Report: Alleged bin Laden aide may soon be freed

By Gavin Dahl
Tuesday, November 3rd, 2009 -- 9:05 pm
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detainees torture Report: Alleged bin Laden aide may soon be freedA man accused by the Pentagon of being Osama bin Laden's logistics chief may soon be released after nearly eight years of incarceration at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, according to published reports.

Fouad al Rabiah, who remains accused before a military commission of providing material support for a terrorist organization and conspiracy, has been moved to the minimum-security wing of the detention center. According to McClatchy Newspapers, the move to Camp Iguana is a sign that he will be released. Prisoners in minimum security can order food from Pizza Hut or McDonald's and use the Internet.

Rabiah's civilian lawyer, David Cynamon says his client was tortured by his American interrogators at Guantanamo and has sent letters to the Senate Armed Forces Committee, the Defense Department and the Justice Department. In his letters, Cynamon notes that U.S. District Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly's ruling in September included "a detailed description of the abusive and coercive tactics used by interrogators to extract patently false confessions."

Judge Kollar-Kotelly ordered Rabiah released, saying there was no credible evidence he had aided bin Laden. An unnamed intelligence analyst concluded the government witnesses weren't believable, she said. Supreme Court reporter Lyle Denniston of SCOTUSblog.com called her ruling "the most critical assessment of government evidence" yet.

According to Judge Kollar-Kotelly, frustrated interrogators "began using abusive techniques that violated the Army Field Manual and the 1949 Geneva Convention Relative to the Treatment of Prisoners of War." The Guantanamo testimony was contaminated by a sleep deprivation program, and a confession that came only after Rabiah had been advised he needed to be convicted to go free.

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Rabiah, a 50-year old Kuwaiti Airways engineer and father of four, claimed his trip to Afghanistan was for humanitarian purposes. Thirty-one release orders have been issued in response to habeas corpus petitions by Guantanamo prisoners.

The Obama administration was faced with a dilemma in Rabiah's case. It had the option of appealing the order dictating his release, after the Judge said, "If there exists a basis for al Rabiah's indefinite detention, it most certainly has not been presented to this court."

Or set free a man accused of war crimes. The notification required to transfer Guantanamo detainees to a third country is classified. Cynamon told McClatchy he didn't know if it had been made.

McClatchy has spent much of the past few years investigating related stories in a series called Guantanamo: Beyond the Law.

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Story comments are below...

  • Northwestwoods
    More catnip for Glenn Beck
  • shrapnel
    The victims of the empire are legion.
  • Phil E. Drifter
    Prisoners in minimum security can order food from Pizza Hut or McDonald's and use the Internet.

    Shit, I wish i was a prisoner there. I can't even afford that shit as a free citizen.
  • The blow back for the torture policy of the shrubster/vader regime has just begun.
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