interagency on Counter Terrorism (IITC) &#8220;as a Tier 2 NGO,&#8221; meaning an organization that has &#8220;demonstrated the intent and willingness to support terrorist organizations willing to attack US persons or interests.&#8221;</p>
<p>Al-Matrafi apparently recruited al-Qahtani, and his cousin Jabir al-Qahtani (ISN 650, released in November 2007), &#8220;to establish an Al-Wafa organisation in Lahore, Pakistan,&#8221; and in early February 2001 gave him $200 for travel expenses. After he and his cousin took a three-week vacation in Egypt, they met al-Matrafi in Lahore in April 2001, and &#8220;were driven to a large storage facility in Lahore,&#8221; where al-Matrafi told them &#8220;they would be accountable for all goods received from the United Arab Emirates and take regular inventories.&#8221; They apparently &#8220;lived on the second floor of the storage facility and were told by [al-Matrafi] to keep a low profile and not to be seen by the local populace.&#8221; Al-Jabrani explained that he &#8220;was told this [was] because he was a foreigner and it would make people in the area suspicious,&#8221; and said that he was also &#8220;introduced to a local Pakistani, Muhammad Gola, who was the acting director of the Al-Wafa office in Lahore, PK, and was told if he needed anything [to] talk to Gola.&#8221;</p>
<p>In September 2001, having not been paid, al-Qahtani said that he asked al-Matrafi &#8220;to pay him so he could travel back to Saudi Arabia,&#8221; and al-Matrafi told him that &#8220;if they travel[ed] to Afghanistan they would be paid the back wages plus any time worked while in Afghanistan.&#8221; He and his cousin agreed and traveled to Kabul, where they met al-Matrafi &#8220;in his villa&#8221; in the Wazir Akbar Khan District of Kabul, and where, according to al-Qahtani, he &#8220;was only paid $3000.00 USD.&#8221; He and his cousin then &#8220;continued working for Al-Wafa in the Wazir Akbar Khan District until captured by Northern Alliance on [sic] November 2001.&#8221;</p>
<p>He was sent to Guantánamo on May 3, 2002, allegedly to &#8220;provide information on the following: Activities of the Al-Wafa organisation under Abdul Aziz aka Abdallah Aiza al-Matrafi, Aspects of Al-Wafa funnelling financial support to illicit purposes, Lahore, PK, and Kabul, AF, offices of Al-Wafa [and] Recruitment procedures and network for Al-Wafa in Mecca, SA.&#8221;</p>
<p>However, as I explained in my article, “<a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/05/01/how-to-read-wikileaks-guantanamo-files/">How to Read WikiLeaks’ Guantánamo Files</a>” (originally published on <a href="http://www.wikileaks.org/gitmo/" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.wikileaks.org/gitmo/?referer=');">WikiLeaks’ website</a> when the Guantánamo files were first published, as part of my work liaising between WikiLeaks and its media partners):</p>
<blockquote><p>[T]he “Reasons for Transfer” included in the documents, which have been repeatedly cited by media outlets as an explanation of why the prisoners were transferred to Guantánamo, are, in fact, lies that were grafted onto the prisoners’ files after their arrival at Guantánamo. This is because, contrary to the impression given in the files, no significant screening process took place before the prisoners’ transfer. As Chris Mackey, a senior interrogator who worked in Afghanistan, explained in <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Interrogators-Inside-Secret-Against-Qaeda/dp/0316871125" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.amazon.com/Interrogators-Inside-Secret-Against-Qaeda/dp/0316871125?referer=');">a book that he wrote about his experiences</a> (<em>The Interrogators</em>), every prisoner who ended up in US custody had to be sent to Guantánamo, even though the majority were not even seized by US forces, but were seized by their Afghan and Pakistani allies at a time when <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2009/05/27/guantanamo-and-the-many-failures-of-us-politicians/">substantial bounty payments</a> for “al-Qaeda and Taliban suspects” were widespread.</p></blockquote>
<p>Given what he said after his release, it may be worth considering that, in this latter period, he may not have been working for Al-Wafa as he stated, but I see no reason to dispute the whole of the story of his humanitarian work with Al-Wafa, although this is what the Task Force did. Noting that he was assessed as being &#8220;affiliated with Al-Wafa&#8221; and &#8220;a member of Al-Qaida and/or its global terrorist network,&#8221; the US authorities were deeply suspicious about al-Qahtani&#8217;s claim that he &#8220;was promised over $6000.00 USD for working six months in Pakistan,&#8221; which was regarded as &#8220;an excessive amount of money since the average employee of Al Wafa was paid between $250- $300 USD per month.&#8221; It was claimed that Al Wafa &#8220;was known for providing money transfers for Al-Qaida&#8221; (although this allegation was never actually tested in an objective manner), and that, as a result, it was &#8220;possible that [al-Qahtani] was involved in that activity or distributing money to Mujahideen as they were exiting Afghanistan.&#8221;</p>
<p>In addition, it was noted that it had been &#8220;assessed that he [was] possibly a higher-ranking employee in the Al-Wafa or other extremist organization and received weapons training at Al-Wafa&#8217;s training camp in Kabul, Afghanistan (AF), and did not work in an alleged &#8216;warehouse&#8217; in Lahore, PK, which research has proven to be non-existent.&#8221;</p>
<p>As a result of all these doubts, al-Qahtani was assessed as being &#8220;of medium intelligence value,&#8221; and of posing &#8220;a medium risk, as he may possibly pose a threat to the US, its interests and allies.&#8221; It was also noted that he was &#8220;assessed as a high force protection threat,&#8221; with &#8220;a past history of aggressive behaviour,&#8221; and &#8220;multiple acts of assault on his disciplinary record,&#8221; who had &#8220;routinely been aggressive and ha[d] two incidents of forced cell extractions,&#8221; had &#8220;incited disturbances on many different blocks and fail[ed] to act within the detention facility SOP.&#8221; As a result, Brig. Gen. Jay W. Hood, the commander of Guantánamo at the time, recommended him for transfer to continued detention in Saudi Arabia, although he was not released for another 17 months, when he was repatriated to be put through the Saudi government&#8217;s rehabilitation program.</p>
<p><strong>Khudaidad (ISN 655, Afghanistan) Released February 2006</strong></p>
<p>In Chapter 14 of <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/the-guantanamo-files/"><em>The Guantánamo Files</em></a>, I explained how Khudaidad (aka Khudai Dad), who was 45 years old at the time of his capture, was seized in a night-time raid by Afghan soldiers in Uruzgan in April 2002. It was <a href="http://projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/655-khudai-dad" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/655-khudai-dad?referer=');">alleged</a> that his compound was used by Mullah Berader, a senior figure in the Taliban, that he himself was a Taliban official and that he was supposed to &#8220;assume a prominent leadership role in Kandahar,&#8221; but he said that he was actually just a poor farmer.</p>
<p>In the documents released by WikiLeaks in April 2011, the file relating to Khudaidad was an &#8220;Update Recommendation to Retain under DoD Control,&#8221; <a href="http://wikileaks.ch/gitmo/prisoner/655.html" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/wikileaks.ch/gitmo/prisoner/655.html?referer=');">dated March 6, 2004</a>, in which he was identified as Kudai Dat, born in 1957, and it was noted that he had been &#8220;diagnosed with Schizophrenia,&#8221; although it was also claimed that he was &#8220;otherwise in good health.&#8221;</p>
<p>In fact, Khudaidad had severe mental health problems, as was revealed in an attachment from the &#8220;JTF GTMO Behavioral Health Service and the Behavioral Science Consultation Team,&#8221; who reported that he &#8220;began to report symptoms of anxiety in November 2002, which resulted in his being hospitalized for acute symptoms of psychosis.&#8221; In January 2003, &#8220;he was referred to the transfer assessment team, which conducted a final interrogation,&#8221; and &#8220;was not interrogated again&#8221; for several months &#8220;while his file was being processed.&#8221; According to JTF GTMO&#8217;s daily incident reports, &#8220;he often refused his medication during this period,&#8221; but &#8220;[h]is condition improved, and he was cleared for a polygraph examination.&#8221; However, when this was to take place, he &#8220;began to have hallucinations again, and the polygraphers determined he was mentally unfit to examine.&#8221; It was also noted that it was &#8220;consistent with a diagnosis of Schizophrenia, controlled with medication, for an individual to react to increased stress with psychotic symptoms.&#8221;</p>
<p>In July 2003, &#8220;he was started on a monthly dose of an antipsychotic to assist with compliance with his medication regimen.&#8221; It was noted that he then &#8220;responded well&#8221; to monthly does of Haldol Decanoate, and was &#8220;free of psychosis.&#8221; However, it was also noted that he could &#8220;be expected to experience intermittent difficulties related to psychosis over time without constant supervision of medication compliance,&#8221; and would &#8220;require continued psychiatric follow-up upon return to his native country.&#8221; Regarding his planned repatriation, it was noted that he would &#8220;require a mental health escort and supplemental medications &#8216;as needed&#8217; in-flight,&#8221; and it was also noted that &#8220;[h]is long-term prognosis appear[ed] poor.&#8221;</p>
<p>Despite this, the &#8220;Update Recommendation,&#8221; following up on a recommendation that he be &#8220;considered for release or transfer to the control of another movement,&#8221; which was based on an assessment that he &#8220;was not affiliated with Al-Qaida or a Taliban leader&#8221; (dated March 22, 2003), included &#8220;New Information,&#8221; which led to Maj. Gen. Geoffrey Miller&#8217;s recommendation that he be retained in DoD control, and was &#8220;contrary to his statements that he [was] nothing more than a farmer.&#8221;</p>
<p>According to &#8220;sensitive reporting,&#8221; which was not specified, Khudaidad was &#8220;referred to as a Mullah,&#8221; and &#8220;was possibly involved in negotiations between Mullah Omar and other Pashtun commanders for control of Kandahar during the disintegration of the Taliban regime.&#8221; According to this account, he &#8220;would have been acting in a leadership position,&#8221; but this was not convincing, given the use of the word &#8220;possibly.&#8221;</p>
<p>It was also noted that, &#8220;according to new information,&#8221; his claim that &#8220;he had only two brothers,&#8221; was untrue, as &#8220;he may have as many as seven brothers,&#8221; although, again, this was not presented as a hard fact. Related to this was a claim that he &#8220;supplied biographical information on a senior Taliban facilitator by the name of &#8216;Zainullah,&#8217;&#8221; who was regarded as a &#8220;possible brother&#8221; of his.</p>
<p>In addition, although it could not be confirmed that there was any significance to the claim that the compound where he was seized was &#8220;identified as the last known location of Mullah Berader and other top Taliban commanders,&#8221; and Khudaidad &#8220;denie[d] any knowledge of these individuals or of Taliban involvement in his town,&#8221; it was noted that his home &#8220;remain[ed] the center of Taliban resistance to the current government of Afghanistan,&#8221; and the authorities were deeply suspicious about that.</p>
<p>In conclusion, the Task Force assessed him as being &#8220;of medium intelligence value,&#8221; and of posing &#8220;a medium risk as he may pose a threat to the US, its interests or its allies.&#8221; It was also noted, evidently by the guard force, and evidently without having ever been apprised of his severe mental health issues, that he had &#8220;shown by his actions in the cell that he ha[d] little regard for himself and [would] not listen to authority,&#8221; and that he had &#8220;refused medications, banged his head against the floor, exposed himself to others, and in general ha[d] been non-compliant.&#8221; Most alarmingly, given what was indicated elsewhere about his mental health, it was also noted that, &#8220;at many times, [he] trie[d] to make it appear that he [was] suffering from a mental breakdown,&#8221; when, in fact, he probably was.</p>
<p>As a result of the Task Force&#8217;s intelligence and threat assessments, Maj. Gen. Miller made his recommendation, although the Criminal Investigative Task Force (CITF) disagreed, having assessed him as a low risk. However, &#8220;In the interest of national security and pursuant to an agreement between the CITF and JTF GTMO Commanders, CITF [deferred] to JTF GTMO&#8217;s assessment that [he] pose[d] a medium risk.&#8221; CITF&#8217;s opinion may eventually have prevailed, but not for another 23 months.</p>
<p><strong>Rashid Al Uwaydah (ISN 664, Saudi Arabia) Released May 2006</strong></p>
<p>In &#8220;<a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/the-guantanamo-files-website-extras-9-seized-in-pakistan-part-one/">The Guantánamo Files: Website Extras (9) – Seized in Pakistan (Part One)</a>,&#8221; I explained how Rashid al-Uwaydah, who was 25 years old at the time of his capture, <a href="http://projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/664-rashid-awad-rashid-al-uwaydah" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/664-rashid-awad-rashid-al-uwaydah?referer=');">said in Guantánamo</a> that he arrived in Pakistan in July 2001 “to escape possible arrest by the Saudi authorities for drug dealing,” but hoped nevertheless to buy drugs in Pakistan to sell in Saudi Arabia. After losing his passport, he was arrested in Islamabad with some Libyans he had met, who, he said, were from an official group recognized by the Libyan government, but who the Americans claimed were “helping Arabs get out of Pakistan.” It has not, to date, been possible to identify what happened to the Libyans seized with al-Uwaydah.</p>
<p>In the documents released by WikiLeaks in April 2011, the file relating to al-Uwaydah was a &#8220;Recommendation [for] Transfer to the Control of Another Country for Continued Detention (TRCD),&#8221; <a href="http://wikileaks.ch/gitmo/prisoner/664.html" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/wikileaks.ch/gitmo/prisoner/664.html?referer=');">dated October 15, 2004</a>, in which he was also identified as Rashid Awwad Rashid al-Uwaydha, born in 1976, and it was noted that he was &#8220;in good health, although he complain[ed] of acid reflux.&#8221;</p>
<p>In telling his story, the Joint Task Force noted that he said, as he did in his review board at Guantánamo, that he &#8220;left Saudi Arabia to avoid being arrested for selling and smuggling pills in Saudi Arabia,&#8221; and &#8220;was advised by a Pakistani hashish smuggler&#8221; to go to Pakistan, where he was provided with a contact. He apparently arrived in Pakistan in June 2001, and planned to stay for a month before returning to Saudi Arabia.</p>
<p>Al-Uwaydah said that &#8220;he never attended any Taliban or Al-Qaida (AQ) affiliated training camps,&#8221; either in Pakistan or in Afghanistan, where, he said, he had never set foot. On approximately January 20, 2002, he was arrested by the Pakistani police &#8220;while residing at the Crowne Plaza Hotel in Islamabad.&#8221; He was transferred to US custody on April 5, 2002, and the circumstances of his transfer to Guantánamo were not known to the Task Force, as it was stated that he was sent to Guantánamo on January 14, 2002, which was obviously impossible, and, in addition, it was &#8220;not documented in [his] file why he was sent to JTF GTMO.&#8221;</p>
<p>In assessing his story, the Joint Task Force noted, bluntly, that his &#8220;cover story of going to Pakistan to buy drugs and never entering Afghanistan [was] untrue,&#8221; although there was little information provided to establish if this was indeed the case. The Task Force noted that it was &#8220;unclear if [he] was arrested with a group of Libyans that were operating in the same hotel,&#8221; as he claimed, but the US authorities had no witnesses to any of his activities, only a few dubious claims that his name was found on Al-Qaida-related documents recovered from house raids.</p>
<p>Particularly significant was the fact that his name &#8220;was listed as one of 77 Saudi nationals whom a visiting Saudi Delegation considered to be of low intelligence value,&#8221; and &#8220;indicated the Government of Saudi Arabia would be willing to have these 77 detainees transferred to Saudi Custody for possible prosecution.&#8221;</p>
<p>In conclusion, the Task Force assessed him as being &#8220;of medium intelligence value,&#8221; and of posing &#8220;a medium to high risk, as he is likely to pose a threat to the US, its interests and allies,&#8221; although it should be noted that he was assessed as being a high risk, and the words &#8220;medium to&#8221; were added in a hand-written note. In assessing the risk he allegedly posed, the Task Force claimed that he &#8220;appear[ed] to be well connected to key facilitators in the Al-Qaida&#8217;s [sic] intemational terrorist network, ha[d] probably participated in terrorist training and hostilities against the US and coalition forces, and maintain[ed] the capability to continue to do so if released,&#8221; and therefore, it was &#8220;imperative&#8221; that he be &#8221;retained in the custody of the US Government or the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia Govenment,&#8221; because his &#8220;continued detention [would] allow for further exploitation of his past affiliation with various terrorist groups and prevent him from engaging in further terrorist activity.&#8221;</p>
<p>The Task Force also declared him to be &#8220;an extremely hostile, radical Islamic,&#8221; whose threat assessment was &#8220;high,&#8221; because he had &#8220;a past history of aggressive behaviour,&#8221; had &#8220;aggressively assaulted the guards and ha[d] made many threats towards the guards.&#8221; As a result, it was perhaps surprising that Brig. Gen. Jay W. Hood, the commander of Guantánamo at the time, recommended him for transfer to continued detention in Saudi Arabia, although it was noted that this decision only applied &#8220;if a satisfactory agreement can be reached that allows access to detainee and/or access to exploited intelligence,&#8221; and that, &#8220;If a satisfactory agreement cannot be reached for his continued detention in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, he should be retained under DoD control.&#8221;</p>
<p>The Criminal Investigative Task Force (CITF) disagreed, having assessed him as &#8220;a medium risk on 7 May 2004,&#8221; but CITF deferred to JTF GTMO&#8217;s assessment that he posed &#8220;a medium to high risk,&#8221; in &#8220;the interest of national security and pursuant to an agreement between the CITF and JTF GTMO Commanders,&#8221; but even with the Task Force&#8217;s conditions, he was not released for another 19 months, and was then put through the Saudi government&#8217;s rehabilitation program.</p>
<p><strong>Zakirjan Asam (ISN 672, Russia) Released in November 2006 (in Albania)</strong></p>
<p><a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/zakirjanasam.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-14545" title="Zakirjan Asam, in a photocoied photo included in the classified US military documents (the Detainee Assessment Briefs) released by WikiLeaks in April 2011. " src="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/zakirjanasam.jpg" alt="" width="166" height="183" /></a>In <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/the-guantanamo-files/"><em>The Guantánamo Files</em></a>, I explained how Zakirjan Asam (aka Zakirjan Hassam), from Saratov Oblast, part of the Russian Federation bordering Kazakhstan, who was 27 years old at the time of his capture, was one of three prisoners released in Albania in November 2006 because the US authorities feared for their safety if they were returned to their home countries, although he was actually cleared for release in 2005. He was one of the 38 prisoners cleared of being &#8220;enemy combatants&#8221; after the Combatant Status Review Tribunals at Guantánamo which took place from July 2004 to March 2005, and which led to the swift release of all 38, except a Uighur and Saudi resident, Saddiq Ahmed Turkistani (ISN 491, profiled <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/10/10/the-complete-guantanamo-files-wikileaks-and-the-prisoners-released-in-2006-part-six-of-ten/">here</a>), and those who could not be safely repatriated &#8212; five Uighurs profiled in <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/10/03/the-complete-guantanamo-files-wikileaks-and-the-prisoners-released-in-2006-part-four-of-ten/">Part Four</a> and <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/10/06/the-complete-guantanamo-files-wikileaks-and-the-prisoners-released-in-2006-part-five-of-ten/">Part Five</a>, and the two others released in Albania in November 2006, who are profiled below &#8212; the Egyptian Ala Salim (ISN 716), and the Algerian Fethi Boucetta (ISN 718).</p>
<p>In Chapter 14, I explained how Asam, a refugee, <a href="http://projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/672-zakirjan-asam" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/672-zakirjan-asam?referer=');">said in Guantánamo</a> that he was deported from Kazakhstan to Afghanistan in spring 2001, and was betrayed, after the US-led invasion began, by Afghan villagers anxious to avail themselves of the reward money offered by the Americans for vulnerable individuals who could be passed off as members of Al-Qaida or the Taliban. He explained that the inhabitants of two villages in Kunduz province negotiated between themselves and asked him to pay them a $3,000 bribe or they would hand him over to the Americans. He said that &#8220;they knew they could sell me to the Americans for $5,000,&#8221; and that they explained to him that &#8220;because I am a Muslim they lowered the price for me.&#8221;</p>
<p>In the documents released by WikiLeaks in April 2011, the file relating to Asam was  an &#8220;Update Recommendation [for] Transfer to the Control of Another Country for Continued Detention (TRCD),&#8221; <a href="http://wikileaks.ch/gitmo/prisoner/672.html" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/wikileaks.ch/gitmo/prisoner/672.html?referer=');">dated March 25, 2005</a>, in which he was misidentified as an Uzbek, and it was noted that he was born in May 1974. It was also noted that he &#8220;was diagnosed with a major depressive disorder with psychotic features and a non-specific psychosis,&#8221; and that he &#8220;suffer[ed] from migraine headaches.&#8221; It was also noted that he was taking &#8220;three psychiatric medications to control his illness,&#8221; and that the only restriction on his ability to travel (in other words, to be released from Guantánamo) was the requirement &#8220;to have his migraine and psychiatric medications available for the flight.&#8221;</p>
<p>In telling his story, the Joint Task Force noted that, according to his own account, after working as an auto mechanic, he moved to Kazakhstan in 1999, where he &#8220;was employed as a wheat farmer and construction laborer&#8221; until the spring of 2001, when Kazakh officials arrested him &#8220;due to lack of identification paperwork.&#8221; He was then apparently turned over to Tajik government officials &#8220;and was housed for two and a half months in a house with two unarmed guards,&#8221; before being &#8220;placed on a helicopter with a &#8216;Red Crescent&#8217; emblem on the side and flown to Afghanistan,&#8221; where he was &#8220;put in a truck and transported to Kunduz.&#8221;</p>
<p>There, he said, he studied in a mosque, and, from May to November 2001, shared a house outside of the city &#8220;with eight women and three other males,&#8221; where he &#8220;maintained the generator for room and board.&#8221; When the US-led invasion reached Kunduz, he &#8220;fled to the mountains where he stayed for three days,&#8221; until Northern Alliances forces captured him &#8220;while he and two Uzbek-ethnic Afghans were sitting by a fire,&#8221; although &#8220;he was the only individual arrested.&#8221;</p>
<p>He was then taken to Dasht-e-Archi, where he was held in a house with &#8220;a group of unidentified Afghans for 25 days,&#8221; and where his captors said that, if he could raise $300, he would be freed. They then &#8220;released him to be able to acquire the funds,&#8221; but he &#8220;was later recaptured and jailed for one month before being turned over to US forces.&#8221; He was sent to Guantánamo on June 14, 2002, on the spurious basis that it was to &#8220;provide information on the following: IMU [Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan] and their activities in Tajikistan and Afghanistan.&#8221;</p>
<p>In assessing his story, the Task Force noted that Asam was &#8220;assessed as being a probable member of the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan,&#8221; although no witnesses were found who had identified him, and all that the Task Force had to go on were similarities to the stories of others, which is hardly very convincing. It may be that he was an IMU recruit, as his story was full of holes, although there were certainly also a number of other strange stories circulating, concerning Afghanistan, the IMU and the countries to the north, indicating that men like Asam had been deported to Afghanistan, or deported and pressed into military service, meaning that his willingness, if he was indeed recruited, was difficult to gauge.</p>
<p>Above all, though, his mental health problems plagued his case, and, it seems to me, made any kind of objective assessment impossible. He was assessed as being &#8220;of medium intelligence value,&#8221; and of posing &#8220;a medium risk, as he is likely to pose a threat to the US, its interests and allies,&#8221; but part of that assessment involved a claim that his &#8220;psychological disorders may make him vulnerable to recruitment or manipulation by Islamic extremist organisations, who would exploit this vulnerability to utilize him to conduct terrorist activities.&#8221; It was also noted, in an analysis of his conduct (presumably submitted by the guard force) that he was &#8220;extremely violent and ha[d] been labeled as a psychiatric patient,&#8221; that he had &#8220;a past history of aggressive behaviour,&#8221; and that he had &#8220;six self-harm incident reports on record.&#8221;</p>
<p>Although it had been recommended that he be retained in DoD control on December 20, 2003, Brig. Gen. Hood drew on &#8220;information obtained since [his] previous assessment&#8221; to recommend that he be transferred to another country for continued detention, although this &#8220;information&#8221; was not specified. Of course, as the government evidently regarded it as unsafe to return him to Russia, the transfer recommendation was meaningless, as no third country would accept a former prisoner and then imprison them on America&#8217;s behalf. As a result, the trigger for his release was the decision, by his Combatant Status Review Tribunal, that he was not an &#8216;enemy combatant,&#8221; although it still took over a year and a half for a country to be found &#8212; Albania &#8212; that was prepared to accept him.</p>
<p>Since his release, no information has been provided regarding his mental health issues or how he has coped with his new life in a country that has offered him shelter, but very little in the way of support.</p>
<p><strong>Salah Ahmed Al Salami (ISN 693, Yemen) Died in Guantánamo June 2006</strong></p>
<p><a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/alialsalami1.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-6761" title="Salah Ahmed al-Salami, one of the three prisoners who died at Guantanamo on June 9, 2006,  in a photo made available by Cageprisoners." src="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/alialsalami1.jpg" alt="" width="173" height="188" /></a>As I explained in Chapter 19 of <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/the-guantanamo-files/"><em>The Guantánamo Files</em></a>, al-Salami (generally identified in Guantánamo as Ali Abdullah Ahmed), who was 25 years old at the time of his capture in Afghanistan in December 2001, was one of three prisoners who died at Guantánamo on June 9, 2006. having allegedly hanged themselves in a coordinated suicide pact. The other two were <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/09/19/the-complete-guantanamo-files-wikileaks-and-the-prisoners-released-in-2006-part-one-of-ten/">Yasser al-Zahrani</a>, a Saudi (who was just 17 at the time of his capture), and <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/10/16/the-complete-guantanamo-files-wikileaks-and-the-prisoners-released-in-2006-part-seven-of-ten/">Mani al-Utayb</a>i, another Saudi, and all three were long-term hunger strikers, who had been force-fed on a daily basis for many months before their deaths.</p>
<p>The administration’s response to the deaths was extraordinarily callous. Rear Adm. Harry Harris, the commander of Guantánamo, said, “This was not an act of desperation, but an act of asymmetric warfare committed against us,” and Colleen Graffy, the deputy assistant secretary of state for public diplomacy, described the suicides as a “good PR move to draw attention.” Stung by international criticism, the administration rapidly back-tracked, and Cully Stimson, the deputy assistant secretary of defense for detainee affairs, was put forward to say, “I wouldn’t characterize it as a good PR move. What I would say is that we are always concerned when someone takes his own life, because as Americans, we value life, even the lives of violent terrorists who are captured waging war against our country.”</p>
<p>In an attempt to stifle further dissent, and to bolster their view that the three men were hardened terrorists, the Pentagon released details of the allegations against them, which served only to highlight almost everything that was wrong with the system at Guantánamo. In the case of al-Salami, one of 15 men seized in a raid on a student house in Faisalabad on March 28, 2002, the same night that <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2010/04/06/abu-zubaydah-tortured-for-nothing/">Abu Zubaydah</a>, who was later tortured and became one of the CIA&#8217;s most notorious &#8220;ghost prisoners,&#8221; was seized. After al-Salami&#8217;s death, the Pentagon alleged, without providing any evidence at all, that he was &#8220;a mid- to high-level Al-Qaida operative who had key ties to principal facilitators and senior members of the group.&#8221;</p>
<p>Although none of the men had taken part in any tribunals, more detailed allegations against al-Salami surfaced in <a href="http://projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/693-ali-abdullah-ahmed" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/693-ali-abdullah-ahmed?referer=');">the alleged evidence</a> against him in his CSRT, although a close inspection of the allegations reveals that they were mostly made by unidentified &#8220;members&#8221; of Al-Qaida, either in Guantánamo or in other secret prisons: &#8220;a senior Al-Qaida facilitator&#8221; identified him, another senior Al-Qaida figure &#8212; a &#8220;lieutenant&#8221; &#8212; identified him as being &#8220;associated with Khalid Sheikh Mohammed,&#8221; the alleged mastermind of the 9/11 attacks, and the &#8220;Al-Qaida weapons trainer from Tora Bora&#8221; allegedly identified him from his time in Kabul and at the Khaldan training camp. He was also identified as &#8220;an Al-Qaida courier,&#8221; and as someone who &#8220;worked directly for Osama bin Laden&#8217;s family.&#8221; Shorn of these allegations, which summon up images of various supposedly &#8220;significant&#8221; prisoners being shown photos of tier fellow prisoners &#8212; in what was known as the &#8220;family album&#8221; &#8212; in painful circumstances, the only other allegation was that the &#8220;Issa&#8221; guest house received the equivalent of jihadi junk mail: apparently, the residents of the house &#8220;routinely received endorsement letters from a well-known Al-Qaida operative&#8221; to attend the Khaldan camp.</p>
