7.1.16
Yesterday, the Pentagon announced that it had released two Yemeni prisoners from Guantánamo to new homes in Ghana. These releases are the first since November, when five Yemenis were given new homes in the United Arab Emirates, releases that followed the release of Shaker Aamer, the last British resident in the prison, and the Mauritanian Ahmed Ould Abdel Aziz, at the end of October. With these releases, 105 men remain at the prison — including 46 also approved for release, ten facing (or having faced) trials, and 43 others awaiting reviews promised five years ago but not yet delivered. Three others had their ongoing imprisonment approved by the review boards, and another three are awaiting the results of theirs.
The release of these two Yemenis is progress, of course, and, as we heard last month, another 15 releases are expected in the near future. With the 14th anniversary of the opening of Guantánamo taking place on Monday, this is a good time for President Obama to be making sure that men are being freed, to maintain the focus on his intention to close Guantánamo before he leaves office, and to neutralize the sting of critics pointing out that, on January 22, it will be seven years since he promised to close Guantánamo within a year.
The two Yemenis released — who were both born in Saudi Arabia, but to Yemeni parents — are men I identified in June 2012 in a major article about the failures to release prisoners approved for release, entitled, “Guantánamo Scandal: The 40 Prisoners Still Held But Cleared for Release At Least Five Years Ago.” The five years in the title, of course, is now eight and half years, and both of these men were first approved for release long before President Bush left office. They were then approved for release again under President Obama, following the deliberations of the high-level, inter-agency Guantánamo Review Task Force that Obama established shortly after taking office in January 2009.
156 men were approved for release by the task force, but 30 of these men, all Yemenis, were assigned to category called “conditional detention,” invented by the task force, which stipulated that their release was dependent on some perceived improvement in the security situation in Yemen. However, as the entire US establishment is unwilling to repatriate any Yemenis, their release, like their remaining compatriots approved for release without a “conditional detention” tag, has instead become dependent on third countries being found that are prepared to take them in, and that can meet the US’s security concerns. Of the 30, the first was one of the five men released in the UAE in November, and the two men released in Ghana are the second and third of the 30.
The first of the two men released in Ghana is Mahmoud Bin Atef (ISN 202), born in 1979, who was actually approved for release over ten years ago, as I explained in my June 2012 article:
In the classified US military files relating to the Guantánamo prisoners, which were released by WikiLeaks in April 2011, bin Atef’s file was a “Recommendation for Continued Detention Under DoD Control (CD),” dated December 28, 2007, which repeated a similar recommendation issued on December 16, 2006. However, he was approved for transfer/release after Administrative Review Board Round One, which was held at Guantanamo in 2005 (see PDF).
The discrepancy, as is typical at Guantánamo, came about because of the existence of multiple review processes and the complete absence of any competent oversight. Similar discrepancies can be found in many other cases between the military reviews (the Combatant Status Review Tribunals and the Administrative Review Boards) and the files released by WikiLeaks (the Detainee Assessment Briefs), and it is also worth noting that eleven men approved for release by reviews then had their habeas corpus petitions successfully challenged in court by the Justice Department — again, without anyone providing competent oversight.
The second man freed in Ghana, Khalid al-Dhuby (ISN 506), born in 1981, was approved for release nine years ago, on Christmas Day 2006. In my June 2012 article, I wrote:
In the classified US military files relating to the Guantánamo prisoners, which were released by WikiLeaks in April 2011, al-Dhuby’s file was a “Recommendation for Transfer Out of DoD Control (TRO),” dated December 25, 2006. A transfer recommendation was also made after his Administrative Review Board Round Three, on May 22, 2007 (PDF, p. 195).
I can’t really explain sufficiently how disgraceful I find it that men approved for release years before President Obama took office were held until the eve of the 14th anniversary of the opening of Guantánamo, but that is part of the disgusting reality of Guantánamo, and the lamentable truth is that, as I have been saying for many years, when President Obama inherited around 66 men already approved for release under President Bush — including these two men — he should have released them immediately.
