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| + | * [[User:Anarchangel/Sandbox/Guantanamo detainees]] |
| + | * [[User:Anarchangel/Sandbox/Guantanamo detainees 2]] |
| + | * '''User:Anarchangel/Sandbox/Guantanamo detainees 3''' |
| + | |
| + | * [[User:Anarchangel/Sandbox/Guantanamo Bay Detainees-WP list]] |
| + | |
| + | pending: |
| + | * [[Said Muhammad Husayn Qahtani]] |
| + | |
| * [[Rami Bin Said Al Taibi]] | | * [[Rami Bin Said Al Taibi]] |
| * [[Abdullah Hamid Mohammed Al-Qahtani]] | | * [[Abdullah Hamid Mohammed Al-Qahtani]] |
− | * [[Said Muhammad Husayn Qahtani]]
| + | |
| * [[Khalid Malu Shia al Ghatani]] | | * [[Khalid Malu Shia al Ghatani]] |
| * [[Jabir Hasan Muhamed Al Qahtani]] | | * [[Jabir Hasan Muhamed Al Qahtani]] |
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| * [[Ahmed Owaidan Al-Harbi]] | | * [[Ahmed Owaidan Al-Harbi]] |
| | | |
− | ==Rami Bin Said Al Taibi==
| + | [[Category:Sandbox pages with potential]] |
− | [[Wikipedia:Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Rami Bin Said Al Taibi]]
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− | {{Infobox WoT detainees
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− | | subject_name = Rami Bin Said Al Taibi
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− | | image_name =
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− | | image_size =
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− | | image_caption =
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− | | date_of_birth = {{Birth year and age|1980}}
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− | | place_of_birth =
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− | | date_of_arrest =
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− | | place_of_arrest = Pakistan
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− | | arresting_authority = Pakistani security officials
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− | | date_of_release = 2007-01-05
| + | |
− | | place_of_release =
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− | | date_of_death = <!-- {{Death-date and age| death date | birth date }} -->
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− | | place_of_death =
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− | | citizenship = Saudi Arabia
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− | | detained_at = Guantanamo
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− | | id_number = 318
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− | | group =
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− | | alias = *{{Lang-ar|<big>رامي بن سعيد الطيبي</big>}}
| + | |
− | *Rami al-Juaid
| + | |
− | | charge = no charge, [[extrajudicial detention]]
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− | | penalty =
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− | | status = repatriated to Saudi custod
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− | | occupation =
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− | | spouse =
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− | | parents =
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− | | children =
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− | }}
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− | '''Rami Bin Said Al Taibi''' ({{Lang-ar|<big>رامي بن سعيد الطيبي</big>}}) or '''Rami al-Juaid''' is a [[Saudi Arabia]]n who was held in the [[United States]] [[Guantanamo Bay detainment camp]]s, in [[Cuba]].<ref name=DoDList2>
| + | |
− | {{cite web
| + | |
− | | url=http://www.dod.mil/news/May2006/d20060515%20List.pdf
| + | |
− | | title=List of Individuals Detained by the Department of Defense at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba from January 2002 through May 15, 2006
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− | | publisher=[[United States Department of Defense]]
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− | | accessdate=2006-05-15
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− | | quote=
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− | }}
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− | {{wikisource-inline|List of Individuals Detained by the Department of Defense at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba from January 2002 through May 15, 2006}}
| + | |
− | </ref>
| + | |
− | Al Taibi's Guantanamo [[Internment Serial Number]] was 318.
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− | The [[US Department of Defense|Department of Defense]] reports that Al Taibi was born on December 24, 1980, in [[Ta'if]], Saudi Arabia.
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− | | + | |
− | ==Background==
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− | | + | |
− | Al Taibi claimed he traveled to Afghanistan for religious training.<ref name=TheGuantanamoFiles>
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− | {{cite book
| + | |
− | | title = The Guantanamo Files
| + | |
− | | publisher = [[Plute Press]]
| + | |
− | | author = [[Andy Worthington]]
| + | |
− | | year = 2007
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− | | page = 57
| + | |
− | | accessdate = 2010-10-
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− | | isbn = 978 0 7453 2664 1
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− | | quote =
| + | |
− | }}
| + | |
− | </ref>
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− | Rami Bin Said al Taibi was transferred to Saudi Arabia on Sept. 5, 2007.<ref>{{cite news| url=http://projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/318-rami-bin-said-al-taibi | work=The New York Times | title=Rami Bin Said al Taibi - The Guantánamo Docket}}</ref>
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− | | + | |
− | ==Combatant Status Review==
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− | {{main|Combatant Status Review Tribunal}}
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− | | + | |
− | A [[Summary of Evidence (CSRT)|Summary of Evidence memo]] was prepared for his tribunal.<ref name=CsrtSummaryOfEvidencePg266>[http://www.dod.mil/pubs/foi/detainees/csrt_mar05.pdf#68 CSRT Summary of Evidence memoranda (.pdf)] prepared for Rami Bin Said Al Taibi's ''[[Combatant Status Review Tribunal]]s'' - October 1, 2004 - page 68</ref>
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− | | + | |
− | {{quotation|
| + | |
− | :a. The detainee is associated with al Qaida:
| + | |
− | :#The detainee traveled to Afghanistan from Saudi Arabia in approximately August 2001.
| + | |
− | :#The detainee received training at a terrorist training camp in Afghanistan.
| + | |
− | :#The detainee's name was included in a computer file recovered from an al Qaida safehouse in Islamabad that listed prisoners currently incarcerated in Pakistan.
| + | |
− | :#The detainee's name was found in a document recovered from an al Qaida safehouse in Karachi.
| + | |
− | :#The detainee's name was listed as al Qaida Mujahidin who had not yet completed training in a document recovered from an al Qaida safehouse in Rawalpindi, Pakistan.
| + | |
− | :#One of the detainee's known aliases was on a list of captured al Qaida members that was discovered on a computer hard drive associated with a senior al Qaida member.
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− | }}
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− | | + | |
− | ==References==
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− | {{Reflist|2}}
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− | | + | |
− | ==External links==
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− | * [http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2007/09/11/guantanamo-the-stories-of-the-16-saudis-just-released/ Guantánamo: The Stories Of The 16 Saudis Just Released] Andy Worthington
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− | {{WoTPrisoners|state=collapsed}}
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− | | + | |
− | {{Persondata <!-- Metadata: see [[Wikipedia:Persondata]]. -->
| + | |
− | | NAME = Al Taibi, Rami Bin Said
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− | | ALTERNATIVE NAMES =
| + | |
− | | SHORT DESCRIPTION = Guantanamo detainees known to have been released
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− | | DATE OF BIRTH = 1980
| + | |
− | | PLACE OF BIRTH =
| + | |
− | | DATE OF DEATH =
| + | |
− | | PLACE OF DEATH =
| + | |
− | }}
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− | {{DEFAULTSORT:Taibi, Rami Bin Said}}
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− | [[Category:Living people]] | + | |
− | [[Category:Guantanamo detainees known to have been released]]
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− | [[Category:1980 births]]
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− | [[Category:People from Ta’if]]
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− | [[Category:Saudi Arabian people]]
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− | | + | |
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− | ==Combatant Status Review Tribunal==
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− | [[Image:Trailer where CSR Tribunals were held.jpg|thumb|[[Combatant Status Review Tribunal]]s were held in a trailer the size of a large [[RV]]. The captive sat on a plastic garden chair, with his hands and feet shackled to a bolt in the floor.<ref name=Nytimes041109>[http://www.nytimes.com/2004/11/08/national/08gitmo.html?ex=1257570000&en=4af06725bdf5c086&ei=5088&partner=rssnyt Guantánamo Prisoners Getting Their Day, but Hardly in Court], ''[[New York Times]]'', November 11, 2004 - [http://cageprisoners.com/articles.php?aid=3838 mirror]</ref><ref name=FinancialTimes041211>[http://www.christusrex.org/www1/news/ft-12-11-04a.htm Inside the Guantánamo Bay hearings: Barbarian "Justice" dispensed by KGB-style "military tribunals"], ''[[Financial Times]]'', December 11, 2004</ref> Three chairs were reserved for members of the press, but only 37 of the 574 Tribunals were observed.<ref name=DoDCsrtBriefing20070306>
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− | +
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− | {{main|Combatant Status Review Tribunal}}
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− | −
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− | {{Cite web
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− |
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− | −
| + | |
− | | url=http://www.defenselink.mil/transcripts/transcript.aspx?transcriptid=3902
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− |
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− | −
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− | | title=Annual Administrative Review Boards for Enemy Combatants Held at Guantanamo Attributable to Senior Defense Officials
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− |
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− | −
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− | | publisher=[[United States Department of Defense]]
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− |
| + | |
− | −
| + | |
− | | date=March 6, 2007
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− |
| + | |
− | −
| + | |
− | | accessdate=2007-09-22
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− |
| + | |
− | −
| + | |
− | }}</ref>{{POV-section|date=December 2007}}]]
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− | | + | |
− | | + | |
− | Initially the Bush administration asserted that they could withhold all the protections of the [[Geneva Conventions]] to captives from [[the war on terror]]. This policy was challenged before the Judicial branch. Critics argued that the USA could not evade its obligation to conduct [[competent tribunal]]s to determine whether captives are, or are not, entitled to the protections of [[prisoner of war]] status.
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− | | + | |
− | | + | |
− | ===Testimony===
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− |
| + | |
− | −
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− | Al Taibi chose to participate in his [[Combatant Status Review Tribunal]].<ref name=CsrtRamiAlTaibi> [{{DoD detainees ARB|Set_1_0001-0097.pdf#1}} Summarized transcripts (.pdf)], from Rami Bin Said Al Taibi's ''[[Combatant Status Review Tribunal]]'' - pages 1-9</ref>
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− |
| + | |
− | Al Taibi denied any relationship with al Qaeda.
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− |
| + | |
− | He acknowledged traveling to Afghanistan for training - religious training.
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− |
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− | He was sure that the name of the person who participate in Mujahidin training was not his.
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− |
| + | |
− | He has no aliases, so no aliases of his could be found in safehouses, or on captured hard drives, because he didn’t have any aliases.
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− |
| + | |
− | He said that as the only son in his family he was exempt from being conscripted into a jihad, and he had an official document, a [[hathwa]], confirming this.
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− | | + | |
− | Subsequently the [[United States Department of Defense|Department of Defense]] instituted the [[Combatant Status Review Tribunal]]s. The Tribunals, however, were not authorized to determine whether the captives were ''lawful combatants'' -- rather they were merely empowered to make a recommendation as to whether the captive had previously been correctly determined to match the Bush administration's definition of an [[enemy combatant]].
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− |
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− | −
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− | −
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− | ===Allegations===
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− |
| + | |
− | −
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− | A memorandum summarizing the evidence against Al Taibi prepared for his Combatan Status Reiew Tribunal, was among those released in March 2005.<ref name=CsrtSummaryOfEvidencePg266> [http://www.dod.mil/pubs/foi/detainees/csrt_mar05.pdf#68 CSRT Summary of Evidence memoranda (.pdf)] prepared for Rami Bin Said Al Taibi's ''[[Combatant Status Review Tribunal]]s'' - October 1, 2004 - page 68</ref>
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− |
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− | −
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− | −
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− | The allegations Al Taibi faced were:
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− | | + | |
− | | + | |
− | | + | |
− | ==Abdullah Hamid Mohammed Al-Qahtani==
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− | [[Wikipedia:Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Abdullah Hamid al Qahtani]]
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− | | + | |
− | :''For other individuals named '''Al Qahtani''', or some variant thereof, see [[Al Qahtani (disambiguation)]].
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− | [[Image:Replace this image male.svg|right]]
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− | | + | |
− | '''Abdullah Hamid Mohammed Al-Qahtani''' ([[Arabic language|Arabic]]: عبد الله Øامد القØطاني) is a [[Saudi Arabia]]n citizen who was held in [[extrajudicial]] detention in the [[United States]] [[Guantanamo Bay Naval Base]], in [[Cuba]].<ref name=DoDList>[http://www.dod.mil/news/May2006/d20060515%20List.pdf list of prisoners (.pdf)], ''[[US Department of Defense]]'', [[May 15]] [[2006]]</ref>
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− | His detainee ID is 652. US [[intelligence (information gathering)|intelligence]] analysts estimate he was born in 1979, in [[Mecca]].
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− | | + | |
− | ==Identity==
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− | | + | |
− | The official documents from the [[US Department of Defense]], and from the [[Royal Embassy of Saudi Arabia, Washington DC]] transliterate Al Otaibi's name differently:
| + | |
− | * His name was transliterated as '''Abdullah Hamid Al Qahtani''' on the official lists of names released by the [[US Department of Defense]].<ref name=DoDList2>[http://www.dod.mil/news/May2006/d20060515%20List.pdf list of prisoners (.pdf)], ''[[US Department of Defense]]'', [[May 15]] [[2006]]</ref>
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− | * His name was transliterated as '''Abdullah Hamid Mohammed Al-Qahtan''' on the press releases from Saudi officials, when he was repatriated on [[May 19]] [[2006]].<ref name=SaudiEmbassyWashDC060519>{{cite web
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− | | date=[[May 19]] [[2006]]
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− | | title=Saudi detainees at Guantanamo returned to the Kingdom; names given
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− | | url=http://saudiembassy.net/2006News/News/UsrDetail.asp?cIndex=6226
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− | | publisher=[[Royal Saudi Embassy]] Washington DC
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− | | accessdate=March 7
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− | | accessyear=2007
| + | |
− | }}</ref>
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− | * His name was transliterated as '''Abdullah Al Quatany''' on the official list of captives whose habeas corpus petitions should be dismissed following their transfer from US custody.<ref name=MotionToDismiss>
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− | {{cite news
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− | | url=http://www.pegc.us/archive/In_re_Gitmo/gov_mot_to_dismiss_20070419.pdf
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− | | title=Exhibit B: List Of Enemy Combatant Detainees With Pending Habeas Corpus Petitions Who Have Been Released From United States Custody
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− | | page=
| + | |
− | | pages=
| + | |
− | | publisher=[[United States Department of Justice]]
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− | | author=
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− | | date=[[April 17]] [[2007]]
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− | | accessdate=2008-05-05
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− | | quote=
| + | |
− | }}</ref>
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− | * His name was transliterated as '''Abdullah Hamid Musleh Qahtany''' on the official list of captives whose habeas corpus petitions should be dismissed following their transfer from US custody.<ref name=MotionToDismiss/>
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− | | + | |
− | ==Combatant Status Review Tribunal==
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− | {{ReadingCSRTNotice}}
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− | | + | |
− | Initially the Bush administration asserted that they could withhold all the protections of the [[Geneva Conventions]] to captives from [[the war on terror]]. This policy was challenged before the Judicial branch. Critics argued that the USA could not evade its obligation to conduct a [[competent tribunal]]s to determine whether captives are, or are not, entitled to the protections of [[prisoner of war]] status.
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | Subsequently the [[United States Department of Defense|Department of Defense]] instituted the [[Combatant Status Review Tribunal]]s. The Tribunals, however, were not authorized to determine whether the captives were ''lawful combatants'' -- rather they were merely empowered to make a recommendation as to whether the captive had previously been correctly determined to match the Bush administration's definition of an [[enemy combatant]].