<p>In the documents released by WikiLeaks in April 2011, the file relating to al-Salami was a &#8220;Recommendation to Retain under DoD Control,&#8221; <a href="http://wikileaks.ch/gitmo/prisoner/693.html" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/wikileaks.ch/gitmo/prisoner/693.html?referer=');">dated October 1, 2004</a>, in which he was not identified by his real name, but only as Ali Abdullah Ahmed and Ali Abdullah Saleh, and it was noted that he was born in August 1979, and was &#8220;in good health,&#8221; although it was also noted that he had &#8220;a history of hunger striking and nephrolithiasis (kidney stones).&#8221;</p>
<p>In telling his story, the Joint Task Force noted that, according to his own account, he &#8220;was a street vendor who sold clothing,&#8221; but &#8220;had been thinking about religious education for a long time and was prompted to travel to Pakistan to receive this education upon hearing God&#8217;s calling.&#8221; Around May 2001, &#8220;he quit his job, left his young wife, spent $500 USD on a passport, visa, and plane ticket,&#8221; which &#8220;was good for a return trip up to one year after purchase,&#8221; and flew from Sana&#8217;a to Karachi.&#8221;</p>
<p>After a week in Karachi, he took a bus to Faisalabad, where he &#8220;enrolled in Jamea Salafia University and began religious studies.&#8221; He said that he &#8220;was living in on-campus dormitories for five to six months,&#8221; but, about one month after the 9/11 attacks, &#8220;was asked to move out of the dorms on-campus,&#8221; and, &#8220;with several other Arab students, moved to an off-campus safehouse ran [sic] by a man named Issa.&#8221; He explained that, by the end of March 2002, he &#8220;was planning on staying in Pakistan until his plane ticket was just about to expire (another month and a half), but his plans were cut short&#8221; when Pakistani authorities raided the house, which was identified as the Crescent Textile Mill, on March 28, 2002.</p>
<p>He was then turned over to US authorities, and was sent to Guantánamo on June 19, 2002, on the spurious basis that it was to &#8220;provide information on: The safehouse in Faisalabad, PK, which was used to house foreign students who were attending the Jamea Salafia University [and] Routes of ingress between Yemen and Pakistan.&#8221;</p>
<p>In assessing his story, the Task Force stated its belief that he was &#8220;using the guise of studying Islam at the Jamea Salafia University while residing at the Issa safehouse as a cover story to conceal his true activities in Pakistan/Afghanistan.&#8221; An analyst pointed out that the Jamea Salafia University was &#8220;a religious madrassa (school) and not a state-funded or state-regulated school,&#8221; and that &#8220;[r]eligious madrassas in Pakistan are perceived to encourage militancy, religious extremism, and intolerance while thriving on anti-Western sentiment,&#8221; which may well have been true, but it did not mean that al-Salami was not a student.</p>
<p>It was also noted that he was captured &#8220;with fifteen others, many of whom have been identified by senior Al-Qaida personnel,&#8221; although this claim was extremely difficult to corroborate. What was clear was that Abu Zubaydah had some sort of connection with the house, but it was unclear exactly what that connection was, beyond being a place where, on occasion, men fleeing Afghanistan &#8212; whether as combatants of civilians was unclear &#8212; could be housed.</p>
<p>It was certainly not appropriate for the Task Force to declare that &#8220;The Issa safehouse was under the control of Abu Zubaydah, an Al-Qaida top lieutenant and aid to Osama bin Laden,&#8221; as the house was under the control of the Pakistani named Issa, and the claims about Zubaydah were and are wildly exaggerated.</p>
<p>As  a result, it was worth regarding with skepticism an analyst&#8217;s note that, although &#8221;[s]everal Arabs captured at the Issa safehouse ha[d] used the same rigid cover story that they were merely educating themselves and studying Islam,&#8221; it was possible that &#8220;the house could have been used as a collection point for Al-Qaida members seeking and returning from Al-Qaida terrorist training.&#8221;</p>
<p>There are also grave doubts about the legitimacy of a raft of other claims made by Zubaydah and others seized with him in another house raid in Faisalabad on March 28, 2002. Zubaydah, for example, allegedly &#8220;identified&#8221; al-Salami, claiming that he had seen him in Kandahar with Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, and that &#8220;he might have seen detainee in Kandahar three or four times,&#8221; but there is no reason to trust this statement, and nor is there any reason to trust a statement made by <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abu_Yasir_Al_Jaza'iri" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abu_Yasir_Al_Jaza_iri?referer=');">Abu Yasir Al-Jaza&#8217;iri</a>, described as &#8220;a senior Al-Qaida facilitator,&#8221; who &#8220;identified&#8221; al-Salami, and made a number of outlandish claims about him, as al-Jaza&#8217;iri was a &#8220;ghost prisoner,&#8221; also seized in Pakistan in March 2003, whose whereabouts have never been explained by the US government. Either held in secret CIA torture prisons, or in Pakistani custody, his testimony is, therefore, probably as unreliable as that of Abu Zubaydah.</p>
<p>Al-Jaza&#8217;iri apparently said that al-Salami&#8217;s cousin was arrested on arrival in Karachi in 1999 &#8220;due to visa violation issues,&#8221; and al-Salami &#8220;was sent by the family to secure his cousin&#8217;s release from jail.&#8221; He also said that he first met al-Salami at a guesthouse in Kandahar in the spring of 2000 and &#8220;place[d] him back in Pakistan in late 2000 assisting in efforts to release his cousin.&#8221; It was also al-Jaza&#8217;iri who claimed that he was &#8220;an Al-Qaida courier,&#8221; and he also claimed that he &#8220;was the younger brother of Assadallah al-Sindhi, a popular Al-Qaida member killed in 1996,&#8221; and also, most outrageously, it seems to me, that al-Salami &#8220;and his cousin Nadim were responsible for caring for the logistics of the families of [Osama bin Laden]&#8216;s son-in-laws, Awa al-Madani and Abdallah al-Madani, that included travel arrangements, lodging, and healthcare arrangements.&#8221; An analyst noted that this claim &#8220;establishe[d] the detainee&#8217;s stature in relation to UBL and adds validity to Zubaydah&#8217;s statements identifying that detainee associated with Senior Al-Qaida Operational Planner KSM,&#8221; but it does no such thing, as there is no indication that any of it is true.</p>
<p>Other dubious claims were made by Noor Uthman Muhammed (ISN 707, captured with Zubyadah), and described as the &#8220;Al-Qaida trainer from Tora Bora,&#8221; who allegedly identified al-Salami as having been in Kabul and at the Khaldan camp, although no further details were provided to corroborate his claims, and Walid bin Attash (ISN 10014), another &#8220;high-value detainee&#8221; held in secret CIA prisons, and sent to Guantánamo in September 2006 with Zubaydah, KSM and 11 others. Bin Attash, described as a &#8220;senior Al-Qaida operational planner,&#8221; said that he &#8220;recognized detainee by his distinct birthmark, but cannot remember any details,&#8221; which is also meaningless as an allegation.</p>
<p>In conclusion, the Task Force assessed him as being &#8220;of medium to high intelligence value,&#8221; and of posing &#8220;a high risk, as he is likely to pose a threat to the US, its interests and allies.&#8221; It was also noted that he had &#8220;a history of aggressive behaviour in the camp, often defiantly failing to comply with instructions.&#8221; As a result, Brig. Gen. Hood recommended that he be retained under DoD control, and he went on to resume the &#8220;history of hunger striking&#8221; and resistance to his detention identified in his file until his death 20 months later. What is particularly sad, reading through this file, is that, although JTF GTMO notified the Criminal Investigative Task Force of its recommendations on October 1, 2004, CITF did not agree, having &#8220;assessed [him] as a low risk on 12 April 2004.&#8221;</p>
<p>In spite of the government&#8217;s official account of the men&#8217;s deaths, the claim that they committed suicide was doubted by their fellow prisoners at the time, and also by other commentators, although it was not until December 2009 and January 2010 that serious doubts were expressed in a concerted and thoroughly researched manner.</p>
<p>In December 2009, the Seton Hall Law School in New Jersey published a 136-page report, “Death in Camp Delta” (<a href="http://law.shu.edu/programscenters/publicintgovserv/policyresearch/upload/gtmo_death_camp_delta.pdf" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/law.shu.edu/programscenters/publicintgovserv/policyresearch/upload/gtmo_death_camp_delta.pdf?referer=');">PDF</a>), which comprehensively undermined the conclusion of the official investigation by the Naval Criminal Investigative Service, and in January 2010, <em>Harper’s Magazine</em> published <a href="http://www.harpers.org/archive/2010/01/hbc-90006368" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.harpers.org/archive/2010/01/hbc-90006368?referer=');">an extraordinary article</a> by law professor Scott Horton (which <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2010/01/18/murders-at-guantanamo-scott-horton-of-harpers-exposes-the-truth-about-the-2006-suicides/">I discussed here</a>), revealing the story of Army Staff Sgt. Joe Hickman, and a number of other soldiers &#8212; the tower guards who “had the responsibility and ability to observe all activity in the camp, [but] were not interviewed” by the NCIS &#8212; who suggested that, earlier in the evening on which the men allegedly committed suicide, they had been taken from the cell block in which they were held to a secret facility outside the main perimeter fence of Guantánamo &#8212; known to the soldiers as “Camp No” &#8212; where they had either been deliberately killed, or had a died as the result of particularly brutal torture sessions. “They didn’t die in their cells,” <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2010/06/11/murders-at-guantanamo-the-cover-up-continues/">Sgt. Hickman explained to me</a> in March 2010.</p>
<p>Despite these claims, the Justice Department shut the door on a proposed inquiry in November 2009, and an attempt by family members (including al-Zahrani’s father) to pursue accountability in the US courts was <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2010/10/03/us-court-denies-justice-to-dead-men-at-guantanamo/">turned down</a> in September 2010, and <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/06/14/relatives-of-disputed-guantanamo-suicides-speak-out-as-families-appeal-in-us-court/">is currently being appealed</a>.</p>
<p><strong>Jamal Kiyemba (ISN 701, Uganda) Released February 2006</strong></p>
<p><a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/jamalkiyemba.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-14546" title="Jamal Kiyemba, photographed in Kampala after his release from Guantanamo." src="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/jamalkiyemba.jpg" alt="" width="200" height="205" /></a>In Chapter 13 of <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/the-guantanamo-files/"><em>The Guantánamo Files</em></a>, I explained how Jamal Kiyemba, who was 22 years old at the time of his capture, was born in Uganda, but had been a British resident since the age of 14, when he was granted indefinite leave to remain in the UK following the death of his father and came to live in the UK with his mother, eventually embarking on a degree in pharmacy at Leicester De Montfort University that he never completed.</p>
<p>Although he lived in the UK for eight years, Kiyemba never claimed British citizenship, and on his release, he was sent to Uganda, and home secretary Charles Clarke prohibited him from setting foot in the UK again. As was reported in an article about him in the <a href="http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-377623/I-confessed-escape-Guantanamo-torture.html" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-377623/I-confessed-escape-Guantanamo-torture.html?referer=');"><em>Mail on Sunday</em></a> after his release, he told his lawyer Clive Stafford Smith, the director of the legal action charity <a href="http://www.reprieve.org.uk/" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.reprieve.org.uk/?referer=');">Reprieve</a>, &#8220;I may not be British according to some bit of paper but in reality I am a Brit and always will be. My doctor, my local mosque, my teens, my education, employment, friends, taxes, home and above all else my family &#8212; it is all in Britain.&#8221; In contrast to this account, the limited allegations against him in Guantánamo are available <a href="http://projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/701-jamal-abdullah-kiyemba" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/701-jamal-abdullah-kiyemba?referer=');">here</a>.</p>
<p>Kiyemba was arrested in March 2002 in Pakistan, where he went to study Arabic and the Koran because it was &#8220;very cheap,&#8221; without ever having set foot in Afghanistan, although he admitted that he was taught how to use a Kalashnikov by a Pakistani he met, and that he &#8220;left England with the intention of finding a way to fight jihad&#8221; in Afghanistan, &#8220;to defend the Muslims who were being killed.&#8221; After his arrest, he was held for two months, beaten by Pakistani intelligence officers, threatened with torture and then transferred to Bagram.</p>
<p>In Chapter 14, I explained how, in describing Bagram, Kiyemba recalled a 48-hour period, when he was &#8220;hung on the door for two hours and then allowed to sit for half an hour but never allowed to sleep,&#8221; and was then taken for interrogation for two hours at a time, adding, &#8220;I had to kneel on the cold concrete throughout the interrogations with my cuffed hands above my head.&#8221; He was also interviewed by MI5 officers, who showed him photos of supposed terrorists in the UK and told him they would only be able to help him if he helped them, but he didn&#8217;t know any of them. He recognized Abu Hamza and Abu Qatada, but had only ever seen them on TV.</p>
<p>In the documents released by WikiLeaks in April 2011, the file relating to Kiyemba was an &#8220;Administrative Review Board Input,&#8221; <a href="http://wikileaks.ch/gitmo/prisoner/701.html" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/wikileaks.ch/gitmo/prisoner/701.html?referer=');">dated November 3, 2004</a>, in which the Joint Task Force recommended that he be &#8220;transferred to the control of another country for continued detention,&#8221; following his last assessment, dated August 2, 2004, in which he was actually recommended for &#8220;Release or transfer to the control of another country for continued detention (TRCD).&#8221; The full details of this assessment were not included , although it was noted that he was assessed as being of low intelligence value, and of posing a medium risk.</p>
<p>In assessing his threat level, the Task Force claimed that he was &#8220;an admitted jihadist who attempted travel to Afghanistan following the 9/11 attacks,&#8221; and that he was &#8220;committed to defending Islamic nations against aggression, citing any system like democracy which tries to end Islamic law is worthy of Jihad against it,&#8221; and &#8220;adding that such systems are ultimately oppressive.&#8221;</p>
<p>It was also claimed that he &#8220;had acquired support in the UK and abroad from tiered organisations&#8221; including the vast, apolitical missionary organization Jamaat al-Tablighi (which was regarded by the US authorities as a front for terrorism), and the Pakistani militant group Lashkar-e-Tayiba, and, additionally, it was claimed that he &#8220;received military training in the use of the AK-47 while in Peshawar, PK, from support members belonging to the LET.&#8221;</p>
<p>It was also noted that &#8220;Pakistani police arrested [him] near Peshawar where he was attempting to enter Afghanistan with three other men who also ended up in Guantánamo &#8212; Mohammed al-Amin (ISN 706, a Mauritanian released in September 2007, but described as having been &#8220;assessed as a low level jihadist&#8221;), Mustafa al-Hassan (ISN 719, a Sudanese prisoner released in October 2008, but described as &#8220;a suspected Al-Qaida operative&#8221;), and Amir Yacoub al-Amir (ISN 720, another Sudanese prisoner, released in May 2008, but &#8220;assessed as a probable Al-Qaida operative&#8221;).</p>
<p>On his return to Uganda, Kiyemba was &#8220;confined to a &#8216;safe house&#8217;&#8221; for two months, <a href="http://old.cageprisoners.com/articles.php?id=13463" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/old.cageprisoners.com/articles.php?id=13463&amp;referer=');">according to the Ugandan press</a>, although it would seem fairer to explain that he was held under a form of house arrest for this period. On April 17, 2006, he told a reporter, Emmy Allio, &#8220;I am now a very happy man because I am free to live my life. I have visited all my relatives. This is the first time I am free since 2002.&#8221; He also said, &#8220;I did not expect anything good in Uganda but I was instead treated quite fairly. I thank the Uganda security for being good to me. I thank all Muslims in Uganda and elsewhere who have been praying for me.&#8221;</p>
<p>He added, &#8220;Last week, the Uganda security told me that I am a free man. The officer told me, &#8216;You are free to go out and live your life but be careful with wrong groups out there.&#8217;&#8221; A security source told the reporter that the Ugandan government &#8220;did not find any cause to continue to detain him,&#8221; although the official added, &#8220;He is a free man, but we shall nab him if he falls in wrong groups.&#8221;</p>
<p>Even so, as the reporter described it, &#8220;his joy upon being released has quickly brought misery. Kiyemba is afraid of the future, saying he does not know what to do, having dropped out of university in 2001 to join &#8216;an Islamic cause against western imperialists in Afghanistan&#8217; after the Taliban fell.&#8221; At the time, he said, &#8220;I was ready to assist my brothers there in any possible way, financially or by holding a gun, to defend them,&#8221; but now, he said, &#8220;I am looking for a job. I want to complete the university course. I want to be independent. I need help. I am determined to complete my studies but I need my independence. I need to sustain myself, not be a burden to relatives.&#8221;</p>
<p>He was unwilling to speak about his experiences in US custody, stating only, &#8220;In Guantánamo Bay, it was more of psychological torture. As a Muslim, you must be prepared to suffer and die for your religion. Being in Guantánamo Bay taught me one thing: to be patient and to put my trust in God.&#8221;</p>
<p>There have been no recent reports about Jamal Kiyemba.</p>
<p><strong>Ala Salim (ISN 716, Egypt) Released November 2006 (in Albania)</strong></p>
<p>In <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/the-guantanamo-files/"><em>The Guantánamo Files</em></a>, I explained how Ala Salim (aka Allah Saleem), a religious scholar who was 34 years old at the time of his capture, was one of three prisoners released in Albania in November 2006 because the US authorities feared for their safety if they were returned to their home countries, although he was actually cleared for release in 2005. He was one of the 38 prisoners cleared of being &#8220;enemy combatants&#8221; after the Combatant Status Review Tribunals at Guantánamo which took place from July 2004 to March 2005, and which led to the swift release of all 38, except a Uighur and Saudi resident, Saddiq Ahmed Turkistani (ISN 491, profiled <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/10/10/the-complete-guantanamo-files-wikileaks-and-the-prisoners-released-in-2006-part-six-of-ten/">here</a>), and those who could not be safely repatriated &#8212; five Uighurs profiled in <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/10/03/the-complete-guantanamo-files-wikileaks-and-the-prisoners-released-in-2006-part-four-of-ten/">Part Four</a> and <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/10/06/the-complete-guantanamo-files-wikileaks-and-the-prisoners-released-in-2006-part-five-of-ten/">Part Five</a>, and the two others released in Albania in November 2006, who are profiled in this article &#8212; the Russian Zakirjan Asam (ISN 672, see above), and the Algerian Fethi Boucetta (ISN 718, see below).</p>
<p>In Chapter 13, I explained, drawing on <a href="http://projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/716-allah-muhammed-saleem" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/716-allah-muhammed-saleem?referer=');">the Pentagon&#8217;s documents</a>, how Salim was one of several dozen prisoners seized in house raids in Pakistan in 2002 (mainly in April and May) who were mostly working for charities regarded by the US authorities as fronts for terrorism. Those seized were, in general, office workers or teachers, but in some cases people who just happened to live at an address regarded as a house where &#8220;terror suspects&#8221; were being &#8220;harbored&#8221; were also seized.</p>
<p>Salim, who became an influential figure to the Arabs in Guantánamo, had lived until the age of 22 in Egypt, where, like thousands of other young men, he was arrested several times but never charged, and after living in Saudi Arabia he moved to Pakistan, where he was distributing humanitarian aid to Afghanistan for the International Islamic Relief Organization at the time of his capture.</p>
<p>In <a href="http://detainees.mcclatchydc.com/mi_services/gitmo/detainees/71" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/detainees.mcclatchydc.com/mi_services/gitmo/detainees/71?referer=');">an interview</a> conducted for McClatchy Newspapers&#8217; major report on 66 released Guantánamo prisoners that was published in 2008, Salim, identified as Abd al-Maqsut Muhammad Sagim Mazruh, spoke to reporter Matthew Schofield, although the reporter noted upfront that, &#8220;After years of imprisonment, alleged torture, countless interrogations and unrelenting psychological pressure, there are some things that Abd al-Maqsut Muhammad Sagim Mazruh won&#8217;t talk about. He won&#8217;t say why he was in Pakistan in late 2001 or early 2002, when he was arrested. He won&#8217;t talk about how he made a living. He won&#8217;t discuss why he can never return to Egypt, his country of birth, or his three previous arrests and &#8212; according to documents filed with the Albanian government &#8212; torture in those prisons.&#8221;</p>
<p>He did, however, discuss why he thought &#8220;there can be no doubt that he&#8217;s innocent of all terrorism charges and suspicions, and why &#8220;there can be no doubt that the US never had any evidence against him.&#8221; As he said (via an interpreter), &#8220;I&#8217;m sitting here, aren&#8217;t I? Is there any reason to believe that if the United States could produce any evidence against me, any evidence at all, they would have set me free? I was innocent when I was arrested. I am innocent now.&#8221;</p>
<p>Mazruh (Salim) said that &#8220;a US military tribunal at Guantánamo told him in 2005 that he was innocent.&#8221; McClatchy noted that &#8220;there are no public records to confirm that,&#8221; but added that the decision to &#8220;declare him no longer an enemy combatant&#8221; was &#8220;the closest [the US government has] come to admitting that it made mistakes.&#8221;</p>
<p>Describing him as a &#8220;timid, soft man,&#8221; the McClatchy article also noted that he recalled that the allegations against him &#8212; and specifically, a claim that he was a bodyguard for Osama bin Laden &#8212; &#8220;created waves of laughter&#8221; from his fellow prisoners, who, he said, told him, &#8220;You were his bodyguard? And he&#8217;s still alive? He&#8217;s still free, and he hires the likes of you to protect him? You need a bodyguard; how could you be one?&#8221;</p>
<p>Turning to his limited freedom in Albania, McClatchy noted that it was not &#8220;a freedom he cherishes.&#8221; Living in &#8220;a small room in a refugee center, in a walled complex on the edge of the capital, in a neighborhood of rutted and pitted gravel roads cut through by a trash-filled creek,&#8221; he was, in Schofield&#8217;s words, &#8220;trapped without knowing the language, without work or even a permit to work. His wife and children wait in northern Africa, and he&#8217;s filed a petition with the Albanian government to allow them to join him, a petition that other former detainees are watching closely because they haven&#8217;t seen their families since they were arrested, either.&#8221;</p>
<p>In the documents released by WikiLeaks in April 2011, the file relating to Salim was a &#8220;Recommendation to Retain under DoD Control,&#8221; <a href="http://wikileaks.ch/gitmo/prisoner/716.html" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/wikileaks.ch/gitmo/prisoner/716.html?referer=');">dated July 2, 2004</a>, in which he was identified as Allah Muhammed Salim, born in January 1967, and it was noted that he was &#8220;in good health,&#8221; although he &#8220;had a lung biopsy prior to detention,&#8221; had &#8220;a history of migraines,&#8221; and had also been a hunger striker.&#8221;</p>
<p>In telling his story, the Joint Task Force noted that, after graduating from an Egyptian university in 1989, he was sponsored by a mosque in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, to travel to Islamabad to assist Afghan refugees. After explaining that he was &#8220;not allowed to train or fight in the Soviet-Afghan War due to his poor hearing and vision,&#8221; he said that he traveled to Peshawar, where he worked as an assistant storage supervisor for the [International] Islamic Relief Organization&#8221; until 1991, when he began ten years of religious study &#8212; six at a university in Peshawar, and four more at a university in Sadiqabad.</p>
<p>After the 9/11 attacks, however, &#8220;he heard that Americans were rounding up Arabs in Pakistan,&#8221; and an acquaintance &#8220;advised him to go to a larger city [Lahore] and stay with a Pakistani man called Wasim.&#8221; He did so, staying at the house &#8220;with five unidentified men,&#8221; but just ten days after his arrival he was seized by Pakistani police. he said that he &#8220;spent nearly 70 days in a Lahore, PK, prison, followed by two months in an Afghanistan prison.&#8221;</p>
<p>He was sent to Guantánamo on August 5, 2002, on the spurious basis that it was because he &#8220;possibly has information pertaining to: Beit Al-Ansar, a Saudi charitable organization operating in Peshawar, PK [who he stayed with for ten days in 1989], A facility near the Pakistan border belonging to Jalal Al-Din Al-Haqqani [the Afghan warlord Jalaluddin Haqqani] in 1989 [and] Refugee operations and weapons training taking place at the &#8220;Center&#8221; [elsewhere described as being close to the Afghan/Pakistan border, and a place where, in 1989, he reportedly "went to see a famous, but unidentified, fighter who fought against the Russians"]. Ironically, when it came to attempts to justify his detention, the Task Force noted that he had &#8220;admitted that he [was] a jihadist, that he traveled to Pakistan to assist the Muslims in Afghanistan who were fighting the Soviets,and that he would kill Russians if he had the opportunity&#8221; &#8212; exactly the same sentiments that, when he traveled to Pakistan in 1989, were being financially supported by the US government to the tune of billions of dollars every year.</p>
<p>Despite having no information about him indicating that he was involved in any way with militancy or terrorism, the Task Force nevertheless stated that he had been &#8220;associated with three terrorist organisations&#8221; &#8212; Egyptian Islamic Jihad, Al-Qaida and Harkat Ul-Mujahideen (HUM), a Pakistani militant group that he allegedly &#8220;attempted to train with,&#8221; and with whom he allegedly worked, at &#8220;the Center,&#8221; which was &#8220;affiliated&#8221; with Jalaluddin Haqqani, according to US analysts. The main problem with this allegation was that this alleged involvement took place in 1989, when Haqqani was a US-funded ally against the Soviet Union.</p>
<p>The US authorities suggested that he had been &#8220;arrested twice in Egypt for distributing propaganda for the EIG [Egyptian Islamic Jihad],&#8221; and that he admitted in one interrogation that he was actually deported from Saudi Arabia to Pakistan, rather than being sponsored by a mosque, but it is uncertain how much truth there is to these accounts, or how relevant what Salim was doing in the late 1980s was to his activities nearly 15 years later.</p>
<p>No satisfactory reason was given for his alleged involvement with Al-Qaida, although, in assessing the risk he posed, the Task Force stated that it was assessed that he was &#8220;very intelligent/educated&#8221; and had &#8220;provided support to multiple terrorist groups by organizing their finances and personnel.&#8221; Even though no evidence was provided to support this assertion, it was further claimed that his &#8220;poor vision and hearing and other medical problems [we]re probably valid, but this would make the perfect cover as being not useful to the fighting force and being underestimated by anti-terrorist forces.&#8221; In addition, it was claimed that &#8220;[t]hese disabilities would not hinder him from distributing material, collecting data, organizing records and delegating tasks to be completed by junior personnel.&#8221;</p>
<p>In conclusion, he was assessed as being &#8220;of high intelligence value,&#8221; and of posing &#8220;a high risk, as he is likely to pose a threat to the US, its interests and allies,&#8221; because of the groundless assessment above, and an additional claim that, &#8220;by examining his attitude to pursue jihad,&#8221; the Task Force had decided that he had &#8220;performed hostilities against the US and coalition forces by supporting terrorist organizations in an administrative role.&#8221; It was also noted that his &#8220;overall behavior ha[d] been generally non-compliant and aggressive,&#8221; that he had been &#8220;preaching and teaching to the other detainees in an angry manner,&#8221; and, &#8220;[w]hen asked to stop, he continue[d],&#8221; that he had &#8220;involved himself in a riot,&#8221; had &#8220;participated in hunger strikes,&#8221; and had been &#8220;caught hoarding food.&#8221; In general, this section concluded, he had &#8220;refused to follow the guard force&#8217;s instructions.&#8221;</p>
<p>For this, he was, no doubt, regularly punished, but for the authorities, all that counted were the assessments of the risk he posed and his intelligence value, leading to Brig. Gen. Hood&#8217;s recommendation that he should be retained in DoD control, which lasted until a tribunal concluded, instead, that he was not an &#8220;enemy combatant,&#8221; and should be released, setting in motion the process that eventually led to his release in Albania.</p>
<p><strong>Fethi Boucetta (ISN 718, Algeria) Released November 2006 (in Albania)</strong></p>
<p>In <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/the-guantanamo-files/"><em>The Guantánamo Files</em></a>, I explained how Fethi Boucetta, a teacher who was 38 years old at the time of his capture, was one of three prisoners released in Albania in November 2006 because the US authorities feared for their safety if they were returned to their home countries, although he was actually cleared for release in 2005. He was one of the 38 prisoners cleared of being &#8220;enemy combatants&#8221; after the Combatant Status Review Tribunals at Guantánamo which took place from July 2004 to March 2005, and which led to the swift release of all 38, except a Uighur and Saudi resident, Saddiq Ahmed Turkistani (ISN 491, profiled <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/10/10/the-complete-guantanamo-files-wikileaks-and-the-prisoners-released-in-2006-part-six-of-ten/">here</a>), and those who could not be safely repatriated &#8212; five Uighurs profiled in <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/10/03/the-complete-guantanamo-files-wikileaks-and-the-prisoners-released-in-2006-part-four-of-ten/">Part Four</a> and <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/10/06/the-complete-guantanamo-files-wikileaks-and-the-prisoners-released-in-2006-part-five-of-ten/">Part Five</a>, and the two others released in Albania in November 2006, who are profiled in this article &#8212; the Russian Zakirjan Asam (ISN 672, see above), and the Egyptian Ala Salim (ISN 716, also see above).</p>