The failure to do so gives a rather longer perspective to the comments in the Washington Post about the state of Guantánamo following these releases. After noting that 105 men now remain in the prison, the Post stated, “That figure includes 46 inmates who have already been approved for settlement overseas but whose release has been held up amid negotiations with potential host countries and, more significantly, by lawmakers’ distaste for prisoner transfers.” The Guardian, in turn, wrote that, although Obama’s task force “decided both men posed a minimal risk to national security and ought to be transferred … years of a self-imposed ban on transferring detainees to Yemen, congressional acrimony and internal bureaucratic “foot-dragging”, according to [a] US official, kept both men at Guantánamo, alongside dozens of others.”
So who are Mahmoud Bin Atef and Khalid al-Dhuby?
As I mentioned in an article in September 2010, Bin Atef was accused of arriving in Afghanistan for jihad in June 2001, training at al-Farouq, and fighting on the Taliban front lines. In an interrogation, he apparently stated that “his enemies were the Northern Alliance,” and also stated that “he never shot at or killed anyone,” and that, although he “was asked to take an oath to Osama bin Laden, [he] did not take one since he might have been obligated to do things that he might not want to do.”
Bin Atef is also one of around 50 prisoners held at Guantánamo who, as I described it in 2010, “survived the Qala-i-Janghi massacre in November 2001, which followed the surrender of the northern city of Kunduz, when several hundred Taliban foot soldiers — and, it seems, a number of civilians — all of whom had been told that they would be allowed to return home if they surrendered, were taken to a fortress run by General Rashid Dostum of the Northern Alliance. Fearing that they were about to be killed, a number of the men started an uprising, which was suppressed by the Northern Alliance, acting with support from US and British Special Forces, and US bombers. Hundreds of the prisoners died, but around 80 survived being bombed and flooded in the basement of the fort, and around 50 of these men ended up at Guantánamo.” With Bin Atef’s release, only about eight of these men remain at Guantánamo.
Speaking to the Washington Post, his attorney, George Clarke, said he was “nearly killed” during the massacre. He called his client “a low-level member of the group,” and said, “He wasn’t part of any planning.”
The Associated Press had more from Clarke, who explained how Bin Atef was “a block leader at Guantánamo, serving as a liaison between guards and detainees.” He said, “Do they think he is a threat? No. He’s a positive character. He’s a very smart guy and I really wish him the best.”
Clarke also pointed out how, “like many other prisoners freed from Guantánamo and forced to start new lives in unfamiliar places,” the two “will face a challenge in Ghana.” However, he added, “Bin Atef at least was eager for the opportunity to find a job and start a family,” as the AP described it. As Clarke said, “He wants to get the hell out of Guantánamo. I don’t think there’s a detainee there now who wouldn’t take any place.”
I wrote about Khalid al-Dhuby in an article in October 2010, when I stated:
Allegedly recruited for military training in Afghanistan after being shown videos of atrocities in Chechnya, al-Dhuby reportedly arrived at [the] al-Farouq [training camp] in late July 2001, and trained for a month and a half until the camp closed. He was then taken to Tora Bora, where he “stayed in one of several caves large enough to fit three or four people,” and then left the area with a group of other men. He said that as they passed through a valley he “saw planes dropping bombs on their location and stated the bombing went on for one night,” and added that he “hid from the bombs until the next morning,” but that many of the men traveling with him “were killed and injured by the bombing.” After the bombing, he was seized by Northern Alliance soldiers and held in an Afghan prison in Kabul before being handed over — or sold — to US forces. At Guantánamo, he maintained that he had never fired a shot at anyone, that he “was not a fighter or a killer,” and that he only “wanted to train to protect himself and his family as well as defend his country.”
In the Miami Herald, Carol Rosenberg noted that al-Dhuby “apparently had no lawyer, unlike Bin Atef, and nobody to speak for him on his release.” She also pointed out that he “had an older brother at Guantanamo,” who “was sent to Georgia,” in November 2014, adding, “The brother, Salah Mohammed al-Thabbi [aka Salah al-Thabi or Salah al-Zabe], also Saudi-born, was approved for release as far back as 2004 but had nowhere to go because he was Yemeni.”
The Guardian noted that the US official who spoke to them said that “quiet negotiations with Ghana to take Guantánamo detainees unfolded over the past year.” The AP had more. In a statement, Ghana’s foreign ministry suggested that the men’s stay may not be permanent. “We have indicated our readiness to accept them for a period of two years, after which they may leave the country,” it read.
