The Shocking Stories of Humanitarian Aid Workers Just Released From Guantánamo

Posted December 15, 2007 | 06:23 PM (EST)



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Two years after being cleared for release from Guantánamo by a military review board, Adel Hassan Hamad, a Sudanese hospital administrator who worked for a Saudi charity, and Salim Muhood Adem, who worked with orphans for a Kuwaiti NGO, have been repatriated to the country of their birth, where, as lawyer Clive Stafford Smith explained, they are both "safe with their families."

After arriving at Khartoum airport, they were presented with traditional Sudanese clothes by intelligence officers, who took them to a hospital for a short medical examination before returning them to their families and friends. As a noisy celebration got underway, Adel Hamad spoke by phone to his American lawyers, Steve Wax and William Teesdale of the Federal Public Defender's office in Oregon. "I thank God almighty and express my gratefulness to you," he said. "I can finally see the light after the darkness."

If the administration was hoping to lie low for a while, and weather the recent torrent of criticism over its post-9/11 detention policies - in the Supreme Court, in connection with the destruction of CIA videotapes chronicling the torture of detainees, and through its generally inept attempts to pursue war crimes trials at Guantánamo itself - the release of these men will provide no comfort whatsoever, as their stories highlight some of the most egregious flaws in the whole of Guantánamo's sordid history.

Adel Hamad, who is now 49 years old, had been living in Pakistan and working for charity organizations for 17 years. Captured at his home in July 2002, after returning from a holiday in Sudan with his wife and four children, he refuted an allegation that he had any kind of connection to al-Qaeda, telling his tribunal in Guantánamo, "I hate them and I pray to God not to let people among the Muslims carry [out] their ideas." He also pointed out, "If I was a member in al-Qaeda or if I had an association with them I would've not travelled in June 2002 to Sudan with my family on an annual vacation and after the vacation ended I voluntarily returned to Pakistan. If I was a criminal, with association to those criminals, why would I return to Pakistan knowing that Pakistani intelligence was arresting al-Qaeda members?"

His description of his arrest seems particularly shocking, but was actually fairly typical of the dozens of arrests in Pakistan at the time, which were mostly based on dubious or non-existent "intelligence." "I was arrested in my house at 1.30 at night when I woke up and found myself in front of policemen from the Pakistani Intelligence pointing their weapons in my face like I was in a dream or a disturbing nightmare," he told his tribunal. "They were screaming at me, 'don't move!' So I told them, 'what is it, what do you want from me?' And with them was a tall man who did not look Pakistani, which I think he was American. So they handcuffed me and they told me 'where are your papers?' (meaning my passport). So I told them, 'in my shirt pocket.' So the tall man checked my passport and he told me that I came back early from my trip. I told him yes. He spoke in poor Arabic. He saw a legal official Pakistani permit by the date that was in my passport, which had a legal official authorization posted for two years. So the guard hesitated at the end and asked the tall man, 'do we take him?' And the man said, 'yes, take him.' So they took me and detained me in jail in Pakistan for six months and ten days. Later I was moved to Bagram and then to Cuba."

Over the last year or so, Adel Hamad has become one of Guantánamo's celebrities, thanks to the efforts of his enterprising lawyers, who traveled to Pakistan to interview his former colleagues and to Sudan to interview his family, producing a film which publicized his plight to a huge audience on YouTube, and which, in turn, led to the establishment of a campaigning website that drew support from thousands of people, including the actor Martin Sheen.

What makes Hamad's story particularly striking, however, beyond his unquestioned innocence, is what happened after his tribunal in Guantánamo three years ago. The tribunals, known as Combatant Status Review Tribunals (CSRTs), were established in the wake of a momentous Supreme Court decision in June 2004 that, contrary to the administration's assertions to that date, the detainees had habeas corpus rights; in other words, that they had the right to challenge the basis of their detention in a court of law. Rather than delivering them to the US courts, however, the administration established the CSRTs to review the detainees' prior designation as "enemy combatants" without rights, who could be held indefinitely without charge or trial. Emphasizing its disdain for the rule of law, the government prevented the detainees from having legal representation, and, moreover, relied on secret evidence that was withheld from them.