<p>In his tribunal in Guantánamo, Hamad Gadallah (ISN 712, <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/09/12/wikileaks-and-the-guantanamo-prisoners-released-after-the-tribunals-2004-to-2005-part-four-of-five/">released in July 2005</a>), who was a Sudanese accountant for a charity, the Revival of Islamic Heritage Society, that had fallen under US suspicion, mentioned that his downstairs neighbor, who did not work for the RIHS, had also been seized on the same day as him, May 27, 2002. The neighbour was Fethi Boucetta, one of three teachers, working in a school run by the Saudi Red Crescent, and the other two teachers were also captured at the same time. The Pentagon&#8217;s limited allegations against him are available <a href="http://projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/718-fethi-boucetta" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/718-fethi-boucetta?referer=');">here</a>.</p>
<p>A doctor who fled Algeria in 1996 to avoid military service, Boucetta sought asylum in Pakistan, where he was taken on as a teacher by the Red Crescent. Speaking of the circumstances of his arrest, his lawyer told the <a href="http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/05/19/AR2006051901603.html" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/05/19/AR2006051901603.html?referer=');"><em>Washington Post</em></a> in May 2006 that the Pakistani police &#8220;went to his house and asked to speak with somebody else [Hamad Gadallah], and Fethi said he didn&#8217;t know that person and that he wasn&#8217;t there. [They] came back with Americans in plain clothes, and they said they wanted to question him. That&#8217;s when he was arrested.&#8221;</p>
<p>Despite being arrested by mistake, it took until May 2005 for the Americans to accept that he was a completely innocent man, and in the meantime the allegations that mounted up against him were staggering. It was alleged that he &#8220;reportedly was an active member of the Islamic Salvation Front&#8221; (the Algerian political party whose suppression by the army in 1992 provoked the civil war that began the following year), that he traveled to Afghanistan from the Yemen, where he taught from 1993 to 1996, &#8220;at the request of the Taliban&#8221; (he actually travelled to Pakistan and carried on teaching), that he &#8220;reportedly organized combatants to fight for the Taliban,&#8221; and that he &#8220;reportedly has organized extremist networks in Arab countries and has contacts throughout the Middle East.&#8221;</p>
<p>In <a href="http://detainees.mcclatchydc.com/mi_services/gitmo/detainees/67" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/detainees.mcclatchydc.com/mi_services/gitmo/detainees/67?referer=');">an interview</a> conducted for McClatchy Newspapers&#8217; major report on 66 released Guantánamo prisoners that was published in 2008, Boucetta, identified as Abu Mohammed, told the reporter Matthew Schofield that, &#8220;[o]n the night the soldiers came for him, [he] was resting at home with his pregnant wife and five children.&#8221; He added that they &#8220;showed him a list of the men they were looking for,&#8221; and that &#8220;[t]he address for his building was on the list, but his name was not.&#8221; He added, &#8220;As they turned to leave, he asked the soldiers what they needed, but was told it was none of his concern.&#8221;</p>
<p>However, the soldiers returned 15 minutes later, and &#8220;asked whether they could look through his apartment.&#8221; He said that he remembered &#8220;thinking he had nothing to hide, so he stepped aside,&#8221; and was handcuffed, while the soldiers searched the house. They then &#8220;uncuffed him, apologized for the inconvenience and departed,&#8221; but they returned for a third time, and it was on this occasion that his nightmare began, when &#8220;they asked him to accompany them to a nearby office, to answer questions.&#8221;</p>
<p>Boucetta told McClatchy&#8217;s reporter, &#8220;I did not like to leave my family at night, but knew in my heart I had done nothing wrong, and I was not on their list &#8212; they showed it to me &#8212; so I knew I had nothing to fear.&#8221; That should have been the case, but instead, he did not see his wife and children again, and still had no idea &#8220;why he was taken away that night or why he then was told he was being taken home but instead was shackled, then flown to a US prison in Bagram, Afghanistan. Or why, after two months there, he was told that he was being taken home to his family but instead was flown to Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, half a world away, where he was kept locked up for four more years, including 18 months after he was told that he was, in effect, innocent of charges that he says were never fully articulated.&#8221;</p>
<p>After asking, &#8220;So why was he arrested?&#8221; McClatchy analysed the supposed evidence, noting that, beyond simply dismissing the charges against him as laughable &#8212; the claim that he was a member of the Algerian Islamic Salvation Front, that he left Yemen for Afghanistan at the request of Al-Qaida, and that he helped recruit fighters &#8212; Boucetta &#8220;said he doubted that these could really be the reasons he was picked up.&#8221;</p>
<p>He explained that the Islamic Salvation Front &#8220;formed after he left Algeria in 1989,&#8221; and in any case he &#8220;was never a member,&#8221; and he also explained that he had &#8221;worked as a doctor for a non-governmental organization in Afghanistan until 1992,&#8221; adding that it &#8220;would have been easy to find out that he hadn&#8217;t been back since,&#8221; and that &#8220;he&#8217;d been working for and with the United Nations and Red Crescent, the Islamic-nations version of the Red Cross, from that point on.&#8221;</p>
<p>The details in his story were pretty compelling. He explained that, from 1996 to 2002, his &#8220;medical license and passport needed to be renewed,&#8221; but he had &#8220;refused to return to Algeria and instead lived in a United Nations refugee camp in Pakistan,&#8221; where &#8220;he taught math and Arabic in a Red Crescent-sponsored school.&#8221; As a result, &#8220;there were multiple witnesses to his presence and many sign-in documents, none of which was brought before the tribunal&#8221; at Guantánamo. This was unsurprising, as the presumption was that everyone had been correctly designated as an &#8216;enemy combatant&#8221; on capture, even though no effort was made to ascertain whether or not prisoners had been seized by mistake, and it was, therefore, something of a miracle that even 38 prisoners were, like Boucetta, found not to be &#8220;enemy combatants&#8221; by their tribunals.</p>
<p>Highlighting further omissions, Boucetta said that, &#8220;although United Nations workers could have vouched for his presence in Pakistan &#8212; and, according to his attorney, spent years working for his release &#8212; US officials refused to listen to them,&#8221; and in the end he &#8220;boycotted his own hearing because he thought it was a sham.&#8221;</p>
<p>He also explained that throughout his detention &#8212; &#8220;both in Afghanistan, where he was made to stand for hours with his hands cuffed high above him, and in Cuba, where the punishment was far more psychologically than physically challenging&#8221; &#8212; he was repeatedly interrogated about Algeria, even though, as he said, &#8220;I told them, &#8216;I have not been in Algeria for 15 years.&#8217;&#8221; Despite this, he said, &#8220;They would ask about political movements there, and I had to say, honestly, that I had no idea what they were talking about.&#8221; All the questions, he explained, related to radical Islamist groups which &#8220;formed after he&#8217;d left Algeria.&#8221;</p>
<p>After explaining that he had been in Guantánamo &#8220;with two men he used to commute to work with in Pakistan, men with whom he was seen every day teaching at school and who, like him, were subjected to occasional home searches as refugees,&#8221; he said that the fact that he had become a refugee in Pakistan had aroused US suspicions, but stated that the reasons he didn&#8217;t want to return home had nothing to do with terrorism, and were, instead, to do with &#8220;a personal feud.&#8221;</p>
<p>As a result, he was stuck in Albania, reflecting on a broken promise by officials at Guantánamo, who &#8220;had promised him a home, a place where he could bring his family and start a new life.&#8221; Instead, he said, there was no work, and &#8220;no hopes of ever being able to provide a home and education for his children.&#8221; When asked about his life, he replied, &#8220;My life here? I wake in time to go to breakfast at the refugee center. That&#8217;s my life. There is nothing more.&#8221;</p>
<p>Even though he had so obviously been seized by mistake, the US authorities were determined to find reasons to justify his detention, hence the long list of allegations that I mentioned in <em>The Guantánamo Files, </em>which duly surfaced in the classified documents released by WikiLeaks in April 2011. The file relating to him was a &#8220;Transfer Recommendation to Another Country for Continued Detention,&#8221; <a href="http://wikileaks.ch/gitmo/prisoner/718.html" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/wikileaks.ch/gitmo/prisoner/718.html?referer=');">dated August 30, 2003</a>, in which he was identified as Fatai Busita, born in 1963, and it was noted that he had been diagnosed with latent tuberculosis, in common with many of the prisoners, but was &#8220;otherwise in good health.&#8221;</p>
<p>In telling his story, the Joint Task Force presented all the allegations that were later dismissed by his tribunal at Guantánamo. It was noted that the left Algeria in 1987 after completing medical school, but an analyst claimed that this was because of the alleged terrorist connections that he later dismissed. It was also noted that he stated that he then traveled extensively through Afghanistan and Pakistan from 1989 to 1993, working for five different NGOs, including the Revival of Islamic Heritage Society, which were all regarded as &#8220;known cover organisations for several terrorist groups including Al-Qaida,&#8221; even though this was generalized scaremongering at its worst, as the organizations he was working for were actually involved in humanitarian aid and charitable work.</p>
<p>The Task Force noted that he then traveled to Yemen in 1993, where, he said, he &#8220;got married, and found employment until 1996, when he bought a forged passport, and moved back to PK because he feared a crackdown on non-Yemeni Arabs,&#8221; and added that he &#8220;claimed&#8221; that &#8220;he worked as a teacher for primary and middle school, and as an Arabic teacher at a school funded by the Saudi Red Crescent Organization.&#8221;</p>
<p>Regarding his capture, it was stated that the Pakistani Inter Services Intelligence Directorate arrested him in Lahore &#8220;as part of a crackdown on Arabs in Pakistan in May 2002,&#8221; which was perhaps not meant to be what it sounded like &#8212; a confession that social cleansing was taking place, using terrorism as a cover. In further explanation, the Task Force claimed that the ISI &#8220;conducted a series of raids against suspected Al-Qaida residences and support facilities connected with the Afghan Support Committee,&#8221; adding that &#8220;[n]ine individuals were arrested including the detainee, all on suspicion of being Islamic extremists,&#8221; but neglecting to mention that Boucetta&#8217;s arrest was, very literally, an afterthought. It was also noted that he was sent to Guantánamo on August 5, 2002, on the spurious basis that it was &#8220;because of his knowledge of NGOs in the Peshawar, PK area.&#8221;</p>
<p>In assessing his story, the Task Force claimed that he was &#8220;of minimal intelligence value to the United States,&#8221; but posed &#8220;a medium threat to the US,&#8221; because he had been &#8220;assessed as being a member of Al-Qaida,&#8221; and, more specifically &#8212; again without anything resembling evidence &#8212; that he was &#8220;an Al-Qaida member and ha[d] severed [sic] in that capacity for many years, becoming a hardened and trusted terrorist operative.&#8221; It was, however, particularly noted that he was &#8220;considered a high threat risk to the government of Algeria,&#8221; and also &#8220;a significant threat,&#8221; who &#8220;may be wanted there for his subversive activities.&#8221; In addition, although the Task Force claimed that he &#8220;refuse[d] to be cooperative concerning his role as an operative&#8221; &#8212; because he had no role as an &#8220;operative&#8221; &#8212; it was nevertheless claimed that he &#8220;may still also possess intelligence information that the Algerian government would find beneficial in its efforts to curtail extremism within Algeria.&#8221;</p>
<p>As a result, Brig. Gen. James E. Payne III of the US Army, who signed the memo, recommended him for transfer to another country for continued detention, although he was not actually released for another three years and three months, and, after his tribunal intervened to discredit the allegations against him and to conclude that he was not an &#8220;enemy combatant,&#8221; it was also obvious that he could not be returned to Algeria, hence the long search for another country that was prepared to take him.</p>
<p><strong>Shams Ullah (ISN 783, Afghanistan) Released October 2006</strong></p>
<p>In &#8220;<a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/the-guantanamo-files-website-extras-11-the-last-of-the-afghans-part-one-and-six-ghost-prisoners/">The Guantánamo Files: Website Extras (11) – The Last of the Afghans (Part One) and Six &#8216;Ghost Prisoners&#8217;</a>,&#8221; I explained how Shams Ullah was seized by US forces, some months before his arrival at Guantánamo in October 2002, and, as I also explained in &#8220;<a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2008/11/22/the-pentagon-cant-count-22-juveniles-held-at-guantanamo/">The Pentagon Can’t Count: 22 Juveniles Held at Guantánamo</a>&#8221; and &#8220;<a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/06/11/wikileaks-and-the-22-children-of-guantanamo/">WikiLeaks and the 22 Children of Guantánamo</a>,&#8221; was just 16 or 17 years of age when he was seized.</p>
<p><a href="http://projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/783-shams-ullah" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/783-shams-ullah?referer=');">According to the US military</a>, he had fired “a whole magazine of ammunition” at the American and Afghan soldiers who had stopped him during a patrol, but although Shams himself had vague recollections of the events, his uncle, Bostan Karim (ISN 975), who was seized some months later by US forces (and is still held in Guantánamo), noted that he had “a mental problem,” and gave an alternative explanation for the circumstances surrounding his capture, when he appeared as a witness at his review board hearing. “When the Americans came to our house there was a Kalashnikov in our house and he knew that the Americans would take this gun,” Karim said. “So, he took the gun and went to the mosque. The Americans asked him to stop and he didn’t stop, so they shot him and he became lame.”</p>
<p>As with all but three of the 22 confirmed juveniles held at Guantánamo, Shams was never treated with anything approaching the kind of care that juveniles are required to receive under the terms of the <a href="http://www2.ohchr.org/english/law/crc-conflict.htm" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www2.ohchr.org/english/law/crc-conflict.htm?referer=');">Optional Protocol to the UN Conventions on the Rights of the Child on the involvement of children in armed conflict</a>, and in fact, in his book <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Enemy-Combatant-Imprisonment-Guantanamo-Kandahar/dp/B004L2KOIG" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.amazon.com/Enemy-Combatant-Imprisonment-Guantanamo-Kandahar/dp/B004L2KOIG?referer=');"><em>Enemy Combatant</em></a>, the released British prisoner Moazzam Begg explained how the authorities’ disregard for Shams’ age &#8212; and his wounds &#8212; was apparent when they were held together at the US prison in Kandahar airport. “Shams had been shot in the upper thigh, and the bone was shattered so he couldn’t walk,” Begg wrote. “He couldn’t make it to the toilet, he couldn’t get his own medications, or his water, or his food. And he couldn’t wash, so he started smelling quite badly.”</p>
<p>Begg ended up teaching the boy how to walk again, and also explained the story of his capture, as it had been explained to him, which backed up the story told by Bostan Karim: “Shams told me the story of his wounds: US helicopters had descended one night and attacked his house during a sweep of the area. He fired his uncle’s weapon at them. They fired back. He was hit, and captured.”</p>
<p>In the documents released by WikiLeaks in April 2011, the file relating to Shams Ullah was an &#8220;Administrative Review Board Input,&#8221; <a href="http://wikileaks.ch/gitmo/prisoner/783.html" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/wikileaks.ch/gitmo/prisoner/783.html?referer=');">dated October 26, 2004</a>, in which, essentially confirming his story, it was noted that he &#8220;was captured during a raid on his family compound in Khost, Afghanistan (AF), conducted by US Special Forces and Afghani Military Force (AMF) personnel,&#8221; and that, when the raid began, &#8220;he grabbed his AK-47 and went to hide it,&#8221; and, when the AMF ordered him to stop, &#8220;a firefight broke out,&#8221; and he fired his magazine full of ammo at the AMF forces, threw down his weapon and attempted to flee,&#8221; but &#8220;was shot in the hip and captured.&#8221;</p>
<p>It was also noted that the compound he was captured in belonged to his uncle, Bostan Karim, described as &#8220;a suspected Al-Qaida cell leader and bomb-maker&#8221; (although this has not been proved) &#8220;who was captured by Pakistani Forces at the Khurgi checkpoint in Pakistan on 13 August 2002 along with Abdallah Muhammad aka Wazir&#8221; (ISN 976, released in December 2007).</p>
<p>In addition, it was claimed that he was &#8220;a member of the Arbaqi security group,&#8221; which &#8220;provide[d] security to all merchants and their businesses at the bazaar located in Khost,&#8221; and, when it came to assessing him, the Task Force concluded that he was &#8220;of low intelligence value,&#8221; and that, &#8220;[a]fter extensive searches on national-level counter-terrorism databases, no further intelligence ha[d] been collected or found&#8221; concerning him. It was also noted that he was assessed as posing &#8220;a Medium threat to the US and its allies,&#8221; and Brig. Gen. Hood, updating a recommendation that he be retained in DoD control, dated November 11, 2003, in which he was assessed as being a high risk, and of medium intelligence value, recommended instead that he be &#8220;transferred to the control of another country for continued detention (TRCD),&#8221; although he was not released for another two years.</p>
<p><strong>Abdul Salaam (ISN 826, Afghanistan) Released February 2006</strong></p>
<p>In Chapter 14 of <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/the-guantanamo-files/"><em>The Guantánamo Files</em></a>, I explained how Abdul Salaam, who was 27 years old at the time of his capture, was part of a family of businessmen from Bermel, in Paktika province, who were caught up in what the Americans described as “a sweep of the Bermel town bazaar,” which was as random as it sounds. Khan was seized with his brother Haji Osman Khan (ISN 818, <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/08/19/wikileaks-and-the-guantanamo-prisoners-released-from-2002-to-2004-part-nine-of-ten/">released in March 2004</a>), who was 50 years old, and 19-year old Noor Aslam (ISN 822, also <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/08/19/wikileaks-and-the-guantanamo-prisoners-released-from-2002-to-2004-part-nine-of-ten/">released in March 2004</a>), who was his cousin, and the family ran a hawala (a money exchange/forwarding business) with branches in Pakistan and the UAE. Salaam <a href="http://projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/826-abdul-salaam" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/826-abdul-salaam?referer=');">explained in a review board at Guantánamo</a> that he was seized at his shop by American and Afghan soldiers, but he insisted that he was an honest businessman and had never received money on behalf of the Taliban or al-Qaeda. He also explained that the money the family received at the hawala was from families outside the country who were supporting their families in Afghanistan.</p>
<p>In the documents released by WikiLeaks in April 2011, the file relating to Abdul Salaam was an &#8220;Update Recommendation to Release or Transfer to the Control of Another Country (TR),&#8221; dated May 13, 2005, in which he was also identified as Abdul Salam Ghulamjohn, born in 1975, and it was noted that he was &#8220;in good health,&#8221; although he had been seen for &#8220;chronic low back pain, acid reflux, and constipation,&#8221; and was &#8220;currently on Zantac and Metamucil.&#8221;</p>
<p>In telling his story, the Joint Task Force managed only to flesh out the story he and his relatives had repeatedly told, Abdul Salaam said that his family business, established 30 years before, consisted of a &#8220;Hawala (money exchange/forwarding business), telephone public call office business, and limited travel reservations,&#8221; and that, after living with his family as a refugee in Miram Shah, Pakistan from 1983 to 2000, where he and his cousin opened a money transferring business that they operated for nine years, returned to Afghanistan and opened another money transferring business in Bermal with his brother, Haji Osman Khan.</p>
<p>It was also noted that, when pressed about the money transferring business, he &#8220;finally admitted to transferring large amounts of money, the largest being 2.5 million rupees, which equals to [sic] about 42 thousand US dollars,&#8221; and also explained how the business also involved another branch in the UAE, couriers, and an accountant in Afghanistan responsible for keeping money in a safe and distributing it.</p>
<p>The intention of all these questions was, of course, to demonstrate that the hawalas had been involved in transferring significant funds for Al-Qaida and/or the Taliban, but there was no truth in those suspicions, as the US authorities finally realized, although not until after he had been seized, sent to Guantánamo and held for up to three years before his innocence was more or less admitted.</p>
<p>In telling the story of his capture, he said that he &#8220;went to work on the morning of 7 September 2002,&#8221; but, approximately twenty minutes later, &#8220;three Afghan army soldiers and three US soldiers entered his shop&#8221; and &#8220;took his telephones and searched his store,&#8221; and &#8220;also confiscated five personal photographs that he had of himself, relatives and friends.&#8221; The soldiers also searched the shop next to his, where his accountant had his shop (and the safe), and then &#8220;led him away from his shop and took him to the Afghanistan Government building in town.&#8221; He &#8220;did not know why he was arrested, but believed that someone must have provided false information to the US or Afghan Governments,&#8221; which sounds like an accurate analysis.</p>
<p>After his capture, he was held first at Bagram, and was then sent to Guantánamo on October 28, 2002, on the spurious basis that it was to &#8220;provide information on the following: Economic issues in Pakistan and Afghanistan, Foreign trade in Pakistan, Afghanistan,and the United Arab Emirates [and] Hawala money transfer system in Afghanistan, Pakistan, and the United Arab Emirates.&#8221;</p>
<p>In assessing his story, the Task Force concluded that he was &#8220;of low intelligence value to the US,&#8221; and also that he posed &#8220;a low risk, as he is unlikely to pose a threat to the US, its interests and allies.&#8221; This was, to be honest, another example of over-classification, as he was clearly of no intelligence value and did not pose a threat to the US at all, because, in a more thorough analysis of his case, it was stated unequivocally that he was &#8220;assessed as not being a member of the Taliban and/or Al-Qaida&#8217;s terrorist network,&#8221; and that, although it &#8220;was first assessed [that he] was involved in money laundering operations,&#8221; the Task Force had concluded that &#8220;nothing ha[d] been found to support this claim,&#8221; after &#8220;reviewing all of the available documentation.&#8221;</p>
<p>It was also noted that it was &#8220;highly probable&#8221; that his &#8220;statements that he and his family [we]re honest businesspeople, ha[d] no connections to the Taliban or Al- Qaida, and ha[d] never transferred any money for or on behalf of the Taliban or Al-Qaida [we]re truthful.&#8221; The Task Force added &#8220;Through debriefings with relatives of detainee and other individuals who operated Hawalas in Pakistan (PK) and Afghanistan, it cannot be confirmed [he] was doing anything illegal.&#8221;</p>
<p>It was also noted that his &#8220;overall behavior ha[d] been generally compliant and non-aggressive,&#8221; and, as a result, the only remaining problems with his case were that, even after his release was recommended by Brig. Gen. Hood, it took another nine months for him to be freed, at which point he had pointlessly spent three years and four months in Guantánamo.</p>
<p><strong>Qadir Khandan (ISN 831, Afghanistan) Released October 2006</strong></p>
<p><a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/qadirkhandan.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-14547" title="Qadir Khandan (aka Qadar Khandan), in a photo taken by McClatchy Newspapers for its 2008 series on 66 released Guantanamo prisoners. " src="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/qadirkhandan.jpg" alt="" width="270" height="221" /></a>In Chapter 14 of <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/the-guantanamo-files/"><em>The Guantánamo Files</em></a>, I explained how Qadir Khandan, who was 32 years old at the time of his capture, was a pharmacist, who seems to have been a victim of the warlord Pacha Khan Zadran and his nephew, Jan Baz Khan, who lied about him to the Americans to get him arrested. Zadran was a US ally until it was finally realized that he was using them for his own ends, but along the way he was responsible for sending several men to Guantánamo on the basis that they were involved in anti-coalition activities, when they were actually his own enemies.</p>
<p>Khandan <a href="http://projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/831-khandan-kadir" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/831-khandan-kadir?referer=');">insisted in Guantánamo</a> that he was &#8220;enemy number one of Jan Baz and Pacha Khan,&#8221; and got into trouble with them because, he said, he realized that, when they were working with the Americans, they were using them for their own ends. Arrested at his home in September 2002 and accused of running a safe house for a bomb-making cell, Khandan pointed out that he was working for the Karzai government in the National Security Office in Khost, and that, as a pharmacist, bombs were &#8220;truly against my ideology.&#8221;</p>
<p>He also explained that he was badly abused by American soldiers in a prison in Khost. &#8220;They put tight round glasses around my eyes, had my ears shut with plugs and I was covered with a bag,&#8221; he said, adding, &#8220;I was ordered to stand up 24 hours for 20 days in a row. I had blood coming out of my body and my nose for days because I was tortured so much.&#8221; Describing what appear to be otherwise unreported murders in US custody, he also said, &#8220;I saw four people die right in front of me.&#8221;</p>
<p>In <a href="http://detainees.mcclatchydc.com/mi_services/gitmo/detainees/37" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/detainees.mcclatchydc.com/mi_services/gitmo/detainees/37?referer=');">an interview</a> conducted for McClatchy Newspapers&#8217; major report on 66 released Guantánamo prisoners that was published in 2008, Khandan (identified as Qadar Khandan) he said that, &#8220;no matter how many times the American soldiers struck him,&#8221; he insisted that &#8220;he&#8217;d worked as a nurse for warlord Gulbuddin Hekmatyar&#8217;s organization during its fight against Soviet forces in the 1980s &#8212; when the US supported Hekmatyar &#8212; but that he&#8217;d broken off all links afterward.&#8221;</p>
<p>He told the same story to McClatchy&#8217;s reporter, but Ismail Khosti, the head of the Khost office of the Afghan Commission for Peace and Reconciliation, said that, despite sticking to is story, Khandan &#8220;was closely aligned with Hekmatyar.&#8221; Khosti said, &#8220;He was a commander for them in this province, not the top commander, but a commander. When the Taliban left Khost, there was a mujahideen (holy warriors) council formed, and Khandan was the only representative of Hezb-e-Islami on that council.&#8221;</p>
<p>McClatchy&#8217;s reporter noted that this association &#8220;appear[ed] to be what sent US troops to his door,&#8221; although Khandan was concerned to explain how US forces had abused him, stating that, when Special Forces operatives &#8220;took him to a nearby base and questioned him,&#8221; they &#8220;made him stand for two days straight with no food or water,&#8221; and &#8220;frequently punched him&#8221; and &#8220;played loud music and brought dogs in to bark and snap at him.&#8221;</p>
<p>Khandan &#8220;said he wouldn&#8217;t break down and confess,&#8221; and, McClatchy&#8217;s reporter noted, &#8220;it appears that he never did,&#8221; also noting that he remained angry about his experiences in US custody. From Khost, where, he said, he was deprived of food and water, he was sent to Kandahar for four days and then to Bagram for about five months.</p>
<p>On arrival at Bagram, he said, &#8220;he and a group of other detainees were stripped naked and photographed,&#8221; and then the questioning began again, and the Hekmatyar allegations that he persistently denied. &#8220;They told me to accept their charges or they would send me to isolation,&#8221; he said. &#8220;I told them they could send me to isolation for 10 years and those things would still not be true.&#8221;</p>
<p>He added that he was indeed sent to an isolation cell, &#8220;a small plywood box with metal bars over the top,&#8221; where guards &#8220;hung him by his wrists from the bars&#8221; and &#8220;left him there for 20 days, taking him down only for three 15-minute meal breaks and for the bathroom when he needed it.&#8221; He explained, &#8220;My heels weren&#8217;t touching the ground, only my toes, and I had on earphones, goggles and a hood. Three or four times I became unconscious. The guards would open the gate and come in and punch me in the stomach.&#8221;</p>
<p>Discussing Guantánamo, where he was sent early in 2003, Khandan said that his &#8220;experience with the interrogators was the same,&#8221; but that &#8220;no one hit him at Guantánamo.&#8221; He also said that he &#8220;told them, repeatedly, that he&#8217;d left Hekmatyar&#8217;s fold many years before,&#8221; but &#8220;was questioned every day during his first month,&#8221; although &#8220;then the sessions dropped to once a month, then once every two months and, at one point, almost a year.&#8221; He also said that &#8220;he spent much of the time between interrogations in isolation cells, twice for seven-month stretches,&#8221; and estimated that &#8220;he spent some 17 months in isolation&#8221; during his three and a half years at Guantánamo.</p>