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− | | + | |
− | ===Summary of Evidence memo===
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− | | + | |
− | A [[Summary of Evidence (CSRT)|Summary of Evidence memo]] was prepared for Abdullah Hamid Al Qahtani's Combatant Status Review Tribunal, on [[14 October]] [[2004]].<ref name=CsrtSummaryOfEvidenceAbdullahHamidAlQahtani>
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− | {{cite web
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− | | url=http://www.dod.mil/pubs/foi/detainees/csrt_arb/000500-000599.pdf#19
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− | | title=Summary of Evidence for Combatant Status Review Tribunal -- Al Qahtani, Abdullah Hamid
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− | | date=[[14 October]] [[2004]]
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− | | author=[[OARDEC]]
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− | | pages=page 19
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− | | publisher=[[United States Department of Defense]]
| + | |
− | | accessdate=2007-11-20
| + | |
− | }}</ref>
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− | The memo listed the following allegations against him:
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− | :'''The detainee is associated with [[al Qaida]]:
| + | |
− | :#The detainee departed Saudi Arabia in February 2001 and arrived in [[Afghanistan]] in August 2001 via [[Pakistan]].
| + | |
− | :#The detainee worked for [[al Wafa]] in its offices in Pakistan and Afghanistan.
| + | |
− | :#Al Wafa is listed on the [[U.S. State Department]]'s [[Terrorist Exclusion list]], which identifies it as an organization that has been found to either commit, or incite to commit, a terrorist activity; prepare or plan a terrorist activity; gather information on potential targets for terrorist activity; or provide material support to further terrorist activity.
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− | :#While working for al Wafa, the detainee came in contact with one of the leaders of the al Wafa organization.
| + | |
− | :#This individual has close ties to al Qaida and [[Usama Bin Laden]].
| + | |
− | :#The detainee worked for the Al Wafa organization.
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− | | + | |
− | ==Administrative Review Board hearing==
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− | [[Image:Administrative Review Board hearing room.jpg|thumb|Hearing room where Guantanamo captive's annual Administrative Review Board hearings convened for captives whose Combatant Status Review Tribunal had already determined they were an "enemy combatant".<ref name=TheWire20060310> {{cite news | url=http://www.jtfgtmo.southcom.mil/wire/WirePDF/v6/TheWire-v6-i049-10MAR2006.pdf#1 | title=Review process unprecedented | publisher=[[JTF-GTMO Public Affairs Office]] | pages=pg 1 | author=Spc [[Timothy Book]] | date=Friday [[March 10]] [[2006]] | accessdate=2007-10-10 }}</ref>]]
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− | | + | |
− | Detainees who were determined to have been properly classified as "enemy combatants" were scheduled to have their dossier reviewed at annual [[Administrative Review Board]] hearings. The Administrative Review Boards weren't authorized to review whether a detainee qualified for POW status, and they weren't authorized to review whether a detainee should have been classified as an "enemy combatant".
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− | | + | |
− | They were authorized to consider whether a detainee should continue to be detained by the United States, because they continued to pose a threat -- or whether they could safely be repatriated to the custody of their home country, or whether they could be set free.
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− | | + | |
− | ===Summary of Evidence memo===
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− | | + | |
− | A [[Summary of Evidence (ARB)|Summary of Evidence memo]] was prepared for Abdullah Hamid Al Qahtani's Administrative Review Board, on [[3 June]] [[2005]].<ref name=ArbSummaryOfEvidenceAbdullahHamidAlQahtani>
| + | |
− | {{cite web
| + | |
− | | url=http://www.dod.mil/pubs/foi/detainees/csrt_arb/ARB_Round_1_Factors_000495-000594.pdf#70
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− | | title=Unclassified Summary of Evidence for Administrative Review Board in the case of Al Qahtani, Abdullah Hamid
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− | | date=[[3 June]] [[2005]]
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− | | author=[[OARDEC]]
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− | | pages=pages 70-72
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− | | publisher=[[United States Department of Defense]]
| + | |
− | | accessdate=2007-11-20
| + | |
− | }}</ref>
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− | The memo listed factors for and against his continued detention.
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− | | + | |
− | ===The following primary factors favor continued detention:===
| + | |
− | :'''a. Commitment
| + | |
− | :#The detainee departed Saudi Arabia in February 2001 and arrived in Afghanistan in August 2001 via Pakistan.
| + | |
− | :#Prior to being turned over to U.S. forces, the detainee had $5000 in his possession. The detainee claims that the Afghan troops, which beat him and his cousin, seized $3000 and did not find the other $2000 hidden in his clothes.
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− | | + | |
− | :'''b. Connections/Associations
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− | :#The detainee worked for al Wafa in its offices in Pakistan and Afghanistan.
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− | :#The detainee was recruited to work for al Wafa in Afghanistan by the leader of al Wafa.
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− | :#The same al Wafa leader who recruited the detainee paid for the detainee's travel to Pakistan.
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− | :#The same al Wafa leader who recruited the detainee and the detainee's father had been employed together in Saudi Arabia.
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− | :#The same al Wafa leader who recruited the detainee has close ties to Usama Bin Laden.
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− | :#Al Wafa is listed on the [[U.S. State Department]]'s [[Terrorist Exclusion list]], which identifies it as an organization that has been found to either commit, or incite to commit, a terrorist activity; prepare or plan a terrorist activity; gather information on potential targets for terrorist activity; or provide material support to further terrorist activity.
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− | :#Al Wafa activities in Afghanistan include the purchase of weapons and chemical warfare equipment, suspicious money transactions, providing a cover to smuggle Usama Bin Laden operatives and sympathizers to Afghanistan, knowledge of a possible pending attack against American interests, and providing employment opportunity and cover to Usama Bin Laden connecting operatives.
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− | :#In anticipation of the American attack, military training on [[AK-47]]'s {{sic}} and [[rocket-propelled grenade]]s was provided in al Wafa's Kabul offices.
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− | :#The detainee traveled to Pakistan and Afghanistan with his cousin.
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− | :#The detainee and his cousin worked with [[Mohammed Afgha]].
| + | |
− | :#Mohammed Agha was the liaison between the al Wafa Organization and the [[Taliban]] Government.
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− | :#The detainee's cousin has issued a [[Fatwa]]h against the United States.
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− | | + | |
− | :'''c. Other Relevant Data
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− | :#The detainee was offered $800 to $1,000 per month to work for al Wafa.
| + | |
− | :#Detainee claims his Afghan captors took his passport.
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− | :#Detainee had a roll of 20 $100 USD dollar bills when turned over to U.S. Forces.
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− | | + | |
− | ===The following primary factors favor release or transfer:===
| + | |
− | :{|
| + | |
− | | '''a.''' ||
| + | |
− | The detainee said the only reason he went to Afghanistan was to pick up money owed to him by a senior al Wafa principal.
| + | |
− | |-
| + | |
− | | '''b.''' ||
| + | |
− | During his employment at al Wafa, the detainee was never asked to nor did he handle weapons of any kind.
| + | |
− | |-
| + | |
− | | '''c.''' ||
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− | The detainee had no knowledge that the employees at the [[Lahore]] of Kabul al Wafa warehouses
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− | were associated with al Qaida or the Taliban. He never observed weapons in the Lahore warehouse.
| + | |
− | |-
| + | |
− | | '''d.''' ||
| + | |
− | The detainee has an extreme dislike of the Taliban and al Qaida.
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− | He believes they are the cause of his current detention, and that Usama Bin Laden is
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− | no different that {{sic}} a common criminal.
| + | |
− | The detainee would not consider supporting Usama Bin Laden or his distorted causes.
| + | |
− | |-
| + | |
− | | '''e.''' ||
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− | Neither the detainee, nor anyone he knows, had prior knowledge of the September 11, 2001
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− | attacks or knowledge of future attacks against the United States or its interests.
| + | |
− | |-
| + | |
− | | '''f.''' ||
| + | |
− | The detainee does not blame the United States Government for detaining people as the
| + | |
− | result of the attacks on America. He is grateful toward the United States, which he
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− | believes saved his life after he was captured by the Northern Alliance in Afghanistan.
| + | |
− | |-
| + | |
− | | '''g.''' ||
| + | |
− | The detainee intends to marry and seek employment upon his return to Saudi Arabia.
| + | |
− | He would not return to Pakistan or Afghanistan.
| + | |
− | |}
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | ===Transcript===
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | Captive 652 did not attend his Board.<ref name=ArbBasisForRecommendationIsn652>
| + | |
− | {{cite web
| + | |
− | | url=http://www.dod.mil/pubs/foi/detainees/csrt_arb/ARB_Round_1_Decision_memos_000392-000483.pdf#72
| + | |
− | | title=Classified Record of Proceedings and basis of Administrative Review Board recommendation for ISN 652
| + | |
− | | date=[[5 July]] [[2005]]
| + | |
− | | author=[[OARDEC]]
| + | |
− | | publisher=[[United States Department of Defense]]
| + | |
− | | accessdate=2007-11-06
| + | |
− | | pages=pages 73-
| + | |
− | }}</ref>
| + | |
− | But he did meet with his [[Assisting Military Officer (ARB)|Assisting Military Officer]]. His Assisting Military Officer summarized his responses to the factors to his Board.
| + | |
− | The Assisting Military Officer's report on his interview takes place during the Board's unclassified session.
| + | |
− | The Department of Defense has not indicated why they withheld the transcript from the Board's unclassified session.
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | ===Board recommendations===
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | In early September 2007 the Department of Defense released two heavily redacted memos, from his Board, to [[Gordon England]], the [[Designated Civilian Official (OARDEC)|Designated Civilian Official]].<ref name=ArbRecommendationIsn652>
| + | |
− | {{cite web
| + | |
− | | url=http://www.dod.mil/pubs/foi/detainees/csrt_arb/ARB_Round_1_Decision_memos_000392-000483.pdf#72
| + | |
− | | title=Administrative Review Board assessment and recommendation ICO ISN 652
| + | |
− | | date=[[26 July]] [[2005]]
| + | |
− | | author=[[OARDEC]]
| + | |
− | | publisher=[[United States Department of Defense]]
| + | |
− | | accessdate=2007-11-06
| + | |
− | | pages=page 72
| + | |
− | }}</ref><ref name=ArbBasisForRecommendationIsn652>
| + | |
− | {{cite web
| + | |
− | | url=http://www.dod.mil/pubs/foi/detainees/csrt_arb/ARB_Round_1_Decision_memos_000392-000483.pdf#72
| + | |
− | | title=Classified Record of Proceedings and basis of Administrative Review Board recommendation for ISN 652
| + | |
− | | date=[[5 July]] [[2005]]
| + | |
− | | author=[[OARDEC]]
| + | |
− | | publisher=[[United States Department of Defense]]
| + | |
− | | accessdate=2007-11-06
| + | |
− | | pages=pages 73-
| + | |
− | }}</ref>
| + | |
− | Captive 652's Board's recommendation was unanimous.
| + | |
− | The redactions concealed the Board's recommendation.
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | Captive 652's Board's considered assessments from the [[FBI]], the [[CIA]], and the [[Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Detainee Affairs]].
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | ==Repatriation==
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | The Saudi embassy announced that a Saudi named '''Abdullah Hamid Mohammed Al-Qahtani''' was one of fifteen Guantanamo captives repatriated to Saudi Arabia on [[May 19]] [[2006]].<ref name=SaudiEmbassyWashDC060519>{{cite web
| + | |
− | | date=[[May 19]] [[2006]]
| + | |
− | | title=Saudi detainees at Guantanamo returned to the Kingdom; names given
| + | |
− | | url=http://saudiembassy.net/2006News/News/UsrDetail.asp?cIndex=6226
| + | |
− | | publisher=[[Royal Saudi Embassy]] Washington DC
| + | |
− | | accessdate=March 7
| + | |
− | | accessyear=2007
| + | |
− | }}</ref><ref name=TheSaudiRepatriatesReport>
| + | |
− | {{cite web
| + | |
− | | url=http://www.fotofest.org/guantanamo/SaudiReport.pdf
| + | |
− | | title=The Saudi Repatriates Report
| + | |
− | | author=[[Anant Raut]], [[Jill M. Friedman]]
| + | |
− | | date=[[March 19]] [[2007]]
| + | |
− | | accessdate=April 21
| + | |
− | | accessyear=2007
| + | |
− | }}</ref>
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | ==References==
| + | |
− | <references/>
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | ==Guantanamo record==
| + | |
− |
| + | |
− | −
| + | |
− | −
| + | |
− | There is no record that Al Qahtani chose to participate in either his Combatant Status Review Tribunal or Administrative Review Board.
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | [[Category:Saudi Arabian extrajudicial prisoners of the United States|Al Qahtani, Abdullah Hamid]]
| + | |
− | [[Category:People held at the Guantanamo Bay detention camp|Al Qahtani, Abdullah Hamid]]
| + | |
− | [[Category:Living people|Al Qahtani, Abdullah Hamid]]
| + | |
− | [[Category:Guantanamo detainees known to have been released]]
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | | + | |
− | | + | |
− | ==Said Muhammad Husayn Qahtani==
| + | |
− | [[Wikipedia:Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Said Muhammad Husayn Qahtani]]
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | {{Infobox War on Terror detainee
| + | |
− | | name = Said Muhammad Husayn Qahtani
| + | |
− | | image =
| + | |
− | | image_size =
| + | |
− | | caption =
| + | |
− | | birth_date = <!-- {{Birth-date and age| birth date }} -->
| + | |
− | | birth_place =
| + | |
− | | date_of_arrest = 2001-12-18
| + | |
− | | place_of_arrest = [[Parachinar, Pakistan]]
| + | |
− | | arresting_authority = Pakistani forces
| + | |
− | | date_of_release =
| + | |
− | | place_of_release =
| + | |
− | | death_date = <!-- {{Death-date and age| death date | birth date }} -->
| + | |
− | | death_place =
| + | |
− | | citizenship = [[Saudi]]
| + | |
− | | detained_at = [[Guantanamo Bay detention camp|Guantanamo]]
| + | |
− | | id_number = 200
| + | |
− | | group =
| + | |
− | | alias =
| + | |
− | | charge = no charge, [[extrajudicial detention]]
| + | |
− | }}
| + | |
− | '''Said Muhammad Husayn Qahtani''' is a citizen of [[Saudi Arabia]], held in [[extrajudicial detention]] in the [[United States]] [[Guantanamo Bay detainment camp]]s, in [[Cuba]].<ref name=DoDList2>
| + | |
− | {{cite web
| + | |
− | | url=http://www.dod.mil/news/May2006/d20060515%20List.pdf
| + | |
− | | title=List of Individuals Detained by the Department of Defense at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba from January 2002 through May 15, 2006
| + | |
− | | publisher=[[United States Department of Defense]]
| + | |
− | | author=[[OARDEC]]
| + | |
− | | accessdate=2006-05-15
| + | |
− | | quote=
| + | |
− | }}</ref>
| + | |
− | His Guantanamo [[Internment Serial Number]] is 200.
| + | |
− | American [[counter-terrorism]] analysts estimate he was born in 1978, in [[Khamees Mushail, Saudi Arabia|Khamees Mushail]], [[Saudi Arabia]].