The tribunals, which duly found that all but 38 of the 558 detainees at the time had indeed been correctly designated as "enemy combatants," came under fire this June from Lt. Col. Stephen Abraham, a veteran of military intelligence who had taken part in compiling the "evidence" for the tribunals, and who condemned them as a sham, reliant upon vague, unsubstantiated and generic evidence, and designed merely to approve the detainees' prior designation as "enemy combatants."

While Lt. Col. Abraham's comments are credited with prompting the Supreme Court to review the detainees' rights once more (in a hearing that took place last week, as reported here), Adel Hamad's tribunal had already provided the first vivid demonstration of the injustice of the whole process back in August 2006, when Farah Stockman of the Boston Globe reported that, in his CSRT, Hamad had been judged to be an "enemy combatant" because of exactly the kind of generic allegations that were later condemned by Lt. Col. Abraham.

Hamad maintained that the Saudi charity he worked for, the World Assembly of Muslim Youth (WAMY), was "a charity organization that works to help the Afghan refugees providing them with food, medicine, clothes and education, building charter schools which is made of an orphanage, educational training, and also works in the health department by establishing hospitals, small clinics, and also digging water wells, [and] building water wells." The US authorities, however, described it as an organization that "supports terrorist ideals and causes," even though it has never appeared on a terrorism watchlist (despite being investigated by the US Senate), and was one of the favored projects of the late Saudi King Fahd bin Abdul Aziz.

Another organization that Hamad had worked for previously, the Kuwait-based Lajanat Dawa Islamiya (LDI), which also does not feature on any US terrorism watchlist, was described as "one of the most active" Islamic NGOs "providing logistical and financial support" to mujahideen operating in Afghanistan and Pakistan, which "may be" associated with Osama bin Laden.

In his tribunal, a clearly exasperated Hamad refuted all the allegations, at one point exclaiming, "arresting employees like myself [who] is not capable of supporting terrorists financially, is this justice? I am an employee who works for a living and I have no connection to the [organization's] political views or its financial resources, so why do you punish me for a crime I did not commit. Why don't you arrest the charities' presidents or the people who support [them] financially instead of arresting a simple employee with no informational value?"

Predictably, his tribunal judged that he had been correctly designated an "enemy combatant," but although his pleas appeared to have been ignored, Stockman, who was allowed to examine the CSRT documentation, noted that one of the tribunal members - an unidentified army major - had issued a dissenting opinion. Taking into account the fact that neither WAMY nor LDI appears on the State Department's list of terrorist organizations, the major argued that, "even assuming all the allegations ... are accurate, the detainee does not meet the definition of enemy combatant." He added, "These NGOs presumably have numerous employees and volunteer workers who have been working in legitimate humanitarian roles. The mere fact that some elements of these NGOs provide support to 'terrorist ideals and causes' is insufficient to declare one of the employees an enemy combatant."

Stockman noted, however, that the major was overruled by his colleagues, one of whom - in a single line that discredits the whole tribunal process as effectively as Lt. Col. Abraham's later declaration - wrote that the case "passed the 'low evidentiary hurdle' set up by the rules of the hearings."

Two months ago, the major, who took part in 49 of the 558 CSRT hearings, publicly added his complaints to those recorded by Lt. Col. Abraham, telling William Teesdale, "Much of the material presented was supplied by intelligence agencies and were summaries that were not necessarily justified by the underlying evidence." The major specifically mentioned his dissent in Adel Hamad's CSRT, and also spoke about the deliberate exclusion of exculpatory evidence, the reconvening of CSRTs when an unfavorable result was produced, and the pressure exerted on the tribunals from higher up the command structure.