<p>In the documents released by WikiLeaks in April 2011, the file relating to Khandan was a &#8220;Recommendation for Transfer to the Control of Another Country with Conditions (TWC), Subject to the Conclusion of an Acceptable Transfer Agreement,&#8221; <a href="http://wikileaks.ch/gitmo/prisoner/831.html" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/wikileaks.ch/gitmo/prisoner/831.html?referer=');">dated September 3, 2005</a>, in which he was identified as Khadan Kadir and Khandan Kadir, born in 1969, and it was noted that he was &#8220;in good health,&#8221; although he had &#8220;a history of a panic disorder with agoraphobia.&#8221;</p>
<p>In telling his story, the Joint Task Force noted that he attended school at a refugee camp in Pakistan, and then &#8220;participated in an Afghan refugee medical training program,&#8221; and &#8220;received his nursing certification in 1989 and worked at a Hezb-e-Islami Gulbuddin (HIG) hospital during the war against the Soviets.&#8221; It was also stated that he &#8220;worked with HIG between 1987 and 1992, and completed high school in Peshawar, PK, in 1991.&#8221;</p>
<p>It was also noted that, from 1995 to 2002, he worked at his own pharmacy in Khost, and claimed he also worked in the National Directorate of Security (NDS) in Khost, during the Karzai government, &#8220;working in office number 7, which was responsible for monitoring open sources  i.e. radio, newspapers.&#8221; He also admitted that &#8220;he owned a Kalashnikov and a pistol, but he only used these weapons for protection,&#8221; and also insisted that he had &#8220;never been a member of any terrorist organization.&#8221;</p>
<p>The Task Force also noted that US and Afghan forces came to his house in Khost on September 20, 2002, but he &#8220;jumped a fence, and hid in a room housing women and children,&#8221; until one of the women told US forces that the was hiding there. After he surrendered, he was &#8220;found to have several documents and a small address book.&#8221; After being held at Bagram, he was sent to Guantánamo on February 6, 2003, to &#8220;provide information on the following: Security services, Security forces, Intelligence, security programs and capabilities, Counter Intelligence services [and] International terrorism.&#8221;</p>
<p>In assessing his story, the Task Force noted that he was apparently seized with Pacha Khan Zadran&#8217;s son, Abdul Walid, and his nephew,Jan Baz, but an analyst, revising history to erase the fact that Zadran was initially a US ally, described him as &#8220;a significant warlord who appointed himself governor of the Paktia province, AF, undermined US and Coalition forces along the Afghan/Pakistan border, [and] opposed the Afghan Transitional Administration (ATA), and President Hamid Karzai&#8217;s appointments for local leadership positions in Khost, Paktia, and Paktika Provinces.&#8221; It was also claimed that he was related to Pacha Khan Zadran, and it was noted that he said he &#8220;was jailed for not supporting Zadran&#8217;s bid for Provincial Governor.&#8221;</p>
<p>There were more allegations concerning Khandan&#8217;s supposed ties to three other Guantánamo prisoners &#8212; Bostan Karim (ISN 975, still held), Obaidullah (ISN 762, also still held) and Shams Ullah (ISN 783, released in October 2006, see above), which will be discussed in detail in articles dealing with Karim&#8217;s and Obaidullah&#8217;s cases.</p>
<p>Overall, his story was quite confusing, and I&#8217;m not sure that the US authorities knew what to make of it either. However, he was assessed as being &#8220;of medium intelligence value,&#8221; and of posing &#8220;a medium risk, as he may pose a threat to the US, its interests and allies.&#8221; It was also noted that he was &#8220;assessed as a low-moderate threat from a detention perspective,&#8221; because his &#8220;overall behaviour ha[d] recently been compliant and non-hostile to the guard force and staff.&#8221; As a result, Maj. Gen. Hood, updating a recommendation that he be transferred for continued detention in Afghanistan (on August 20, 2004), recommended him for &#8220;transfer with conditions,&#8221; although he was not released for another 13 months.</p>
<p>After his release, following the McClatchy interview, Khandan was also <a href="http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/south_asia/8116046.stm" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/south_asia/8116046.stm?referer=');">interviewed by the BBC</a>, when, in a broadcast in June 2009, he said, &#8220;They did things that you would not do against animals let alone to humans. They poured cold water on you in winter and hot water in summer. They used dogs against us. They put a pistol or a gun to your head and threatened you with death.&#8221; He added, &#8220;They put some kind of medicine in the juice or water to make you sleepless and then they would interrogate you.&#8221;</p>
<p>Nothing more was heard about Khandan until January 15, 2010, when the Pentagon responded to a FOIA request submitted by the ACLU in April 2009, and released <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/bagram-the-first-ever-prisoner-list-the-annotated-version/">the first ever list of prisoners held at Bagram</a>, as of September 22, 2009, when Khandan, identified by his Guantánamo number, and named as Khadan Kadir, was included, although no further information has been provided to explain what he was supposed to have done to be recaptured, when it took place, and whether he was still held.</p>
<p><strong>Also see <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/09/19/the-complete-guantanamo-files-wikileaks-and-the-prisoners-released-in-2006-part-one-of-ten/">Part One</a>, <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/09/25/the-complete-guantanamo-files-wikileaks-and-the-prisoners-released-in-2006-part-two-of-ten/">Part Two</a>, <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/09/27/the-complete-guantanamo-files-wikileaks-and-the-prisoners-released-in-2006-part-three-of-ten/">Part Three</a>, <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/10/03/the-complete-guantanamo-files-wikileaks-and-the-prisoners-released-in-2006-part-four-of-ten/">Part Four</a>, <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/10/06/the-complete-guantanamo-files-wikileaks-and-the-prisoners-released-in-2006-part-five-of-ten/">Part Five</a>, <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/10/10/the-complete-guantanamo-files-wikileaks-and-the-prisoners-released-in-2006-part-six-of-ten/">Part Six</a>, <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/10/16/the-complete-guantanamo-files-wikileaks-and-the-prisoners-released-in-2006-part-seven-of-ten/">Part Seven</a>, <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/10/25/the-complete-guantanamo-files-wikileaks-and-the-prisoners-released-in-2006-part-nine-of-ten/">Part Nine</a> and <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/10/31/the-complete-guantanamo-files-wikileaks-and-the-prisoners-released-in-2006-part-ten-of-ten/">Part Ten</a> of this series.</strong></p>
<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Guantanamo-Files-Stories-Detainees-Americas/dp/0745326641" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.amazon.com/Guantanamo-Files-Stories-Detainees-Americas/dp/0745326641?referer=');"><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-3000" title="The Guantanamo Files" src="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/bookcover6200.jpg" alt="" width="126" height="179" /></a>Andy Worthington is the author of <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/the-guantanamo-files/" target="_self"><em>The Guantánamo Files: The Stories of the 774 Detainees in America&#8217;s Illegal Prison</em></a> (published by Pluto Press, distributed by Macmillan in the US, and available from Amazon &#8212; click on the following for the <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Guantanamo-Files-Stories-Detainees-Americas/dp/0745326641" target="_self" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.amazon.com/Guantanamo-Files-Stories-Detainees-Americas/dp/0745326641?referer=');">US</a> and the <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/Guantanamo-Files-Stories-Detainees-Americas/dp/0745326641" target="_self" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.amazon.co.uk/Guantanamo-Files-Stories-Detainees-Americas/dp/0745326641?referer=');">UK</a>) and of two other books: <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/stonehenge-celebration-subversion/" target="_self"><em>Stonehenge: Celebration and Subversion</em></a> and <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/battle-of-the-beanfield/" target="_self"><em>The Battle of the Beanfield</em></a>. To receive new articles in your inbox, please subscribe to my <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/feed/" target="_self">RSS feed</a> (and I can also be found on <a href="http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=738143803" target="_self" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=738143803&amp;referer=');">Facebook</a>, <a href="http://twitter.com/GuantanamoAndy" target="_self" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/twitter.com/GuantanamoAndy?referer=');">Twitter</a>, <a href="http://digg.com/aworthington" target="_self" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/digg.com/aworthington?referer=');">Digg</a> and <a href="http://www.youtube.com/user/AndyWorthington1?feature=mhum" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.youtube.com/user/AndyWorthington1?feature=mhum&amp;referer=');"> YouTube</a>). Also see my <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/06/01/guantanamo-the-definitive-prisoner-list-updated-for-2011-with-new-information-and-photos-from-wikileaks/" target="_self">definitive Guantánamo prisoner list</a>, updated in June 2011, &#8220;<a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/category/2002-2011-the-complete-guantanamo-files-new/">The Complete Guantánamo Files</a>,&#8221; a 70-part, million-word series drawing on files released by WikiLeaks in April 2011, and details about the documentary film, “<a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/outside-the-law-stories-from-guantanamo/" target="_self">Outside the Law: Stories from Guantánamo</a>” (co-directed by Polly Nash and Andy Worthington, and available on DVD <a href="http://www.spectacle.co.uk/catalogue_production.php?id=538" target="_self" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.spectacle.co.uk/catalogue_production.php?id=538&amp;referer=');">here</a> &#8212; or <a href="http://www.freewebstore.org/WorldCantWait/Andy_Worthingtons_Outside_the_Law__Stories_from_Guantanamo/p237374_3033886.aspx" target="_self" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.freewebstore.org/WorldCantWait/Andy_Worthingtons_Outside_the_Law_Stories_from_Guantanamo/p237374_3033886.aspx?referer=');">here</a> for the US). Also see my <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/guantanamo-habeas-results-the-definitive-list/" target="_self">definitive Guantánamo habeas list</a> and <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/category/a-chronological-list-of-guantanamo-articles/" target="_self">the chronological list of all my articles</a>, and, if you appreciate my work, feel free to <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/09/05/quarterly-fundraiser-help-me-raise-2500-for-my-work-on-guantanamo-and-torture/" target="_self">make a donation</a>.</p>
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		<title>On Antiwar Radio, Andy Worthington Discusses the Omar Khadr Film, &#8220;You Don&#8217;t Like the Truth: 4 Days Inside Guantánamo&#8221;</title>
		<link>http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/10/18/on-antiwar-radio-andy-worthington-discusses-the-omar-khadr-film-you-dont-like-the-truth-4-days-inside-guantanamo/</link>
		<comments>http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/10/18/on-antiwar-radio-andy-worthington-discusses-the-omar-khadr-film-you-dont-like-the-truth-4-days-inside-guantanamo/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 18 Oct 2011 20:40:59 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Andy Worthington</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Children in Guantanamo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Guantanamo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Guantanamo media]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Omar Khadr]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Guantanamo Files - radio and TV]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Antiwar Radio]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Scott Horton]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/?p=14517</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[A few days ago, I was delighted to speak to Scott Horton of Antiwar Radio, in what was our 29th interview (available here) since he first sought me out over four years ago, but our first interview since June this year. Scott particularly wanted to discuss &#8220;You Don&#8217;t Like the Truth: 4 Days Inside Guantánamo,&#8221; [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/youdontlikethetruth.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-14518" title="The poster for &quot;You Don't Like the Truth: 4 Days Inside Guantanamo,&quot; the documentary film about Omar Khadr." src="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/youdontlikethetruth.jpg" alt="" width="258" height="336" /></a>A few days ago, I was delighted to speak to Scott Horton of Antiwar Radio, in what was <a href="http://antiwar.com/radio/2011/10/15/andy-worthington-29/" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/antiwar.com/radio/2011/10/15/andy-worthington-29/?referer=');"><strong>our 29th interview (available here)</strong></a> since he first sought me out over four years ago, but our first interview <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/06/17/andy-worthington-discusses-obamas-permanent-guantanamo-with-scott-horton-on-antiwar-radio/">since June this year.</a> Scott particularly wanted to discuss &#8220;<a href="http://www.youdontlikethetruth.com/" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.youdontlikethetruth.com/?referer=');">You Don&#8217;t Like the Truth: 4 Days Inside Guantánamo</a>,&#8221; the harrowing documentary about <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2007/11/14/the-trials-of-omar-khadr-guantanamos-child-soldier/">Omar Khadr</a>, the Canadian citizen and former child prisoner, which is based on footage of <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2008/07/15/screwed-up-and-abused-omar-khadrs-canadian-interrogations-at-guantanamo/">his interrogations by Canadian intelligence agents</a> in the summer of 2003, when he was just 16 years old.</p>
<p>I attended a Q&amp;A session after <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/06/02/open-city-new-london-film-festival-screening-of-outside-the-law-stories-from-guantanamo-ucl-june-19-2011/">a London screening of this film</a> back in June, and also took part in a discussion about it on Press TV (available in two parts <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/06/08/video-andy-worthington-discusses-the-omar-khadr-film-you-dont-like-the-truth-on-press-tv/">here</a> and <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/06/18/video-andy-worthington-discusses-the-omar-khadr-film-you-dont-like-the-truth-on-press-tv-part-two/">here</a>), so I was pleased to be able to revisit it, especially as the story of Omar Khadr is so central to the injustices of Guantanamo, and also because, barring any last-minute horrors on the part of the Obama administration, he is due to be released from Guantanamo to Canada on October 31.</p>
<p>Khadr was only 15 when he was seized in July 2002, after a firefight in which he allegedly threw a grenade that killed a US soldier &#8212; although serious doubts have been expressed about whether he actually threw the grenade, as he was apparently unconscious, face down, and half-buried under rubble at the time, and his lawyers claimed that the initial reports of the firefight were amended afterwards to incriminate him.<span id="more-14517"></span></p>
<p>The whole story of his treatment, as I told Scott, has been disgraceful, both on the part of the US administration under George W. Bush and also under Barack Obama, and also of the various Canadian governments over the last nine years. America initially abused him under President Bush, but last fall hit a new low under President Obama, when Khadr <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2010/11/02/omar-khadr-jury-hammers-the-final-nail-into-the-coffin-of-american-justice/">agreed to a plea deal in his trial by Military Commission</a>, signing a disgraceful document in which he accepted responsibility for the actions he took when he was 15, in a situation in which he had been placed by his father, and accepted that he was an &#8220;alien unprivileged enemy belligerent,&#8221; who was not allowed to engage in combat with US forces under any circumstances.</p>
<p>America, disgracefully, may have abused a child and, just as disgracefully, have unilaterally criminalized warfare for its enemies, making &#8220;war&#8221; against the US into a &#8220;war crime,&#8221; but Canada does not come out of this story any better, having consistently neglected Omar Khadr, despite his Canadian citizenship, as the footage of the interrogations, shown and discussed in this film, demonstrates &#8211; especially in the sections in which Omar weeps uncontrollably when he realizes that he has been betrayed by the country of his birth.</p>
<p>The blunt truth is that the Canadian government &#8212; and many Canadian people &#8212; have been content to blame Omar for the perceived sins of his father, Ahmed Khadr, an alleged fundraiser for Osama bin Laden, who was killed in Pakistan in October 2003, and to ignore the fact that, when it comes to the rights of child soldiers in other conflicts, Canada has led the way in calling for rehabilitation and not punishment, but when it comes to Omar Khadr, the only response has been hypocrisy and cruel indifference.</p>
<p>It was great to speak to Scott again, and I hope that, if you have 20 minutes to spare, you can listen to the show. In addition, if you&#8217;re interested in seeing the film, please <a href="http://www.youdontlikethetruth.com/" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.youdontlikethetruth.com/?referer=');">check out the website</a>, and please also feel free to check out <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/category/omar-khadr/">my archive of articles about Omar Khadr here</a>.</p>
<p>And this, for your information, is how Scott described the show:</p>
<blockquote><p><a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/">Andy Worthington</a>, author of <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Guantanamo-Files-Stories-Detainees-Americas/dp/0745326641/antiwarbookstore" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.amazon.com/Guantanamo-Files-Stories-Detainees-Americas/dp/0745326641/antiwarbookstore?referer=');"><em>The Guantánamo Files</em></a>, discusses the film <a href="http://www.filmjournal.com/filmjournal/content_display/reviews/specialty-releases/e3ic0ca3e297258044bcaa52cbfb7729e7a" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.filmjournal.com/filmjournal/content_display/reviews/specialty-releases/e3ic0ca3e297258044bcaa52cbfb7729e7a?referer=');">You Don’t Like the Truth: 4 Days Inside Guantánamo</a> about child soldier and Canadian citizen Omar Khadr’s interrogation in Guantánamo; Khadr’s travails in Afghanistan, where he was nearly killed by a US airstrike then captured and accused of killing a medic; the US government’s decision to treat child soldiers as regular prisoners in contravention of international norms; and how military commissions have made it a war crime to fight against US invasions and occupations.</p></blockquote>
<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Guantanamo-Files-Stories-Detainees-Americas/dp/0745326641" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.amazon.com/Guantanamo-Files-Stories-Detainees-Americas/dp/0745326641?referer=');"><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-3000" title="The Guantanamo Files" src="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/bookcover6200.jpg" alt="" width="126" height="179" /></a>Andy Worthington is the author of <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/the-guantanamo-files/" target="_self"><em>The Guantánamo Files: The Stories of the 774 Detainees in America&#8217;s Illegal Prison</em></a> (published by Pluto Press, distributed by Macmillan in the US, and available from Amazon &#8212; click on the following for the <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Guantanamo-Files-Stories-Detainees-Americas/dp/0745326641" target="_self" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.amazon.com/Guantanamo-Files-Stories-Detainees-Americas/dp/0745326641?referer=');">US</a> and the <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/Guantanamo-Files-Stories-Detainees-Americas/dp/0745326641" target="_self" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.amazon.co.uk/Guantanamo-Files-Stories-Detainees-Americas/dp/0745326641?referer=');">UK</a>) and of two other books: <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/stonehenge-celebration-subversion/" target="_self"><em>Stonehenge: Celebration and Subversion</em></a> and <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/battle-of-the-beanfield/" target="_self"><em>The Battle of the Beanfield</em></a>. To receive new articles in your inbox, please subscribe to my <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/feed/" target="_self">RSS feed</a> (and I can also be found on <a href="http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=738143803" target="_self" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=738143803&amp;referer=');">Facebook</a>, <a href="http://twitter.com/GuantanamoAndy" target="_self" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/twitter.com/GuantanamoAndy?referer=');">Twitter</a>, <a href="http://digg.com/aworthington" target="_self" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/digg.com/aworthington?referer=');">Digg</a> and <a href="http://www.youtube.com/user/AndyWorthington1?feature=mhum" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.youtube.com/user/AndyWorthington1?feature=mhum&amp;referer=');"> YouTube</a>). Also see my <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/06/01/guantanamo-the-definitive-prisoner-list-updated-for-2011-with-new-information-and-photos-from-wikileaks/" target="_self">definitive Guantánamo prisoner list</a>, updated in June 2011, &#8220;<a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/category/2002-2011-the-complete-guantanamo-files-new/">The Complete Guantánamo Files</a>,&#8221; a 70-part, million-word series drawing on files released by WikiLeaks in April 2011, and details about the documentary film, “<a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/outside-the-law-stories-from-guantanamo/" target="_self">Outside the Law: Stories from Guantánamo</a>” (co-directed by Polly Nash and Andy Worthington, and available on DVD <a href="http://www.spectacle.co.uk/catalogue_production.php?id=538" target="_self" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.spectacle.co.uk/catalogue_production.php?id=538&amp;referer=');">here</a> &#8212; or <a href="http://www.freewebstore.org/WorldCantWait/Andy_Worthingtons_Outside_the_Law__Stories_from_Guantanamo/p237374_3033886.aspx" target="_self" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.freewebstore.org/WorldCantWait/Andy_Worthingtons_Outside_the_Law_Stories_from_Guantanamo/p237374_3033886.aspx?referer=');">here</a> for the US). Also see my <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/guantanamo-habeas-results-the-definitive-list/" target="_self">definitive Guantánamo habeas list</a> and <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/category/a-chronological-list-of-guantanamo-articles/" target="_self">the chronological list of all my articles</a>, and, if you appreciate my work, feel free to <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/09/05/quarterly-fundraiser-help-me-raise-2500-for-my-work-on-guantanamo-and-torture/" target="_self">make a donation</a>.</p>
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		<title>The Complete Guantánamo Files: WikiLeaks and the Prisoners Released in 2006 (Part Seven of Ten)</title>
		<link>http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/10/16/the-complete-guantanamo-files-wikileaks-and-the-prisoners-released-in-2006-part-seven-of-ten/</link>
		<comments>http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/10/16/the-complete-guantanamo-files-wikileaks-and-the-prisoners-released-in-2006-part-seven-of-ten/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 16 Oct 2011 18:16:24 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Andy Worthington</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[2002-2011: THE COMPLETE GUANTANAMO FILES (*NEW*)]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Afghans in Guantanamo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Children in Guantanamo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Guantanamo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Guantanamo suicides]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Iranians in Guantanamo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Kazakhs in Guantanamo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Saudis in Guantanamo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[WikiLeaks]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[WikiLeaks and the Guantanamo Prisoners Released in 2006]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Yemenis in Guantanamo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Abdul Majid Muhammed]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Abdul Rahman Khowlan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Abdullah Magrupov]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Afghans]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Al-Qaeda]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Deaths in Guatanamo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ehsanullah Peerzai]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Hassan Ghul]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ibn al-Shaykh al-Libi]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Iranians]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Kazakhs]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Khalid al-Muri]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Mani Al Utaybi]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Nawaf al-Otaibi]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Qari Esmhatulla]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Saleh al-Zuba]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Saudis]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Sultan al-Anazi]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Taliban]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Tora Bora]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Yakub Abahanov]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Yemenis]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/?p=14454</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Please support my work! Freelance investigative journalist Andy Worthington continues his 70-part, million-word series telling, for the first time, the stories of 776 of the 779 prisoners held at Guantánamo since the prison opened on January 11, 2002. Adding information released by WikiLeaks in April 2011 to the existing documentation about the prisoners, much of [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/wikileaksgitmofiles.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-12492" title="WikiLeaks logo for its release of previously classified military files relating to the prisoners held at Guantanamo  Bay, Cuba" src="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/wikileaksgitmofiles.png" alt="" width="314" height="158" /></a></p>
<h3>Please support my work!</h3>
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<p><strong><em>Freelance investigative journalist Andy Worthington continues his 70-part, million-word series telling, for the first time, the stories of 776 of the 779 prisoners held at Guantánamo since the prison opened on January 11, 2002. Adding <a href="http://wikileaks.org/gitmo/" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/wikileaks.org/gitmo/?referer=');">information released by WikiLeaks</a> in April 2011 to the existing documentation about the prisoners, much of which was already covered in Andy’s book <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/the-guantanamo-files/">The Guantánamo Files</a> and in the archive of articles on <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/">his website</a>, the project will be completed in time for the 10th anniversary of the prison’s opening on January 11, 2012.</em></strong></p>
<p><strong><em>This is Part 27 of the 70-part series. 337 stories have now been told. See the entire archive <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/category/2002-2011-the-complete-guantanamo-files-new/">here</a>.</em></strong></p>
<p>In late April, I worked with WikiLeaks as a media partner for the <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/04/25/wikileaks-reveals-secret-guantanamo-files-exposes-detention-policy-as-a-construct-of-lies/">publication of thousands of pages</a> of classified military documents &#8212; the Detainee Assessment Briefs &#8212; relating to almost all of the 779 prisoners held at Guantánamo since the prison opened on January 11, 2002. These documents drew heavily on the testimony of the prisoners themselves, and also on the testimony of their fellow inmates (either in Guantánamo, or <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2010/06/15/un-secret-detention-report-part-one-the-cias-high-value-detainee-program-and-secret-prisons/">in secret prisons run by or on behalf of the CIA</a>), whose <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/04/25/wikileaks-reveals-secret-guantanamo-files-exposes-detention-policy-as-a-construct-of-lies/">statements are unreliable</a>, either because they were subjected to torture or other forms of coercion, or because they provided false statements in the hope of securing better treatment in Guantánamo.</p>
<p>The documents were compiled by the Joint Task Force at Guantánamo (JTF GTMO), which operates the prison, and were based on assessments and reports made by interrogators and analysts whose primary concern was to “exploit” the prisoners for their intelligence value. They also include input from the Criminal Investigative Task Force, created by the DoD in 2002 to conduct interrogations on a law enforcement basis, rather than for “actionable intelligence.”</p>
<p>My ongoing analysis of the documents began in May, with a five-part series, “<a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/category/wikileaks-the-unknown-prisoners-of-guantanamo/">WikiLeaks: The Unknown Prisoners of Guantánamo</a>,” telling the stories of 84 prisoners, released between 2002 and 2004, whose stories had never been told before. This was followed by a ten-part series, “<a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/category/wikileaks-and-the-guantanamo-prisoners-released-from-2002-to-2004/">WikiLeaks and the Guantánamo Prisoners Released from 2002 to 2004</a>,” in which I revisited the stories of 114 other prisoners released in this period, adding information from the Detainee Assessment Briefs to what was already known about these men and boys from press reports and other sources. This was followed by another five-part series, “<a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/category/wikileaks-and-the-guantanamo-prisoners-released-after-the-tribunals-2004-to-2005/">WikiLeaks and the Guantánamo Prisoners Released After the Tribunals, 2004 to 2005</a>,” dealing with the period from September 2004 to the end of 2005, when 62 prisoners were released.<span id="more-14454"></span></p>
<p>This, as I explained, was the period in which, after the prisoners won a spectacular victory in the Supreme Court in June 2004, in <a href="http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/scripts/getcase.pl?court=US&amp;vol=000&amp;invol=03-334" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/scripts/getcase.pl?court=US_amp_vol=000_amp_invol=03-334&amp;referer=');"><em>Rasul v. Bush</em></a>, when the Supreme Court granted them habeas corpus rights (in other words, the right to ask an impartial judge why they were being held), lawyers were allowed to meet the prisoners for the first time, and the secrecy that was required for Guantánamo to function as an interrogation center beyond the law was finally broken.</p>