Andy Worthington is a freelance investigative journalist, activist, author, photographer, film-maker and singer-songwriter (the lead singer and main songwriter for the London-based band The Four Fathers, whose debut album, ‘Love and War,’ is available for download or on CD via Bandcamp — also see here). He is the co-founder of the Close Guantánamo campaign, the co-director of We Stand With Shaker, which called for the release from Guantánamo of Shaker Aamer, the last British resident in the prison (finally freed on October 30, 2015), and the author of The Guantánamo Files: The Stories of the 774 Detainees in America’s Illegal Prison (published by Pluto Press, distributed by the University of Chicago Press in the US, and available from Amazon, including a Kindle edition — click on the following for the US and the UK) and of two other books: Stonehenge: Celebration and Subversion and The Battle of the Beanfield. He is also the co-director (with Polly Nash) of the documentary film, “Outside the Law: Stories from Guantánamo” (available on DVD here — or here for the US).
To receive new articles in your inbox, please subscribe to Andy’s RSS feed — and he can also be found on Facebook (and here), Twitter, Flickr and YouTube. Also see the six-part definitive Guantánamo prisoner list, and The Complete Guantánamo Files, an ongoing, 70-part, million-word series drawing on files released by WikiLeaks in April 2011. Also see the definitive Guantánamo habeas list, the full military commissions list, and the chronological list of all Andy’s articles.
Please also consider joining the Close Guantánamo campaign, and, if you appreciate Andy’s work, feel free to make a donation.
See the following for articles about the 142 prisoners released from Guantánamo from June 2007 to January 2009 (out of the 532 released by President Bush), and the 130 prisoners released from February 2009 to November 2015 (by President Obama), whose stories are covered in more detail than is available anywhere else –- either in print or on the internet –- although many of them, of course, are also covered in The Guantánamo Files, and for the stories of the other 390 prisoners released by President Bush, see my archive of articles based on the classified military files released by WikiLeaks in 2011: June 2007 –- 2 Tunisians, 4 Yemenis (here, here and here); July 2007 –- 16 Saudis; August 2007 –- 1 Bahraini, 5 Afghans; September 2007 –- 16 Saudis; 1 Mauritanian; 1 Libyan, 1 Yemeni, 6 Afghans; November 2007 –- 3 Jordanians, 8 Afghans; 14 Saudis; December 2007 –- 2 Sudanese; 13 Afghans (here and here); 3 British residents; 10 Saudis; May 2008 –- 3 Sudanese, 1 Moroccan, 5 Afghans (here, here and here); July 2008 –- 2 Algerians; 1 Qatari, 1 United Arab Emirati, 1 Afghan; August 2008 –- 2 Algerians; September 2008 –- 1 Pakistani, 2 Afghans (here and here); 1 Sudanese, 1 Algerian; November 2008 –- 1 Kazakh, 1 Somali, 1 Tajik; 2 Algerians; 1 Yemeni (Salim Hamdan), repatriated to serve out the last month of his sentence; December 2008 –- 3 Bosnian Algerians; January 2009 –- 1 Afghan, 1 Algerian, 4 Iraqis; February 2009 — 1 British resident (Binyam Mohamed); May 2009 —1 Bosnian Algerian (Lakhdar Boumediene); June 2009 — 1 Chadian (Mohammed El-Gharani); 4 Uighurs to Bermuda; 1 Iraqi; 3 Saudis (here and here); August 2009 — 1 Afghan (Mohamed Jawad); 2 Syrians to Portugal; September 2009 — 1 Yemeni; 2 Uzbeks to Ireland (here and here); October 2009 — 1 Kuwaiti, 1 prisoner of undisclosed nationality to Belgium; 6 Uighurs to Palau; November 2009 — 1 Bosnian Algerian to France, 1 unidentified Palestinian to Hungary, 2 Tunisians to Italian custody; December 2009 — 1 Kuwaiti (Fouad al-Rabiah); 2 Somalis; 4 Afghans; 6 Yemenis; January 2010 — 2 Algerians, 1 Uzbek to Switzerland; 1 Egyptian, 1 Azerbaijani and 1 Tunisian to Slovakia; February 2010 — 1 Egyptian, 1 Libyan, 1 Tunisian to Albania; 1 Palestinian to Spain; March 2010 — 1 Libyan, 2 unidentified prisoners to Georgia, 