Jamil el-Banna Arabic: جميل عبد اللطيف البنّاء |
|
---|---|
el-Banna in 2008 |
|
Born | May 28, 1952 - Born in Jericho, West Bank[1] - Jordanian citizen - refugee status in the United Kingdom |
Detained at | Guantanamo Bay camp |
ISN | 905 |
Alleged to be a member of | al-Qaeda |
Children | El-Banna is a father of five:[1][2][3] Anas - December 17, 1996 Mohamed - December 22, 1997 Abdulrahman - May 10, 1999 Badeah - February 11, 2001 Mariam - April 13, 2003 |
Jamil el-Banna (Arabic: جميل عبد اللطيف البنّاء, Ǧamīl ʿAbdu 'l-Laṭīf al-Bannāʾ) is a Jordanian of Palestinian origin with refugee status in the United Kingdom who had been living in north-west London.[4] He is currently on bailed release in the United Kingdom[5] following his release from extrajudicial detention in the United States in the Guantanamo Bay detainment camps, in Cuba.[6]
The Department of Defense reports that el-Banna was born on May 28, 1952, in Jericho, [sic] Turkey [sic]. His wife is quoted as saying that Jamil is not from Jericho, Turkey but was born in Jericho, West Bank
Jamil El Banna was captured in Gambia in November 2002 and was transferred to the United Kingdom on December 19, 2007.[7]
Contents |
Jamil and Bisher al-Rawi travelled to Gambia to meet a shipment of machine parts to be used to set up an edible oil factory owned by Basher's brother. They arrived in Gambia on November 7, 2002. He was captured by the Gambian National Intelligence Agency on arrival at Banjul airport in Gambia on November 8, 2002, purportedly on suspicion of alleged links to al-Qaeda. At first they were under a kind of unofficial house arrest. They were not formally charged with any crimes under Gambian law. They were told that they would be released when their machinery had been checked to make sure it wasn't something that could be used for terrorism.
They weren't detained in a Gambian jail, but rather in a CIA snatch team safe house, provided by American security officials, guarded by Gambians, but interrogated by Americans.
In late December, 2002 [1] the decision was made to take them from Gambia. The team that arrived to do that wore black uniforms, their faces covered by black balaklavas. They cut their clothes from their bodies, when they bound them for transportation.. They were illegally "rendered" to Bagram Air Base in Afghanistan, where he was imprisoned underground in total darkness for weeks.[8] Once in the main portion of the airbase prison, he met Moazzam Begg whose bookshop he had visited in England.[9] Nicknamed "Kenny Rogers", he once entertained American guards by singing half a verse Coward of the County.[9] In March 2003 Jamil and Basher al-Rawi were transferred to Guantanamo Bay.[10]
Jamil's lawyer, Clive Stafford Smith, quoted in an article in The Guardian, said Jamil was a participant in both the hunger strike that ended when the camp authorities made promises on July 28, 2005, and a second that started on August 8.[11] Smith said that Jamil told him that one of the reasons for the second hunger strike was that guards were still searching through the prisoner's copies of the Qur'an by hand.
An article in The Times repeated Jamil's claim that his American interrogators told him that MI5 had colluded in Jamil's extraordinary rendition.[12] The lawyers of Guantanamo Bay detainees have to hand in all their notes. They are all classified. The lawyers are only allowed to examine their notes in a single secure location outside Washington DC. The Times describes how a section of Stafford Smith's notes were recently declassified:
The Times repeats Jamil's claim that he was offered $10 million, and a US passport, if he would testify against Abu Qatada. According to The Times:
El-Banna is a father of five.[2] His youngest daughter was born after his capture.
“ | Dear Sir Tony Blair, I am a boy called Anas Jamil El-Banna. I am 7 years old. Me and my four brothers are writing to you this letter from my heart because I miss my father. I am wishing that you can help me and my father. I am always asking mother, Where is my father, when will he come back? And my mother says I don't know.