<p>However, although the Bush administration allowed habeas petitions to proceed, Congress attempted to strip the prisoners of their habeas rights in the <a href="http://www.pegc.us/detainee_act_2005.html" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.pegc.us/detainee_act_2005.html?referer=');">Detainee Treatment Act</a> in 2005, and the administration also responded to the Supreme Court’s ruling with its own inferior version of habeas, the Combatant Status Review Tribunals, <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2007/07/03/guantanamo-whistleblowers-lt-col-stephen-abraham-is-not-the-first-insider-to-condemn-the-kangaroo-courts/">a sham process</a> designed to rubber-stamp their designation as “enemy combatants” who could be held indefinitely.</p>
<p>With just 38 prisoners cleared for release after the CSRTs, another review process &#8212; the annual Administrative Review Boards &#8212; took over, reviewing whether prisoners still had ongoing intelligence value, and whether they still posed a threat to the US. These were essentially the decisions being taken by JTF GTMO and CITF, and they reveal how, in the “War on Terror,” prosecuting criminals (the few genuine terror suspects in Guantánamo) and holding soldiers off the battlefield until the end of hostilities had largely given way to the strange mixture of threat assessments and intelligence assessments that fill the Detainee Assessment Briefs.</p>
<p>With 260 prisoners profiled in the first 20 parts of this project, this latest ten-part series covers the stories of the 111 prisoners released in 2006 (and the three who died at the prison in June 2006) and readers will, I hope, realize that almost all of these prisoners were freed because of political maneuvering rather than anything to do with justice. The largest groups released by nationality in 2006 were Saudis (45 in total &#8212; 15 in May 2006, 14 in June and 16 in December) and Afghans (35 in total &#8212; 7 in February, 5 in August, 16 in October and 7 in December).</p>
<p>I also hope that readers will reflect on the problems of over-classification that have been thoroughly chronicled in the preceding series analyzing the Detainee Assessment Briefs. My analysis to date has established repeatedly that even patently innocent prisoners seized by mistake were regarded as a “low risk,” rather than as no risk at all, and it is important for readers to bear in mind that the entire process of detaining and processing prisoners and exploiting them for their supposed intelligence was shot through with a drive to conclude that they were all a threat, and to overlook the distressing fact that most of them were seized in <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2009/05/27/guantanamo-and-the-many-failures-of-us-politicians/">a largely random manner</a>, mostly by America’s Afghan and Pakistan allies, at a time when substantial bounty payments were widespread, and were never subjected to anything that resembled an adequate screening process.</p>
<p>For further information, also see <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/09/19/the-complete-guantanamo-files-wikileaks-and-the-prisoners-released-in-2006-part-one-of-ten/">Part One</a>, which contained eleven stories about prisoners from a variety of countries, mostly captured in Afghanistan, and including Yasser al-Zahrani, who died in Guantánamo in June 2006, and <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/09/25/the-complete-guantanamo-files-wikileaks-and-the-prisoners-released-in-2006-part-two-of-ten/">Part Two</a>, which featured another eleven stories, mostly of prisoners who survived the Qala-i-Janghi massacre in northern Afghanistan in November 2001. <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/09/27/the-complete-guantanamo-files-wikileaks-and-the-prisoners-released-in-2006-part-three-of-ten/">Part Three</a> featured another eleven stories, including some examples of prisoners who &#8220;returned to the battlefield&#8221; after their release, and the story of a Libyan prisoner whose fie is full of statements made by other Libyans, including Abdelhakim Belhaj, now active as a commander of the Libyan rebels, who were subjected to extraordinary rendition and torture in secret CIA prisons. <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/10/03/the-complete-guantanamo-files-wikileaks-and-the-prisoners-released-in-2006-part-four-of-ten/">Part Four</a> told eleven more stories, of prisoners seized, for a variety of reasons, crossing from Afghanistan to Pakistan after the US-led invasion in October 2001, and <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/10/06/the-complete-guantanamo-files-wikileaks-and-the-prisoners-released-in-2006-part-five-of-ten/">Part Five</a> featured more of those stories, including four accounts of the Uighurs, Muslims from China&#8217;s oppressed Xinjiang province, who persuaded the US they were held by mistake, but had to wait until 2006 to be freed, when they were resettled in Albania, and not in the US, which accepted that it could not return them to China, but refused to allow them to live in America. <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/10/10/the-complete-guantanamo-files-wikileaks-and-the-prisoners-released-in-2006-part-six-of-ten/">Part Six</a> involved more stories of Saudis and Afghans, including the particularly unfortunate story of a Saudi-born Uighur, who was tortured by Al-Qaida for allegedly plotting to assassinate Osama bin Laden, liberated from a Taliban prison, and then sent to Guantánamo, and this seventh part features more Saudis, a Yemeni, two Kazakhs, an Iranian and some Afghans, including some prisoners with serious mental health issues (and one juvenile prisoner), and the sad &#8212; and unresolved &#8212; story of Mani al-Utaybi, another of the three prisoners who died in June 2006. Also see <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/10/20/the-complete-guantanamo-files-wikileaks-and-the-prisoners-released-in-2006-part-eight-of-ten/">Part Eight</a>, <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/10/25/the-complete-guantanamo-files-wikileaks-and-the-prisoners-released-in-2006-part-nine-of-ten/">Part Nine</a> and <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/10/31/the-complete-guantanamo-files-wikileaks-and-the-prisoners-released-in-2006-part-ten-of-ten/">Part Ten</a>.</p>
<h3>The Complete Guantánamo Files: WikiLeaks and the Prisoners Released in 2006 (Part Seven of Ten)</h3>
<p><strong>Nawaf Al Otaibi (ISN 501, Saudi Arabia) Released May 2006</strong></p>
<p><a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/nawafalotaibi.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-14456" title="Nawaf al-Otaibi, in a photo made available by Cageprisoners." src="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/nawafalotaibi.jpg" alt="" width="182" height="236" /></a>In &#8220;<a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/the-guantanamo-files-website-extras-tora-bora/">The Guantánamo Files: Website Extras (2) – Tora Bora</a>,&#8221; I explained how Nawaf al-Otaibi, who was 29 years old at the time of his capture, was accused of traveling to Afghanistan in June 2001 and training at a Libyan camp. It was also alleged that he “was identified as being captured in Tora Bora,” although <a href="http://projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/501-nawaf-fahad-al-otaibi" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/501-nawaf-fahad-al-otaibi?referer=');">he stated</a> that he did not receive any training and never possessed a weapon while he was in Afghanistan, and added that, if given the opportunity to return home, he would “seek employment as a school teacher.”</p>
<p>In the documents released by WikiLeaks in April 2011, the file relating to al-Otaibi was a &#8220;Recommendation [for] Transfer to the Control of Another Country for Continued Detention (TRCD),&#8221; <a href="http://wikileaks.org/gitmo/prisoner/501.html" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/wikileaks.org/gitmo/prisoner/501.html?referer=');">dated September 7, 2004</a>, in which it was noted that he was born in November 1972, and had latent TB, in common with many of the prisoners, although he was described as being in &#8220;good health.&#8221; It was also noted that he had been &#8220;seen several times by the medical teams during routine and sick call rounds,&#8221; and had been &#8220;complaining of back, ear and head pains,&#8221; and also that he had been &#8220;treated in Kandahar for multiple wounds of an unidentified type,&#8221; and had &#8220;also been treated for abrasions on both ankles (resolved).&#8221;</p>
<p>In telling his story, the Joint Task Force noted that, around June 2001, he met a man named Adil, who had apparently &#8220;trained at a Libyan training camp &#8212; described as &#8220;a Libyan terrorist training camp&#8221; &#8212; in Afghanistan. Having reportedly &#8220;decided to train there as well,&#8221; he traveled to Karachi, where &#8220;he met a man named Hassan&#8221; &#8212; presumably, therefore, some sort of facilitator &#8212; &#8220;who paid for his travel to Quetta.&#8221; He then traveled to Kandahar and on to Kabul &#8220;with a man named Abu Assam,&#8221; who was evidently another volunteer.</p>
<p>The two were then told that the training camp &#8212; in common with others, it should be noted &#8212; &#8220;was closed due to the events of 9/11,&#8221; and the fear of retaliation. They then stayed for a month in a safehouse, allegedly &#8220;hoping for the training camp to reopen, but it never did.&#8221; When Kabul fell to the Northern Alliance, he and twenty other Arabs &#8220;spent three weeks trying to make it to the Pakistan border,&#8221; although only &#8220;six or seven individuals&#8221; survived the US bombing campaign that accompanied their travel.</p>
<p>They then went to an Afghan village, where they surrendered. Imprisoned in Jalalabad for ten days, al-Otaibi was then transferred to a prison in Kabul for another month (probably a prison run by the Northern Alliance), and was then sent to the US prisons at Bagram airbase and Kandahar airport. He was sent to Guantánamo on May 4, 2002, allegedly because he &#8220;may be able to provide information on the following: A Libyan terrorist training camp in or near Kabul, AF [and] A safe house in Quetta, Pakistan, Kandahar and Kabul, AF.&#8221;</p>
<p>However, as I explained in my article, “<a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/05/01/how-to-read-wikileaks-guantanamo-files/">How to Read WikiLeaks’ Guantánamo Files</a>” (originally published on <a href="http://www.wikileaks.org/gitmo/" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.wikileaks.org/gitmo/?referer=');">WikiLeaks’ website</a> when the Guantánamo files were first published, as part of my work liaising between WikiLeaks and its media partners):</p>
<blockquote><p>[T]he “Reasons for Transfer” included in the documents, which have been repeatedly cited by media outlets as an explanation of why the prisoners were transferred to Guantánamo, are, in fact, lies that were grafted onto the prisoners’ files after their arrival at Guantánamo. This is because, contrary to the impression given in the files, no significant screening process took place before the prisoners’ transfer. As Chris Mackey, a senior interrogator who worked in Afghanistan, explained in <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Interrogators-Inside-Secret-Against-Qaeda/dp/0316871125" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.amazon.com/Interrogators-Inside-Secret-Against-Qaeda/dp/0316871125?referer=');">a book that he wrote about his experiences</a> (<em>The Interrogators</em>), every prisoner who ended up in US custody had to be sent to Guantánamo, even though the majority were not even seized by US forces, but were seized by their Afghan and Pakistani allies at a time when <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2009/05/27/guantanamo-and-the-many-failures-of-us-politicians/">substantial bounty payments</a> for “al-Qaeda and Taliban suspects” were widespread.</p></blockquote>
<p>In assessing his story, the Task Force noted that the man named Hassan, who paid for his travel to Quetta, may have been &#8220;the Al-Qaida facilitator Hassan Ghul,&#8221; who, according to the Task Force, &#8220;worked under the Al-Qaida Senior Operational Commander Khalid Shaykh Muhammad [aka Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, ISN 10024].&#8221; What the Task Force failed to mention was that <a href="http://emptywheel.firedoglake.com/2009/06/15/hassan-ghul-timeline/" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/emptywheel.firedoglake.com/2009/06/15/hassan-ghul-timeline/?referer=');">Hassan Ghul was a CIA &#8220;ghost prisoner,&#8221;</a> seized in Iraq but held in a variety of locations as part of the CIA&#8217;s network of secret torture prisons.</p>
<p>Beyond al-Otaibi&#8217;s own words, there was nothing to incriminate him directly in any activities directed at the United States. The Task Force concluded that he was &#8220;of medium intelligence value,&#8221; and posed &#8220;a medium risk,&#8221; as &#8220;he may possibly pose a threat to the US, its interests and allies,&#8221; because he was assessed as &#8220;a member of Al-Qaida and/or its global terrorist network,&#8221; who had &#8220;shown deception by changing his story (when the Saudi delegation came to visit, he said that &#8220;he went to AF on a self-appointed religious mission, to investigate the Taliban&#8217;s unorthodox method of praying for the deceased and to see &#8216;The Cloth&#8217; that purportedly belonged to the Prophet Mohammad&#8221;).</p>
<p>It was also claimed that he had &#8220;demonstrated a commitment to Jihad by paying for and traveling to Afghanistan on his own accord,&#8221; and that he &#8220;left college to take up arms against the US and its allies and, if released, he will probably attempt to aid the enemy once more&#8221; &#8212; which was an interesting way of describing an intention to fight with the Taliban against the Northern Alliance, before the 9/11 attacks, when the Northern Alliance were, to be honest, only nominally allies of the US, which had done little to help them in their long battle against the Taliban.</p>
<p>It was also noted that his &#8220;overall behaviour ha[d] been generally noncompliant and aggressive,&#8221; although &#8220;most [of] his behavior problems were failures to follow simple directions; such as not giving trash to guards.&#8221; Although Maj. Gen. Jay W. Hood, the commander of Guantánamo at the time, recommended him for transfer to continued detention in Saudi Arabia (on the basis of nothing more than intent), and although the Saudi government clearly had no suspicions about him (or they would have been mentioned), he was not released for another 20 months, when he was repatriated to be put through the Saudi government&#8217;s rehabilitation program.</p>
<p><strong>Saleh Al Zuba (ISN 503, Yemen) Released December 2006</strong></p>
<p><a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/salehalzuba2.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-14459" title="Saleh al-Zuba, photographed in January 2010 (Photo: Ahmad Gharabli/AFP/Getty Images)." src="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/salehalzuba2.jpg" alt="" width="313" height="234" /></a>In Chapter 4 of <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/the-guantanamo-files/"><em>The Guantánamo Files</em></a>, I explained how Saleh al-Zuba, who was 46 years old at the time of his capture, had a non-military explanation for being in Afghanistan. Accused of fighting in Tora Bora, <a href="http://projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/503-saleh-mohamed-al-zuba" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/503-saleh-mohamed-al-zuba?referer=');">he said</a> that he had coronary artery disease and went to Pakistan for medical treatment, and was only in Afghanistan because he did not have enough money for an operation, and was told that a charitable organization in Afghanistan might provide extra funding.</p>
<p>In the documents released by WikiLeaks in April 2011, the file relating to al-Zuba was an &#8220;Update Recommendation [for] Release or Transfer to the Control of Another Country (TR),&#8221; <a href="http://wikileaks.org/gitmo/prisoner/503.html" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/wikileaks.org/gitmo/prisoner/503.html?referer=');">dated June 27, 2004</a>, in which the contradictions in the US military&#8217;s assessment of him were not reconciled. The file did not include any detention information, meaning that the claims aired in his CSRT are all that exists to evaluate what he was doing in Afghanistan. As a result, the claims that he admitted&#8221; to &#8220;being at Al-Farouq training camp&#8221; and to &#8220;being in Tora Bora while Osama bin Laden was present&#8221; and &#8220;participat[ing] in the battle for Tora Bora&#8221; must be weighed against his evident illness, which, I believe, can only lead to a conclusion that his confessions were lies, produced under unknown circumstances to appease his captors.</p>
<p>In the file released by WikiLeaks, the Task Force described a serious, and life-threatening medical history, which would make armed adventures in the Tora Bora mountains seem particularly unlikely. It was confirmed that al-Zuba had &#8220;known coronary artery disease with symptoms for 8-10 years,&#8221; that he had a catheterization in Yemen&#8221; that was &#8220;not successful,&#8221; according to al-Zuba, and that he &#8220;had stents place[d] in two vessels in March 2003,&#8221; when &#8220;he had an occluded, non-operable right coronary artery.&#8221; &#8220;Since then,&#8221; the report continued, he &#8220;had some episodes of chest pain, but no myocardial infarction.&#8221;</p>
<p>It was also noted that he had &#8220;a history of hypercholesterolemia and hypertension, also with H. pylori and history of epigastric pain,&#8221; but he &#8220;refused to finish medical regimen for eradication of H. pylori.&#8221; He also had a &#8220;history of shrapnel to left shoulder in 2001,&#8221; and a history of depression in Yemen in the 1990s, before his capture. It was also noted that his &#8220;medications include[d] Tricor, Atenolol, ECASA, Plavix, Lipitor and Isordil.&#8221;</p>
<p>Finally, it was noted that he reported that &#8220;he estimate[d] he walk[ed] 2 km twice per day,&#8221; presumably before his capture, as walking was severely restricted in Guantánamo, and that every couple of weeks he would have &#8220;an episode of chest tightness and mild dyspnea [shortness of breath] while walking that resolve[d] when he rest[ed].&#8221; It was also noted, &#8220;These symptoms have not worsened or become more frequent and do not occur at rest,&#8221; but in their prognosis, the medical professionals at Guantánamo advised that al-Zuba&#8217;s &#8220;coronary artery disease could reoccur,&#8221; and that he &#8220;require[d] regular surveillance, as the stents can fail.&#8221;</p>
<p>Although al-Zuba was assessed as being &#8220;of medium intelligence value,&#8221; and it was noted that, on June 4, 2004, Brig. Gen. Hood recommended that he be &#8220;considered for transfer for continued detention,&#8221; his case was reassessed just three weeks later, and he was recommended for release or transfer, because JTF GTMO had determined that he posed &#8220;a low risk, due to his medical condition.&#8221; Without his serious health problems, it is not known how long he would have been held, as, when it came to his behaviour in Guantánamo, as opposed to anything he may have done before his capture (even though in al-Zuba&#8217;s case there was nothing), it was noted, with obvious disapproval, that he had &#8220;a history of noncompliance,&#8221; and that, although his &#8220;reported occurrences ha[d] typically been refusal of meds and meals,&#8221; he &#8220;also had incidents requiring physical restraint by guards and appear[ed] to be a leader on the blocks.&#8221;</p>
<p>Even with the recommendation for his release, on health grounds, he was, shockingly, not freed for another two and half years, although he was still one of the lucky Yemenis, as only 23 have been released from Guantánamo throughout the prison’s history, primarily because of institutional fears regarding security in Yemen, and as a result <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/05/12/abandoned-in-guantanamo-wikileaks-reveals-the-yemenis-cleared-for-release-for-up-to-seven-years/">over half of the 171 prisoners</a> who remain at Guantánamo at the time of writing are Yemenis.</p>
<p>Two and half years after his release, al-Zuba was interviewed by Michelle Shephard of the <a href="http://www.thestar.com/News/World/article/698066" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.thestar.com/News/World/article/698066?referer=');"><em>Toronto Star</em></a>, one of three former prisoners to meet &#8220;for an afternoon at a hotel lounge.&#8221; The three men &#8212; who also included Walid al-Qadasi (ISN 10014, <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/08/26/wikileaks-and-the-guantanamo-prisoners-released-from-2002-to-2004-part-ten-of-ten/">released in March 2004</a>) and Mohsen al-Askari (ISN 221, released in June 2007, and also identified as Ali Mohsen Salih) &#8212; &#8220;said it was the first time they had been together since Guantánamo.&#8221;</p>
<p>According to the US authorities, he would have been 53 or 54 years old at the time, but he told Shephard he was 60, &#8220;maybe more,&#8221; and &#8220;his weathered face and occasional labored breathing [did] make him appear older.&#8221; He was working as a pipefitter and handyman, but he said that work was &#8220;hard to find.&#8221; Repeating his story, he said that &#8220;his only connection with Afghanistan was to ask for help from an Afghan charity to have an angioplasty in Pakistan,&#8221; and he also stated that, during interrogations at Guantánamo, &#8220;they spared no method of torture or humiliation in dealing with us.&#8221;</p>
<p>He also said that &#8220;he spent time with many of the Yemeni detainees still in Guantánamo,&#8221; and argued on behalf of those he believed were &#8220;wrongly imprisoned&#8221; &#8212; men he described as teachers, students and charity workers. &#8220;The longer these people stay in detention, the more complicated their mental state is and the state of their relatives,&#8221; he explained. &#8220;And this definitely will lead to negative consequences. So why don&#8217;t they address this issue in the proper way so that the person can return to his country safely and not be a threat?&#8221;</p>
<p>In March 2010, al-Zuba spoke to <a href="http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=125394445" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=125394445&amp;referer=');">a reporter from NPR</a>, explaining that, on his return to Yemen in December 2006, he had &#8220;spent a few more months in Yemeni custody, then was freed when a relative vouched for him.&#8221; He also explained that his employment prospects had taken a turn for the worse. According the reporter, he was spending &#8220;most days at home, watching TV.&#8221; He said he &#8220;tried to open a honey store, but the owner wouldn&#8217;t rent to him because he heard Zuba had been in Guantánamo.&#8221; Once a month, he explained, he had to &#8220;check in with local security officers.&#8221; The article was about a possible rehabilitation program for Yemenis in Guantánamo, but as al-Zuba said, &#8220;I don&#8217;t need a rehabilitation program. Right now, I just need a job.&#8221;</p>
<p>In another interview, for <a href="http://www.telegraph.co.uk/expat/expatnews/6987895/Former-Guantanamo-bay-detainee-warns-of-inmates-return-to-extremism.html" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.telegraph.co.uk/expat/expatnews/6987895/Former-Guantanamo-bay-detainee-warns-of-inmates-return-to-extremism.html?referer=');">AFP in January 2010</a>, al-Zuba was more talkative, warning that, &#8220;If the former detainees of Guantánamo, who were released after being unjustly imprisoned for a long time and tortured, do not receive help to quickly reintegrate into their society, they could be tempted by extremism and violence,&#8221; and adding, &#8220;If an innocent man who has been tortured does not get support from the authorities in his country in order to reintegrate &#8230; he could become extremist, explode himself (as a suicide bomber) and kill innocents.&#8221;</p>
<p>Noting that he had two wives and ten children, the author of the article, Taieb Mahjoub, wrote of his unemployment, noting also that he complained that the government had &#8220;done nothing to look after him or help him find a stable source of income.&#8221;</p>
<p>Describing himself as a &#8220;pacific Islamist&#8221; who wants to &#8220;apply (Islamic law) sharia &#8230; but not according to the model of those who launch attacks or kill innocents in the name of Islam,&#8221; al-Zuba ran through his story again, adding more detail. He said that &#8220;he was nabbed by chance in the Afghan region of Tora Bora&#8221; by Afghans &#8220;who &#8220;sold (him) for 5,000 dollars&#8221; to the Americans. After traveling from Pakistan to Afghanistan for medical treatment, as advised by some Arabs he met, he said that he ended up in a training camp and then in Tora Bora, where he &#8220;saw Osama bin Laden getting out of a minibus accompanied by gunmen, following an air raid on the area.&#8221; He added, &#8220;They did not try to recruit me due to my age and frail health.&#8221;</p>
<p>Speaking of his treatment in Guantánamo, he said, &#8220;At the beginning, the Americans did not treat me for the heart problems I had, but after medical exams, they operated on me and hospitalized me for four months. After that, physical torture stopped, only to give way to psychological torture.&#8221; He added, &#8220;My memory has suffered, but I shall never forget how much I suffered at Guantánamo, where at the end of six years I was told that my detention was unjustified and that my presence was a mistake. Although I have never been to school, I learned a lot during this journey, much more than I could have learned at university. At Guantánamo, I learned a lot about Al-Qaida and radical groups, stuff that I had never known.&#8221; He also remembered &#8220;remarks made by a US investigator to prisoners as they were being released.&#8221; The investigator said, &#8220;You are not members of Al-Qaida, but from now on, you are well placed to become so.&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Khalid Al Muri (ISN 505, Saudi Arabia) Released May 2006</strong></p>
<p>In &#8220;<a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/the-guantanamo-files-website-extras-tora-bora/">The Guantánamo Files: Website Extras (2) – Tora Bora</a>,&#8221; I explained how, in the case of Khalid al-Muri, who was 26 years old at the time of his capture, all that was available until WikiLeaks released the Detainee Assessment Briefs in April 2011 was a one-page <a href="http://projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/505-khalid-rashd-ali-al-muri" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/505-khalid-rashd-ali-al-muri?referer=');">Summary of Evidence</a> for his CSRT, in which it was alleged that he was “a member of al-Qaeda,” who traveled to Afghanistan in August 2001, and “received military training at an Al-Qaida camp near Kabul” until September 2001. It was also alleged that he “manned a fighting position in the Tora Bora mountain region from mid-November through mid-December 2001,” and that he surrendered to coalition forces near Jalalabad, which could indicate that he fled from Tora Bora.</p>
<p>In the documents released by WikiLeaks in April 2011, the file relating to al-Muri was a &#8220;Recommendation [for] Transfer to the Control of Another Country for Continued Detention (TRCD),&#8221; <a href="http://wikileaks.org/gitmo/prisoner/505.html" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/wikileaks.org/gitmo/prisoner/505.html?referer=');">dated September 24, 2004</a>, in which it was noted that he was born in September 1975, and had &#8220;a history of testicular pain.&#8221;</p>
<p>In telling his story, the Joint Task Force noted that he and a friend traveled to Zenica in Bosnia-Herzegovina during the Bosnian War, in 1995, where they &#8220;taught the Koran,&#8221; and &#8220;spent their summer vacation working on behalf of a charitable organization.&#8221; In 2000, he traveled to Mecca for the Al-Umra ceremonies with three friends, and &#8220;met a Yemeni named Abu Thabitt who owned a molasses business,&#8221; and who, after al-Muri confided in him that he wanted to travel to Afghanistan &#8220;to teach the Koran and learn military training as part of the jihad,&#8221; said he would assist him and provided him with a contact in Karachi.</p>
<p>After resuming his university studies, al-Muri &#8220;purchased a round trip ticket In the summer of 2001, and traveled with Nasir Maziyad Abdallah al-Qurayshi al-Subi&#8217;i (ISN 497, released in February 2007, and also identified as Nasir al-Subii). On arrival, their contact, Abu Omar, traveled with them to Quetta, where his &#8220;personal vehicle was waiting for them.&#8221; They then traveled to the Al-Nebras guesthouse in Kandahar. Soon after, al-Subi&#8217;i reportedly left the guesthouse to attend the Al-Farouq training camp (identified as &#8220;the Al-Farouq terrorist camp&#8221;), while al-Muri went to Kabul to &#8220;attend training at Camp 9, also known as Camp Malik.&#8221;</p>
<p>In November 2001, after two months at Camp Malik, al-Muri &#8220;and an unknown group&#8221; left &#8220;when the fighting began,&#8221; and fled to the Tora Bora mountains, where he &#8220;was assigned to an unidentified fighting position.&#8221; He said that he never saw the leaders, but only &#8220;heard them on the radio.&#8221; After leaving Tora Bora, he traveled with a group towards the Pakistani border, but they were captured by Northern Alliance forces on December 18, 2001. He was imprisoned in Jalalabad for eight days, and then in Kabul (probably in a prison run by the Northern Alliance) for another month, and was then taken to the US prison at Bagram airbase. He was sent to Guantánamo on April 30, 2002, on the spurious basis that he &#8220;could provide information on: Training Camp Number 9, Curriculum of mountain and plains warfare taught by Al-Qaida, Safehouse in Quetta, PK, and Kandahar, AF [and] Abu Thabitt, possible jihad recruiter in Saudi Arabia, and his counterpart in Pakistan.&#8221;</p>
<p>In assessing his story, an analyst first claimed that Zenica served as &#8220;a major stronghold for Al-Qaida and other extremist Islamic groups within Bosnia,&#8221; and that it was &#8220;unlikely [he] performed charity work in Bosnia.&#8221; There was actually no reason for believing the analyst&#8217;s point of view, but it was typical, as every analysis was geared towards establishing that prisoners were significant.</p>
<p>Regarding his time in Afghanistan, the Task Force tried to make out that he was suspicious, although they had little to go on, beyond an odd claim that &#8220;other US Intelligence Agencies&#8221; had identified him &#8220;as the subject of an attempt by extremist[s] to buy the freedom of a large number of foreign fighters captured in the Tora Bora area of Afghanistan,&#8221; in which &#8220;[p]articular urgency was given to freeing a captive identified as detainee, Khalid Rashid al-Marri,&#8221; to which an analyst noted, &#8220;Due to the specific request for assistance to be rendered to detainee, he is possibly a high-level operative or has connections with some of the more influential members of Al-Qaida.&#8221;</p>
<p>Beyond this outlandish-sounding claim, there were only more general suspicions &#8212; that his credibility was low, that he was &#8220;believed to have been deceptive during interrogations,&#8221; and that he had a &#8220;changing cover story.&#8221; He was assessed as being &#8220;of medium intelligence value,&#8221; and although no specific threat level was included, I imagine that he was assessed as &#8220;a medium risk.&#8221; It was noted that he was assessed as &#8220;a member of Al-Qaida and/or its global terrorist network,&#8221; and that &#8220;his knowledge of weapons and commitment to jihad in Afghanistan as well as intentions of jihad in Chechnya make it imperative [he] be retained in the custody of the US Government or Kingdom of Saudi Arabia Government,&#8221; which &#8220;will allow for further exploitation of his past affiliation with various terrorist groups and prevent him from engaging in further terrorist activity.&#8221;</p>