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | As of today Said Muhammad Husayn Qahtani has been confined in the Guantanamo camps for {{For year month day|year=2002|month=02|day=15}}, he arrived there on February 15, 2002.<ref name=OfficialGuantanamoWeights>
| + | |
− | {{cite web
| + | |
− | | url=http://www.dod.mil/pubs/foi/detainees/measurements/
| + | |
− | | title=Measurements of Heights and Weights of Individuals Detained by the Department of Defense at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba
| + | |
− | | publisher=[[United States Department of Defense|Department of Defense]]
| + | |
− | | author=[[JTF-GTMO]]
| + | |
− | | date=2007-03-16
| + | |
− | | accessdate=2008-12-22
| + | |
− | | quote=
| + | |
− | }} [http://www.webcitation.org/query?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.dod.mil%2Fpubs%2Ffoi%2Fdetainees%2Fmeasurements&date=2008-12-22 mirror]
| + | |
− | </ref><ref name=CshraHeightAndWeightTable>
| + | |
− | {{cite web
| + | |
− | | url=http://humanrights.ucdavis.edu/resources/library/documents-and-reports/gtmo_heightsweights.pdf
| + | |
− | | title=Measurements of Heights and Weights of Individuals Detained by the Department of Defense at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba (ordered and consolidated version)
| + | |
− | | publisher=[[Center for the Study of Human Rights in the Americas]], from DoD data
| + | |
− | | date=
| + | |
− | | author=
| + | |
− | | archiveurl=http://www.webcitation.org/query?url=http%3A%2F%2Fhumanrights.ucdavis.edu%2Fresources%2Flibrary%2Fdocuments-and-reports%2Fgtmo_heightsweights.pdf&date=2009-12-21
| + | |
− | | archivedate=2009-12-21
| + | |
− | }}</ref><ref name=NYTimesGuantanamoDocket>
| + | |
− | {{cite news
| + | |
− | | url=http://projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/200-said-muhammad-husyan-qahtani
| + | |
− | | title=Guantanamo Docket: Said Muhammad Husyan Qahtani
| + | |
− | | publisher=[[New York Times]]
| + | |
− | | date=2008-11
| + | |
− | | author=
| + | |
− | | accessdate=2010-03-30
| + | |
− | | quote=
| + | |
− | }}</ref>
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | == Combatant Status Review Tribunal ==
| + | |
− | {{wikisource|Summary of Evidence for Combatant Status Review Tribunal - Qahtani, Said Muhammed Husyan|CSRT Allegation memo}}
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | {{CSRT-Yes}}<ref name=CsrtMemoIsn200>
| + | |
− | {{cite web
| + | |
− | | url=http://www.dod.mil/pubs/foi/detainees/csrt_arb/000201-000299.pdf#14-15
| + | |
− | | title=Summary of Evidence for Combatant Status Review Tribunal -- Qahtani, Said Muhammed Husyan
| + | |
− | | publisher=[[United States Department of Defense]]
| + | |
− | | pages=14–15
| + | |
− | | date=2004-09-21
| + | |
− | | author=[[OARDEC]]
| + | |
− | | accessdate=2010-05-15
| + | |
− | }} [http://projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/200-said-muhammad-husyan-qahtani/documents/5/pages/213#1 fast mirror]
| + | |
− | </ref>
| + | |
− | * He was alleged to have been [[associated with al Qaida]] and [[associated with the Taliban]].
| + | |
− | * He was alleged to have been trained at the [[Kubah training camp]] and other [[Afghan training camp]]s/
| + | |
− | * He was alleged to have travelled to Afghanistan in April 2001 in response to a [[fatwa]].
| + | |
− | * He was alleged to have stayed at a [[Rawibandy, Pakistan|Rawibandy]] {{sic}}, [[Pakistan]] [[safe house, Rawalpindi|safe house]] in May 2000 with a high ranking [[al Qaida official]].
| + | |
− | * He was alleged to have served on the Taliban's front lines.
| + | |
− | * He was alleged to have fled through [[Tora Bora]], and to have been captured by Pakistani Forces on 18 December 2001 near [[Parachinar]], Pakistan.
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | ===Transcript===
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | Said chose to participate in his Tribunal.<ref name=CsrtSaidMuhammadHusaynQahtani>
| + | |
− | {{cite web
| + | |
− | | url={{DoD detainees ARB|Set_33_2302-2425_Revised.pdf#100-111}}
| + | |
− | | title=Detainee's Preliminary Comments
| + | |
− | | publisher=[[United States Department of Defense]]
| + | |
− | | date=date redacted
| + | |
− | | author=[[OARDEC]]
| + | |
− | | accessdate=2010-05-15
| + | |
− | }}</ref>
| + | |
− | On March 3, 2006, in response to a [[court order]] from [[Jed Rakoff]] the [[United States Department of Defense|Department of Defense]] published a twelve page summarized transcript from his Combatant Status Review Tribunal.<ref name=TheAge20060404>
| + | |
− | {{cite news
| + | |
− | | url=http://www.theage.com.au/news/World/US-releases-Guantanamo-files/2006/04/04/1143916500334.html
| + | |
− | | title=US releases Guantanamo files
| + | |
− | | publisher=[[The Age]]
| + | |
− | | date=April 4, 2006
| + | |
− | | accessdate=2008-03-15
| + | |
− | | quote=
| + | |
− | }}</ref>
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | ==Salam Abdullah Said v. George W. Bush==
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | Saad Al Qahtani was one of five Saudi who had a petition of [[habeas corpus]] filed on their behalf December 13, 2005, in [[Salam Abdullah Said v. George W. Bush]].<ref name=GuantanamoHabeasRespondentResponse/><ref name=Cv08-0442Doc139/>
| + | |
− | In September 2007 the Department of Justice published dossiers of unclassified documents arising from the Combatant Status Review Tribunals of 179 captives.<ref name=OardecPubliclyFiledDocuments20070910>
| + | |
− | {{cite web
| + | |
− | | url=http://www.dod.mil/pubs/foi/detainees/csrt_arb/index_publicly_filed_CSRT_records.pdf
| + | |
− | | title=Index for CSRT Records Publicly Files in Guantanamo Detainee Cases
| + | |
− | | author=[[OARDEC]]
| + | |
− | | publisher=[[United States Department of Defense]]
| + | |
− | | date=August 8, 2007
| + | |
− | | accessdate=2007-09-29
| + | |
− | }}</ref>
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | ===Seizure of privileged lawyer-client documents===
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | On June 10, 2006 the [[United States Department of Defense|Department of Defense]] reported that three captives died in custody.
| + | |
− | The Department of Defense stated the three men [[Guantanamo suicide attempts|committed suicide]].
| + | |
− | Camp authorities called the deaths "an act of asymmetric warfare", and suspected plans had been coordinated by the captive's attorneys—so they seized all the captives' documents, including the captives' copies of their habeas documents.<ref name=GuantanamoHabeasRespondentResponse>
| + | |
− | {{cite web
| + | |
− | | url=http://www.pegc.us/archive/OK_v_Bush/govt_resp_to_GK_20060815.pdf
| + | |
− | | title=Respondents' response to Court's August 7, 2006 order
| + | |
− | | date=August 15, 2006
| + | |
− | | publisher=[[United States Department of Defense]]
| + | |
− | | accessdate=2008-06-23
| + | |
− | |archiveurl = http://web.archive.org/web/20080627111630/http://www.pegc.us/archive/OK_v_Bush/govt_resp_to_GK_20060815.pdf <!-- Bot retrieved archive --> |archivedate = 2008-06-27}} [http://www.webcitation.org/query?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.pegc.us%2Farchive%2FOK_v_Bush%2Fgovt_resp_to_GK_20060815.pdf&date=2008-08-18 mirror]
| + | |
− | </ref>
| + | |
− | Since the habeas documents were privileged lawyer-client communication the
| + | |
− | Department of Justice was compelled to file documents about the document seizures.
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | ===Military Commissions Act===
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | The [[Military Commissions Act of 2006]] mandated that Guantanamo captives were no longer entitled to access the US civil justice system, so all outstanding habeas corpus petitions were stayed.
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | ===Boumediene v. Bush===
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | On June 12, 2008 the [[United States Supreme Court]] ruled, in [[Boumediene v. Bush]], that the [[Military Commissions Act of 2006|Military Commissions Act]] could not remove the right for [[Guantanamo captives]] to access the US Federal Court system. And all previous Guantanamo captives' habeas petitions were eligible to be re-instated.
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | ===Request for his habeas corpus petition to be re-instated===
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | On July 18, 2008 [[David W. DeBruin]] filed a renewal for the habeas corpus of two of the five captives in [[Said v. Bush]]. The petition stated that three of the captives had been repatriated.<ref name=Cv08-0442Doc139>
| + | |
− | {{cite web
| + | |
− | | url=http://docs.justia.com/cases/federal/district-courts/district-of-columbia/dcdce/1:2008mc00442/131990/139/0.pdf
| + | |
− | | title=Guantanamo Bay Detainee Litigation: Doc 139 -- Civil Action No. 05-CV-2384 (RWR) STATUS REPORT REGARDING SAID V. BUSH
| + | |
− | | publisher=[[United States Department of Justice]]
| + | |
− | | author=
| + | |
− | | date=2008-07-18
| + | |
− | | accessdate=2008-08-18
| + | |
− | | quote=
| + | |
− | }}
| + | |
− | </ref>
| + | |
− | Saad Al Qahtani and [[Mohammed Zahrani]] were listed as captives who were still in detention in Guantanamo, who were requesting having their habeas petition re-instated.
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | Saudi Arabian captives had represented the largest group of foreigners apprehended in Afghanistan and transported to Guantanamo. But, by the end of 2007 almost all the Saudis had been sent home.
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | == References ==
| + | |
− | {{reflist|2}}
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | ==External links==
| + | |
− | * [http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2010/09/22/who-are-the-remaining-prisoners-in-guantanamo-part-three-captured-crossing-from-afghanistan-into-pakistan-1-of-2/ Who Are the Remaining Prisoners in Guantánamo? Part Three: Captured Crossing from Afghanistan into Pakistan (1 of 2)] Andy Worthington, September 22, 2010
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | {{Afghanistan War}}
| + | |
− | {{Controversies surrounding people captured during the War on Terror}}
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | {{Persondata <!-- Metadata: see [[Wikipedia:Persondata]]. -->
| + | |
− | | NAME = Qahtani, Said Muhammad Husyan
| + | |
− | | ALTERNATIVE NAMES =
| + | |
− | | SHORT DESCRIPTION =
| + | |
− | | DATE OF BIRTH = 1978
| + | |
− | | PLACE OF BIRTH =
| + | |
− | | DATE OF DEATH =
| + | |
− | | PLACE OF DEATH =
| + | |
− | }}
| + | |
− | {{DEFAULTSORT:Qahtani, Said Muhammad Husyan}}
| + | |
− | [[Category:Living people]]
| + | |
− | [[Category:People held at the Guantanamo Bay detention camp]]
| + | |
− | [[Category:Saudi Arabian extrajudicial prisoners of the United States]]
| + | |
− | [[Category:Year of birth uncertain]]
| + | |
− | [[Category:1978 births]]
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | | + | |
− | | + | |
− | | + | |
− | == Abdullah Muhammed Abdel Aziz ==
| + | |
− | [[Wikipedia:Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Abdullah Muhammed Abdel Aziz]]
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | '''Abdullah Muhammed Abdel Aziz''' is a citizen of [[Saudi Arabia]] who was held in [[extrajudicial detention]] in the [[United States]] [[Guantanamo Bay detention camp]]s, in [[Cuba]].<ref name=DoDList2>[http://www.dod.mil/news/May2006/d20060515%20List.pdf list of prisoners], ''[[US Department of Defense]]'', May 15, 2006</ref>
| + | |
− | His Guantanamo [[Internment Serial Number]] was 206.
| + | |
− | [[Joint Task Force Guantanamo]] report that he was born on September 8, 1967, in [[Al Medina Menawa, Saudi Arabia|Al Medina Menawa]], Saudi Arabia.
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | was captured in Afghanistan in December 2001 and transferred to Saudi Arabia on December 13, 2006.<ref>{{cite news| url=http://projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/206-abdullah-muhammed-abdel-aziz | work=The New York Times | title=Abdullah Muhammed Abdel Aziz - The Guantánamo Docket}}</ref>
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | ==References==
| + | |
− | {{Reflist|2}}
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | {{Afghanistan War}}
| + | |
− | {{WoTPrisoners}}
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | {{Persondata
| + | |
− | | NAME = Abdel Aziz, Abdullah Muhammed
| + | |
− | | ALTERNATIVE NAMES =
| + | |
− | | SHORT DESCRIPTION = Saudi Arabian held in [[Guantanamo Bay detention camp]]
| + | |
− | | DATE OF BIRTH = 1967
| + | |
− | | PLACE OF BIRTH =
| + | |
− | | DATE OF DEATH =
| + | |
− | | PLACE OF DEATH =
| + | |
− | }}
| + | |
− | {{DEFAULTSORT:Abdel Aziz, Abdullah Muhammed}}
| + | |
− | [[Category:Saudi Arabian extrajudicial prisoners of the United States]]
| + | |
− | [[Category:Living people]]
| + | |
− | [[Category:Guantanamo detainees known to have been released]]
| + | |
− | [[Category:1967 births]]
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | | + | |
− | | + | |
− | | + | |
− | == Sa ad Ibraham Sa ad Al Bidna ==
| + | |
− | [[Wikipedia:Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Sa ad Ibraham Sa ad Al Bidna]]
| + | |
− | {{Infobox War on Terror detainee
| + | |
− | | name = Sa ad Ibraham Sa ad Al Bidna
| + | |
− | | image =
| + | |
− | | image_size =
| + | |
− | | caption =
| + | |
− | | birth_date = {{Birth year and age|1978}}
| + | |
− | | birth_place = [[Riyadh]], [[Saudi Arabia]]
| + | |
− | | arrest_date = 2001-12
| + | |
− | | arrest_place = [[Quetta]] or [[Karachi]], [[Pakistan]]
| + | |
− | | arresting_authority= Pakistani police
| + | |
− | | release_date = 2006-06
| + | |
− | | release_place = Saudi Arabia
| + | |
− | | death_date = <!-- {{Death-date and age| death date | birth date }} -->
| + | |
− | | death_place =
| + | |
− | | citizenship = [[Saudi Arabia]]
| + | |
− | | detained_at = [[Guantanamo Bay detainment camp]]
| + | |
− | | id_number = 337
| + | |
− | | group =
| + | |
− | | alias =
| + | |
− | | charge = no charge, [[extrajudicial detention]]
| + | |
− | | penalty =
| + | |
− | | status = repatriated to Saudi custody
| + | |
− | | csrt_summary =
| + | |
− | | csrt_transcript=
| + | |
− | | occupation =
| + | |
− | | spouse =
| + | |
− | | parents =
| + | |
− | | children =
| + | |
− | }}
| + | |
− | '''Sa ad Ibraham Sa ad Al Bidna''' is a citizen of [[Saudi Arabia]], who was held in [[extrajudicial detention]] in the [[United States]] [[Guantanamo Bay detainment camp]]s, in [[Cuba]].<ref name=DoDList2>
| + | |
− | {{cite web
| + | |
− | | url=http://www.dod.mil/news/May2006/d20060515%20List.pdf
| + | |
− | | title=List of Individuals Detained by the Department of Defense at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba from January 2002 through May 15, 2006
| + | |
− | | publisher=[[United States Department of Defense]]
| + | |
− | | accessdate=2006-05-15
| + | |
− | | quote=
| + | |
− | }}
| + | |
− | {{wikisource-inline|List of Individuals Detained by the Department of Defense at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba from January 2002 through May 15, 2006}}
| + | |
− | </ref>
| + | |
− | Al Bidna's Guantanamo detainee ID number was 337.
| + | |
− | The [[United States Department of Defense|Department of Defense]] reports that Al Bidna was born in 1978, in [[Riyadh]], Saudi Arabia.