Now I have started to know that my father is in prison in a place called Cuba and I don't know the reason why and I don't know where is Cuba. I hope that you can help me because I miss my father. Every night I think of my dad and I cry in a very low voice so that my mother doesn't hear, and I dream that he is coming home and gives me a big, big hug. Every Eid I wait for my father to come back. I hope to God that you can help me to bring my daddy back to me. I don't want anything, I just want my daddy please. Please Mr Blair can you bring my daddy back to me on this Eid. I wish you a happy life with your children in your house. Love Anas - 7 years old, Mohamed - 6 years, Abdulrahman - 4 years, Badeah - 3 years, Mariam - 9 months |
” |
— Anas Jamil El-Banna writing to Tony Blair to free his father
|
A November 1, 2006 article in the Willesden & Brent Times reported that el-Banna was allowed a phone call to his wife on October 19, 2006.[13] It is unusual for detainees to be allowed a phone call to their family. This phone call was el-Banna's first. It is not known why this concession was made, although el-Banna's MP, Sarah Teather, had previously made representations to US authorities asking for some contact to be allowed.
According to el-Banna' wife:[13]
“ | He told me that when the prison guards led him away from his camp, he thought he was going to be interrogated again. He didn't even know he was going to speak to me, so hearing my voice was a complete shock to him. | ” |
— Mrs al-Banna
|
On Thursday March 29, 2007, UK Foreign Secretary Margaret Beckett announced that the UK Government had negotiated the return from Guantanamo of el-Banna's traveling companion, Bisher al-Rawi's.[14][15] According to the Associated Press Beckett issued a statement to Parliament which said:
“ | We have now agreed with the U.S. authorities that Mr. al-Rawi will be returned to the U.K. shortly, as soon as the practical arrangements have been made, This decision follows extensive discussions to address the security implications of Mr. Al-Rawi's return. | ” |
Beckett's announcement didn't say anything about el-Banna, or the other remaining former UK residents who remain held in Guantanamo.[15] Jamil's case has caused controversy within the UK as the British Government refuses to make representations on his behalf, due to his not having attained British citizenship before his imprisonment.[16] All the British nationals imprisoned at Guantanamo were freed before September 2004, following British Government representations.
On August 7, 2007 the United Kingdom government requested the release of Jamil el-Banna and four other men who had been legal British residents without being British citizens.[17] The UK government warned that the negotiations might take months.
Jamil el-Banna was released from Guantanemo Bay on 18 November 2007 and flown back to Britain.[18][19] On his return, he was detained under port and border controls and questioned. On 19 November he was arrested under a Spanish extradition warrant. On 20 December he was released on bail of £50,000, part of which was put up by actress Vanessa Redgrave; conditions of his bail include observing a curfew and wearing an electronic tag.
On his return, El-Banna and Omar Deghayes were arrested and questioned, before appearing in court on a Spanish extradition warrant.[18][19] He was freed on bail on 20 December, conditions of which include obeying a curfew and wearing an electronic tag.
On Thursday March 6, 2008 Spanish judge Baltasar Garzon dropped the extradition request on humanitarian grounds.[19] Garzon based his decision on a medical examination made public on February 12, 2008. The report said El Banna suffered from: "post-traumatic stress syndrome, severe depression and suicidal tendencies. Garzon ruled the two men's mental health had deteriorated so badly it would be cruel to prosecute them.
On April 29, 2009, that Spanish investigating magistrate Baltazar Garzon initiated a formal investigation into whether confessions from Ikassrien, and three other former Guantanamo captives were the result of the use of abusive interrogation techniques.[20][21][22] Al Banna and the other three men: Hamed Abderrahman Ahmed, Lahcen Ikassrien, and Omar Deghayes, had previously faced charges in Spanish courts, based on confessions they made while in US custody. Their charges had been dropped based on their claims that their confessions were false and were the result of abusive interrogation techniques.
|
|