The case of Salim Muhood Adem, who is also 49 years sold, is, in its own way, just as damning as that of Adel Hamad. A Pakistani resident, who had first traveled to Pakistan in 1991 when he "performed official lawful work for schools," he told his tribunal that he had been employed by the Revival of Islamic Heritage Society (RIHS), a Kuwaiti NGO, since 1994, and pointed out that he had mentioned to the interrogators what type of work he did - traveling from one school to another to check on education before being transferred to "the Orphanage Office of Administration" - and that it "wasn't a crime."

Responding to an allegation that the organization was "suspected of supporting extremist activity, and some employees are suspected of supporting terrorism," he said, "I have only known the Islamic organization to be associated with humanitarian efforts, never terrorism." He acknowledged traveling to Afghanistan in 1998, explaining that he went "to supervise the administration of Orphanage Schools," and was perplexed by an allegation that his residence was "identified as a suspected al-Qaeda residence and raided." He said that he rented the house from a Pakistani woman, and added, "everything I did regarding the house was legal." Crucially, he explained that when he was arrested, at home with his wife and two small children, "the officer that arrested us said he was giving us to the American forces to avoid problems and keep our country safe."

Unlike WAMY and LDI, the RIHS was actually blacklisted by the US Treasury in January 2002, apparently because some of its personnel, including the director of its Pakistani office, Abdul Muhsin al-Libi, "defrauded well-meaning contributors by diverting money donated for widows and orphans to al-Qaeda terrorists," and "padded the number of orphans it claimed to care for by providing names of orphans that did not exist or who had died. Funds then sent for the purpose of caring for the non-existent or dead orphans were instead diverted to al-Qaeda terrorists."

However, neither al-Libi nor another named suspect, Abu Bakr al-Jaziri, both of whom also apparently held senior positions in the Afghan Support Committee, which was identified as having been established by Osama bin Laden in the 1980s, were captured by the Americans. Instead, Adem and four of the charity's other workers were seized, even though there was no evidence that any of the men knew anything about the terrorist funding. What's particularly shocking about Adem's situation is that, although the other four men - one Jordanian and another three Sudanese, including the charity's accountant in 2001 - were released between November 2003 and July 2005, Adem had to wait another 29 months to be granted his freedom.

Explaining the delay in the release of both men, Adel Hamad's lawyers recently filed a declaration in the DC Circuit Court, outlining the progress - or lack of progress - in negotiations between the Sudanese and American governments, which revealed the extent to which political maneuvering, rather than issues of justice, has driven much of the US administration's policy towards the detainees.

In the declaration, William Teesdale explained that the Sudanese government had been notified that Hamad and Adem had been "approved for transfer" on November 14, 2005, and that the State Department had sought assurances that they would be investigated on their return to Sudan, and that their human rights would be respected. The Department also sought permission to have "access to the detainees if needed," and assurances that the Sudanese government would "take responsibility for the detainees and prevent them from being a further threat to the United States."

The Sudanese Deputy Ambassador, a Mr. Elguneid, explained to Teesdale that the Sudanese Embassy gave an "official reply" to these demands in June 2006, agreeing to all of them and even pointing out that US officials had "met with some of the [previously] released detainees in Sudan since their release." The State Department then indicated that it would be good "to try to resolve the issue of all the Sudanese Guantánamo detainees" (another six, including al-Jazeera cameraman Sami al-Haj, are still being held) and that the way forward would be to "draw up a memorandum of understanding between the two countries."

Deputy Ambassador Elguneid noted, however, that Samuel Whitton, the US Ambassador who had been proceeding with these negotiations, then left his job, and that "negotiations with the new Ambassador At Large for War Crimes, Clint Williamson, were more difficult." This was something of an understatement. Elguneid admitted that, despite filing ten requests for a meeting to discuss the release of Hamad and Adem, he had been unable to secure an appointment with Williamson, and had not met any State Department officials since that last meeting in June 2006.

With the release of Adel Hamad and Salim Adem, the deadlock has obviously been broken, but the clear politicization of the detainee release process casts further shadows on the legitimacy of Guantánamo, and the stonewalling on the part of State Department officials serves only to undermine Condoleezza Rice's claims that the Department is committed to defense secretary Robert Gates' stated aim of finding ways to close the prison sooner rather than later.