| + | |
− | Al Bidna was repatriated on June 25, 2006.<ref name=SaudiEmbassy06-06-25/>
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | ==Background==
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | During his Guantanamo stay al Bidna described his family as wealthy enough to employ multiple servants.<ref name=AndyWorthingtonCagePrisonersIsn337>
| + | |
− | {{cite news
| + | |
− | | url = http://www.cageprisoners.com/cases/guantanamo-bay/item/2565-saad-al-bidna-isn-337
| + | |
− | | title = Saad Al Bidna (ISN 337)
| + | |
− | | publisher = [[Cageprisoners]]
| + | |
− | | date = 2011-11-02
| + | |
− | | accessdate = 2012-06-21
| + | |
− | | quote = Noting that it was stated that he had “admitted to being a terrorist,†he said that he made that statement when he was “frustrated and extremely mad and being sarcastic,†when he “threw his hands up, and said, ‘all right, you got me, I’m a terrorist.’â€
| + | |
− | | page =
| + | |
− | | author = [[Andy Worthington]]
| + | |
− | }}
| + | |
− | </ref>
| + | |
− | He said his father was a retired teacher.
| + | |
− | In an interview following his release from Guantanamo al Bidna said that he only went as far as primary school.<ref name=AlRiyadhInterview>
| + | |
− | {{cite news
| + | |
− | | url = http://www.aifdemocracy.org/policy-issues.php?id=2625
| + | |
− | | title = Online Fatwas Incite Young Muslims to Jihad
| + | |
− | | publisher = [[American Islamic Forum for Democracy]]
| + | |
− | | date = 2006-10-26
| + | |
− | | accessdate = 2012-06-20
| + | |
− | | quote =
| + | |
− | | page =
| + | |
− | | author =
| + | |
− | }}
| + | |
− | </ref>
| + | |
− | [[Andy Worthington]], the author of [[The Guantanao Files]], noted that in interviews following his release al Bidna acknowledged that he had traveled to Afghanistan for jihad, after being motivated to do so by fatwas issued by radical sheikhs.<ref name=TheGuantanamoFiles>
| + | |
− | {{cite book
| + | |
− | | url =
| + | |
− | | title = The Guantanao Files
| + | |
− | | publisher = [[Pluto Press]]
| + | |
− | | author = [[Andy Worthington]]
| + | |
− | | year = 2007
| + | |
− | | pages = 52-53
| + | |
− | | accessdate = 2012-06-26
| + | |
− | | isbn = 978 0 7453 2665 8
| + | |
− | | quote = He said he now knew that what he did was wrong -- although he also pointed out that, when he was in Afghanistan, ‘what concerned me the most was that Muslims were fighting each other, and that is why I left and went to Pakistan, for in jihad a Muslim must never fight
| + | |
− | his Muslim brother.’
| + | |
− | }}
| + | |
− | </ref><ref>
| + | |
− | {{cite news
| + | |
− | | url = http://www.israele.net/articolo,1407.htm
| + | |
− | | title = Editorialista saudita: Evidenti le cause dellondata di jihadisti
| + | |
− | | trans_title = Saudi Columnist: Jihadist Obvious causes of dellondata
| + | |
− | | publisher = [[Israele.net]]
| + | |
− | | date = 2006-10-23
| + | |
− | | archivedate = 2012-06-27
| + | |
− | | archiveurl = http://www.webcitation.org/query?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.israele.net%2Farticolo%2C1407.htm&date=2012-06-27
| + | |
− | | dead = no
| + | |
− | | quote = Al-Riyadh pubblica anche un’intervista a Sa'ad Bin Ibrahim al-Bidna, un giovane saudita che è partito per l’Afghanistan per combattere nella jihad, è stato arrestato in Pakistan ed è stato consegnato agli Stati Uniti.
| + | |
− | }}
| + | |
− | </ref>
| + | |
− | According to Worthington:
| + | |
− | ''“The most complete explanation of the sheikh's role was put forward by 23-year-old Saad al-Bidna.â€''
| + | |
− | Al Bidna had denied traveling to Afghanistan, while he was still in Guantanamo. He had claimed he spent the three missing months on a sex, drug and alcohol binge in Mashad, Iran.
| + | |
− | ==Status reviews==
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | Multiple US agencies reviewed al Bidna's status.
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | === Combatant Status Review Tribunal ===
| + | |
− | [[Image:Trailer where CSR Tribunals were held.jpg|thumb|[[Combatant Status Review Tribunal]]s were held in a trailer the size of a large [[RV]]. The captive sat on a plastic garden chair, with his hands and feet shackled to a bolt in the floor.<ref name=Nytimes041109>[http://www.nytimes.com/2004/11/08/national/08gitmo.html?ex=1257570000&en=4af06725bdf5c086&ei=5088&partner=rssnyt Guantánamo Prisoners Getting Their Day, but Hardly in Court], ''[[New York Times]]'', November 11, 2004 - [http://cageprisoners.com/articles.php?aid=3838 mirror]</ref><ref name=FinancialTimes041211>[http://www.christusrex.org/www1/news/ft-12-11-04a.htm Inside the Guantánamo Bay hearings: Barbarian "Justice" dispensed by KGB-style "military tribunals"], ''[[Financial Times]]'', December 11, 2004</ref> Three chairs were reserved for members of the press, but only 37 of the 574 Tribunals were observed.<ref name=DoDCsrtBriefing20070306>
| + | |
− | {{cite web
| + | |
− | | url=http://www.defenselink.mil/transcripts/transcript.aspx?transcriptid=3902
| + | |
− | | title=Annual Administrative Review Boards for Enemy Combatants Held at Guantanamo Attributable to Senior Defense Officials
| + | |
− | | publisher=[[United States Department of Defense]]
| + | |
− | | date=March 6, 2007
| + | |
− | | accessdate=2007-09-22
| + | |
− | }}</ref>]]
| + | |
− | {{wikisource|Summary of Evidence for Combatant Status Review Tribunal - AL BIDNA, Sa'ad Ad Ibraham Sa'ad}}
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | Initially the Bush administration asserted that they could withhold all the protections of the [[Geneva Conventions]] to captives from [[the war on terror]]. This policy was challenged before the Judicial branch. Critics argued that the USA could not evade its obligation to conduct [[competent tribunal]]s to determine whether captives are, or are not, entitled to the protections of [[prisoner of war]] status.
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | Subsequently the [[United States Department of Defense|Department of Defense]] set up the [[Office for the Administrative Review of Detained Enemy Combatants]] (OARDEC), an independent agency.
| + | |
− | In late 2004 and January 2005 [[Combatant Status Review Tribunal]]s organized by OARDEC reviewed the status of the 558 remaining captives. Al Bidna's review took place in late October or early November of 2004.<ref name=CsrtMemoIsn337>
| + | |
− | {{cite news
| + | |
− | | url = http://projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/337-saad-ibraham-saad-al-bidna/documents/5
| + | |
− | | title = Summary of Evidence for Combatant Status Review Tribunal - AL BIDNA, Sa'ad Ad Ibraham Sa'ad
| + | |
− | | publisher = [[OARDEC]]
| + | |
− | | date = 2004-10-21
| + | |
− | | accessdate = 2012-06-20
| + | |
− | | quote =
| + | |
− | | page =
| + | |
− | | author =
| + | |
− | }}
| + | |
− | </ref>
| + | |
− | A [[Summary of Evidence (CSRT)|Summary of Evidence memo]] drafted for his CSR Tribunal listed 7 unclassified allegations offered to justify his continued detention.
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | ====Transcript====
| + | |
− | Al Bidna chose to participate in his Combatant Status Review Tribunal.<ref name=CsrtSaadIbrahamSaadAlBidna> {{cite news
| + | |
− | | url = {{DoD detainee ARB|Set_47_3130-3248.pdf#102}}
| + | |
− | | title = CSR Tribunal transcript
| + | |
− | | publisher = [[OARDEC]]
| + | |
− | | year = 2004
| + | |
− | | accessdate = 2012-06-20
| + | |
− | | quote =
| + | |
− | | page =
| + | |
− | | author =
| + | |
− | }}
| + | |
− | [http://projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/337-saad-ibraham-saad-al-bidna/documents/4 mirror]
| + | |
− | </ref>
| + | |
− | The Department of Defense published a fifteen page transcript.
| + | |
− | Al Bidna's Tribunal confirmed he had properly been determined to be an enemy combatant.
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | === 2005 Administrative Review Board hearing ===
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | Detainees who were determined to have been properly classified as "enemy combatants" were scheduled to have their dossier reviewed at annual [[Administrative Review Board]] hearings. The Administrative Review Boards weren't authorized to review whether a detainee qualified for POW status, and they weren't authorized to review whether a detainee should have been classified as an "enemy combatant".
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | They were authorized to consider whether a detainee should continue to be detained by the United States, because they continued to pose a threat—or whether they could safely be repatriated to the custody of their home country, or whether they could be set free.
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | A two page [[Summary of Evidence (ARB)|Summary of Evidence memo]] was prepared for his 2005 hearing.<ref name=Arb2005MemoIsn337>
| + | |
− | {{cite news
| + | |
− | | url = {{DoD detainee ARB|ARB_Round_1_Factors_001046-001160.pdf#41}}
| + | |
− | | title = Unclassified Summary of Evidence for Administrative Review Board in the case of Al Bidna, Sa ad Ibrahim Sa ad
| + | |
− | | publisher = [[OARDED]]
| + | |
− | | date = 2005-05-02
| + | |
− | | accessdate = 2012-06-20
| + | |
− | | quote =
| + | |
− | | page =
| + | |
− | | author =
| + | |
− | }}
| + | |
− | [http://projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/337-saad-ibraham-saad-al-bidna/documents/1 mirror]
| + | |
− | </ref>
| + | |
− | The 2005 memo offered 8 ''"primary factors [that] favor continued detention"'' and 3 ''"primary factors [that] favor release or transfer"''.
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | ==== Transcript ====
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | Al Bidna chose to participate in his Administrative Review Board hearing.<ref name=ArbAlBidna>
| + | |
− | {{cite news
| + | |
− | | url = {{DoD detainee ARB|ARB_Transcript_Set_1_395-584.pdf#127}}
| + | |
− | | title = Summarized detainee statement
| + | |
− | | publisher = [[OARDEC]]
| + | |
− | | date = 2005
| + | |
− | | accessdate = 2012-06-20
| + | |
− | | quote =
| + | |
− | | page =
| + | |
− | | author =
| + | |
− | }}
| + | |
− | [http://projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/337-saad-ibraham-saad-al-bidna/documents/2#search/p1/ISN%20337 mirror]
| + | |
− | </ref>
| + | |
− | The Department of Defense publsihed a nine page transcript.
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | ===2006 Administrative Review Board hearing ===
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | Detainees who were determined to have been properly classified as "enemy combatants" were scheduled to have their dossier reviewed at annual [[Administrative Review Board]] hearings. The Administrative Review Boards weren't authorized to review whether a detainee qualified for POW status, and they weren't authorized to review whether a detainee should have been classified as an "enemy combatant".
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | They were authorized to consider whether a detainee should continue to be detained by the United States, because they continued to pose a threat—or whether they could safely be repatriated to the custody of their home country, or whether they could be set free.
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | A three page [[Summary of Evidence (ARB)|Summary of Evidence memo]] was prepared for his 2005 hearing.<ref name=Arb2005MemoIsn337>
| + | |
− | {{cite news
| + | |
− | | url = http://projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/337-saad-ibraham-saad-al-bidna/documents/3
| + | |
− | | title = Unclassified Summary of Evidence for Administrative Review Board in the case of Al Bidna, Sa ad Ibrahim Sa ad
| + | |
− | | publisher = [[OARDED]]
| + | |
− | | date = 2006-03-22
| + | |
− | | accessdate = 2012-06-20
| + | |
− | | quote =
| + | |
− | | page =
| + | |
− | | author =
| + | |
− | }}
| + | |
− | [http://projects.nytimes.com/guantanamo/detainees/337-saad-ibraham-saad-al-bidna/documents/1 mirror]
| + | |
− | </ref>
| + | |
− | The 2006 memo offered 13 ''"primary factors [that] favor continued detention"'' and 6 ''"primary factors [that] favor release or transfer"''.
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | There is no record al Bidna chose to attend his 2006 review.
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | ===Formerly secret JTF-GTMO assessment===
| + | |
− | {{commons|File:ISN 00337, Saad Al Bedna's Guantanamo detainee assessment.pdf}}
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | In April 2011 whistleblower organization [[WikiLeaks]] published formerly secret assessments, signed by Guantanamo camp commandants, for almost all the Guantanamo captives.<ref name=AndyWorthingtonCagePrisonersIsn337/>
| + | |
− | A ''"Recommendation for Continued Detention under DoD Control"'' was leaked, dated January 26, 2006, signed by camp commandant [[Jay W. Hood]].<ref name=JtfGtmoDabIsn337>
| + | |
− | {{cite news
| + | |
− | | url = http://wikileaks.ch/gitmo/pdf/sa/us9sa-000337dp.pdf
| + | |
− | | title = Recommendation for Continued Detention under DoD Control
| + | |
− | | publisher = [[Joint Task Force Guantanamo]]
| + | |
− | | date = 2006-01-26
| + | |
− | | accessdate = 2012-06-20
| + | |
− | | quote =
| + | |
− | | page =
| + | |
− | | author = [[Jay W. Hood]]
| + | |
− | }}
| + | |
− | {{commons-inline|File:ISN 00337, Saad Al Bedna's Guantanamo detainee assessment.pdf}}
| + | |
− | </ref>
| + | |
− | The recommendation was eight pages long, and recommended his continued detention. He was, however, repatriated to Saudi custody just five months later, where he was enrolled in a [[Saudi jihadist rehabilitation program]].
| + | |
− | In November 2011, historian [[Andy Worthington]], author of ''[[The Guantanamo Files]]'', published his analysis of what the formerly secret JTF-GTNO analysis added to the public knowledge of al Bidna's case.<ref name=AndyWorthingtonCagePrisonersIsn337/>
| + | |
− | Worthington noted that the JTF_GTMO assessment characterized al Bidna's account of himself as ''"inconsistent"''.
| + | |
− | He noted that JTF-GTMO analysts suspected his passport may have been forged
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | Worthington noted that the JTF-GTMO assessment placed weight on al Bidna`s meeting with [[Wa’el al-Jabiri]], who they characterized as a facilitator for the charity [[Al Wafa]] -- a charity the Bush administration listed as having suspected ties to terrorism.<ref name=AndyWorthingtonCagePrisonersIsn337/>
| + | |
− | Worthington noted that an association with al Jafiri was offered as a justification for the continued detention of [[Ibrahim al-Nasir]]
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | == Repatriation ==
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | Al Bidna was repatriated with thirteen other men, on June 25, 2006.<ref name=SaudiEmbassy06-06-25>
| + | |
− | {{cite web
| + | |
− | | url=http://saudiembassy.net/2006News/News/TerDetail.asp?cIndex=6331
| + | |
− | | title=Fourteen Guantanamo detainees returned to the Kingdom
| + | |
− | | date=June 25, 2006
| + | |
− | | publisher=[[Royal Saudi Embassy]], [[Washington, D.C.]]
| + | |
− | | accessdate=2007-03-10
| + | |
− | | archiveurl=http://www.webcitation.org/query?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.saudiembassy.net%2Farchive%2F2006%2Fnews%2Fpage453.aspx&date=2009-09-07
| + | |
− | | archivedate=2009-09-07
| + | |
− | }}</ref>
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | Upon his return to Suadi Arabia al Bidna was enrolled in the [[Saudi rehabilitation program]].<ref name=AlRiyadhInterview>
| + | |
− | {{cite news
| + | |
− | | url = http://www.aifdemocracy.org/policy-issues.php?id=2625
| + | |
− | | title = Online Fatwas Incite Young Muslims to Jihad
| + | |
− | | publisher = [[American Islamic Forum for Democracy]]
| + | |
− | | date = 2006-10-26
| + | |
− | | accessdate = 2012-06-20
| + | |
− | | quote = The [brief] period I spent there did not enable me see the full picture, and I did not have the knowledge to distinguish real jihad from other actions that are [only] called jihad. But I did see that there were devout people there. Some of them were young men who came [to Afghanistan] out of youthful enthusiasm and [due to their] scant religious knowledge, or were influenced by certain fatwas published by various religious scholars, or [were influenced by] by false images, which were not free of exaggeration, of the situation in Afghanistan. This was the kind of thing that prompted me to set out without informing or asking my family, and without considering the concept of legitimate jihad, its conditions and its rules.
| + | |
− | | page =
| + | |
− | | author =
| + | |
− | }}
| + | |
− | </ref><ref name=AndyWorthington>
| + | |
− | {{cite news
| + | |
− | | url = http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2007/08/03/saudi-who-suffered-brain-damage-in-guantanamo-gets-married-in-medina/
| + | |
− | | title = Saudi who suffered brain damage in Guantánamo gets married in Medina
| + | |
− | | publisher =
| + | |
− | | date = 2007-04-08
| + | |
− | | accessdate = 2012-06-20
| + | |
− | | quote = al-Saheil’s article, like a previous article about released detainee Sa’ad al-Bidna, is rather vague about the constraints imposed on the released detainees in terms of surveillance and restrictions on their liberty, although there seems little doubt that the rehabilitation programs are principally designed to reintegrate the former detainees into society, through a form of “reprogramming,†in the case of the former jihadis, and then through more direct means –- including returning them to their former jobs –- in the cases of both the ex-Taliban recruits and the many men who were in Afghanistan as humanitarian aid workers or missionaries.
| + | |
− | | page =
| + | |
− | | author = [[Andy Worthington]]
| + | |
− | }}
| + | |
− | </ref>
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | In October 2006, four months after his repatriation, Al Bidna offered an account of his activities
| + | |
− | in the months leading up to his capture that was at odds with the account he offered while in Guantanamo.<ref name=AlRiyadhInterview/> In Guantanamo he described living in [[Mashad]], [[Iran]], in September, October and November of 2001, indulging in a three month sex, drug and alcohol binge, where he enjoyed a series of brief
| + | |
− | term marriages with approximately a dozen Iranian women. In Guantanamo he denied entering Afghanistan, and explained his December 2, 2001 capture in Quetta to travel to Pakistan for medical treatment after ruining his digestion
| + | |
− | through his long binge.