2 Uighurs to Switzerland; May 2010 — 1 Syrian to Bulgaria, 1 Yemeni to Spain; July 2010 — 1 Yemeni (Mohammed Hassan Odaini); 1 Algerian; 1 Syrian to Cape Verde, 1 Uzbek to Latvia, 1 unidentified Afghan to Spain; September 2010 — 1 Palestinian, 1 Syrian to Germany; January 2011 — 1 Algerian; April 2012 — 2 Uighurs to El Salvador; July 2012 — 1 Sudanese; September 2012 — 1 Canadian (Omar Khadr) to ongoing imprisonment in Canada; August 2013 — 2 Algerians; December 2013 — 2 Algerians; 2 Saudis; 2 Sudanese; 3 Uighurs to Slovakia; March 2014 — 1 Algerian (Ahmed Belbacha); May 2014 — 5 Afghans to Qatar (in a prisoner swap for US PoW Bowe Bergdahl); November 2014 — 1 Kuwaiti (Fawzi al-Odah); 3 Yemenis to Georgia, 1 Yemeni and 1 Tunisian to Slovakia, and 1 Saudi; December 2014 — 4 Syrians, a Palestinian and a Tunisian to Uruguay; 4 Afghans; 2 Tunisians and 3 Yemenis to Kazakhstan; January 2015 — 4 Yemenis to Oman, 1 Yemeni to Estonia; June 2015 — 6 Yemenis to Oman; September 2015 — 1 Moroccan and 1 Saudi; October 2015 — 1 Mauritanian and 1 British resident (Shaker Aamer); November 2015 — 5 Yemenis to the United Arab Emirates.
Investigative journalist, author, campaigner, commentator and public speaker. Recognized as an authority on Guantánamo and the “war on terror.” Co-founder, Close Guantánamo and We Stand With Shaker. Also, photo-journalist (The State of London), and singer and songwriter (The Four Fathers).
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11 Responses
Andy Worthington says...
When I posted this on Facebook, I wrote:
Here’s my latest article – on the eve of my departure for the US – about the two Yemenis released from Guantanamo and given new homes in Ghana. What a long and unacceptable wait it has been for them. One was told the US no longer wanted to hold him in 2005, the other on Christmas Day 2006. How is this sort of delay in giving men their freedom supposed to be at all acceptable? Close Guantanamo now!
...on January 7th, 2016 at 10:05 pm
Andy Worthington says...
Thanks to everyone liking and sharing this. The photo above is of Mahmoud Bin Atef, who was told in 2005 that the US no longer wanted to hold him. No photo is publicly available of Khalid al-Dhuby, who appears to have had no lawyer. He was told he was approved for release on Christmas Day 2006. I hope Ghana welcomes them!
...on January 7th, 2016 at 10:17 pm
Andy Worthington says...
Lindis Percy wrote:
Posted on CAAB website – thank you Andy and safe journeys.
https://www.facebook.com/groups/121142151239668
...on January 8th, 2016 at 12:24 am
Andy Worthington says...
Thanks, Lindis. Much appreciated.
...on January 8th, 2016 at 12:24 am
Andy Worthington says...
Jan Strain wrote:
Andy, Dude – Be safe and yell loudly 🙂
...on January 8th, 2016 at 12:25 am
Andy Worthington says...
I shall do that, Jan. Count on it!
...on January 8th, 2016 at 12:25 am
Andy Worthington says...
Sara SN wrote:
Safe and successful travels, Andy!
...on January 8th, 2016 at 12:39 am
Andy Worthington says...
Thanks, Sara!
...on January 8th, 2016 at 12:39 am
Andy Worthington says...
Jan Strain wrote:
Andy – Maybe the NW will be on your next tour… Or I can get closer to one of your tour cities. (Or over to London to actually work a gig 🙂 )
...on January 8th, 2016 at 8:13 am
Andy Worthington says...
You’re always welcome here, Jan. I’m definitely intending to get the book of my collected writing published this year, and visiting a few places I’ve never visited before, and seeing people I’ve wanted to see for years – in Seattle and Portland, for example!
...on January 8th, 2016 at 8:16 am
freedetainees.org – Pentagon Blocks Prisoner Releases From Guantánamo Including 74-Pound Yemeni Hunger Striker – OpEd says...
[…] in “conditional detention” in 2009. One was freed in the United Arab Emirates in November, and the other two were freed just days ago in Ghana, in the first of 17 planned releases from the prison in early […]
...on January 20th, 2016 at 5:40 pm