<p>As a result, Brig. Gen. Hood recommended that he be &#8220;transferred for continued detention to his country of origin (Kingdom of Saudi Arabia) if a satisfactory agreement can be reached that allows access to detainee and/or access to exploited intelligence,&#8221; adding, &#8220;If a satisfactory agreement cannot be reached for his continued detention in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, he should be retained under DoD control,&#8221; and it evidently took a while for a &#8220;satisfactory agreement &#8221; to be reached, as he was not released for another 20 months, when he was repatriated to be put through the Saudi government&#8217;s rehabilitation program.</p>
<p><strong>Sultan Al Anazi (ISN 507, Saudi Arabia) Released December 2006</strong></p>
<p>In Chapter 4 of <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/the-guantanamo-files/"><em>The Guantánamo Files</em></a>, I explained how Sultan al-Anazi, who was 27 years old at the time of his capture, <a href="http://projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/507-sultan-sari-sayel-al-anazi" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/507-sultan-sari-sayel-al-anazi?referer=');">said in Guantánamo</a> that he traveled to Pakistan before 9/11 to study with Jamaat al-Tablighi, the vast and apolitical missionary organization that, nevertheless, was regarded in Guantánamo as a front for terrorism, and then went to Jalalabad on a specific mission. After the collapse of the Taliban, he said that &#8220;Afghanis would look for Arabs to hold as hostages or kill so they could take our money and possessions,&#8221; and described how he fled with the other Jamaat al-Tablighi members to a village near Tora Bora, where they waited for an opportunity to escape that never came. &#8220;When I was in the village,&#8221; he said, &#8220;it was bombed by the United States and I decided to give up because I didn&#8217;t want to die. Many people were killed as a result of the bombing of the village and I didn&#8217;t want to be next. The people from Jamaat al-Tablighi that I fled with were killed by the air raids and I was injured.&#8221;</p>
<p>In the documents released by WikiLeaks in April 2011, the file relating to al-Anazi was a &#8220;Recommendation for Continued Detention Under DoD Control (CD),&#8221; <a href="http://wikileaks.org/gitmo/prisoner/507.html" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/wikileaks.org/gitmo/prisoner/507.html?referer=');">dated June 15, 2006</a>, in which he was identified as Sultan Sari Sayel al-Ja&#8217;afari al-Anzi, born in July 1976, and it was noted that he was &#8220;in good health.&#8221;</p>
<p>In telling his story, the Joint Task Force noted that, in 1998, he began working as a personal driver for schoolteachers, and, in mid-2001, &#8220;decided to travel to Pakistan on vacation,&#8221; choosing Pakistan &#8220;because he had already traveled to Egypt, Syria and Lebanon.&#8221; Later in the year (on an unspecified date), he flew to Karachi, where he met a man at a mosque, Abu Islam, a member of Jamaat al-Tablighi, who convinced him to travel with him to Kandahar.</p>
<p>In contrast to al-Anazi&#8217;s claim that he was a missionary, the Task Force picked up on one interrogation in which he allegedly stated that his &#8220;intent was to receive training in Afghanistan,&#8221; and claimed that, in Kandahar, he and Abu Islam &#8220;stayed in a guesthouse owned by an Arab,&#8221; but al-Anazi &#8220;was unable to attend a training camp,&#8221; because &#8220;they were all closed&#8221; &#8212; indicating that he arrived in Afghanistan after the 9/11 attacks.</p>
<p>Al-Anazi said he then met a friend, Abu Yahya, from Saudi Arabia, who invited him to stay at his house in Jalalabad. After two months at Yahya&#8217;s home, he said that, on or about November 17, 2001, he, Abu Yahya and five other Arabs &#8220;went to the Abu Zubayr (variant: Zubair) Center in the Tora Bora region to hide,&#8221; where he &#8220;worked as a cook&#8221; for &#8220;approximately one month,&#8221; and then left for Pakistan with a group of other men. One major problem with this particular scenario was that the Abu Zubayr guesthouse (aka Hajji Habash) was actually in Kandahar, many hundreds of miles from Tora Bora.</p>
<p>According to the Task Force, the &#8220;Senior Al-Qaida commander&#8221; in Tora Bora was Ibn al-Sheikh al-Libi (aka Ibn al-Shaykh al-Libi), the former emir of an independent training camp, Khaldan, and one of the most notorious of all the CIA&#8217;s &#8220;ghost prisoners,&#8221; as he was sent to Egypt to be tortured, where he came up with the false claim (used to <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2010/03/22/seven-years-of-war-in-iraq-still-based-on-cheneys-torture-and-lies/">justify the invasion of Iraq</a>) that Al-Qaida operatives had been meeting with Saddam Hussein to discuss obtaining chemical and biological weapons, and, after being <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2009/06/18/world-exclusive-new-revelations-about-the-torture-of-ibn-al-shaykh-al-libi/">sent around a number of secret prisons</a>, was returned to Libya, where <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2009/05/10/ibn-al-shaykh-al-libi-has-died-in-a-libyan-prison/">he died, in deeply suspicious circumstances, in May 2009</a>. The Taliban had closed al-Libi&#8217;s camp in 2000, when he refused to allow it to be taken over by Osama bin Laden, so it is unlikely that al-Libi, if he was indeed commanding forces in Tora Bora, could adequately be described as a &#8220;Senior Al-Qaida commander.&#8221; However, while this story needs to be explored in further detail, what is clear from al-Anazi&#8217;s file is that it contains the first statement in the Detainee Assessment Briefs that I&#8217;ve so far come across that was attributed to al-Libi, who apparently &#8220;reported that an air strike hit the first group as they were led out of Tora Bora but only those capable of walking accompanied him.&#8221;</p>
<p>Afghan forces then took al-Anazi, &#8220;along with other wounded individuals, to a Jalalabad hospital.&#8221; He was then transferred to what was described as &#8220;the Ministry of Security prison in Kabul&#8221; (perhaps Pol-i-Charki), and was transferred to US custody on January 21, 2002, and taken to Bagram. He was sent to Guantánamo on June 12, 2002, on the spurious basis that it was to &#8220;provide information on the following: Recruitment for terrorist organizations or the Taliban.&#8221;</p>
<p>In assessing his story, the Task Force noted that he was &#8220;assessed to be an Islamic extremist affiliated with Jamaat [al-] Tablighi (JT) and a probable Al-Qaida member,&#8221; which only really reveals the extent to which Jamaat al-Tabighi was unjustly regarded as a front for terrorism. Facts, however, were elusive or non-existent, leading the authorities to note that he &#8220;probably received training at Al- Farouq and then stayed in a series of caves in Tora Bora with a possible Saudi Al-Qaida cell operative,&#8221; and that he was &#8220;probably part of a group of fighters sent out of Tora Bora by Al-Qaida commander Ibn al-Sheikh al-Libi.&#8221;</p>
<p>That reference to &#8220;a possible Saudi Al-Qaida cell operative&#8221; involved a slightly desperate attempt to tie him to a man named Abu Zubayr al-Rimi, who he was apparently with in Tora Bora &#8220;during the entire month of Ramadan 2001.&#8221; The authorities noted that this was the alias of Sultan Jubran Sultan al-Qahtani (killed on September 23, 2003), who was &#8220;on Saudi Arabia&#8217;s 19 most wanted list from early May 2003 as well as an FBI Be On the Lookout (BOLO) Alert.&#8221; An analyst, clutching at straws, noted that, if this was &#8220;the same al-Rimi,&#8221; then al-Anazi &#8220;may have heard al-Rimi speak about future operations,&#8221; or he &#8220;possibly ha[d] knowledge of associates of al-Rimi, like Abu Bakr al-Azdi, who is in Saudi custody.&#8221;</p>
<p>More realistically, it is, of course, very possible that al-Anazi came up with a cover story that disguised both his intention to participate in jihad, and his arrival in Afghanistan in time to attend Al-Farouq, as the Task Force repeatedly insisted, and it may be, as also noted, that his story was very similar to that of two other prisoners, Abdullah T. al-Anzy (ISN 514, released September 2007, and also identified as Abdullah al-Anazi) and Ranam Abdul Rahman Ghanim al-Harbi (ISN 516, released July 2007, and also identified as Ghanim al-Harbi), who &#8220;reported that they spent the entire month of Ramadan at Tora Bora, departed Tora Bora on or about 17 December 2001, and were wounded during an air strike,&#8221; and who were also &#8220;treated at a Jalalabad hospital after being wounded,&#8221; and &#8220;transferred to the Ministry of Security prison in Kabul and then to the custody of US forces on 21 January 2002 at Bagram.&#8221;</p>
<p>However, there was nothing in his file to indicate that he was anything other than an insignificant foot soldier, and this appeared to have been recognized by the Task Force, which assessed him as being &#8220;of low intelligence value,&#8221; and of posing &#8221;a medium risk, as he may pose a threat to the US, its interests and allies.&#8221; It was also noted that he was assessed as &#8220;a high threat from a detention perspective,&#8221; because his &#8220;overall behaviour ha[d] been non-compliant and hostile to the guard force and staff,&#8221; but as his behaviour included &#8220;exposing himself to guards,&#8221; it is, perhaps, worth considering that he had unaddressed mental health issues.</p>
<p>The most important assessments came from the Saudi intelligence service, and al-Anazi&#8217;s fellow prisoners throughout the &#8220;War on Terror&#8221; prison network. Significantly, it was noted that, &#8220;After the 2002 Saudi delegation visit, detainee was identified by the Saudi Ministry of Interior&#8217;s General Directorate of Investigations (Mabahith) as one of the 77 Saudi nationals of low intelligence and law enforcement value to the US Government but of whom [sic] the Saudi Government would attempt to prosecute if transferred to its custody from US control.&#8221;</p>
<p>On the US end, it was also noted that &#8220;[m]ultiple Al-Qaida operatives and leaders in US custody were not able to identify the detainee,&#8221; to which an analyst added, &#8220;This gives some validity to detainee&#8217;s timeline &#8212; that he was not in Afghanistan for very long and/or did not participate within significant Al-Qaida circles of influence.&#8221; As a result, although it was recommended that he be retained in DoD control on October 1, 2004, and Rear Adm. Harry Harris recommended him for continued dentition, it was also noted that, &#8220;If a satisfactory agreement can be reached that ensures continued detention and allows access to detainee and/or to exploited intelligence, detainee can be Transferred Out of DoD Control (TRO)&#8221; &#8212; and this happened just six months later, when he was repatriated to be put through the Saudi government&#8217;s rehabilitation program.</p>
<p><strong>Abdul Rahman Khowlan (ISN 513, Saudi Arabia) Released December 2006</strong></p>
<p>In Chapter 4 of <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/the-guantanamo-files/"><em>The Guantánamo Files</em></a>, I explained how Abdul Rahman Khowlan, who was 29 years old at the time of his capture, denied allegations that he received military training at the Al-Farouq training camp and was captured in Tora Bora. <a href="http://projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/513-abdul-rahman-mohammed-hussein-khowlan" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/513-abdul-rahman-mohammed-hussein-khowlan?referer=');">He said</a> that he was captured in Jalalabad, and told what appeared to be a particularly fantastical story &#8212; that he went to Afghanistan to &#8220;retrieve the clothing of the Prophet Mohammed from a shrine in Kandahar with financial backing from a prominent Saudi businessman,&#8221; a mission which, if successful, would have made him &#8220;more popular than Michael Jackson,&#8221; in his own words.</p>
<p>In the documents released by WikiLeaks in April 2011, the file relating to Khowlan was a &#8220;Recommendation for Continued Detention Under DoD Control (CD),&#8221; <a href="http://wikileaks.org/gitmo/prisoner/513.html" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/wikileaks.org/gitmo/prisoner/513.html?referer=');">dated March 31, 2006</a>, in which he was also identified as Abd al-Rahman Muhammad Husayn al-Khawlan, born in 1974, and it was noted that he was &#8220;in good health,&#8221; although he had &#8220;chronic eczema,&#8221; was &#8220;a former hunger striker,&#8221; had &#8220;a history of chronic right shoulder pain,&#8221; and &#8220;had a left anterior cruciate ligament tear in August 2005.&#8221;</p>
<p>In telling his story, the Joint Task Force noted that the story he told, as recounted above, of being &#8220;an artefact thief in search of the clothing of the Prophet Mohammed&#8221; only came about as an abrupt change in his story, after he had already admitted &#8220;several key associations&#8221; as part of &#8220;his claimed motive and purpose [of] traveling to Afghanistan [for] jihadist training to fulfil a religious obligation.&#8221;</p>
<p>In this version of events, he &#8220;dropped out of high school in 1990 and worked part-time at a family convenience store until 2001,&#8221; when he went to Afghanistan. How that came about was complicated. He apparently &#8220;decided he wanted to get married, but felt his excessive weight would pose a problem.&#8221; On a visit to Jeddah, with his older brother, he &#8220;saw a poster declaring a fatwa supporting training for jihad as a religious duty,&#8221; and then met a man named Abu Muith, &#8220;who sold dates near his brother&#8217;s house,&#8221; and who, in summer 2001, had a conversation with him &#8220;regarding his desire to marry, his weight concern, and the fatwa supporting jihadist training.&#8221; Abu Muath recommended that he visit Afghanistan &#8220;for two months of training to fulfill the religious obligation,&#8221; noting that &#8220;[t]he physical training regimen would also afford him an opportunity to lose weight.&#8221;</p>
<p>Abu Muath then bought his plane ticket and provided him with some spending money (3,000 Saudi riyals, or approximately $800), and set off for Karachi in July 2001. On arrival, he liaised with Abu Muath, and, after a week in a guesthouse, flew to Quetta with an unidentified man who had bought tickets for them. They were then met by a man named Muhammad Rahim (aka Rakhim Khan) and taken to a guesthouse, &#8220;where they stayed for less than a week,&#8221; and he &#8220;and five others then traveled to an unknown location near the Afghanistan/Pakistan border,&#8221; and &#8220;drove motorcycles over the border,&#8221; before taking a bus to the Al-Ansar guesthouse in Kandahar, where he stayed for up to two weeks &#8220;waiting for enough recruits to gather before being taken to Al-Farouq.&#8221; It was also noted that, at this time, Osama Bin Laden &#8220;visited the guesthouse and encouraged the trainees to continue the jihad.&#8221; He also apparently said he &#8220;shook UBL&#8217;s hand during this visit.&#8221;</p>
<p>He then &#8220;traveled to Al-Farouq with approximately fourteen other individuals,&#8221; where he stayed for approximately a month and a half, until, two days after the 9/11 attacks, bin Laden reportedly &#8220;came to the camp and gave a speech to the trainees.&#8221; Two days later, he &#8220;and approximately forty-nine others were ordered to leave the camp,&#8221; and traveled to Kabul, and then Jalalabad, where they &#8220;stayed in the Nejma Al-Jihad Guesthouse (variant: Najim Al-Jihad),&#8221; and, after approximately two weeks, went to a crop field or forest at the foot of the Tora Bora mountains, where they stayed for three weeks.</p>
<p>During Ramadan (presumably in late November 2001), he and others apparently &#8220;traveled to the top of the Tora Bora Mountains,&#8221; where &#8220;they were subjected to constant attack from coalition air strikes.&#8221; The leaders then &#8220;told the group that they could have the passports back and leave Afghanistan when the bombing ended,&#8221; and Khowlan said he left in a large group, &#8220;traveled back down the mountain and surrendered to unidentified Afghanis&#8221; on December 10, 2001. He was then transferred to a Northern Alliance prison in Kabul for a month, and was &#8220;initially screened&#8221; by US forces on January 28, 2002.&#8221;</p>
<p>He was sent to Guantánamo on May 5, 2002, to &#8220;provide information on the following: UBL [Osama bin Laden] visits to Al-Farouq and Al-Ansar Guesthouse, Al-Farouq and Al-Ansar Guesthouse, Al-Qaida/Taliban recruiter and travel facilitator Abu Muath [and] Abu Mahajin (Star the Jihad) Guesthouse in Jalalabad.&#8221;</p>
<p>In assessing his story, much was made of his relationship with Hani Hanjour, the pilot of the hijacked plane that hit the Pentagon on September 11, 2001. They had apparently been friends since they were teenagers, and Khowlan apparently &#8220;stated in a letter to his interrogator on 2 May 2005, that he had &#8216;a very strong relationship with the beloved brother and dear friend Hani Hanjour al-Tawirqi who used the name Arwa. He was the pilot of the plane that headed to the Pentagon and he was a skilled pilot.&#8217;&#8221;</p>
<p>Despite this, Khowlan&#8217;s relationship predated Hanjour&#8217;s drastic radicalization, and I find other claims improbable &#8212; primarily, the claim that &#8220;he knew about the mission to which had been assigned Hanjour [sic] prior to 11 September 2001,&#8221; which I&#8217;m 100 percent certain is completely untrue, as the 9/11 attacks depended for their success on as few people as possible knowing about them. I&#8217;m also suspicious of claims that he knew three other 9/11 hijackers, and I also found other inferences suspicious, such as the following passage, for example:</p>
<blockquote><p>When asked whether he knew senior Al-Qaida operative Abu Faraj al-Libi [ISN 10017, still held], detainee responded, &#8220;Who did not know him?&#8221; The interrogator noted that this was stated with a tone that indicated, &#8220;of course he knew al-Libi;&#8221; however, despite attempts, detainee did not explicitly state a relationship.</p></blockquote>
<p>A good reason for that would be that Khowlan did not know Abu Faraj al-Libi at all, and that this and other allegations were only extracted from him because of his relationship with Hanjour, and the presumption that he was therefore significant, even though there appears to be no reason for coming to that conclusion about an overweight young Saudi foot soldier in the Afghan jihad.</p>
<p>The Task Force concluded that he was &#8220;of medium intelligence value,&#8221; acknowledging that his connection with Hani Hanjour &#8220;appears to be that of a longtime friend rather than a co-conspirator in the 11 September 2001 attacks,&#8221; and that no reporting indicated that he &#8220;served in a leadership or operational planning capacity.&#8221; It was also noted that he posed &#8220;a medium risk, as he may pose a threat to the US, its interests and allies,&#8221; because he was &#8220;assessed to be a member of Al-Qaida.&#8221; He was also &#8220;assessed as a high threat from a detention perspective,&#8221; whose &#8220;overall behaviour ha[d] been non-compliant and hostile to the guard force and staff.&#8221; As a result, Rear Adm. Harry Harris, updating a recommendation that he be retained in DoD control (dated July 25, 2005), recommended him for continued detention, although he was released nine months later, to be put through the Saudi government&#8217;s rehabilitation program.</p>
<p><strong>Yakub Abahanov (ISN 526, Kazakhstan) Released December 2006</strong></p>
<p>In Chapter 10 of <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/the-guantanamo-files/"><em>The Guantánamo Files</em></a>, I explained how Abahanov was one of three Kazakhs from the same village, who were captured in Kabul in December 2001. <a href="http://projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/526-yakub-abahanov" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/526-yakub-abahanov?referer=');">According to the US authorities</a>, he was an assistant cook at a Taliban camp from August to October 2001, and this was apparently confirmed by one of the Kazakhs seized with him, 18-year old Abdulrahim Kerimbakiev (ISN 521, who was not released until November 2008), who &#8220;was a cook for the [Taliban] back-up forces.&#8221;</p>
<p>Abahanov did not take part in his tribunal or review board, but Kerimbakiev did, and he explained that he traveled to Afghanistan in 2000 with ten family members, including his grandmother, his mother and his sisters and brothers, and also Abahanov. He denied allegations that he worked as a cook for the Taliban, saying that he lived a simple life in a house in Kabul, where he spent most of his time growing vegetables. This was difficult for his tribunal to accept, and prompted one of its members to say, &#8220;We&#8217;re trying to understand why you&#8217;re here. The United States wouldn&#8217;t detain someone for more than two years for simply growing vegetables. Can you help us understand?&#8221; Although it was quite possible to be imprisoned for growing vegetables, it was at this point that Kerimbakiev explained that Abahanov had been a cook for the Taliban.</p>
<p>In the documents released by WikiLeaks in April 2011, the file relating to Abahanov was an &#8220;Update Recommendation [for] Transfer to the Control of Another Country for Continued Detention (TRCD),&#8221; <a href="http://wikileaks.org/gitmo/prisoner/526.html" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/wikileaks.org/gitmo/prisoner/526.html?referer=');">dated January 7, 2005</a>, in which it was noted that he was born in 1977, and was listed by medical officials at the detention clinic as being in &#8220;good health,&#8221; although the psychiatric staff were &#8220;still treating him for psychosis and his prognosis [was] &#8216;fair&#8217; with continued treatment.&#8221; It was also noted that he &#8220;often complain[ed] of chest pains,&#8221; which, he claimed, were &#8220;caused by his medication,&#8221; although he had been &#8220;evaluated for his chest pains and no special care ha[d] been directed.&#8221;</p>
<p>In telling his story, the Joint Task Force noted that he served in the Kazakh Army from 1995 to 1997, when he was discharged, and then returned home, where &#8220;he farmed and tended the neighbourhood sheep until 2000.&#8221; In August 2000, two Tajiks, Abdullah and Farhat, apparently recruited him &#8220;to travel to Afghanistan to study the Koran and truly learn Islam,&#8221; telling him that the Taliban leader, Mullah Omar, &#8220;would provide a better life.&#8221;</p>
<p>On April 9, 2001, with Abdullah and Farhat, Abahanov, his sister and her children, and his great-grandmother flew to Karachi, and then took a train to Islamabad, and a bus to Kandahar. Abahanov apparently &#8220;had $10,000 in US currency from the sale of his home and personal savings,&#8221; although that seems unlikely. After a complicated story, which involved them all staying in a guesthouse for a month, while he regularly attended a mosque, he said he &#8220;began to run short on money and told Farhat and Abdullah he could no longer afford the hotel room,&#8221; and they suggested they should all go to Kabul &#8220;because the government (Taliban) would be able to house them and give [him] a job.&#8221; In Kabul, they reportedly &#8220;were provided a home,&#8221; but he &#8220;remained unemployed, studying the Koran full time and attending a mosque.&#8221; After a few months, Abdullah and Farhat left, and in August or September 2001, Abahanov said, he &#8220;began working as a cook in a restaurant that was somehow affiliated with the Taliban.&#8221;</p>
<p>In rather blunter terms, cutting through the largely unconvincing twists and turns of his story, the Task Force stated that he &#8220;worked as a cook for the Taliban,&#8221; and that &#8220;[a] provincial Taliban commander named Saif Rahman gave the house to [him],&#8221; and he lived there &#8220;with his mother, sister and two nephews.&#8221; He also apparently said that he attended a Taliban training camp, and also &#8220;admitted to fighting as a member of the Taliban in a mixed Uzbek/Afghan unit under the command of Gul Rahman,&#8221; although it is uncertain whether, as a cook, he would in fact have been made to fight.</p>
<p>What does seem certain is that, &#8220;[a]fter the US bombing began in Kabul, he had enough money to send his family back to Semeya,&#8221; although he was &#8220;unaware if they made it back.&#8221; and that, as he and his fellow countrymen stated, he was seized at the house in Kabul by Commander Zalmai Topan of the Northern Alliance, who &#8220;arrested him during Ramadan 2001 (17 November &#8211; 16 December 2001),&#8221; and held him in a jail in Kabul before handing him and his companions over to the US military, who held him at Bagram and Kandahar.</p>
<p>He was sent to Guantánamo on June 19, 2002, on the spurious basis that it was to &#8220;provide information on the following: General information on hostilities in Kandahar and Kabul obtained during his stay in those cities, Routes of ingress/egress for jihadists from Kazakhstan to Afghanistan, Jihadist recruitment practices within Kazakhstan [and] Islamic extremist recruiters in Kazakhstan.&#8221;</p>
<p>In assessing his story, beyond those aspects mentioned above, it was also noted that he was &#8220;assessed as &#8220;a member of the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU) and affiliated with the Al-Qaida global terrorist network,&#8221; and Farhat was identified as Furkat Yusupov, a recruiter and a member of the IMU, who was arrested in Uzbekistan in March 2004, apparently in possession of ten home-made bombs, and sentenced to 18 years in prison. However, Abahanov himself was clearly insignificant. It was noted that he &#8220;advised he was unaware of the September 11 attacks on the United States until he was questioned about them in Kandahar,&#8221; and &#8220;was saddened to hear so many innocent people were killed and the perpetrators were not true Muslims,&#8221; and &#8220;expressed an interest in cooperating with the United States in any manner he could.&#8221;</p>
<p>In conclusion, he was assessed as being &#8220;of low intelligence value,&#8221; and of posing &#8220;a medium risk, as he may possibly pose a threat to the US, its interests and allies,&#8221; providing an example of how over-classification was built into the risk assessments. It was also noted that his &#8220;overall behaviour ha[d] been passive-aggressive and his conduct at times [was] non-compliant,&#8221; but Brig. Gen. Hood recommended him for transfer to continued detention in Kazakhstan, although he was not released for nearly two years.</p>
<p>On his return, with Ilkham Batayev (ISN 84, see <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/09/19/the-complete-guantanamo-files-wikileaks-and-the-prisoners-released-in-2006-part-one-of-ten/">Part One</a> of this series) and Abdullah Magrupov, all three men &#8220;were met by relatives who took them home, Foreign Ministry spokesman Ilyas Omarov said,&#8221; as reported by the <a href="http://www.sptimes.ru/index.php?action_id=2&amp;story_id=19889" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.sptimes.ru/index.php?action_id=2_amp_story_id=19889&amp;referer=');"><em>St. Petersburg Times</em></a>. Omarov &#8220;said the three would not face investigation and charges &#8216;because their release means that they had been cleared of all suspicions of having terror links,&#8217;&#8221; which rather undermines the accumulation of colorful claims against them in Guantánamo.</p>
<p><strong>Abdullah Magrupov (ISN 528, Kazakhstan) Released December 2006</strong></p>
<p><a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/abdullahmagrupov.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-14460" title="Abdullah Magrupov, in a photocopied photo from 2005 included in the classified US military documents (the Detainee Assessment Briefs) released by WikiLeaks in April 2011." src="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/abdullahmagrupov.jpg" alt="" width="177" height="198" /></a>In Chapter 10 of <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/the-guantanamo-files/"><em>The Guantánamo Files</em></a>, I explained how Magrupov, who was 18 years old at the time of his capture, was one of three Kazakhs from the same village, who were were captured in Kabul in December 2001 &#8212; Yakub Abahanov (ISN 526, see above), and Abdulrahim Kerimbakiev (ISN 521, released in November 2008). According to the US authorities, he was held because, although there was no evidence that he had done anything, he was captured in a Taliban house with two individuals who &#8220;worked as cooks for the Taliban.&#8221; In his tribunal, <a href="http://projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/528-abdullah-tohtasinovich-magrupov" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/528-abdullah-tohtasinovich-magrupov?referer=');">he explained</a> that he had only been at the house for five days, after studying at a madrassa in Karachi, when he and the others were captured by a Northern Alliance commander, who held them in &#8220;some kind of huge container&#8221; and &#8220;a place like a barn,&#8221; before transferring them to US custody.</p>
<p>In the documents released by WikiLeaks in April 2011, the file relating to Magrupov was an &#8220;Update Recommendation [for] Transfer to the Control of Another Country for Continued Detention (TRCD),&#8221; <a href="http://wikileaks.org/gitmo/prisoner/528.html" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/wikileaks.org/gitmo/prisoner/528.html?referer=');">dated June 17, 2005</a>, in which he was identified as Abdullah Makrubov and Shukrat Tokhtasunovich Arupov, born in May 1983, and it was noted that he was &#8220;in good health.&#8221;</p>
<p>In telling his story, the Task Force noted that, after leaving school, he &#8220;worked as a farmer in an orchard,&#8221; and then, in August 2001, traveled to Pakistan, where he attended madrassas in Islamabad, Karachi and Lahore for several months. With Yakub Abahanov and Abahanov&#8217;s two brothers, he then traveled to Kabul &#8220;to visit a state that practiced Islamic law.&#8221; However, within a week of their arrival, he said, the US bombing of Kabul began, and &#8220;[s]everal unidentified people came to the house and offered to help them.&#8221; Magrupov said that they &#8220;packed all of their belongings into a truck and fled,&#8221; but that he and his friends &#8220;were taken in a separate vehicle&#8221; to &#8220;an unknown location and kept in a basement for approximately 10 days.&#8221;</p>
<p>He added that, on December 10, 2001, &#8220;Afghan Military Forces commander Tufal [assessed to be Commander Zalmai Topan] &#8220;captured them in Kabul&#8221; and took  them &#8220;to a container with 2 other Arabs (one of them named Abdullah),&#8221; where they were held for eight days until Tufal [Topan] turned them over to US forces on 2 February 2002.&#8221; He was sent to Guantánamo on June 19, 2002, on the spurious basis that it was to &#8220;provide information on the following: Recruitment practices in Semey, Kazakhstan, Madrassas he visited in Islamabad, Karachi and Lahore, Pakistan [and] Traveling companions (current detainees at JTF GTMO).&#8221;</p>