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | In an October 2006 interview with ''[[al Riyadh]]'' magazine he acknowledged traveling to Afghanistan after being influenced by a [[fatwa]] to defend muslims there.<ref name=AlRiyadhInterview/>
| + | |
− | However, he described quidkly being disillusioned when he arrived and realized that the conflict was
| + | |
− | a muslim on muslim conflict.
| + | |
− | {{quotation|The [brief] period I spent there did not enable me see the full picture, and I did not have the knowledge to distinguish real jihad from other actions that are [only] called jihad. But I did see that there were devout people there. Some of them were young men who came [to Afghanistan] out of youthful enthusiasm and [due to their] scant religious knowledge, or were influenced by certain fatwas published by various religious scholars, or [were influenced by] by false images, which were not free of exaggeration, of the situation in Afghanistan. This was the kind of thing that prompted me to set out without informing or asking my family, and without considering the concept of legitimate jihad, its conditions and its rules.<ref name=AlRiyadhInterview/>}}
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | == References ==
| + | |
− | <references/>
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | <!--
| + | |
− | The following categories contain articles about individuals who almost all have Arabic names.
| + | |
− | Arabic names don't have European style surnames that are inherited, father to son.
| + | |
− | So, there is no point changing the order in which they are sorted in the categories.
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | Thanks!
| + | |
− | -->
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | [[Category:Living people]]
| + | |
− | [[Category:Saudi Arabian extrajudicial prisoners of the United States]]
| + | |
− | [[Category:1978 births]]
| + | |
− | [[Category:People from Riyadh]]
| + | |
− | [[Category:Guantanamo detainees known to have been released]]
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | | + | |
− | | + | |
− | | + | |
− | | + | |
− | == References ==
| + | |
− | {{Reflist|2}}
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | {{WoTPrisoners|state=collapsed}}
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | {{Persondata <!-- Metadata: see [[Wikipedia:Persondata]]. -->
| + | |
− | | NAME = Al Bidna, Saad Ibraham Saad al-
| + | |
− | | ALTERNATIVE NAMES =
| + | |
− | | SHORT DESCRIPTION =
| + | |
− | | DATE OF BIRTH = 1978
| + | |
− | | PLACE OF BIRTH =
| + | |
− | | DATE OF DEATH =
| + | |
− | | PLACE OF DEATH =
| + | |
− | }}
| + | |
− | {{DEFAULTSORT:Bidna, Saad Ibraham Saad Al}}
| + | |
− | [[Category:Living people]]
| + | |
− | [[Category:Saudi Arabian extrajudicial prisoners of the United States]]
| + | |
− | [[Category:1978 births]]
| + | |
− | [[Category:People from Riyadh]]
| + | |
− | [[Category:Guantanamo detainees known to have been released]]
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | | + | |
− | == Fahd Salih Sulayman Al Jutayli ==
| + | |
− | [[Wikipedia:Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/Fahd_Salih_Sulayman_Al_Jutayli]]
| + | |
− | {{Infobox War on Terror detainee
| + | |
− | | name = Fahd Salih Sulayman Al Jutayli
| + | |
− | | image =
| + | |
− | | image_size =
| + | |
− | | caption =
| + | |
− | | birth_date = {{Birth year and age|1983}}
| + | |
− | | birth_place = [[Burayada, Saudi Arabia]]
| + | |
− | | death_date =
| + | |
− | | death_place =
| + | |
− | | detained_at = [[Guantanamo Bay detention camp|Guantanamo]]
| + | |
− | | id_number = 177
| + | |
− | | group =
| + | |
− | | alias =
| + | |
− | | charge = No charge (held in [[extrajudicial detention]])
| + | |
− | | penalty =
| + | |
− | | status = Repatriated
| + | |
− | | occupation =
| + | |
− | | spouse =
| + | |
− | | parents =
| + | |
− | | children =
| + | |
− | }}
| + | |
− | '''Fahd Salih Sulayman Al Jutayli''' (c. 1983 – September 2009) was a citizen of [[Saudi Arabia]] who was held in [[extrajudicial]] detention in the [[United States]] [[Guantanamo Bay detention camp]]s, in [[Cuba]].<ref name=DoDList2>
| + | |
− | {{cite web
| + | |
− | | url=http://www.dod.mil/news/May2006/d20060515%20List.pdf
| + | |
− | |format=PDF| title=List of Individuals Detained by the Department of Defense at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba from January 2002 through May 15, 2006
| + | |
− | | author=[[OARDEC]]
| + | |
− | | publisher=[[United States Department of Defense]]
| + | |
− | | date=May 15, 2006
| + | |
− | | accessdate=2007-09-29
| + | |
− | }}</ref>
| + | |
− | Al Jutayli's Guantanamo [[Internment Serial Number]] was 177.
| + | |
− | [[Joint Task Force Guantanamo]] [[counter-terrorism]] analysts estimate that Al Jutayli was born in 1983, in [[Burayada, Saudi Arabia]].
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | == Combatant Status Review ==
| + | |
− | {{main|Combatant Status Review Tribunal}}
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | Al Jutayli was among the 60% of prisoners who participated in the tribunal hearings.<ref>[[OARDEC]], [http://www.dod.mil/pubs/foi/detainees/csrt_arb/index_CSRT_detainees_testimony.pdf Index to Transcripts of Detainee Testimony and Documents Submitted by Detainees at Combatant Status Review Tribunals Held at Guantanamo Between July 2004 and March 2005], September 4, 2007</ref> A [[Summary of Evidence (CSRT)|Summary of Evidence memo]] was prepared for the tribunal of each detainee. The memo for his hearing lists the following allegations:<ref name=CsrtSummaryOfEvidenceFahdSalihSulaymanAlJutayli>
| + | |
− | {{cite web
| + | |
− | | url=http://www.dod.mil/pubs/foi/detainees/csrt_arb/000101-000200.pdf#83
| + | |
− | | title=Summary of Evidence for Combatant Status Review Tribunal -- Al Jutayli, Fahd Salih Sulayman
| + | |
− | | date=23 September 2004
| + | |
− | | author=[[OARDEC]]
| + | |
− | | pages=page 83
| + | |
− | | publisher=[[United States Department of Defense]]
| + | |
− | | accessdate=2007-12-05
| + | |
− | }}</ref>
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | {{Quotation|
| + | |
− | :a. The detainee is associated with Al Qaeda and is a Taliban fighter.
| + | |
− | :#Detainee was recruited to fight in Kashmir and Chechnya by a Jihadist recruiter in Saudi Arabia.
| + | |
− | :#Detainee joined the Taliban after receiving a Fatwa from Sheikh Ha Al-Uqla at the Imam Muhammad Bin Saud College in Burayda, Saudi Arabia.
| + | |
− | :#Detainee trained at Al Farouq training camp in Afghanistan during September 2001.
| + | |
− | :#Detainee was trained on the Kalashnikov rifle, Pakistan machine gun, and a Russian pistol at the Al Farouq training camp.
| + | |
− | :#One of detainee's known aliases was on a list of captured Al Qaeda members that was discovered on a computer hard drive associated with a senior Al Qaeda member.
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | :b. The detainee participated in military operations against the coalition.
| + | |
− | :#Detainee was a fighter at Tora Bora.
| + | |
− | }}
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | On March 3, 2006 the DoD released a 9 page summarized transcript from his Tribunal.<ref name=CsrtAlJutayli>[http://www.dod.mil/pubs/foi/detainees/csrt/Set_43_2811-2921.pdf#1 Summarized transcripts (.pdf)], from Fahd Salih Sulayman Al Jutayli's ''[[Combatant Status Review Tribunal]]'' - pages 1-9</ref>
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | ==Summarized Unsworn Detainee Statement==
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | Al Jutayli denied all the allegations:
| + | |
− | :{| class="wikitable"
| + | |
− | |
| + | |
− | The words that you said are not true. The Accusations you presented are not true.
| + | |
− | I don't understand what you want me to do. Do you want me to talk to the [[Personal Representative (CSRT)|Personal Representative]]?
| + | |
− | What should I tell him?
| + | |
− | |}
| + | |
− | *Al Jutayli denied going to Chechnya or Kashmir.
| + | |
− | *Al Jutayli denied ever meeting Sheik Uqla.
| + | |
− | *Al Jutayli denied ever fighting with the Taliban, Al Qaeda, or the coalition.
| + | |
− | *Al Jutayli denied being trained on the machine guns.
| + | |
− | *Al Jutayli denied knowing the captured al Qaeda member who was captured with a suspicious list that named him.<ref>Al Jutayli said: ''"The name that you mentioned that was captured, I don't know anything about that name."</ref>
| + | |
− | *Al Jutayli confirmed that he attended a training camp—but he didn't know if it was called Al Farouq, and did not know if it was run by al Qaeda.
| + | |
− | *Al Jutayli claimed he was only trained on the use of handguns.
| + | |
− | *Al Jutayli denied any knowledge of the presence of his names on suspicious lists. He claimed he only learned about Guantanamo after he was brought to Guantanamo. He claimed he didn't know what alias the allegations referred to.
| + | |
− | *Al Jutayli claimed that the two months he was in Afghanistan for two months, and that this was only enough time to attend training. He claimed he would not have had time to both train and fight.
| + | |
− | *Al Jutayli denied he was never near any fighting in Tora Bora.
| + | |
− | *Al Jutayli claimed that all he did after he finished his training was try to get out of Afghanistan.
| + | |
− | *Al Jutayli stated he did not have his passport with him when he fled Afghanistan for Pakistan.
| + | |
− | *Al Jutayli stated a benefactor he met, during his flight, found him an Afghan guide to guide him through the Mountains. He stated he didn't know whether his benefactor paid his guide.
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | ==Fahd Salih Sulayman Al Jutayli v. George W. Bush==
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | A [[writ of habeas corpus]] was submitted on Fahd Salih Sulayman Al Jutayli's behalf.<ref name=GuantanamoHabeasFahdSalihSulaymanAlJutaylivGeorgeWBush>
| + | |
− | {{cite web
| + | |
− | | url=http://www.dod.mil/pubs/foi/detainees/csrt_arb/publicly_filed_CSRT_records_977-1088.pdf#75
| + | |
− | | title=Fahd Salih Sulayman Al Jutayli v. George W. Bush
| + | |
− | | publisher=[[United States Department of Defense]]
| + | |
− | | date=22 December 2005
| + | |
− | | pages=Pages 75–97
| + | |
− | | accessdate=2007-12-05
| + | |
− | }}</ref>
| + | |
− | In response the Department of Defense released 23 pages of unclassified documents arising from his Combatant Status Review Tribunal.
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | According to the [[Combatant Status Review Tribunal Decision Report Cover Sheet]] within that dossier his
| + | |
− | Tribunal convened on 7 October 2004.<ref name=AlJutayliCsrtCoverSheet>
| + | |
− | {{cite web
| + | |
− | | url=http://www.dod.mil/pubs/foi/detainees/csrt_arb/publicly_filed_CSRT_records_977-1088.pdf#80
| + | |
− | | title=Combatant Status Review Tribunal Decision Report Cover Sheet
| + | |
− | | publisher=[[United States Department of Defense]]
| + | |
− | | date=7 October 2005
| + | |
− | | pages=Page 80
| + | |
− | | accessdate=2007-12-05
| + | |
− | }}</ref>
| + | |
− | His "enemy combatant" status was confirmed by [[Tribunal panel 12]].
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | Al Jutayli's [[Personal Representative (CSRT)|Personal Representative]] completed his [[Detainee election form]] on
| + | |
− | 5 October 2004.<ref name=CsrtDetaineeElectionFormAlJutayli>
| + | |
− | {{cite web
| + | |
− | | url=http://www.dod.mil/pubs/foi/detainees/csrt_arb/publicly_filed_CSRT_records_977-1088.pdf#93
| + | |
− | | title=Detainee election form
| + | |
− | | publisher=[[United States Department of Defense]]
| + | |
− | | date=5 October 2005
| + | |
− | | pages=Page 93
| + | |
− | | accessdate=2007-12-05
| + | |
− | }}</ref>
| + | |
− | The box for marked "Wants to participate in Tribunal" was checked.
| + | |
− | The section for the Personal Representative's comments stated, simply:
| + | |
− | {{quotation|"No witnesses. Polite and calm."}}
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | {{ARB}}
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | ===Summary of Evidence memo===
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | A [[Summary of Evidence (ARB)|Summary of Evidence memo]] was prepared for
| + | |
− | Fahd Salih Sulayman Al Jutayli's
| + | |
− | Administrative Review Board,
| + | |
− | on 5 July 2005.<ref name=ArbSummaryOfEvidenceFahdSalihSulaymanAlJutayli>
| + | |
− | {{cite web
| + | |
− | | url=http://www.dod.mil/pubs/foi/detainees/csrt_arb/ARB_Round_1_Factors_000197-000294.pdf#3
| + | |
− | | title=Unclassified Summary of Evidence for Administrative Review Board in the case of Al Jutayli, Fahd Salih Sulayman
| + | |
− | | date=5 July 2005
| + | |
− | | author=[[OARDEC]]
| + | |
− | | pages=pages 3–5
| + | |
− | | publisher=[[United States Department of Defense]]
| + | |
− | | accessdate=2007-12-05
| + | |
− | }}</ref>
| + | |
− | The memo listed factors for and against his continued detention.