This article draws on passages from my newly published book The Guantánamo Files: The Stories of the 774 Detainees in America's Illegal Prison.

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- Mutex See Profile I'm a Fan of Mutex

In a recent National Intelligence Estimate, in an effort to profile future terrorists, the CIA stated that "the transformation of an individual to a terrorist is triggered by oppression, suffering, revenge, or desperation".

My question is: Why are the oppressed, suffering, desperate people of the world our enemies instead of the corrupt dictators we support?

The entire 'war on terror' is a sham intended to sustain and extend our empire in the name of 'stability'. In a time of peak oil and a crumbling economy the veil of our supposed principles is becoming increasingly transparent for anyone interested in seeing...which, unfortunately, doesn't include many Americans.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:51 PM on 12/17/2007
- Mutex See Profile I'm a Fan of Mutex

In a recent National Intelligence Estimate, in an effort to profile future terrorists, the CIA stated that "the transformation of an individual to a terrorist is triggered by oppression, suffering, revenge, or desperation".

My question is: Why are the oppressed, suffering, desperate people of the world our enemies instead of the corrupt dictators we support?

The entire 'war on terror' is a sham intended to sustain and extend our empire in the name of 'stability'. In a time of peak oil and a crumbling economy the veil of our supposed principles is becoming increasingly transparent for anyone interested in seeing...which, unfortunately, doesn't include many Americans.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:13 PM on 12/17/2007
- Ravenlea See Profile I'm a Fan of Ravenlea

Disgraceful. How has my country come to this awful place? And when are we going to impeach the people who have brought us here?

Thank you for sharing the information about these cases in such detail.

We must impeach Bush and Cheney... and send a lot of other people to jail with them.

This is all another argument for Impeachment and there is now renewed hope. Check out Rep.Wexler's post. Someone is finally following up on Dennis Kucinich's HR333 order of impeachment... http://www.huffingtonpost.com/rep-robert-wexler/the-case-for-impeachment-_b_76846.html

They were looking for a minimum of 50,000 signatures to proceed and have already exceeded that in just two days. The more the better. If you haven't signed on, please do. http://wexlerwantshearings.com/

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:14 AM on 12/17/2007
- lungfish See Profile I'm a Fan of lungfish

"All men are created equal.." not just Americans...


Jose A Rodriquez was the CIA DDO responsible for authorizing all CIA kidnappings... and he has lawyered up mightily. I hope he brings down the rest of the rats with him.

Far more terrorists have been caught using conventional policing than with secret CIA goon squads, rendition and torture.

Our goon squads have snatched innocent people off the streets and tortured them, imprisoned them and turned them over to other nations for torture.

If we don't take the moral high ground there won't be a moral high ground.

Terrorists are criminals, nothing less and nothing more and the rule of law has adequately managed them for decades.

The fact is that these people aren't proven guilty before they are subjected to this treatment, that is why innocent people are caught up in it.

We have spent several hundred years polishing and improving our nation based upon establishing and entrenching a fundamental respect for individual rights, and have still been able to incarcerate and execute those guilty of heinous crimes.

Bottom line is that if we choose to torture, unlawfully imprison innocent people, allow Church to control state, religion to over-ride science, deny women rights, choose business over human rights, we become nothing better than those forces we are confronted by.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:45 AM on 12/17/2007
- lungfish See Profile I'm a Fan of lungfish

Pathetic... add them and the unreleased innocents to the list of innocents abused in the secret CIA kidnapping program and all one can do is demand change and accountability. Everyone reading this should sign Rep Wexlers impeachment petition...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:39 AM on 12/17/2007
- Danny See Profile I'm a Fan of Danny

Can you imagine being sent to a prison camp for the "crime" of working for a charitable organization that HAS AN ARABIC NAME?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:37 AM on 12/17/2007
- retarius See Profile I'm a Fan of retarius

This Bush adminstration really is a group of really slimy people...filthy people with filthy morals...gorging at the public trough while pulling stunts like these and lying bare-faced to a dumb American people