<p>In assessing Magrupov&#8217;s story, which was very different from the one told by Abahanov, the Task Force noted that he was &#8220;assessed to be a member of the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU),&#8221; even though he had just turned 18 when he arrived in Afghanistan, and claimed that Commander Topan had captured the three Kazakhs &#8220;and five other suspected Al-Qaida members,&#8221; the inference being that they had been seized together, although this does not appear to have been the case. The other five were a Saudi, a Kuwaiti, and three Pakistanis. According to the Task Force, the Saudi was a 28-year old named Mohammad Abdullah, who &#8220;offered his captors USD $1,000,000 for his freedom and transport to Pakistan,&#8221; and told them &#8220;he could arrange for the money [to be sent] via a contact in Riyadh,&#8221; the Kuwaiti was a 27-year old named Abdullah Ali Abu-Salem, and the three Pakistanis were Patshah Douai Khan, a 30 year old, Mohammad Anwar and Israr al-Haq. To the best of my knowledge, only the last two ended up in Guantánamo &#8212; Mohammed Anwar (ISN 524) was <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/08/02/wikileaks-and-the-guantanamo-prisoners-released-from-2002-to-2004-part-six-of-ten/">released in September 2004</a>, and Israr al-Haq (ISN 515, also identified as Israr Ul-Haq) was <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/08/02/wikileaks-and-the-guantanamo-prisoners-released-from-2002-to-2004-part-six-of-ten/">released in March 2004</a>.</p>
<p>It was also claimed, as it had not been in Abahanov&#8217;s file, that the three Kazakhs were &#8220;part of an Islamic Jihadist Group terrorist cell originating from Kazakhstan,&#8221; and that &#8220;when the group split, one half stayed in Kazakhstan to continue their terrorist activities,&#8221; while &#8220;the other half&#8221; &#8212; allegedly Magrupov and his companions &#8212; &#8220;traveled to Afghanistan, joined the IMU and trained to be terrorists.&#8221; It is not known whether there was any truth to this claim or, indeed, whether there was any truth to a claim that Abahanov had stated that Magrupov was the nephew of Furkat Yusupov, a member of the IMU who reportedly recruited the three Kazakhs, and who was arrested in Uzbekistan in March 2004, apparently in possession of ten home-made bombs, and sentenced to 18 years in prison.</p>
<p>In conclusion, the Task Force assessed Magrupov as being &#8220;of medium intelligence value,&#8221; and of posing &#8220;a medium risk, as he may pose a threat to the US, its interests and allies.&#8221; It was also noted that his &#8220;overall behaviour pattern ha[d] been compliant and non-hostile in nature,&#8221; and that he had &#8220;a relatively low amount of reports with the majority being leading prayer or physical training and martial arts.&#8221; As a result, Maj. Gen. Hood, updating a recommendation that he be transferred to another country for continued detention (dated August 9, 2003), recommended him &#8212; again &#8212; for transfer to continued detention in another country, noting that he was &#8220;assessed as a member of the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU), which is associated to [sic] Al-Qaida Associated Movements (AQAM),&#8221; although he was not released for another 18 months.</p>
<p>On his return, with Ilkham Batayev (ISN 84, see <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/09/19/the-complete-guantanamo-files-wikileaks-and-the-prisoners-released-in-2006-part-one-of-ten/">Part One</a> of this series) and Yakub Abahanov, all three men &#8220;were met by relatives who took them home, Foreign Ministry spokesman Ilyas Omarov said,&#8221; as reported by the <a href="http://www.sptimes.ru/index.php?action_id=2&amp;story_id=19889" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.sptimes.ru/index.php?action_id=2_amp_story_id=19889&amp;referer=');"><em>St. Petersburg Times</em></a>. Omarov &#8220;said the three would not face investigation and charges &#8216;because their release means that they had been cleared of all suspicions of having terror links.&#8217;&#8221; which rather undermines the accumulation of colorful claims against them in Guantánamo.</p>
<p><strong>Abdul Majid Muhammed (ISN 555, Iran) Released October 2006</strong></p>
<p>In Chapter 10 of <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/the-guantanamo-files/"><em>The Guantánamo Files</em></a>, I explained how Abdul Majid Mohammed, a poor Iranian well-digger, who was 22 years old at the time of his capture, occasionally dealt in opium and hashish, and <a href="http://projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/555-abdul-majid-muhammed" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/555-abdul-majid-muhammed?referer=');">said in Guantánamo</a> that he went to Afghanistan in December 2001 to make money out of drugs and to bribe the military so that he would not be punished for desertion. He denied an allegation that he served as a watchman for the Taliban, explaining that the Taliban had been known to kill Iranians, and that he was particularly at risk because he was a Catholic, and said that he was captured by Northern Alliance soldiers, who thought he was an Arab and handed him over to the Americans.</p>
<p>In the documents released by WikiLeaks in April 2011, the file relating to Muhammed was an &#8220;Update Recommendation [for] Release or Transfer to the Control of Another Country (TR),&#8221; <a href="http://wikileaks.org/gitmo/prisoner/555.html" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/wikileaks.org/gitmo/prisoner/555.html?referer=');">dated June 3, 2005</a>, in which it was noted that he was born in 1979, and had been &#8220;diagnosed with severe Anti-social Personality Disorder,&#8221; for which the &#8220;long-term prognosis [was] poor with expected continued frequent use of psychiatric services for poor impulse control and maladaptive behavior pattern.&#8221;</p>
<p>In telling his story, the Joint Task Force assessed him as &#8220;not being affiliated with Al-Qaida or the Taliban,&#8221; because he &#8220;was involved in the sale and trafficking of drugs.&#8221; It was noted that, in 1997, he worked as a clerk at a florist&#8217;s that was &#8220;a cover for illegal drug sales of opium, hashish, and heroin,&#8221; and that, from 1998 to 2000, he &#8220;delivered opium and hashish for Aiduk Khan, a major Iranian drug trafficker.&#8221; He explained that he &#8220;owed Aiduk Khan a large debt,&#8221; and that, as collateral, Khan &#8220;held [his] two younger brothers,&#8221; and &#8220;stated he would kill them if [he] did not repay the debt within one year.&#8221; In order to repay the debt, he &#8220;traveled to Afghanistan in early February 2002 looking for construction work as part of the rebuilding effort after the war,&#8221; after paying $2,000 for a travel letter &#8220;issued by the Islamic Party of Afghanistan office&#8221; in Iran.</p>
<p>After noting that he &#8220;received no [military] training&#8221; in Afghanistan, the Task Force explained that he &#8220;spent three days traveling to Kabul, AF, looking for work,&#8221; but that, on the third day, &#8220;he stopped to wash his clothes at a river in the vicinity of Ghazni,&#8221; when &#8220;an Afghan soldier approached [him] and accused him of being an Al-Qaida member.&#8221; On capture, he had &#8220;11,000 Iranian Rials, 300,000 Afghanis and a notebook,&#8221; but he &#8220;possessed no other items and was not carrying a weapon.&#8221; Afghan forces turned him over to US forces on February 18, 2002, and he was then held in the US prison at Kandahar airport.</p>
<p>He was sent to Guantánamo on May 2, 2002, on the spurious basis that it was to &#8220;provide information on the following: Drug trade operations across the Afghan-Iranian border, The organisation and operation of a large heroin/hashish production ring operating across the Afghan-Iranian border, The transportation of poppy and hashish from Afghanistan to Iran [and] Drug production facilities run by Aiduk Khan&#8221; &#8212; all of which serves only to emphasize how everyone who ended up in US custody in Afghanistan was sent to Guantánamo, and how, if there were no allegations of militancy or terrorism-related activities, then any other excuse would do.</p>
<p>In assessing his story, the Task Force noted that he &#8220;claimed to have no knowledge of Taliban and Al-Qaida activities,&#8221; and that he &#8220;claimed he did not know why US forces were in Afghanistan,&#8221; and &#8220;had no interest in fighting and only wanted to find work.&#8221; It was also noted that he &#8220;denied knowledge of extremist groups in Iran and stated that because Iran is mostly Shi&#8217;ite, Iran would not tolerate any Al-Qaida in the country because Al-Qaida is predominantly Sunni.&#8221;</p>
<p>Even so, it was noted that, although he had been &#8220;cooperative,&#8221; his &#8220;veracity [was] questionable.&#8221; It was noted that he had &#8220;changed his story on at least three separate debriefings,&#8221; stating, on one occasion, that he &#8220;lied about selling drugs and he really deserted the Iranian army&#8221; (as noted above), and, on another occasion, claiming &#8220;he was trained as a SCUBA diver, paratrooper, in mountain climbing techniques, and was a member of the Revolutionary Guards Marines.&#8221;</p>
<p>Ignored in all this were Muhammed&#8217;s obvious mental health issues, which provided a perfect explanation for why anything he said might have been unreliable. As was noted elsewhere in the file, in a specific analysis of &#8220;Detainee&#8217;s Conduct&#8221;: his &#8220;behaviour is extremely maladaptive. [He] had several self-harm incidents and often exhibits extreme emotion. He threatened to harm himself on several occasions as an attempt to gain attention.&#8221;</p>
<p>In conclusion, the Task Force assessed him as being &#8220;of low intelligence value,&#8221; and of posing &#8220;a low risk, as he is unlikely to pose a treat to the US, its interests and allies,&#8221; and Brig. Gen. Hood, updating a recommendation to release him or to transfer him (dated September 27, 2002), recommended again that he be released or transferred. Even so, it took another 16 months for him to be freed, and that was four years and two months after he was first recommended for release.</p>
<p><strong>Ehsanullah Peerzai (ISN 562, Afghanistan) Released August 2006</strong></p>
<p>In Chapter 10 of <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/the-guantanamo-files/"><em>The Guantánamo Files</em></a>, I explained how Ehsanullah Peerzai, who was 24 years old and had been imprisoned in Iran for smuggling hashish, was accused of carrying lists of Taliban members and radio codes, when he was captured by US forces in Helmand province in February 2002. A clerk for the new government, <a href="http://projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/562-qari-hasan-ulla-peerzai" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/562-qari-hasan-ulla-peerzai?referer=');">he said</a> that he was betrayed by two members of the Taliban in his home district, and his four and a half year imprisonment seemed to be based on the US authorities&#8217; claim that he was &#8220;extremely evasive and use[d] multiple resistance techniques,&#8221; and their suspicion that he was recruited by Iranian intelligence to work in Afghanistan as a spy.</p>
<p>In the documents released by WikiLeaks in April 2011, the file relating to Peerzai was an &#8220;Update Recommendation [for] Transfer to the Control of Another Country for Continued Detention (TRCD),&#8221; <a href="http://wikileaks.org/gitmo/prisoner/562.html" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/wikileaks.org/gitmo/prisoner/562.html?referer=');">dated January 7, 2005</a>, in which he was identified as Qari Hasan Ulla Peerzai, born in 1977, and it was also noted that medical officials at the detention clinic listed him as being &#8220;in good health,&#8221; although psychiatry staff &#8220;diagnosed him for Dissociative Disorder,&#8221; and, &#8220;since he refuse[d] treatment, his prognosis and condition [we]re both poor.&#8221;</p>
<p>In telling his story, the Joint Task Force admitted up front that he had been seized by mistake, noting that &#8220;[n]o capture data ha[d] been found&#8221; in his case, and that it appeared that &#8220;the initial reason for capturing [him] was due to suspicions by US Forces in Afghanistan [that he] was a trained Iranian agent&#8221; (as noted above), although, based on the information he had provided, it was assessed that he was &#8220;not a trained intelligence agent and ha[d] no discernible associations with terrorists or terrorist support.&#8221; It was also confirmed that he &#8220;had a low rank and position within the post-Taliban government,&#8221; and &#8220;never held a position of leadership within the Taliban.&#8221;</p>
<p>From Helmand province, Peerzai, who had three brothers and four sisters, and was married, but had no children, &#8220;fled to Iran for safety during the chaos in Afghanistan after the Soviet occupation came to an end, and, from the age of 14, &#8220;began trafficking hashish,&#8221; and also &#8220;became a user of opportunity using &#8216;whatever he could get his hands on,&#8217; to include hashish, marijuana, heroin, cigarettes and snuff,&#8221; but he was arrested with four others for trafficking hashish, and given a ten-year sentence. After nine years, In 1999, his sentence was commuted, and he was released.</p>
<p>After returning to Afghanistan with his father, he then spent 18 months doing &#8220;odd jobs such as selling medicine, picking poppies for a month, day labor, and selling, in Quetta, PK, prayer rugs he made in prison.&#8221; He said that he &#8220;wanted a job as a clerk and applied to the Taliban government in Kandahar, AF, but was rejected.&#8221; After the fall of the Taliban, two of his uncles apparently &#8220;helped him to get a clerk position&#8221; with the local post-Taliban government, where his responsibilities &#8220;included typing documents and complaints that came into the district, typing food vouchers for some of the local residents, and resupplying US personnel that were staying in a nearby building.&#8221;</p>
<p>Peerzai was seized on February 24, 2002, and said that, on the day of his capture, &#8220;he was trying to turn in two former Taliban members&#8221; who had been harassing him. As &#8220;he delivered food to the Americans, he attempted to tell them, without an interpreter, about the two men,&#8221; but, &#8220;because of the language barrier, they were unable to determine what [he] wanted.&#8221; However, after he returned to work, the Americans requested that the most senior figure in the area &#8220;come to their location to explain what [he] wanted.&#8221; Afterwards, he &#8220;was summoned back,&#8221; but when he arrived, &#8220;some of the men tackled him and took him into a room.&#8221;</p>
<p>He then spent approximately three months in US custody in Kandahar, and was sent to Guantánamo on June 14, 2002, on the spurious basis that it was to &#8220;provide information on the following: general to specific information concerning prison facilities in or around Zahidon [Zahedan], IR [and] specific information about: Abdul Wahid, commander in Bagram, AF; Mullah Kabir, Mullah Mawd Yaqub, Taliban commander; Mir Gul, brother of Taliban Defense Minister; Haji Abdul Khaliq, brother of Taliban Defense Minister; Haji Baran; and Mullah Khan Mohammed, whom he claims was the Taliban Defense Minister.&#8221;</p>
<p>In assessing his story, although the Task Force effectively conceded that he had been seized by mistake, accepting that no further information had been &#8220;found since his incarceration that would support the supposition [that he was] an intelligence operative,&#8221; and that he did not &#8220;appear to have special skills, education, or the capability to organize, coordinate or participate in acts against the US,&#8221; it was still claimed that, despite having had &#8220;no involvement in hostilities&#8221; and having &#8220;not demonstrated a commitment to jihad or a propensity towards violence,&#8221; he nevertheless &#8220;may be susceptible to recruitment for terrorist organizations or support groups.&#8221;</p>
<p>This, I believe, was unforgivable, given his severe and debilitating mental health problems. It was noted that he &#8220;had a continuing history of psychiatric problems since his arrival at JTF GTMO,&#8221; and the Behavioral Science Consultation Team (BSCT) explained that he was &#8220;being treated for Dissociative Disorder,&#8221; described as &#8220;the failure to integrate one&#8217;s memories, perceptions, identity or consciousness properly,&#8221; whereby he &#8220;cannot distinguish between reality and fantasy.&#8221; The BSCT representatives also noted that his condition &#8220;was probably caused by deep psychological trauma&#8221; and &#8220;appear[ed] to be worsening [as he was] refusing treatment,&#8221; and the Task Force added that, because of his Dissociative Disorder, his &#8220;overall behaviour varie[d] from aggressive to incoherent, from threatening to friendly.&#8221;</p>
<p>In conclusion, the Task Force assessed him as being &#8220;of low intelligence value,&#8221; and of posing &#8220;a medium risk to the US, its interests and allies,&#8221; although it was noted that, &#8220;[d]ue to his psychiatric condition it [wa]s difficult to conduct a risk assessment.&#8221; It was &#8220;also strongly recommended [that he] be transferred to his country of citizenship and committed for further custodial psychiatric care,&#8221; and this was endorsed by Brig. Gen. Hood, although he was not freed for another 19 months, and it is not known whether, on his return, he received the psychiatric care that he so clearly needed.</p>
<p><strong>Mani Al Utaybi (ISN 588, Saudi Arabia) Died in Guantánamo June 2006</strong></p>
<p>As I explained in Chapter 19 of <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/the-guantanamo-files/"><em>The Guantánamo Files</em></a>, Mani al-Utaybi, who was 25 years old at the time of <a href="http://projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/588-mana-shaman-allabardi-al-tabi" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/588-mana-shaman-allabardi-al-tabi?referer=');">his capture in Afghanistan</a> in December 2001, was one of three prisoners who died at Guantánamo on June 9, 2006. having allegedly hanged themselves in a coordinated suicide pact. The other two were <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/09/19/the-complete-guantanamo-files-wikileaks-and-the-prisoners-released-in-2006-part-one-of-ten/">Yasser al-Zahrani</a>, another Saudi (who was just 17 at the time of his capture), and Ali Abdullah Ahmed al-Salami, a Yemeni, and all three were long-term hunger strikers, who had been force-fed on a daily basis for many months before their deaths. As was revealed in weight records released by the Pentagon in 2007, which I analysed for a report in 2009, &#8220;<a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2009/06/10/guantanamos-hidden-history-shocking-statistics-of-starvation/">Guantánamo’s Hidden History: Shocking Statistics of Starvation</a>,&#8221; al-Utaybi only weighed 114 pounds on his arrival at  Guantánamo, but in September and October 2005, as a hunger striker, his weight dropped to just 89 pounds.</p>
<p>The administration’s response to the deaths was extraordinarily callous. Rear Adm. Harry Harris, the commander of Guantánamo, said, “This was not an act of desperation, but an act of asymmetric warfare committed against us,” and Colleen Graffy, the deputy assistant secretary of state for public diplomacy, described the suicides as a “good PR move to draw attention.” Stung by international criticism, the administration rapidly back-tracked, and Cully Stimson, the deputy assistant secretary of defense for detainee affairs, was put forward to say, “I wouldn’t characterize it as a good PR move. What I would say is that we are always concerned when someone takes his own life, because as Americans, we value life, even the lives of violent terrorists who are captured waging war against our country.”</p>
<p>In an attempt to stifle further dissent, and to bolster their view that the three men were hardened terrorists, the Pentagon released details of the allegations against them, which served only to highlight almost everything that was wrong with the system at Guantánamo. In al-Utaybi&#8217;s case, all the Pentagon had to go on was his involvement with Jamaat al-Tablighi, the vast and apolitical worldwide missionary organization, with millions of members worldwide, which, nevertheless, was inappropriately regarded as a front for terrorism by the US authorities, and was duly described by the Pentagon as &#8220;an al-Qaeda 2nd tier recruitment organization&#8221; in a statement following his death.</p>
<p>Heartless to the last, the administration also admitted that he had actually been approved for release &#8212; &#8220;transfer to the custody of another country&#8221; &#8212; in November 2005, although Navy Cmdr. Robert Durand said he &#8220;did not know whether al-Utaybi had been informed about the transfer recommendation before he killed himself.&#8221;</p>
<p>In the documents released by WikiLeaks in April 2011, the file relating to Peerzai was an &#8220;Update Recommendation [for] Transfer to the Control of Another Country for Continued Detention (TRCD),&#8221; <a href="http://wikileaks.org/gitmo/prisoner/588.html" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/wikileaks.org/gitmo/prisoner/588.html?referer=');">dated June 3, 2005</a>, in which he was identified as Mana Shaman Allabardi al-Tabi and Mani Shaman Turki al-Habardi al-Utaybi, born in 1976, and it was noted that he was &#8220;in good health.&#8221;</p>
<p>In telling his story, the Task Force noted that he had served in the Saudi army for three months at the age of 20, and after that &#8220;worked as an office gopher&#8221; for &#8220;an agricultural company selling dates and oranges.&#8221; He also became interested in the work of Jamaat al-Tablighi, and in early 2001 &#8220;attended a three-day bonding session with JT members.&#8221; Afterwards, the organization &#8220;directed and financed [his] travel to a JT missionary school in Qatar,&#8221; where he performed 40 days of missionary work,&#8221; and met a man named Hamid al-Ali, who convinced him to travel to Pakistan with him in September 2001 &#8220;to complete a five-month mission there.&#8221;</p>
<p>On or around September 3, 2001, al-Utaybi flew from Bahrain to the United Arab Emirates, where he met al-Ali, and they flew to Karachi to then took a bus to the Jamaat al-Tablighi center in Lahore. There, he &#8220;was assigned to a preaching group that traveled to various villages in the area,&#8221; and that &#8220;spent the whole month of Ramadan (17 November to 16 December 2001) in Faisalabad.&#8221; They then traveled to Bannu, near the Afghan border, where &#8220;they set up operations at a mosque on the outskirts of the city.&#8221;</p>
<p>At this point his story became complicated, because, in trying to leave Bannu &#8212; for reasons that were not explained, but were, I presume, because he wanted to return home to resume work, and/or because it was getting dangerous for Arabs in Pakistan &#8212; he said that he left the Bannu mosque on 17 January 2002, wearing a burka and in the company of four other individuals fleeing in a car. One of the four was Ibrahim al-Umar (ISN 585, <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/06/09/wikileaks-the-unknown-prisoners-of-guantanamo-part-four-of-five/">released in May 2003</a>, a juvenile &#8212; aged 16 or 17 &#8212; who had been studying at a religious school, and had left after “the school director requested that [he] leave Pakistan for his own safety, and so that the Pakistani authorities would not close the school.” The others were Adel Noori (ISN 584, a Uighur released in Palau in October 2009), <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/08/11/wikileaks-and-the-guantanamo-prisoners-released-from-2002-to-2004-part-seven-of-ten/">Brahim Benchekroun</a> (ISN 587, a Moroccan released in July 2004, but later imprisoned in his home country), and Ahmed Errachidi, (ISN 590, a Moroccan chef who had lived and worked in London for 18 years, and who had no involvement with terrorism whatsoever, who was released in Morocco in March 2007).</p>
<p>As al-Utaybi described it, the Pakistani driver &#8220;failed to yield the right-of-way at a stop light and accidentally struck a woman crossing the street.&#8221; However, to &#8220;avoid confrontation with the authorities, the driver continued without stopping,&#8221; although the car was &#8220;stopped at the next checkpoint,&#8221; where al-Utaybi was arrested with a Yemeni passport containing a photo of someone similar looking to him, having apparently had his own passport stolen from his luggage. Pakistani officials then took the passengers to a Pakistani prison, and, on March 8, 2002, he was transferred to the US authorities in Afghanistan. He was sent to Guantánamo on June 8, 2002, on the spurious basis that it was to &#8220;provide information on the Jama&#8217;at Tabligh [Jamaat al-Tablighi] and its operations in Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and Pakistan.&#8221;</p>
<p>In assessing his story, the Task Force was anxious to establish that he had connections with militants or alleged terrorists, but there was little to go on. It was claimed that he had made &#8220;several inconsistent statements to his debriefers,&#8221; who assessed that he was &#8220;hiding information from the debriefers to avoid supplying them with incriminating evidence about his true purpose for traveling to Pakistan,&#8221; but this was nothing more than supposition. In addition, the Saudi intelligence service did not designate him as a significant detainee, noting only that he had been involved in criminal activities as a teenager, had gone AWOL from the army during military service, and, allegedly, &#8220;met with a number of suspicious individuals&#8221; prior to setting off for Pakistan.</p>
<p>He was assessed as being &#8220;of low intelligence value,&#8221; and of posing &#8220;a medium risk, as he may pose a threat to the US, its interests and allies,&#8221; and it was also assessed that, overall, his behaviour had been &#8220;belligerent, argumentative, harassing, and very aggressive,&#8221; and that he had &#8220;a number of cases where he ha[d] failed to comply with the rules of the cellblock and the guard force,&#8221; and had &#8220;assaulted the guards, incited disturbances, and used sign language to communicate with detainees in other cells.&#8221; As a result, Brig. Gen. Hood, following up on a recommendation that he be released or transferred (dated September 27, 2002), but drawing on information obtained since that assessment (which was not specified, as such), recommended his transfer to continued detention in Saudi Arabia.</p>
<p>It is, of course, a depressing irony that al-Utaybi could have been freed three years and nine months before his death, and could have been freed (with conditions) a year before he died, but it was not to be, and he went to his death without an apology from the government, which had omitted to mention his force-feeding in his Detainee Assessment Brief, and which, as mentioned above, unforgivably slandered him after his death.</p>
<p>Even so, and despite the government&#8217;s official account of the men&#8217;s deaths, the claim that they committed suicide was doubted by their fellow prisoners at the time, and also by other commentators, although it was not until December 2009 and January 2010 that serious doubts were expressed in a concerted and thoroughly researched manner.</p>
<p>In December 2009, the Seton Hall Law School in New Jersey published a 136-page report, “Death in Camp Delta” (<a href="http://law.shu.edu/programscenters/publicintgovserv/policyresearch/upload/gtmo_death_camp_delta.pdf" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/law.shu.edu/programscenters/publicintgovserv/policyresearch/upload/gtmo_death_camp_delta.pdf?referer=');">PDF</a>), which comprehensively undermined the conclusion of the official investigation by the Naval Criminal Investigative Service, and in January 2010, <em>Harper’s Magazine</em> published <a href="http://www.harpers.org/archive/2010/01/hbc-90006368" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.harpers.org/archive/2010/01/hbc-90006368?referer=');">an extraordinary article</a> by law professor Scott Horton (which <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2010/01/18/murders-at-guantanamo-scott-horton-of-harpers-exposes-the-truth-about-the-2006-suicides/">I discussed here</a>), revealing the story of Army Staff Sgt. Joe Hickman, and a number of other soldiers &#8212; the tower guards who “had the responsibility and ability to observe all activity in the camp, [but] were not interviewed” by the NCIS &#8212; who suggested that, earlier in the evening on which the men allegedly committed suicide, they had been taken from the cell block in which they were held to a secret facility outside the main perimeter fence of Guantánamo &#8212; known to the soldiers as “Camp No” &#8212; where they had either been deliberately killed, or had a died as the result of particularly brutal torture sessions. “They didn’t die in their cells,” <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2010/06/11/murders-at-guantanamo-the-cover-up-continues/">Sgt. Hickman explained to me</a> in March 2010.</p>
<p>Despite these claims, the Justice Department shut the door on a proposed inquiry in November 2009, and an attempt by family members (including al-Zahrani’s father) to pursue accountability in the US courts was <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2010/10/03/us-court-denies-justice-to-dead-men-at-guantanamo/">turned down</a> in September 2010, and <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/06/14/relatives-of-disputed-guantanamo-suicides-speak-out-as-families-appeal-in-us-court/">is currently being appealed</a>.</p>
<p><strong>Qari Esmhatulla (ISN 591, Afghanistan) Released October 2006</strong></p>
<p>In a footnote to Chapter 14 of <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/the-guantanamo-files/"><em>The Guantánamo Files</em></a>, I explained how Qari Esmhatulla was the only prisoner captured after &#8220;Operation Anaconda,&#8221; a mission to oust remnants of Al-Qaida from the Shah-i-Kot valley in Paktia province in March 2002, which involved 2,700 US and Afghan troops and was hailed as a major victory by the US, even though there was never any evidence of the bodies of the 500 al-Qaeda soldiers that the US military claimed to have killed.</p>
<p>At the time, I was not sure of his age at the time of his capture, and cannot be certain even now, but in my article, &#8220;<a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/06/11/wikileaks-and-the-22-children-of-guantanamo/">WikiLeaks and the 22 Children of Guantánamo</a>,&#8221; I explained how he was possibly a juvenile, as he was born in 1984, and seized on March 10, 2002 (when he was 17, or possibly 18). If under 18, he &#8212; like the other juveniles at Guantánamo &#8212; should have been rehabilitated rather than punished, according to America’s obligations under the <a href="http://www2.ohchr.org/english/law/crc-conflict.htm" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www2.ohchr.org/english/law/crc-conflict.htm?referer=');">Optional Protocol to the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child on the involvement of children in armed conflict</a>, which the US <a href="http://treaties.un.org/Pages/ViewDetails.aspx?src=TREATY&amp;mtdsg_no=IV-11-b&amp;chapter=4&amp;lang=en" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/treaties.un.org/Pages/ViewDetails.aspx?src=TREATY_amp_mtdsg_no=IV-11-b_amp_chapter=4_amp_lang=en&amp;referer=');">ratified on December 23, 2002</a>. However, only three juveniles were ever treated differently from the adult prisoners (as described in “<a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/08/26/wikileaks-and-the-guantanamo-prisoners-released-from-2002-to-2004-part-ten-of-ten/">WikiLeaks and the Guantánamo Prisoners Released from 2002 to 2004 (Part Ten of Ten)</a>”).</p>
<p>In Guantánamo, <a href="http://projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/591-qari-esmhatulla" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/591-qari-esmhatulla?referer=');">he told a story</a> in which he claimed to have been set up by Afghan soldiers while returning from a shrine. He stated that he “admitted the things that were not true only to make them stop beating me,” and added, “I heard my captors talk about receiving a bounty from American forces for people they captured. They placed a grenade near me so they could have an explanation for arresting me.”</p>