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | ''The following primary factors favor continued detention''
| + | |
− | {{Quotation|
| + | |
− | :a. Commitment
| + | |
− | :#The detainee received a fatwa from Sheik Ha Al-Uqla at the Immam Muhammad Bin Saud College in Burayda, Saudi Arabia to participate in ongoing conflicts in either Kashmir, Pakistan or Chechnya.
| + | |
− | :#The detainee's travel was also facilitated by Al-Uqla.
| + | |
− | :#Sheikh Hamud Al Uqla was a Saudi Arabian Mufti who issued fatwahs and encouraged people to fight jihad against Christians and Jews. Al Uqla condoned the 11 September 2001 attacks against the United States and helped raise money for Usama Bin Laden.
| + | |
− | :#The detainee traveled to Mecca and Jeddah, Saudi Arabia; Doha, Qatar; Karachi, Pakistan; Quetta, Pakistan; Qandahar, Afghanistan; Kabul, Afghanistan and finally to Jalalabad, Afghanistan.
| + | |
− | :#The detainee was identified by a senior al Qaida operative as a fighter belonging to the Khallad Bin Attash group at Tora Bora in late 2001. He was described as a new mujahidin.
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | :b. Training
| + | |
− | :#The detainee trained at al Farouq training camp in Afghanistan during September 2001.
| + | |
− | :#The detainee was trained on the Kalashnikov rifle, PK machine gun, and a Russian pistol at the al Farouq training camp.
| + | |
− | :#The detainee was trained by Al-Muhajir, believe to a member of al Qaida.
| + | |
− | :#Al-Muhahir has been identified as the most experienced person within al Qaida on the use of explosives.
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | :c. Connections/Associations
| + | |
− | :#The detainee was identified at the Nebras Arab guesthouse. This guesthouse was used by fighters heading to the al Farouq training camp and by Usama Bin Laden.
| + | |
− | :#The detainee's name was found on a computer used by suspected al Qaida members listing associated incarcerated in Pakistan.
| + | |
− | :#The detainee's name was found on a list recovered from safehouse raids associated with suspected al Qaida in Karachi, Pakistan.
| + | |
− | :#A Foreign Government Service listed the detainee as a high priority Saudi.
| + | |
− | :#The detainee's name was found on a hard drive associated with a senior al Qaida operative seized during raids on 1 March 2003 in Pakistan.
| + | |
− | :#The detainee's name was on a list for al Qaida Mujahidin who were scheduled to fight in Afghanistan, but who were arrested by Pakistani Authorities.
| + | |
− | }}
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | ''The following primary factors favor release or transfer''
| + | |
− | {{Quotation|
| + | |
− | :a. The detainee stated he would not participate in another Jihad if he were released.
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | :b. The detainee advised he was not aware that camp al Farouq was conducted by al Qaida.
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | :c. The detainee denied having any prior knowledge of the September 11th attacks or any future attacks against the United States and its interests.
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | :d. The detainee also stated that he had not heard of any plans of escape or any plans of attack on the Military Police at Camp X-ray.
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | :e. The detainee denied having ever met Usama Bin Laden during any of his travels.
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | :f. The detainee was identified by a foreign government service as being of low intelligence or law enforcement value to the United States. He was also unlikely to pose a terrorist threat to the United States or its interests.
| + | |
− | }}
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | ===Board recommendations===
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | In early September 2007 the Department of Defense released two heavily redacted memos, from his Board, to [[Gordon England]], the [[Designated Civilian Official (OARDEC)|Designated Civilian Official]].<ref name=ArbRecommendationIsn177>
| + | |
− | {{cite web
| + | |
− | | url=http://www.dod.mil/pubs/foi/detainees/csrt_arb/ARB_Round_1_Decision_memos_000096-000195.pdf#51
| + | |
− | | title=Administrative Review Board assessment and recommendation ICO ISN 177
| + | |
− | | date=26 July 2005
| + | |
− | | author=[[OARDEC]]
| + | |
− | | publisher=[[United States Department of Defense]]
| + | |
− | | accessdate=2007-12-05
| + | |
− | | pages=page
| + | |
− | }}</ref><ref name=ArbBasisForRecommendationIsn177>
| + | |
− | {{cite web
| + | |
− | | url=http://www.dod.mil/pubs/foi/detainees/csrt_arb/ARB_Round_1_Decision_memos_000096-000195.pdf#52
| + | |
− | | title=Classified Record of Proceedings and basis of Administrative Review Board recommendation for ISN 177
| + | |
− | | date=19 July 2005
| + | |
− | | author=[[OARDEC]]
| + | |
− | | publisher=[[United States Department of Defense]]
| + | |
− | | accessdate=2007-12-05
| + | |
− | | pages=page
| + | |
− | }}</ref>
| + | |
− | The Board's recommendation was unanimous
| + | |
− | The Board's recommendation was redacted.
| + | |
− | The Board concluded he continued to represent a threat to the United States.
| + | |
− | England authorized his transfer on July 28, 2005.
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | ==Repatriation==
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | According to [[The Saudi Repatriates Report]] Al Jutayli was one of fifteen men repatriated on May 15, 2006.<ref name=TheSaudiRepatriatesReport>
| + | |
− | {{cite web
| + | |
− | | url=http://www.fotofest.org/guantanamo/SaudiReport.pdf
| + | |
− | |format=PDF| title=The Saudi Repatriates Report
| + | |
− | | author=[[Anant Raut]], [[Jill M. Friedman]]
| + | |
− | | date=March 19, 2007
| + | |
− | | accessdate=April 21, 2007
| + | |
− | }}</ref>
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | ===Named on the Saudi most wanted list===
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | On February 3, 2009 Al Jutayli was named on Saudi Arabia's [[list of most wanted suspected terrorists]].<ref name=Nefa2009-02-09>
| + | |
− | {{cite news
| + | |
− | | url=http://www.nefafoundation.org/miscellaneous/FeaturedDocs/nefagitmoreturnees0209-1.pdf
| + | |
− | | title="The Eleven": Saudi Guantanamo Veterans Returning to the Fight
| + | |
− | | publisher=[[NEFA foundation]]
| + | |
− | | author=[[Evan Kohlmann]]
| + | |
− | | date=2009-02-09
| + | |
− | | accessdate=2009-02-14
| + | |
− | | quote=
| + | |
− | }}
| + | |
− | </ref>
| + | |
− | There were 85 names on the list, including ten other former Guantanamo captives.
| + | |
− | According to his mother he was living openly in Saudi Arabia just days prior to the publication of the most wanted list.
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | ===Reported to have been killed fighting Yemeni security officials===
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | Yemeni newspapers reported that two militants, including a former Guantanamo captive they
| + | |
− | identified as '''"Fahad Saleh al-Jotaili"''' were killed in combat in September 2009.<ref name=AlSahwa2009-09-27>
| + | |
− | {{cite news
| + | |
− | | url=http://www.alsahwanet.net/view_nnews.asp?sub_no=401_2009_09_27_73130
| + | |
− | | title=Saudi wanted militants killed in Yemen
| + | |
− | | publisher=[[Al Sawah]]
| + | |
− | | quote=Sources told al-Hayat that other Saudi militants called their families and asked them to inform the family of al-Jolaiti that he along with a companion were killed.
| + | |
− | | date=2009-09-27
| + | |
− | | author=
| + | |
− | | archiveurl=http://www.webcitation.org/query?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.alsahwanet.net%2Fview_nnews.asp%3Fsub_no%3D401_2009_09_27_73130&date=2009-09-30
| + | |
− | | archivedate=2009-09-30
| + | |
− | }}</ref>
| + | |
− | He was killed in clashes between Yemeni security officials and ''"[[Huthis|al-Houthi rebels]] in [[Saada]]."''
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | The ''[[Yemen Post]]'' reported on September 27 that [[Othman Al-Ghamedi]] and [[Yousuf Al-Shahri]] had contacted their families requesting that they pass on news to the Al Jutayli's family that he had died during a military action by Yemeni security officials.<ref name=YemenPost2009-09-27>
| + | |
− | {{cite news
| + | |
− | | url=http://yemenpost.net/Detail123456789.aspx?ID=3&SubID=1317&MainCat=3
| + | |
− | | title=Saudi Wanted Suspects Killed in Yemen Fighting
| + | |
− | | publisher=[[Yemen Post]]
| + | |
− | | quote=Othman Al-Ghamedi and Yousuf Al-Shahri, who are also on the most wanted list, called their families asking them to inform the Al-Jatili’s family of the death of their fellow, according to the paper.
| + | |
− | | date=2009-09-27
| + | |
− | | archiveurl=http://www.webcitation.org/query?url=http%3A%2F%2Fyemenpost.net%2FDetail123456789.aspx%3FID%3D3%26SubID%3D1317%26MainCat%3D3&date=2009-10-02
| + | |
− | | archivedate=2009-10-02
| + | |
− | }}</ref>
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | The Saudi Interior Ministry reported that DNA tests had confirmed that Al Jutayli was one of the several militants killed on September 14, 2009.<ref name=WashingtonPost2010-01-18>
| + | |
− | {{cite news
| + | |
− | | url=http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/01/18/AR2010011801995.html
| + | |
− | | title=Ministry: 3 Saudi militants killed in blast abroad
| + | |
− | | publisher=[[Washington Post]]
| + | |
− | | date=2010-01-18
| + | |
− | | archiveurl=http://www.webcitation.org/query?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.washingtonpost.com%2Fwp-dyn%2Fcontent%2Farticle%2F2010%2F01%2F18%2FAR2010011801995.html&date=2010-01-18
| + | |
− | | archivedate=2010-01-18
| + | |
− | }}</ref><ref name=ArabNews2010-01-18>
| + | |
− | {{cite news
| + | |
− | | url=http://www.arabnews.com/?page=1§ion=0&article=131464&d=19&m=1&y=2010&pix=kingdom.jpg&category=Kingdom
| + | |
− | | title=Blast kills 3 terrorists
| + | |
− | | publisher=[[Arab News]]
| + | |
− | | date=2010-01-18
| + | |
− | | archiveurl=http://www.webcitation.org/query?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.arabnews.com%2F%3Fpage%3D1%26section%3D0%26article%3D131464%26d%3D19%26m%3D1%26y%3D2010%26pix%3Dkingdom.jpg%26category%3DKingdom&date=2010-01-18
| + | |
− | | archivedate=2010-01-18
| + | |
− | }}</ref>
| + | |
− | The Saudi press release named [[Mohammed Abdel-Rahman al-Rashed]] and [[Sultan Radi al-Utaibi]] as the other two men killed by the blast, and noted that they were both on the [[Saudi most wanted list]].
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | == See also ==
| + | |
− | * [[Minors detained in the War on Terror]]
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | ==References==
| + | |
− | {{Reflist|2}}
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | {{Afghanistan War}}
| + | |
− | {{WoTPrisoners}}
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | {{Persondata <!-- Metadata: see [[Wikipedia:Persondata]]. -->
| + | |
− | | NAME = Jutayli, Fahd Salih Sulayman al-
| + | |
− | | ALTERNATIVE NAMES =
| + | |
− | | SHORT DESCRIPTION = Guantanamo detainees known to have been released
| + | |
− | | DATE OF BIRTH = 1983
| + | |
− | | PLACE OF BIRTH = [[Burayada, Saudi Arabia]]
| + | |
− | | DATE OF DEATH = 2009
| + | |
− | | PLACE OF DEATH =
| + | |
− | }}
| + | |
− | {{DEFAULTSORT:Jutayli, Fahd Salih Sulayman Al-}}
| + | |
− | [[Category:Saudi Arabian extrajudicial prisoners of the United States]]
| + | |
− | [[Category:Guantanamo detainees known to have been released]]
| + | |
− | [[Category:1983 births]]
| + | |
− | [[Category:2009 deaths]]
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | | + | |
− | | + | |
− | {{Infobox WoT detainees
| + | |
− | | subject_name = Fahd Salih Sulayman Al Jutayli
| + | |
− | | image_name =
| + | |
− | | image_size =
| + | |
− | | image_caption =
| + | |
− | | date_of_birth = {{Birth year and age|1983}}
| + | |
− | | place_of_birth = [[Burayada, Saudi Arabia]]
| + | |
− | | date_of_death =
| + | |
− | | place_of_death =
| + | |
− | | detained_at = [[Guantanamo Bay detention camp|Guantanamo]]
| + | |
− | | id_number = 177
| + | |
− | | group =
| + | |
− | | alias =
| + | |
− | | charge = no charge, held in [[extrajudicial detention]]
| + | |
− | | penalty =
| + | |
− | | status =
| + | |
− | | occupation =
| + | |
− | | spouse =
| + | |
− | | parents =
| + | |
− | | children =
| + | |
− | }}
| + | |
− | '''Fahd Salih Sulayman Al Jutayli''' is a citizen of [[Saudi Arabia]], held in [[extrajudicial]] detention in the [[United States]] [[Guantanamo Bay Naval Base]], in [[Cuba]].<ref name=DoDList2>
| + | |
− | {{cite web
| + | |
− | | url=http://www.dod.mil/news/May2006/d20060515%20List.pdf
| + | |
− | |format=PDF| title=List of Individuals Detained by the Department of Defense at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba from January 2002 through May 15, 2006
| + | |
− | | author=[[OARDEC]]
| + | |
− | | publisher=[[United States Department of Defense]]
| + | |
− | | date=[[May 15]] [[2006]]
| + | |
− | | accessdate=2007-09-29
| + | |
− | }}</ref>
| + | |
− | Al Jutayli's Guantanamo detainee ID number is 177.
| + | |
− | [[Joint Task Force Guantanamo]] [[counter-terrorism]] analysts estimates that Al Jutayli was born in 1983, in [[Burayada, Saudi Arabia]].
| + | |
− | {{main|minors detained in the global war on terror}}
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | ==Combatant Status Review Tribunal==
| + | |
− | [[Image:Trailer where CSR Tribunals were held.jpg|thumb|[[Combatant Status Review Tribunal]]s were held in a trailer the size of a large [[RV]]. The captive sat on a plastic garden chair, with his hands and feet shackled to a bolt in the floor.<ref name=Nytimes041109>[http://www.nytimes.com/2004/11/08/national/08gitmo.html?ex=1257570000&en=4af06725bdf5c086&ei=5088&partner=rssnyt Guantánamo Prisoners Getting Their Day, but Hardly in Court], ''[[New York Times]]'', [[November 11]] [[2004]] - [http://cageprisoners.com/articles.php?aid=3838 mirror]</ref><ref name=FinancialTimes041211>[http://www.christusrex.org/www1/news/ft-12-11-04a.htm Inside the Guantánamo Bay hearings: Barbarian "Justice" dispensed by KGB-style "military tribunals"], ''[[Financial Times]]'', [[December 11]] [[2004]]</ref> Three chairs were reserved for members of the press, but only 37 of the 574 Tribunals were observed.<ref name=DoDCsrtBriefing20070306>
| + | |
− | {{cite web
| + | |
− | | url=http://www.defenselink.mil/transcripts/transcript.aspx?transcriptid=3902
| + | |
− | | title=Annual Administrative Review Boards for Enemy Combatants Held at Guantanamo Attributable to Senior Defense Officials
| + | |
− | | publisher=[[United States Department of Defense]]
| + | |
− | | date=[[March 6]] [[2007]]|accessdate=2007-09-22
| + | |
− | }}</ref>{{POV-section|date=December 2007}}]]
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | Initially the Bush administration asserted that they could withhold all the protections of the [[Geneva Conventions]] to captives from [[the war on terror]]. This policy was challenged before the Judicial branch. Critics argued that the USA could not evade its obligation to conduct a [[competent tribunal]]s to determine whether captives are, or are not, entitled to the protections of [[prisoner of war]] status.