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:30 AM on 12/17/2007
- rabun666 See Profile I'm a Fan of rabun666

Political prisoners from around the world, how Hitler and Stalinist but what else can be expected from Bush and the Republicans who are implementing a soviet-fascist type government for the USA.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:41 PM on 12/16/2007
- batguano See Profile I'm a Fan of batguano

First they came for the Jews
and I did not speak out
because I was not a Jew.
Then they came for the Communists
and I did not speak out
because I was not a Communist.
Then they came for the trade unionists
and I did not speak out
because I was not a trade unionist.
Then they came for me
and there was no one left
to speak out for me.

Pastor Martin Niemöller

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:30 AM on 12/16/2007
- batguano See Profile I'm a Fan of batguano

The promise of America is justice and equality before the law, NOT one man "deciding" who will be arbitrarily labeled an "enemy combatant", imprisoned without charges, evidence, effective representation or trial.....a REAL trial,not a kangaroo court with secret "evidence"!....to be treated in the most depraved and inhumane ways. The Bush/Neocon regime has robbed us of our Honor and Respect with their "pre-emptive immoral war and the imprisonment of hundreds of innocent people.....remember innocent until proven guilty?...not to mention the deaths and displacement of millions. The Seton Hall Report on GITMO prisoners concluded that the MAJORITY did not commit acts against our forces. Many were sold to US forces by bounty hunters for profit.
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=885659

Bush&Co have commited treason and crimes against humanity,IMO,and lied consistantly to the american people and the world......for Bush/Republican/Neocon political benefit!....and profit. Fascism NEEDS "enemies" to consolidate their power.
The Constitution, Bill of Rights and International Law convey certain rights to all human beings. When one man unilaterally proclaims himself the sole arbiter of the law...the "decider"....and a certain class of people to be "outside" the protections our laws, to be treated in ways at odds with our National morality and history....with utter contempt for their lives, and his minions (like ex AG Gonzales & the depraved John Yoo) justify torture, imprisonment without charge or trial, the striping away of Habaeus Corpus, secret "evidence" and proceedings, that is a decent into Facism and Dictatorship....Star Chamber justice.....and a co-opted congress just goes along for the ride. Quisling Dems support the Bush treason and abuse of the law for their own political gain. The respect we have as Americans for the law is only nourished by the application of those laws to the people most in need of them!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:28 AM on 12/16/2007
- zaneblue See Profile I'm a Fan of zaneblue

I'm ashamed to be an American

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:13 AM on 12/16/2007
- skwan91607 See Profile I'm a Fan of skwan91607

This is the classic case of over-powered the field agent working in foreign soil and irresponsible to one's duty and the incompetent leaderships in the chain of command. There are wide spread problems in the organizations of anti terrorist held by Bush's administration, a regime infamous of their subversion of Constitution. Those bad luck guys are the victims of the lousy works from that operation Bush called it a mission accomplished.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:33 AM on 12/16/2007
- TheHandyman See Profile I'm a Fan of TheHandyman

What has happen to these people only proves that the administration of this country are the biggest liars and terrorists we have seen in not only the history of this country but maybe of the world. To allow a military system to judge and sentence people of crimes they did not commit under circumstances reminisent of Stalin or Hitler proves that this group of evil men are not worthy of any respect by the citizens of this country let alone other countries. What they have done to these prisoners in the name of the GWOT is despicable. They have sullied the reputation of this country and made us a people of hipocrasy and terror.

The Constitution is about the rights that all humans have, not just Americans. We are no greater or no lesser than any other human on this planet. For our government to have treated these people in such a manner should make all of us ashamed that we would allow such a thing to happen. These people will have served the time that our own war criminals will never serve. We owe these people an apology!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:56 AM on 12/16/2007
- larry278 See Profile I'm a Fan of larry278

In the USA of post 9/11/01-no good deed ever goes unpunished. That is why we have Gitmo for NGO types & those who oppose the USA's war of terror, aka war of terror.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:31 PM on 12/15/2007
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