Kuwaiti Gitmo Detainees Speak Out About Abuse
By Rania El Gamal
December 1, 2006
KUWAIT: Suspected of ties with Al-Qaeda, Adil Al-Zamil and Saad Al-Anzi
spent almost four years in the US detention facilities from Bagram in
Afghanistan to Guantanamo Bay without a trial. Only in November 2005,
they were finally returned to Kuwait after being declared non-enemy
combatants by the Combatant Status Review Tribunals (CSRTs). Now
although they have been hailed as local heroes in their community ever
since their return, Al-Zamil and Al-Anzi’s terrifying ordeals through
the years, shed light on the conditions of the remaining four Kuwaitis
still detained in Guantanamo in an almost limbo-like status.
Talking exclusively to Kuwait Times, Al-Zamil and Al-Anzi relate their
tormented ordeals in the maximum-security US Naval Base at Guantanamo
Bay, which is no different than the narrated stories of the other 385
released detainees who were held in Guantanamo on suspicion of having
ties to the Islamist terror organisations. Soon after being branded as
suspects of fighting with Osama bin Laden, and handed over to the
American authorities for bounty money in the aftermath of the September
11, 2001 attacks, claims of mental and physical torture, not being
represented by a lawyer or receiving a fair trial for years, not to
mention restrictions enforced on them by their own government even now
that they are released, are just a few of the so many tribulations that
Al-Zamil and Al-Anzi have in common when narrating their stories.
THE JOURNEY TO GITMO
Al-Zamil begins his story when he was in Pakistan while working for the
Kuwait Public Authority for Housing Care. He was arrested on February
2002 by the Pakistani authorities, and then handed over US custody.
“During that time, Arabs were being picked up from the streets and sold
to Americans. There was bounty money for anyone handing over Arabs to
the US authorities ranging from US$5000 to $10,000,” he said. He added
he stayed in Pakistan for 20 days where he was interrogated by the
Pakistani intelligence. After that he was handed over to American
interrogators for another 20 days. He was then taken to a detention
facility in Kandahar, Afghanistan for 3 days, after which he was
transferred to Bagram in Afghanistan for a month and a half, before
being returned to Kandahar and eventually sent to Guantanamo.
Like other released detainees, Al-Zamil claims American interrogators
frequently tortured him. “While walking to the place of interrogation,
the guards would continuously hit me on my head with sticks, and every
time I their accusations during interrogations (of being tied to
Al-Qaeda) the guards would hit me even more, hold me high up and then
fling me to the floor,”
Other ways of punishment that Al-Zamil claimed that he was subjected to
during his detention included; being intimidated during interrogations
by placing a gun on the table, staying for two months without a shower,
suspending him with one hand tied to the ceiling during interrogations
making it almost impossible to either sit or stand straight, as well as
being head-covered (hooded), stripped naked in front of women officers
while they clicked photos, laughing all the time.
According to Al-Zamil whenever detainees were taken out of their cells,
they had to be handcuffed and in leg iron, which were made in such a
way that it made it almost impossible for the prisoner to stand
upright. After being back to Kandahar where Al-Zamil stayed for another
month, he was told by some American guards that he would be transferred
to Guantanamo. “We used to hear news about Guantanamo and that there
were other Kuwaiti detainees there before us,” he said.
Talking about his journey to the place where he would be staying in for many years to come, Al-
Zamil recalls: “I call the journey to Guantanamo ‘the journey of death.’ I discreetly wished that
the plane would fall to end the pain I felt.” As other prisoners
transferred with him on the plane, he too was handcuffed behind his
back, had his head covered, wore earplugs, and was tightly restrained
by ropes over his chest, stomach and legs.
“They (the accompanied guards) used to give me pills which I didn’t know what they
were, I think they were drugs because I was sleeping almost all the
time,” he said. Once Cuba, and still head-covered, Al- Zamil said the
guards started to hit them again and push them around. “They (the
guards) used to come into my cell and force me to walk out by beating
me. They used to hit me with their fists and put their feet on my head
ordering me not to move, though I never moved or refused to walk,” he
said. Al- Zamil claims the guards slammed him on the head with iron
handcuffs and though was bleeding, stayed for weeks without medical
attention until infection set in. “The guard used to hit me and then
apologise laugh with each other all the time,” he said.
Al-Zamil also related a story about a Moroccan detainee called Hamza,
who had been hit by his interrogator with a fridge in Guantanamo in
2005. When asked if he knew what happened with Hamza, he said, “No body
knows, they took him (Hamza) to the hospital.”