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | Subsequently the [[United States Department of Defense|Department of Defense]] instituted the [[Combatant Status Review Tribunal]]s. The Tribunals, however, were not authorized to determine whether the captives were ''lawful combatants'' -- rather they were merely empowered to make a recommendation as to whether the captive had previously been correctly determined to match the Bush administration's definition of an [[enemy combatant]].
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | ===Summary of Evidence memo===
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | A [[Summary of Evidence (CSRT)|Summary of Evidence memo]] was prepared for Fahd Salih Sulayman Al Jutayli's Combatant Status Review Tribunal, on [[23 September]] [[2004]].<ref name=CsrtSummaryOfEvidenceFahdSalihSulaymanAlJutayli>
| + | |
− | {{cite web
| + | |
− | | url=http://www.dod.mil/pubs/foi/detainees/csrt_arb/000101-000200.pdf#83
| + | |
− | | title=Summary of Evidence for Combatant Status Review Tribunal -- Al Jutayli, Fahd Salih Sulayman
| + | |
− | | date=[[23 September]] [[2004]]
| + | |
− | | author=[[OARDEC]]
| + | |
− | | pages=page 83
| + | |
− | | publisher=[[United States Department of Defense]]
| + | |
− | | accessdate=2007-12-05
| + | |
− | }}</ref>
| + | |
− | The memo listed the following allegations against him:
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | :'''a. The detainee is associated with [[Al Qaeda]] and is a [[Taliban]] fighter.
| + | |
− | :#Detainee was recruited to fight in [[Kashmir]] and [[Chechnya]] by a [[Jihadist]] recruiter in Saudi Arabia.
| + | |
− | :#Detainee joined the Taliban after receiving a [[Fatwa]] from [[Sheik]] [[Ha Al-Uqla]] at the [[Imam Muhammad Bin Saud College]] in Burayda, Saudi Arabia.
| + | |
− | :#Detainee trained at [[Al Farouq training camp]] in [[Afghanistan]] during September 2001.
| + | |
− | :#Detainee was trained on the [[Kalashnikov]] {{sic}} rifle, [[Pakistan machine gun]], and a Russian pistol at the Al Farouq training camp.
| + | |
− | :#One of detainee's known aliases was on a [[suspicious list (OARDEC)|list of captured Al Qaeda]] members that was discovered on a computer hard drive associated with a senior Al Qaeda member.
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | :'''b. The detainee participated in military operations against the coalition.
| + | |
− | :#Detainee was a fighter at [[Tora Bora]].
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | ===Transcript===
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | Al Jutayli participated in his Combatant Status Review Tribunal.<ref name=CsrtAlJutayli>[http://www.dod.mil/pubs/foi/detainees/csrt/Set_43_2811-2921.pdf#1 Summarized transcripts (.pdf)], from [[Fahd Salih Sulayman Al Jutayli]]'s ''[[Combatant Status Review Tribunal]]'' - pages 1-9</ref>
| + | |
− | On [[March 3]] [[2006]] the DoD released a 9 page summarized transcript from his Tribunal.
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | ===testimony===
| + | |
− | ===Summarized Unsworn Detainee Statement===
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | Al Jutayli denied all the allegations:
| + | |
− | :{| class="wikitable"
| + | |
− | |
| + | |
− | The words that you said are not true. The Accusations you presented are not true.
| + | |
− | I don't understand what you want me to do. Do you want me to talk to the [[Personal Representative (CSRT)|Personal Representative]]?
| + | |
− | What should I tell him?
| + | |
− | |}
| + | |
− | *Al Jutayli denied going to Chechnya or Kashmir.
| + | |
− | *Al Jutayli denied ever meeting Sheik Uqla.
| + | |
− | *Al Jutayli denied ever fighting with the Taliban, Al Qaeda, or the coalition.
| + | |
− | *Al Jutayli denied being trained on the machine guns.
| + | |
− | *Al Jutayli denied knowing the captured al Qaeda member who was captured with a suspicious list that named him.<ref>Al Jutayli said: ''"The name that you mentioned that was captured, I don't know anything about that name."</ref>
| + | |
− | *Al Jutayli confirmed that he attended a training camp -- but he didn't know if it was called Al Farouq, and did not know if it was run by al Qaeda.
| + | |
− | *Al Jutayli claimed he was only trained on the use of handguns.
| + | |
− | *Al Jutayli denied any knowledge of the presence of his names on suspicious lists. He claimed he only learned about Guantanamo after he was brought to Guantanamo. He claimed he didn't know what alias the allegations referred to.
| + | |
− | *Al Jutayli claimed that the two months he was in Afghanistan for two months, and that this was only enough time to attend training. He claimed he would not have had time to both train and fight.
| + | |
− | *Al Jutayli denied he was never near any fighting in Tora Bora.
| + | |
− | *Al Jutayli claimed that all he did after he finished his training was try to get out of Afghanistan.
| + | |
− | *Al Jutayli stated he did not have his passport with him when he fled Afghanistan for Pakistan.
| + | |
− | *Al Jutayli stated a benefactor he met, during his flight, found him an Afghan guide to guide him through the Mountains. He stated he didn't know whether his benefactor paid his guide.
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | ==Fahd Salih Sulayman Al Jutayli v. George W. Bush==
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | A [[writ of habeas corpus]] was submitted on Fahd Salih Sulayman Al Jutayli's behalf.<ref name=GuantanamoHabeasFahdSalihSulaymanAlJutaylivGeorgeWBush>
| + | |
− | {{cite web
| + | |
− | | url=http://www.dod.mil/pubs/foi/detainees/csrt_arb/publicly_filed_CSRT_records_977-1088.pdf#75
| + | |
− | | title=Fahd Salih Sulayman Al Jutayli v. George W. Bush
| + | |
− | | publisher=[[United States Department of Defense]]
| + | |
− | | date=[[22 December]] [[2005]]
| + | |
− | | pages=Pages 75-97
| + | |
− | | accessdate=2007-12-05
| + | |
− | }}</ref>
| + | |
− | In response the Department of Defense released 23 pages of unclassified documents arising from his Combatant Status Review Tribunal.
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | According to the [[Combatant Status Review Tribunal Decision Report Cover Sheet]] within that dossier his
| + | |
− | Tribunal convened on [[7 October]] [[2004]].<ref name=AlJutayliCsrtCoverSheet>
| + | |
− | {{cite web
| + | |
− | | url=http://www.dod.mil/pubs/foi/detainees/csrt_arb/publicly_filed_CSRT_records_977-1088.pdf#80
| + | |
− | | title=Combatant Status Review Tribunal Decision Report Cover Sheet
| + | |
− | | publisher=[[United States Department of Defense]]
| + | |
− | | date=[[7 October]] [[2005]]
| + | |
− | | pages=Page 80
| + | |
− | | accessdate=2007-12-05
| + | |
− | }}</ref>
| + | |
− | His "enemy combatant" status was confirmed by [[Tribunal panel 12]].
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | Al Jutayli's [[Personal Representative (CSRT)|Personal Representative]] completed his [[Detainee election form]] on
| + | |
− | [[5 October]] [[2004]].<ref name=CsrtDetaineeElectionFormAlJutayli>
| + | |
− | {{cite web
| + | |
− | | url=http://www.dod.mil/pubs/foi/detainees/csrt_arb/publicly_filed_CSRT_records_977-1088.pdf#93
| + | |
− | | title=Detainee election form
| + | |
− | | publisher=[[United States Department of Defense]]
| + | |
− | | date=[[5 October]] [[2005]]
| + | |
− | | pages=Page 93
| + | |
− | | accessdate=2007-12-05
| + | |
− | }}</ref>
| + | |
− | The box for marked "Wants to participate in Tribunal" was checked.
| + | |
− | The section for the Personal Representative's comments stated, simply:
| + | |
− | {{quotation|"No witnesses. Polite and calm."}}
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | ==Administrative Review Board hearing==
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | [[Image:Administrative Review Board hearing room.jpg|thumb|Hearing room where Guantanamo captive's annual Administrative Review Board hearings convened for captives whose Combatant Status Review Tribunal had already determined they were an "enemy combatant".<ref name=TheWire20060310> {{cite news | url=http://www.jtfgtmo.southcom.mil/wire/WirePDF/v6/TheWire-v6-i049-10MAR2006.pdf#1 | title=Review process unprecedented | publisher=[[JTF-GTMO Public Affairs Office]] | pages=pg 1 | author=Spc [[Timothy Book]] | date=Friday [[March 10]] [[2006]]|accessdate=2007-10-10 }}</ref>]]
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | Detainees who were determined to have been properly classified as "enemy combatants" were scheduled to have their dossier reviewed at annual [[Administrative Review Board]] hearings. The Administrative Review Boards weren't authorized to review whether a detainee qualified for POW status, and they weren't authorized to review whether a detainee should have been classified as an "enemy combatant".
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | They were authorized to consider whether a detainee should continue to be detained by the United States, because they continued to pose a threat -- or whether they could safely be repatriated to the custody of their home country, or whether they could be set free.
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | ===Summary of Evidence memo===
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | A [[Summary of Evidence (ARB)|Summary of Evidence memo]] was prepared for
| + | |
− | Fahd Salih Sulayman Al Jutayli's
| + | |
− | Administrative Review Board,
| + | |
− | on [[5 July]] [[2005]].<ref name=ArbSummaryOfEvidenceFahdSalihSulaymanAlJutayli>
| + | |
− | {{cite web
| + | |
− | | url=http://www.dod.mil/pubs/foi/detainees/csrt_arb/ARB_Round_1_Factors_000197-000294.pdf#3
| + | |
− | | title=Unclassified Summary of Evidence for Administrative Review Board in the case of Al Jutayli, Fahd Salih Sulayman
| + | |
− | | date=[[5 July]] [[2005]]
| + | |
− | | author=[[OARDEC]]
| + | |
− | | pages=pages 3-5
| + | |
− | | publisher=[[United States Department of Defense]]
| + | |
− | | accessdate=2007-12-05
| + | |
− | }}</ref>
| + | |
− | The memo listed factors for and against his continued detention.
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | ====The following primary factors favor continued detention:====
| + | |
− | :'''a. Commitment
| + | |
− | :#The detainee received a fatwa from Sheik Ha Al-Uqla at the Immam Muhammad Bin Saud College in Burayda, Saudi Arabia to participate in ongoing conflicts in either Kashmir, Pakistan or Chechnya.
| + | |
− | :#The detainee's travel was also facilitated by Al-Uqla.
| + | |
− | :#Sheikh Hamud Al Uqla was a Saudi Arabian [[Mufti]] who issued fatwahs and encouraged people to fight jihad against Christians and Jews. Al Uqla condoned the 11 September 2001 attacks against the United States and helped raise money for Usama Bin Laden.
| + | |
− | :#The detainee traveled to [[Mecca]] and [[Jeddah]], Saudi Arabia; [[Doha]], [[Qatar]]; [[Karachi]], Pakistan; [[Quetta]], Pakistan; [[Qandahar]], Afghanistan; [[Kabul]], Afghanistan and finally to [[Jalalabad]], Afghanistan.
| + | |
− | :#The detainee was identified by a senior al Qaida operative as a fighter belonging to the [[Khallad Bin Attash]] group at Tora Bora in late 2001. He was described as a new mujahidin.
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | :'''b. Training
| + | |
− | :#The detainee trained at al Farouq training camp in Afghanistan during September 2001.
| + | |
− | :#The detainee was trained on the Kalashnikov {{sic}} rifle, PK machine gun, and a Russian pistol at the al Farouq training camp.
| + | |
− | :#The detainee was trained by [[Al-Muhajir]], believe to a [[al Qaida member|member of al Qaida]].
| + | |
− | :#Al-Muhahir has been identified as the most experienced person within al Qaida on the use of explosives.
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | :'''c. Connections/Associations
| + | |
− | :#The detainee was identified at the [[Nebras Arab guesthouse]]. This guesthouse was used by fighters heading to the al Farouq training camp and by Usama Bin Laden.
| + | |
− | :#The detainee's name was found on a computer used by suspected al Qaida members listing associated [[incarcerated in Pakistan (OARDEC)|incarcerated in Pakistan]].
| + | |
− | :#The detainee's name was found on a [[suspicious list (OARDEC)|list]] recovered from [[al Qaida safe house, Karachi|safehouse raids]] associated with [[suspected al Qaida]] in Karachi, Pakistan.
| + | |
− | :#A Foreign Government Service listed the detainee as a high priority Saudi.
| + | |
− | :#The detainee's name was found on a hard drive associated with a senior [[al Qaida operative]] seized during raids on 1 March 2003 in Pakistan.
| + | |
− | :#The detainee's name was on a list for [[al Qaida Mujahidin]] who were scheduled to fight in Afghanistan, but who were arrested by Pakistani Authorities.
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | ====The following primary factors favor release or transfer:====
| + | |
− | :{|
| + | |
− | |valign="top" | '''a.''' ||
| + | |
− | The detainee stated he would not participate in another Jihad if he were released.
| + | |
− | |-
| + | |
− | |valign="top" | '''b.''' ||
| + | |
− | The detainee advised he was not aware that camp al Farouq was conducted by al Qaida.
| + | |
− | |-
| + | |
− | |valign="top" | '''c.''' ||
| + | |
− | The detainee denied having any prior knowledge of the September 11th attacks or any future attacks against the United States and its interests.
| + | |
− | |-
| + | |
− | |valign="top" | '''d.''' ||
| + | |
− | The detainee also stated that he had not heard of any plans of escape or any plans of attack on the [[Military Police]] at [[Camp X-ray]].
| + | |
− | |-
| + | |
− | |valign="top" | '''e.''' ||
| + | |
− | The detainee denied having ever met [[Usama Bin Laden]] during any of his travels.
| + | |
− | |-
| + | |
− | |valign="top" | '''f.''' ||
| + | |
− | The detainee was identified by a foreign government service as being of low intelligence or law enforcement value to the United States. He was also unlikely to pose a terrorist threat to the United States or its interests.
| + | |
− | |}
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | ===Board recommendations===
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | In early September 2007 the Department of Defense released two heavily redacted memos, from his Board, to [[Gordon England]], the [[Designated Civilian Official (OARDEC)|Designated Civilian Official]].<ref name=ArbRecommendationIsn177>
| + | |
− | {{cite web
| + | |
− | | url=http://www.dod.mil/pubs/foi/detainees/csrt_arb/ARB_Round_1_Decision_memos_000096-000195.pdf#51
| + | |
− | | title=Administrative Review Board assessment and recommendation ICO ISN 177
| + | |
− | | date=[[26 July]] [[2005]]
| + | |
− | | author=[[OARDEC]]
| + | |
− | | publisher=[[United States Department of Defense]]
| + | |
− | | accessdate=2007-12-05
| + | |
− | | pages=page
| + | |
− | }}</ref><ref name=ArbBasisForRecommendationIsn177>
| + | |
− | {{cite web
| + | |
− | | url=http://www.dod.mil/pubs/foi/detainees/csrt_arb/ARB_Round_1_Decision_memos_000096-000195.pdf#52
| + | |
− | | title=Classified Record of Proceedings and basis of Administrative Review Board recommendation for ISN 177
| + | |
− | | date=[[19 July]] [[2005]]
| + | |
− | | author=[[OARDEC]]
| + | |
− | | publisher=[[United States Department of Defense]]
| + | |
− | | accessdate=2007-12-05
| + | |
− | | pages=page
| + | |
− | }}</ref>
| + | |
− | The Board's recommendation was unanimous
| + | |
− | The Board's recommendation was redacted.
| + | |
− | The Board concluded he continued to represent a threat to the United States.
| + | |
− | England authorized his transfer on [[July 28]] [[2005]].
