Mohammed el Gharani | |
---|---|
Born | 1986 (age 25–26) Medina, Saudi Arabia |
Detained at | Guantanamo |
Alternate name | Mohammad El Gharani Muhammed Hamid al Qarani Muhammad Hamid (Yousef Akbir Salih) al Qarani |
ISN | 269 |
Charge(s) | No charge (unlawfully detained) |
Status | Repatriated after winning his habeas corpus |
Mohammed el Gharani is a citizen of Chad and native of Saudi Arabia[1] born in 1986, in Medina. He was one of the juveniles held at the Guantanamo Bay detention camp with an estimated age of 15–16 years when he arrived at the camps.[2] Human Rights lawyer Clive Stafford Smith identified Al Qarani as one of a dozen teenage boys held in the adult portion of the prison.[3]
The Independent said Gharani was accused of plotting with Abu Qatada, in London, in 1999 – when he was a 12 year old, living with his parents, in Saudi Arabia.[4] He was detained for seven years in the United States Guantanamo Bay detention camps.[5] [6]
On January 14, 2009 U.S. District Judge Richard J. Leon ordered the release of Gharani because the evidence that he was an enemy combatant was mostly limited to statements from two other detainees whose credibility had been called into question by US government staff. Gharani's attorney Zachary Katznelson said after the ruling "Judge Leon did justice today. This is an innocent kid when he was seized illegally in Pakistan and should never have been in prison in the first place." [7] [8]
Contents |
On July 14, 2006 the Boston Globe reported on investigations they made to test the credibility of the allegations against Guantanamo detainees.[9] Al Gharani was one of the detainees whom they profiled.[10]
The Globe reported that Al Gharani was alleged to have been part of a cell, in London, led by Abu Qatada, c. 1998 – when Al Gharani was 11 or 12 years old.[10] According to the Globe:
Al Gharani's lawyer, Clive Stafford Smith pointed out that Al Gharani had never traveled to England.[10]
Smith also offered an example of how allegations arose against Al Gharani due to the DoD's lack of qualified translators.[10] In Al Gharani's dialect of Arabic 'zalati' is a tomato. In his translator's dialect of Arabic 'zalati' meant money. His translator asked Al Gharani where he would go to get money, back home, and Al Gharani dutifully listed all the grocery stalls where he could buy tomatoes.
The Department of Defense reported, on June 10, 2006, that three detainees committed suicide.
The camp commander, Admiral Harry Harris, called the suicides, "an act of asymetrial warfare". One reaction of the camp authorities to the suicide was to seize all their papers, even their confidential communication with their lawyers. Leaks from the camp authorities fueled rumors that the camp authorities had reason to believe that detainee's lawyers had actively conspired with the detainees in arranging the suicides. The camp authorities claimed that one of the suicide notes was written on stationary that the camp authorities made available to detainee's lawyers.
The Washington Post reports that the lawyer camp authorities have focussed their suspicion on was Clive Stafford Smith.[11] Stafford Smith reports that his client Mohammed el-Gharani, one of the youngest of the Guantanamo detainees, has been interrogated, at length, trying to establish a tie between him and the suicides.[12] In a letter to the Associated Press Stafford Smith wrote:
According to the Seattle Post-Intelligencer, Stafford Smith claims: "...soldiers have threatened to move el-Gharani to Camp 5, a maximum-security facility, if he does not implicate Stafford Smith in the suicides.".[12]
Historian Andy Worthington, reporting on April 25, 2008, in the Lebanon Daily Star, described abuse Al Qaranhi reports experiencing.[13] The abuse Al Qaranhi reports include:
On January 14, 2009 US District Court Judge Richard Leon ordered Al Qarani's released.[14][15] Leon dismissed all the US allegations that Al Garani had been observed in Afghanistan, because there was no evidence to support them—other than denunciations from two other captives—captives whose credibility he questioned.
Muhammad Al Qarani was allowed his first phone call home on April 16, 2009.[16] But instead, he phoned former captive, recently released Al Jazeera journalist Sami Al Hajj.[17] He told Al Hajj that conditions had worsened after the election of United States President Barack Obama. Al Qarani was repatriated less than two months after the call, on June 13, 2009.[18]
On June 11, 2009 the Department of Justice reported that they had repatriated an Iraqi captive and a Chadian captive from Guantanamo to their home countries.[19]
Andy Worthington, the author of The Guantanamo Files, reported that he was still not free after his repatriation, that he being held by Chadian security forces, who described his Chadian detention as a formality.[20][21]
Reuters reports that Commander Jeffrey Gordon continued to insist that Al Garani was older than he claimed.[22]
The BBC reports that after his repatriation Al Garani has not been able to receive any official identity documents, because Chad officials are not sure he is actually a citizen.[23] They report that since Al Garani grew up in Saudi Arabia he is unable to speak to any other Chadians in their local language.
|
|