Other abuses claimed by Al- Anzi, varied from being by guards leading
to breaking one of his legs during interrogations, or being bitten by
dogs while being hooded, sprayed by a mysterious “red solution” causing
a burning sensation to his skin, to being stripped naked and staying
without clothes for two months. As many other detainees interviewed by
their lawyers, there have been claims that female interrogators
sexually provocative in treatment of detainees as a way to break down
devout Muslims. Al-Anzi confirmed that those incidents occurred to him
too during his interrogations at Guantanamo.
Al-Anzi was detained while he was in Pakistan for a business trip
before Sept 11th by the Pakistani authorities. Although he initially
thought the reason for his detention was for overstaying his visa limit
- as happened in earlier cases where he usually ends up paying a
penalty - he found himself even tually transferred to t he American
authorities after the Sept 11th attacks. His experience in the US
detention facilities was similar to that of Al-Zamil before he ended up
in Guantanamo.
On Monday Nov 20, 2006, John Bellinger, the US State Department’s chief
legal adviser while speaking to journalists in Kuwait through a DVC
from Washington, denied that there had been human rights abuses in
Guantanamo.
“The individuals who have been held in Guantanamo have been questioned
certainly, but they have not been abused or subjected to any of these
very rigorous interrogations, allegations of which you read about in
the newspapers,” he said.
BUILDING NEW LIVES
Losing four years of one’s life for no apparent reason can definitely
have a destructive effect on one’s future. After returning to Kuwait,
and though they have been tried in front of the Kuwaiti courts for
conspiring against a friendly country, both Al-Zamil and Al-Anzi were
released with no charges. However, there are certain restrictions
placed upon them by the Kuwaiti authorities, where they are not allowed
to leave the country ‘until further notice.’ Other restrictions
imposed such as the ability to work, confine the ex-detainees’
integration into the society. After all, it is no secret that being
held in Guantanamo would definitely not be a plus point in anyone’s
curriculum . Still, both Al-Zamil and Al-Anzi are happy to be back
with their families. They said that people hail them as heroes now and
never looked down on them for being imprisoned.
But are they the same persons as before their arrest? “I became a very
suspicious person. If anybody asks me about anything, I think he/she
is working for the American intelligence. I don’t trust anyone,” he
said. “Sometimes when someone in the street asks me about an address,
I think he is a spy. Even though you [this reporter] told me you are a
journalist, I am thinking maybe you would report back with what I said
to the American interrogators in Guantanamo,” he said with a chuckle.
“Every Kuwaiti who has returned from Guantanamo wants to settle down
here in his own country. The bachelor got married and the married
person is reunited with his family. The people of Kuwait embraced
them, and I hope the Kuwaiti government would do that too,” said Khalid
Al-Odah, head of the Kuwaiti Family Committee and father of detainee
Fawzi Al-Odah. “I am calling upon the American government to give our
detainees a fair trial, give them a chance to defend themselves, or
release them,” he added. “Who is held responsible in detaining these
prisoners for years with no humane treatment or a fair trial?” he
questions.
CAUGHT ON THE WRONG SIDE OF THE LAW
Since 2002, the US has held as many as 800 individuals from more than
40 different countries in military custody at the US Naval Base at
Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. The facility is believed to detain what is known
as “enemy combatants” in the so-called global war on terror. For
almost five years now, detainees are being held with no fair hearing or
a chance to study the evidence held against them by the US government.
According to testimonies of detainees held at Guantanamo, many alleged
that they were beaten, forced to remain in uncomfortable positions for
long periods of time, left in solitary confinement for months, and even
shocked with electricity.
In 2004, in a leaked report by the International Committee of the Red
Cross (ICRC), US interrogators at Guantanamo were accused of causing
psychological and physical agony to prisoners, “tantamount to
torture.” The ICRC refused “to publicly confirm or deny” the
allegation.
In November 2001, President Bush authorized the creation of military
commissions to try non-US citizens suspected of terrorism. On June 29,
2006, the US Supreme Court’s decision held that the military
commissions violated US military law and the Geneva Conventions. On
October 17, 2006, President Bush enacted the Military Commissions Act
2006 (MCA), which, among other things, establishes a system of military
commissions for trials of non-US citizens who have been classified as
“unlawful enemy combatants.”
Important concerns have been raised by different human rights
organizations and legal scholars such as denying the detainees the
right to challenge one’s imprisonment (known as habeas corpus appeals);
permitting the use of evidence extracted through abusive interrogation
techniques that were used prior to passing the Detainee Treatment Act
in December 2005. Constitutionality of the MCA is still under a heated
debate and only a decision by the Supreme Court could end it.
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