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | ==Repatriation==
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | According to [[The Saudi Repatriates Report]] Al Jutayli was one of fifteen men repatriated on [[May 15]] [[2006]].<ref name=TheSaudiRepatriatesReport>
| + | |
− | {{cite web
| + | |
− | | url=http://www.fotofest.org/guantanamo/SaudiReport.pdf
| + | |
− | |format=PDF| title=The Saudi Repatriates Report
| + | |
− | | author=[[Anant Raut]], [[Jill M. Friedman]]
| + | |
− | | date=[[March 19]] [[2007]]
| + | |
− | | accessdate=April 21
| + | |
− | | accessyear=2007
| + | |
− | }}</ref>
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | ==References==
| + | |
− | <references/>
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | | + | |
− | | + | |
− | {{DEFAULTSORT:Al Jutayli, Fahd Salih Sulayman}}
| + | |
− | [[Category:People held at the Guantanamo Bay detention camp]]
| + | |
− | [[Category:Saudi Arabian extrajudicial prisoners of the United States]]
| + | |
− | [[Category:Living people]]
| + | |
− | [[Category:Guantanamo detainees known to have been released]]
| + | |
− | [[Category:1983 births]]
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | | + | |
− | | + | |
− | == Mohammed Abdel-Rahman al-Rashed ==
| + | |
− | [[Wikipedia:Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Mohammed Abdel-Rahman al-Rashed]]
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | '''Mohammed Abdel-Rahman al-Rashed''' is a citizen of [[Saudi Arabia]] who was named on a [[list of Saudi Arabia's most wanted suspected terrorists]] on February 3, 2009.<ref name=AlSahwa2009-09-27>
| + | |
− | {{cite news
| + | |
− | | url=http://www.alsahwanet.net/view_nnews.asp?sub_no=401_2009_09_27_73130
| + | |
− | | title=Saudi wanted militants killed in Yemen
| + | |
− | | publisher=[[Al Sawah]]
| + | |
− | | quote=Sources told al-Hayat that other Saudi militants called their families and asked them to inform the family of al-Jolaiti that he along with a companion were killed.
| + | |
− | | date=2009-09-27
| + | |
− | | author=
| + | |
− | | archiveurl=http://www.webcitation.org/query?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.alsahwanet.net%2Fview_nnews.asp%3Fsub_no%3D401_2009_09_27_73130&date=2009-09-30
| + | |
− | | archivedate=2009-09-30
| + | |
− | }}</ref><ref name=YemenPost2009-09-27>
| + | |
− | {{cite news
| + | |
− | | url=http://yemenpost.net/Detail123456789.aspx?ID=3&SubID=1317&MainCat=3
| + | |
− | | title=Saudi Wanted Suspects Killed in Yemen Fighting
| + | |
− | | publisher=[[Yemen Post]]
| + | |
− | | quote=Othman Al-Ghamedi and Yousuf Al-Shahri, who are also on the most wanted list, called their families asking them to inform the Al-Jatili’s family of the death of their fellow, according to the paper.
| + | |
− | | date=2009-09-27
| + | |
− | | archiveurl=http://www.webcitation.org/query?url=http%3A%2F%2Fyemenpost.net%2FDetail123456789.aspx%3FID%3D3%26SubID%3D1317%26MainCat%3D3&date=2009-10-02
| + | |
− | | archivedate=2009-10-02
| + | |
− | }}</ref><ref name=WashingtonPost2010-01-18>
| + | |
− | {{cite news
| + | |
− | | url=http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/01/18/AR2010011801995.html
| + | |
− | | title=Ministry: 3 Saudi militants killed in blast abroad
| + | |
− | | publisher=[[Washington Post]]
| + | |
− | | date=2010-01-18
| + | |
− | | archiveurl=http://www.webcitation.org/query?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.washingtonpost.com%2Fwp-dyn%2Fcontent%2Farticle%2F2010%2F01%2F18%2FAR2010011801995.html&date=2010-01-18
| + | |
− | | archivedate=2010-01-18
| + | |
− | }}</ref><ref name=ArabNews2010-01-18>
| + | |
− | {{cite news
| + | |
− | | url=http://www.arabnews.com/?page=1§ion=0&article=131464&d=19&m=1&y=2010&pix=kingdom.jpg&category=Kingdom
| + | |
− | | title=Blast kills 3 terrorists
| + | |
− | | publisher=[[Arab News]]
| + | |
− | | date=2010-01-18
| + | |
− | | archiveurl=http://www.webcitation.org/query?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.arabnews.com%2F%3Fpage%3D1%26section%3D0%26article%3D131464%26d%3D19%26m%3D1%26y%3D2010%26pix%3Dkingdom.jpg%26category%3DKingdom&date=2010-01-18
| + | |
− | | archivedate=2010-01-18
| + | |
− | }}</ref>
| + | |
− | He was one of several suspected jihadists killed in an attack by [[Yemen]]i security officials on September 14, 2009.
| + | |
− | Saudi officials named two other men who had been killed in that attack: [[Fahd Salih Sulayman Al Jutayli]], a former [[Saudi captive in Guantanamo]]; and [[Sultan Radi al-Utaibi]], also named on the most wanted list.
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | The men were with a group of ''"[[Huthis|al-Houthi rebels]] in [[Saada]]."''<ref name=AlSahwa2009-09-27/>
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | Saudi officials announced on January 18, 2010, that they had confirmed the three men's identity through DNA tests.<ref name=WashingtonPost2010-01-18/><ref name=ArabNews2010-01-18/>
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | ==References==
| + | |
− | <references/>
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | {{Persondata <!-- Metadata: see [[Wikipedia:Persondata]]. -->
| + | |
− | | NAME = Rashed, Mohammed Abdel-Rahman
| + | |
− | | ALTERNATIVE NAMES =
| + | |
− | | SHORT DESCRIPTION =
| + | |
− | | DATE OF BIRTH =
| + | |
− | | PLACE OF BIRTH =
| + | |
− | | DATE OF DEATH = September 14, 2009
| + | |
− | | PLACE OF DEATH = [[Yemen]]
| + | |
− | }}
| + | |
− | {{DEFAULTSORT:Rashed, Mohammed Abdel-Rahman}}
| + | |
− | [[Category:2009 deaths]]
| + | |
− | [[Category:Saudi Arabian al-Qaeda members]]
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | | + | |
− | == Sultan Radi al-Utaibi ==
| + | |
− | {{WP+DEL|Sultan Radi al-Utaibi}}
| + | |
− | {{Infobox person
| + | |
− | |name = Sultan Radi al-Utaibi
| + | |
− | |image =
| + | |
− | |image_size = 140px
| + | |
− | |alt = Al Qaeda member Rayed Al Harbi
| + | |
− | |caption =
| + | |
− | |birth_date = January 18, 1985
| + | |
− | |birth_place =
| + | |
− | |death_date = {{Death date|2009|9|14}} (aged 25)
| + | |
− | |death_place = Yemen
| + | |
− | |other_names =
| + | |
− | |known_for = listed on the [[Saudi most wanted list]]
| + | |
− | |occupation = member of [[Al Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula]]
| + | |
− | |nationality = [[Saudi Arabia]]
| + | |
− | }}
| + | |
− | <!-- Note to over-hasty speedy deleters... (1) named on a list of most wanted; (2) killed in a shootout. That is TWO events, by my count. -->
| + | |
− | '''Sultan Radi al-Utaibi''' (January 18, 1985.<ref>"http://www.okaz.com.sa/okaz/osf/20090205/Cat2009020555249.htm." ''okaz Newspaper''.Feb 5, 1009.</ref> - September 14, 2009) is a citizen of [[Saudi Arabia]] who was named on a [[list of Saudi Arabia's most wanted suspected terrorists]] on February 3, 2009.<ref name=AlSahwa2009-09-27>
| + | |
− | {{cite news
| + | |
− | | url=http://www.alsahwanet.net/view_nnews.asp?sub_no=401_2009_09_27_73130
| + | |
− | | title=Saudi wanted militants killed in Yemen
| + | |
− | | publisher=[[Al Sawah]]
| + | |
− | | quote=Sources told al-Hayat that other Saudi militants called their families and asked them to inform the family of al-Jolaiti that he along with a companion were killed.
| + | |
− | | date=2009-09-27
| + | |
− | | author=
| + | |
− | | archiveurl=http://www.webcitation.org/query?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.alsahwanet.net%2Fview_nnews.asp%3Fsub_no%3D401_2009_09_27_73130&date=2009-09-30
| + | |
− | | archivedate=2009-09-30
| + | |
− | }}</ref><ref name=YemenPost2009-09-27>
| + | |
− | {{cite news
| + | |
− | | url=http://yemenpost.net/Detail123456789.aspx?ID=3&SubID=1317&MainCat=3
| + | |
− | | title=Saudi Wanted Suspects Killed in Yemen Fighting
| + | |
− | | publisher=[[Yemen Post]]
| + | |
− | | quote=Othman Al-Ghamedi and Yousuf Al-Shahri, who are also on the most wanted list, called their families asking them to inform the Al-Jatili’s family of the death of their fellow, according to the paper.
| + | |
− | | date=2009-09-27
| + | |
− | | archiveurl=http://www.webcitation.org/query?url=http%3A%2F%2Fyemenpost.net%2FDetail123456789.aspx%3FID%3D3%26SubID%3D1317%26MainCat%3D3&date=2009-10-02
| + | |
− | | archivedate=2009-10-02
| + | |
− | }}</ref><ref name=WashingtonPost2010-01-18>
| + | |
− | {{cite news
| + | |
− | | url=http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/01/18/AR2010011801995.html
| + | |
− | | title=Ministry: 3 Saudi militants killed in blast abroad
| + | |
− | | publisher=[[Washington Post]]
| + | |
− | | date=2010-01-18
| + | |
− | | archiveurl=http://www.webcitation.org/query?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.washingtonpost.com%2Fwp-dyn%2Fcontent%2Farticle%2F2010%2F01%2F18%2FAR2010011801995.html&date=2010-01-18
| + | |
− | | archivedate=2010-01-18
| + | |
− | }}</ref><ref name=ArabNews2010-01-18>
| + | |
− | {{cite news
| + | |
− | | url=http://www.arabnews.com/?page=1§ion=0&article=131464&d=19&m=1&y=2010&pix=kingdom.jpg&category=Kingdom
| + | |
− | | title=Blast kills 3 terrorists
| + | |
− | | publisher=[[Arab News]]
| + | |
− | | date=2010-01-18
| + | |
− | | archiveurl=http://www.webcitation.org/query?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.arabnews.com%2F%3Fpage%3D1%26section%3D0%26article%3D131464%26d%3D19%26m%3D1%26y%3D2010%26pix%3Dkingdom.jpg%26category%3DKingdom&date=2010-01-18
| + | |
− | | archivedate=2010-01-18
| + | |
− | }}</ref>
| + | |
− | He was one of several suspected jihadists killed in an explosion while they were assembling a bomb in a house used by Al-Qaeda in [[Yemen]] on September 14, 2009.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.saudigazette.com.sa/index.cfm?method=home.regcon&contentID=2010011960638 |title=3 Saudis involved in attempt on prince life |publisher=Saudi Gazette |date=2010-01-19 |accessdate=2010-01-19}}</ref>
| + | |
− | Saudi officials named two other men who had been killed in that explosion: [[Fahd Salih Sulayman Al Jutayli]], a former [[Saudi captive in Guantanamo]]; and [[Mohammed Abdel-Rahman al-Rashed]], also named on the most wanted list.
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | Saudi officials announced on January 18, 2010, that they had confirmed the three men's identity through DNA tests.<ref name=WashingtonPost2010-01-18/><ref name=ArabNews2010-01-18/>
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | In September 2010, al-Qaeda offered a Video of the Sultan and others deaths on September 14, 2009
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | ==References==
| + | |
− | <references/>
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | {{Persondata <!-- Metadata: see [[Wikipedia:Persondata]]. -->
| + | |
− | | NAME = Utaibi, Sultan Radi
| + | |
− | | ALTERNATIVE NAMES =
| + | |
− | | SHORT DESCRIPTION =
| + | |
− | | DATE OF BIRTH = January 18, 1985
| + | |
− | | PLACE OF BIRTH =
| + | |
− | | DATE OF DEATH = September 14, 2009
| + | |
− | | PLACE OF DEATH = Yemen
| + | |
− | }}
| + | |
− | {{DEFAULTSORT:Utaibi, Sultan Radi}}
| + | |
− | [[Category:1985 births]]
| + | |
− | [[Category:2009 deaths]]
| + | |
− | [[Category:Saudi Arabian al-Qaeda members]]
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | == Ahmed Owaidan Al-Harbi ==
| + | |
− | {{WP+DEL|Ahmed Owaidan Al-Harbi}}
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | '''Ahmed Owaidan Al-Harbi''' is a citizen of [[Saudi Arabia]] who is suspected of ties to terrorism.<ref name=SaudiGazette2009-02-20>
| + | |
− | {{cite news
| + | |
− | | url=http://www.saudigazette.com.sa/index.cfm?method=home.regcon&contentID=2009022029818
| + | |
− | | title=Yemen extradites suspect to Kingdom
| + | |
− | | publisher=[[Saudi Gazette]]
| + | |
− | | author=
| + | |
− | | date=2009-02-20
| + | |
− | | accessdate=2009-02-20
| + | |
− | | quote=
| + | |
− | }} [http://www.webcitation.org/query?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.saudigazette.com.sa%2Findex.cfm%3Fmethod%3Dhome.regcon%26contentID%3D2009022029818&date=2009-02-20 mirror]
| + | |
− | </ref><ref name=ArmiesOfLiberation2009-02-20>
| + | |
− | {{cite news
| + | |
− | | url=http://armiesofliberation.com/archives/2009/02/19/al-harbi-repatriated-to-saudi-arabia-from-yemen/
| + | |
− | | title=Al-Harbi Arrested in Yemen 20 Days Ago
| + | |
− | | publisher=
| + | |
− | | author=
| + | |
− | | date=2009-02-20
| + | |
− | | accessdate=2009-02-20
| + | |
− | | quote=
| + | |
− | }} [http://www.webcitation.org/query?url=http%3A%2F%2Farmiesofliberation.com%2Farchives%2F2009%2F02%2F19%2Fal-harbi-repatriated-to-saudi-arabia-from-yemen%2F&date=2009-02-20 mirror]
| + | |
− | </ref>
| + | |
− | On February 20, 2009, the ''[[Saudi Gazette]]'' reported he had been captured in [[Yemen]] "twenty days earlier".
| + | |
− | He was described as "[[Saudi most wanted list|wanted]]" by Saudi a security officials.
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | ==References==
| + | |
− | <references/>
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | {{Persondata <!-- Metadata: see [[Wikipedia:Persondata]]. -->
| + | |
− | | NAME = Al-Harbi, Ahmed Owaidan
| + | |
− | | ALTERNATIVE NAMES =
| + | |
− | | SHORT DESCRIPTION = Imprisoned on charges of terrorism
| + | |
− | | DATE OF BIRTH =
| + | |
− | | PLACE OF BIRTH =
| + | |
− | | DATE OF DEATH =
| + | |
− | | PLACE OF DEATH =
| + | |
− | }}
| + | |
− | {{DEFAULTSORT:Harbi, Ahmed Owaidan}}
| + | |
− | [[Category:Saudi Arabian people]]
| + | |
− | [[Category:People imprisoned on charges of terrorism]]
| + | |
− | [[Category:Living people]]
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | | + | |
− | {{terrorism-stub}}
| + | |
− | | + | |
− | [[es:Ahmed Owaidan Al-Harbi]]
| + | |