<p>In the documents released by WikiLeaks in April 2011, the file relating to Esmhatulla was a &#8220;Recommendation [for] Transfer to the Control of Another Country for Continued Detention (TRCD),&#8221; <a href="http://wikileaks.org/gitmo/prisoner/591.html" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/wikileaks.org/gitmo/prisoner/591.html?referer=');">dated November 19, 2004</a>, in which he was also identified as Hesmatullah, and it was confirmed that he was born in 1984. It was also noted that he was &#8220;in good health,&#8221; although, as with many of the prisoners, he had latent TB, although he &#8220;completed treatment with INH in March 2004.&#8221;</p>
<p>In telling his story, the Joint Task Force noted that he was born in a refugee camp in Miram Shah, Pakistan, and that, when his family returned to Afghanistan, he stayed on to finish his schooling, returning to his family in Gardez sometime in 2000. In February 2002, he attended the funeral of a Taliban member (reportedly a friend of his), where &#8220;two Taliban recruiters approached [him] and convinced him to join the jihad against the Northern Alliance and US forces,&#8221; and told him to go to Shah-i-Kot &#8220;and to wait for further instructions.&#8221; He said that he traveled to the town of Zormat, near the valley, and met a Taliban commander named Ali Ghul, who directed him to a madrassa in the town, which, in one interrogation, Esmhatulla apparently described as &#8220;a mustering point for Taliban and Al-Qaida forces preparing to return to the front.&#8221;</p>
<p>After staying a night at the madrassa, he set off towards Shah-i-Kot, but, &#8220;[a]fter several days of traveling, sleeping in abandoned houses and cars, encountering several corpses, and being hit by mortar shrapnel in the head,&#8221; he decided to return to his village, but was captured on the way. He was sent to Guantánamo on June 10, 2002, on the spurious basis that it was to &#8220;provide information on the movement of supplies and weapons from Gardez to the area of Tamir.&#8221;</p>
<p>In assessing his story, the Task Force repeated the claim by the capturing forces that he &#8220;was captured with two grenades and a hand-held radio,&#8221; and noted that he agreed &#8220;to join the jihad against the Northern Alliance and US forces,&#8221; and that he reportedly &#8220;consider[ed] himself a member of the Taliban,&#8221; and &#8220;admit[ted] to wanting to martyr himself.&#8221;</p>
<p>Despite this, no information was provided to justify regarding him as anything more than a lowly Afghan recruit, who almost certainly never raised arms against anyone, and an example of the lengths the US authorities went to in an attempt to portray him as more significant that he was can be found in a passage dealing with a fatwa that was &#8220;signed by 113 Afghan Mullahs,&#8221; and was &#8220;found in poster format in a mosque in the town of Zormat in April of 2002.&#8221; An analyst suggested that this was &#8220;possibly a place detainee entered during his travels through Zormat,&#8221; which was a rather desperate claim, and the Task Force proceeded to explain how the poster &#8220;explained the Afghan public how the war against terrorism started; that the authors blame the president of the US for not resolving the Osama Bin Laden (UBL) issue peacefully; that the Taliban government conveyed to the US that they asked UBL to leave the country on his own, but this proposal was not acceptable to the US; and despite all efforts to the contrary by the Taliban government, the US attacked the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan,the only pure Islamic system in the world.&#8221; Apart from the final sentence, this was a pretty accurate summary of what actually happened, but what made it relevant to Qari Esmhatulla&#8217;s case was an analyst&#8217;s note that, because he had been given the title &#8220;Qari&#8221; (bestowed on those who memorize the Quran), it had been assessed that he may have had &#8220;knowledge of who issued this edict,&#8221; which is a ridiculous claim.</p>
<p>Another ludicrous claim, but one which was specifically noted, was a mention of the fact that, on October 19, 2003, he &#8220;commented to the guard force that he [wa]s a Taliban commander of 150 men earning $2,000 a month and he was on leave during his time of capture,&#8221; which ought to have been obviously a lie, as it was inconceivable that a 17-year old would have been commanding 150 men.</p>
<p>Despite these feeble attempts to incriminate him in any kind of significant anti-coalition activities, even though he was nothing more than a wandering youth picked up randomly, the Task Force conceded that he was &#8220;of low intelligence value,&#8221; but also claimed that he posed &#8220;a medium risk, as he may pose a threat to the US, its interests and allies,&#8221; which, yet again, demonstrated how over-classification was built into the assessment system. It was also noted that his behaviour ha[d] been passively aggressive,&#8221; and he had &#8220;repeatedly harassed the guards and failed to comply with the rules of the cellblock,&#8221; but in the end Brig. Gen. Hood recommended him for transfer to continued detention in Afghanistan, even though he was not released for another 23 months.</p>
<p><strong>Also see <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/09/19/the-complete-guantanamo-files-wikileaks-and-the-prisoners-released-in-2006-part-one-of-ten/">Part One</a>, <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/09/25/the-complete-guantanamo-files-wikileaks-and-the-prisoners-released-in-2006-part-two-of-ten/">Part Two</a>, <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/09/27/the-complete-guantanamo-files-wikileaks-and-the-prisoners-released-in-2006-part-three-of-ten/">Part Three</a>, <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/10/03/the-complete-guantanamo-files-wikileaks-and-the-prisoners-released-in-2006-part-four-of-ten/">Part Four</a>, <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/10/06/the-complete-guantanamo-files-wikileaks-and-the-prisoners-released-in-2006-part-five-of-ten/">Part Five</a>, <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/10/10/the-complete-guantanamo-files-wikileaks-and-the-prisoners-released-in-2006-part-six-of-ten/">Part Six</a>, <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/10/20/the-complete-guantanamo-files-wikileaks-and-the-prisoners-released-in-2006-part-eight-of-ten/">Part Eight</a>, <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/10/25/the-complete-guantanamo-files-wikileaks-and-the-prisoners-released-in-2006-part-nine-of-ten/">Part Nine</a> and <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/10/31/the-complete-guantanamo-files-wikileaks-and-the-prisoners-released-in-2006-part-ten-of-ten/">Part Ten</a> of this series.</strong></p>
<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Guantanamo-Files-Stories-Detainees-Americas/dp/0745326641" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.amazon.com/Guantanamo-Files-Stories-Detainees-Americas/dp/0745326641?referer=');"><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-3000" title="The Guantanamo Files" src="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/bookcover6200.jpg" alt="" width="126" height="179" /></a>Andy Worthington is the author of <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/the-guantanamo-files/" target="_self"><em>The Guantánamo Files: The Stories of the 774 Detainees in America&#8217;s Illegal Prison</em></a> (published by Pluto Press, distributed by Macmillan in the US, and available from Amazon &#8212; click on the following for the <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Guantanamo-Files-Stories-Detainees-Americas/dp/0745326641" target="_self" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.amazon.com/Guantanamo-Files-Stories-Detainees-Americas/dp/0745326641?referer=');">US</a> and the <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/Guantanamo-Files-Stories-Detainees-Americas/dp/0745326641" target="_self" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.amazon.co.uk/Guantanamo-Files-Stories-Detainees-Americas/dp/0745326641?referer=');">UK</a>) and of two other books: <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/stonehenge-celebration-subversion/" target="_self"><em>Stonehenge: Celebration and Subversion</em></a> and <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/battle-of-the-beanfield/" target="_self"><em>The Battle of the Beanfield</em></a>. To receive new articles in your inbox, please subscribe to my <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/feed/" target="_self">RSS feed</a> (and I can also be found on <a href="http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=738143803" target="_self" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=738143803&amp;referer=');">Facebook</a>, <a href="http://twitter.com/GuantanamoAndy" target="_self" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/twitter.com/GuantanamoAndy?referer=');">Twitter</a>, <a href="http://digg.com/aworthington" target="_self" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/digg.com/aworthington?referer=');">Digg</a> and <a href="http://www.youtube.com/user/AndyWorthington1?feature=mhum" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.youtube.com/user/AndyWorthington1?feature=mhum&amp;referer=');"> YouTube</a>). Also see my <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/06/01/guantanamo-the-definitive-prisoner-list-updated-for-2011-with-new-information-and-photos-from-wikileaks/" target="_self">definitive Guantánamo prisoner list</a>, updated in June 2011, &#8220;<a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/category/2002-2011-the-complete-guantanamo-files-new/">The Complete Guantánamo Files</a>,&#8221; a 70-part, million-word series drawing on files released by WikiLeaks in April 2011, and details about the documentary film, “<a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/outside-the-law-stories-from-guantanamo/" target="_self">Outside the Law: Stories from Guantánamo</a>” (co-directed by Polly Nash and Andy Worthington, and available on DVD <a href="http://www.spectacle.co.uk/catalogue_production.php?id=538" target="_self" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.spectacle.co.uk/catalogue_production.php?id=538&amp;referer=');">here</a> &#8212; or <a href="http://www.freewebstore.org/WorldCantWait/Andy_Worthingtons_Outside_the_Law__Stories_from_Guantanamo/p237374_3033886.aspx" target="_self" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.freewebstore.org/WorldCantWait/Andy_Worthingtons_Outside_the_Law_Stories_from_Guantanamo/p237374_3033886.aspx?referer=');">here</a> for the US). Also see my <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/guantanamo-habeas-results-the-definitive-list/" target="_self">definitive Guantánamo habeas list</a> and <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/category/a-chronological-list-of-guantanamo-articles/" target="_self">the chronological list of all my articles</a>, and, if you appreciate my work, feel free to <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/09/05/quarterly-fundraiser-help-me-raise-2500-for-my-work-on-guantanamo-and-torture/" target="_self">make a donation</a>.</p>
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		<title>WikiLeaks and the Guantánamo Prisoners Released from 2002 to 2004 (Part Ten of Ten)</title>
		<link>http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/08/26/wikileaks-and-the-guantanamo-prisoners-released-from-2002-to-2004-part-ten-of-ten/</link>
		<comments>http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/08/26/wikileaks-and-the-guantanamo-prisoners-released-from-2002-to-2004-part-ten-of-ten/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 26 Aug 2011 22:00:19 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Andy Worthington</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[2002-2011: THE COMPLETE GUANTANAMO FILES (*NEW*)]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Afghans in Guantanamo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[American torture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Children in Guantanamo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Extraordinary rendition and secret prisons]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Guantanamo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Jordanians in Guantanamo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pakistanis in Guantanamo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[WikiLeaks]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[WikiLeaks and the Guantanamo Prisoners Released from 2002 to 2004]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Yemenis in Guantanamo]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Please support my work! Freelance investigative journalist Andy Worthington continues his 70-part, million-word series telling, for the first time, the stories of 776 of the 779 prisoners held at Guantánamo since the prison opened on January 11, 2002. Adding information released by WikiLeaks in April 2011 to the existing documentation about the prisoners, much of which was [...]]]></description>
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<p><strong><em>Freelance investigative journalist Andy Worthington continues his 70-part, million-word series telling, for the first time, the stories of 776 of the 779 prisoners held at Guantánamo since the prison opened on January 11, 2002. Adding <a href="http://wikileaks.org/gitmo/" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/wikileaks.org/gitmo/?referer=');">information released by WikiLeaks</a> in April 2011 to the existing documentation about the prisoners, much of which was already covered in Andy&#8217;s book <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/the-guantanamo-files/">The Guantánamo Files</a> and in the archive of articles on <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/">his website</a>, the project will be completed in time for the 10th anniversary of the prison&#8217;s opening on January 11, 2012.</em></strong></p>
<p><em><strong>This is Part 15 of the 70-part series.</strong></em></p>
<p>In late April, <a href="http://wikileaks.org/gitmo/" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/wikileaks.org/gitmo/?referer=');">WikiLeaks released</a> its latest treasure trove of classified US documents, a set of 765 Detainee Assessment Briefs (DABs) from the US prison at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba. Compiled between 2002 and January 2009 by the Joint Task Force that has primary responsibility for the detention and interrogation of the prisoners, these detailed military assessments therefore provided new information relating to the majority of the 779 prisoners held in the prison at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba throughout its long and inglorious history, including, for the first time, information about <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/category/wikileaks-the-unknown-prisoners-of-guantanamo/">84 of the first 201 prisoners released</a>, which had never been made available before.</p>
<p>Superficially, the Detainee Assessment Briefs appear to contain allegations against numerous prisoners which purport to prove how dangerous they are or were, but in reality the majority of these statements were made by the prisoners&#8217; fellow prisoners, in Kandahar or Bagram in Afghanistan prior to their arrival at Guantánamo, in Guantánamo itself, or <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2010/06/15/un-secret-detention-report-part-one-the-cias-high-value-detainee-program-and-secret-prisons/">in the CIA&#8217;s secret prisons</a>, and in all three environments, torture and abuse were rife.</p>
<p>I ran through some of the dubious witnesses responsible for so many of the claims against the prisoners in the introduction to <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/06/27/wikileaks-and-the-guantanamo-prisoners-released-from-2002-to-2004-part-one-of-ten/">Part One of this new series</a>, and, while this is of enormous importance in the cases of many of the men still held (and also in the cases of some of those released), it is not particularly relevant to the overwhelmingly insignificant prisoners released between 2002 and September 2004, whose detention was so pointless that the authorities didn&#8217;t even bother trying to build cases against them through the testimony of their fellow prisoners.<span id="more-13783"></span></p>
<p>As a result, the stories of these prisoners are particularly important in demonstrating how many innocent men or insignificant foot soldiers for the Taliban, engaged in combat with the Northern Alliance before the 9/11 attacks, and unconnected with international terrorism, were held at Guantánamo (and specifically how this latter category included many unwilling Afghan recruits).</p>
<p>What is also worth bearing in mind (and which is not spelled out in these documents) is that many prisoners were pointlessly rounded up because the Bush administration ordered the military not to screen the prisoners on capture, leading to a dragnet of &#8220;Mickey Mouse&#8221; prisoners, as was <a href="http://www.latimes.com/la-na-gitmo22dec22,0,2294365.story" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.latimes.com/la-na-gitmo22dec22_0_2294365.story?referer=');">noted by Maj. Gen, Michael Dunlavey</a>, a commander of the prison in 2002, and also <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2009/05/27/guantanamo-and-the-many-failures-of-us-politicians/">offered substantial bounty payments</a> for al-Qaeda and Taliban suspects to the US military&#8217;s Afghan and Pakistani allies.</p>
<p>In a five-part series, &#8220;<a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/category/wikileaks-the-unknown-prisoners-of-guantanamo/">WikiLeaks and the Unknown Prisoners of Guantánamo</a>,&#8221; I began analyzing, transcribing and condensing the stories revealed in the documents released by WikiLeaks, looking at 84 stories of prisoners released between 2002 and September 2004 that had never been told before. The work of extracting information from the files and presenting it in edited form, with commentary based on my extensive research and experience, is a project that will take up the rest of the year. The next step is this ten-part series revisiting the stories of the 114 other prisoners released between 2002 and September 2004. That was the point at which the Combatant Status Review Tribunals (CSRTs) began, a military review process that, in turn, led to the first official release of documents relating to the prisoners in 2006, providing the material that I analysed and transcribed for my book <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Guantanamo-Files-Stories-Detainees-Americas/dp/0745326641" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.amazon.com/Guantanamo-Files-Stories-Detainees-Americas/dp/0745326641?referer=');"><em>The Guantánamo Files</em></a>.</p>
<p>While this ten-part project is underway, I also propose to begin examining closely the files relating to the 171 prisoners still held, supplementing the series of articles that I produced last fall, entitled, &#8220;<a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/category/a-list-of-the-remaining-guantanamo-prisoners-new/">Who Are the Remaining Prisoners in Guantánamo?</a>&#8221; This is important not just because the remaining prisoners have largely been abandoned by the mainstream media, even though <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2010/06/11/does-obama-really-know-or-care-about-who-is-at-guantanamo/">89 of the 171 have been cleared for release</a>, and only 36 were recommended for trials by President Obama&#8217;s interagency Guantánamo Review Task Force, but also because, in the US, attorneys for the prisoners have <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/06/17/wikileaks-and-the-lawyers-justice-department-finally-allows-attorneys-to-see-leaked-guantanamo-files-but-not-to-download-save-or-print-them/">only just won the right to look at the files</a> (and not to download, save or print them), and the media in general is unwilling to subject them to much scrutiny because of how they became public in the first place.</p>
<p>So with thanks to WikiLeaks &#8212; and <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/04/12/on-the-torture-of-bradley-manning-obama-ignores-criticism-by-un-rapporteur-and-300-legal-experts/">whoever</a> leaked these documents &#8212; the final part of my ten-part analysis of the 114 prisoners released between 2002 and September 2004 (in addition to the 84 stories covered in my previous series) is below. When lies and distortions are covered up on this scale, and an experimental prison built on torture and abuse remains open, even under a Democratic President who promised to close it, everyone who believes in justice should publicize what has been revealed, and, if you agree, I hope that you will share this information widely. Also see <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/06/27/wikileaks-and-the-guantanamo-prisoners-released-from-2002-to-2004-part-one-of-ten/">Part One</a>, <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/07/06/wikileaks-and-the-guantanamo-prisoners-released-from-2002-to-2004-part-two-of-ten/">Part Two</a>, <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/07/13/wikileaks-and-the-guantanamo-prisoners-released-from-2002-to-2004-part-three-of-ten/">Part Three</a>, <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/07/18/wikileaks-and-the-guantanamo-prisoners-released-from-2002-to-2004-part-four-of-ten/">Part Four</a>, <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/07/25/wikileaks-and-the-guantanamo-prisoners-released-from-2002-to-2004-part-five-of-ten/">Part Five</a>,  <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/08/02/wikileaks-and-the-guantanamo-prisoners-released-from-2002-to-2004-part-six-of-ten/">Part Six</a>, <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/08/11/wikileaks-and-the-guantanamo-prisoners-released-from-2002-to-2004-part-seven-of-ten/" target="_self">Part Seven</a>, <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/08/15/wikileaks-and-the-guantanamo-prisoners-released-from-2002-to-2004-part-eight-of-ten/" target="_self">Part Eight</a> and <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/08/19/wikileaks-and-the-guantanamo-prisoners-released-from-2002-to-2004-part-nine-of-ten/" target="_self">Part Nine</a> of this series. Coming up next will be analyses of the prisoners released as a result of the Combatant Status Review Tribunals in 2004-05.</p>
<h3>WikiLeaks and the Guantánamo Prisoners Released from 2002 to 2004 (Part Ten of Ten)</h3>
<p><strong>Peta Muhammed (ISN 908, Afghanistan) Released March 2004</strong></p>
<p>In Chapter 17 of <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/the-guantanamo-files/"><em>The Guantánamo Files</em></a>, I told the story of a group of 30 prisoners rounded up after a raid by US Special Forces, in December 2002, on a compound in Musawal village, near Zormat, in Paktia province in Afghanistan, which was owned by a warlord called Samoud Khan. Eight of the 30 were subsequently transferred to Guantánamo, even though they appeared to have had nothing to do with the supposed anti-coalition activities of their boss, and were (according to testimony recorded at Guantánamo) treated brutally in a US base in Gardez and at Bagram, where they were abused until they admitted attacking US forces. Only four of these stories were available at the time I wrote <em>The Guantánamo Files</em>, but they were deeply shocking, as they revealed that, of the four, two (Asadullah Rahman and Naqibullah, see below) were only 13 or 14 years ofd when they were seized.</p>
<p>Mentioned briefly in my articles, &#8220;<a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/the-guantanamo-files-website-extras-12-the-last-of-the-afghans-part-two/">The Guantánamo Files: Website Extras (12) – The Last of the Afghans (Part Two)</a>&#8221; and &#8221; <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2008/11/22/the-pentagon-cant-count-22-juveniles-held-at-guantanamo/">The Pentagon Can’t Count: 22 Juveniles Held at Guantánamo</a>,&#8221; Peta Muhammed, also seized in the raid, was also possibly a juvenile (defined as those under 18 at the time their alleged crimes took place), as he was born in 1985, according to the prisoner list released by the Pentagon in May 2006 (<a href="http://www.defense.gov/news/May2006/d20060515%20List.pdf" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.defense.gov/news/May2006/d20060515_20List.pdf?referer=');">PDF</a>), which included, where available, the dates and places of birth of the prisoners.</p>
<p>However, in Muhammed&#8217;s Detainee Assessment Brief, <a href="http://wikileaks.org/gitmo/prisoner/908.html" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/wikileaks.org/gitmo/prisoner/908.html?referer=');">dated August 23, 2003</a>, which was a &#8220;Transfer Recommendation,&#8221; his date of birth was recorded as 1984, which, if correct, would mean that he was almost certainly 18 at the time of his capture.</p>
<p>Elsewhere, the file confirmed that he was essentially insignificant, and had not raised arms against US forces. It was noted that he &#8220;stated that he worked as a cook&#8221; for Samoud Khan (erroneously described as &#8220;a known Taliban supporter&#8221;), &#8220;who had recruited him to do menial work around his compound.&#8221; He also &#8220;stated that while working around the compound he heard the Americans were coming but he believed they were not coming to attack but to form an alliance.&#8221; He &#8220;did note that several key figures fled the compound but he denie[d] being told to stay behind and fight the Americans.&#8221;</p>
<p>He explained that he and &#8220;about a half dozen others stayed behind and when the Americans came they rounded everyone up and loaded them [onto] trucks and took them to prison.&#8221; A &#8220;Field note&#8221; added that &#8220;[o]ther detainees arrested in this same raid advised that they were ordered to &#8216;fight&#8217; the Americans while the leaders fled the compound however no firefight occurred.&#8221;</p>
<p>It was also noted that he was sent to Guantánamo &#8220;around 5 August 2002&#8243; (that should be 2003) &#8220;because of his knowledge of Samoud Khan&#8217;s compound,&#8221; which was only partly true, because, as I explained in my article, &#8220;<a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/05/01/how-to-read-wikileaks-guantanamo-files/">How to Read WikiLeaks’ Guantánamo Files</a>&#8221; (originally published on <a href="http://www.wikileaks.org/gitmo/" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.wikileaks.org/gitmo/?referer=');">WikiLeaks’ website</a> when the Guantánamo files were first published, as part of my work liaising between WikiLeaks and its media partners):</p>
<blockquote><p>[T]he “Reasons for Transfer” included in the documents, which have been repeatedly cited by media outlets as an explanation of why the prisoners were transferred to Guantánamo, are, in fact, lies that were grafted onto the prisoners’ files after their arrival at Guantánamo. This is because, contrary to the impression given in the files, no significant screening process took place before the prisoners’ transfer. As a senior interrogator who worked in Afghanistan explained in <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Interrogators-Inside-Secret-Against-Qaeda/dp/0316871125" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.amazon.com/Interrogators-Inside-Secret-Against-Qaeda/dp/0316871125?referer=');">a book that he wrote about his experiences</a>, every prisoner who ended up in US custody had to be sent to Guantánamo, even though the majority were not even seized by US forces, but were seized by their Afghan and Pakistani allies at a time when <a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2009/05/27/guantanamo-and-the-many-failures-of-us-politicians/">substantial bounty payments</a> for “al-Qaeda and Taliban suspects” were widespread.</p></blockquote>
<p>In its assessment, the Joint Task Force stated that, “Based on current information, detainee [908] is assessed as being neither affiliated with Al-Qaida nor a Taliban leader. Moreover … the detainee has no further intelligence value to the United States and will not be seen for further intelligence purposes. [He] has not expressed thoughts of violence nor made threats toward the US or its allies during interrogations or in the course of his detention, though he has not been completely forthcoming concerning his association with individuals affiliated with the Taliban. Based on all the above, detainee poses a low threat to the US or its interests.” As a result, Maj. Gen. Geoffrey Miller, the commander of Guantánamo at the time, recommended that he be “considered for release or transfer to the control of another government for continued detention.”</p>
<p>Muhammed himself added that he &#8220;wishe[d] to return to Afghanistan and would like to work for Americans there.&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Abdul Samad (ISN 911, Afghanistan) Released September 2004</strong></p>
<p>Another of the eight prisoners seized in December 2002 during a raid by US Special Forces on a compound in Afghanistan that was owned by a warlord called Samoud Khan, Abdul Samad was probably a juvenile at the time of his capture. As I noted in &#8220;<a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/the-guantanamo-files-website-extras-12-the-last-of-the-afghans-part-two/">The Guantánamo Files: Website Extras (12) – The Last of the Afghans (Part Two)</a>,&#8221; the Pentagon recorded his date of birth as 1982, but when representatives of the International Committee of the Red Cross met Guantánamo’s commander, Maj. Gen. Geoffrey Miller, on October 9, 2003 (<a href="http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/nation/documents/GitmoMemo10-09-03.pdf" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/nation/documents/GitmoMemo10-09-03.pdf?referer=');">PDF</a>), they noted that he was actually born in 1987.</p>
<p>In his Detainee Assessment Brief, <a href="http://wikileaks.org/gitmo/prisoner/911.html" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/wikileaks.org/gitmo/prisoner/911.html?referer=');">dated August 23, 2003</a>, which was also a &#8220;Transfer Recommendation,&#8221; his date of birth was recorded as 1986, meaning that he was just 15 or 16 years old when he was seized. In an account that was largely similar to that of Peta Muhammed, it was noted that he was hired by Samoud Khan to work in his compound near Gardez (which was described as &#8220;Takar compound&#8221;), &#8220;doing menial laborer jobs including security.&#8221; He also &#8220;stated that as he worked in the compound, people started talking about the Americans and that they were coming to the compound,&#8221; but &#8220;he did not fear the Americans and did not believe they were going to attack the compound.&#8221; Like Peta Muhammed, he stated that &#8220;several people fled the compound, fearing being arrested,&#8221; adding that, &#8220;When the Americans arrived, they took all the guns and arrested [him] with about six others.&#8221; Crucially, he added, &#8220;there was no shooting by either side.&#8221; He also noted that &#8220;he had only been at the compound for about 25 days before being arrested.&#8221;</p>
<p>He was sent to Guantánamo on February 6, 2003, on the spurious basis that it was &#8220;because of his knowledge of personality information on Samoud Khan, personalities associated with Samoud Khan, and the Partak and Shirwakala compounds and their activities.&#8221;</p>
<p>In its assessment, the Joint Task Force stated that, “Based on current information, detainee [911] is assessed as being neither affiliated with Al-Qaida nor a Taliban leader. Moreover … the detainee is of no intelligence value to the United States. Based on the above, detainee poses a low threat to the US, its interests and its allies.” As a result, Maj. Gen. Miller recommended that he be “considered for release or transfer to the control of another government for continued detention.”</p>
<p><strong>Asadullah Rahman (ISN 912, Afghanistan) Released January 2004</strong></p>
<p><a href="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/asadullahrahman2.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-13784" title="Asadullah Rahman, photographed in February 2004, after his release from Guantanamo (Photo: Sonia Verma/San Francisco Chronicle)." src="http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/asadullahrahman2.jpg" alt="" width="262" height="203" /></a>One of three wel
