Taranaki Daily News

Terrorist testifies about the Guantanamo perks for his co-operation

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UNITED STATES: A tortured al Qaeda terrorist turned prosecutio­n witness is being rewarded with a comfortabl­e cabin-style lockup where he can garden, paint, exercise, learn English, cook meals for his interrogat­ors and attorneys and watch American television.

In sworn testimony, Ahmed al Darbi, 42, described changing from a lying, faeces-flinging prisoner with a bad behaviour record in the maximum-security Camp Five prison to a co-operating witness now cloistered in Camp Echo, an annex of the prison compound across the street.

Darbi has his own kitchen with a freezer stocked with meat and spices, and other never-beforedisc­losed perks to pass his time preparing to testify as a witness for the war court prosecutor in two cases, one that seeks the death penalty.

The prison provides him with lamb, rabbit, chicken, shrimp and other halal meat, he said as defence attorney Air Force Major Yolanda Miller read from what sounded like a shopping list.

‘‘Goat,’’ the Saudi volunteere­d with a grin, adding, ‘‘I love chicken, and I don’t see any issue with that. I still have it in my freezer until now.’’

Darbi is scheduled to go home to a Saudi rehabilita­tion programme on February 20 under a plea agreement if diplomats can close the deal and Secretary of Defence Jim Mattis approves.

Four years ago he pleaded guilty to being an accomplice in a 2002 al Qaeda attack on a French oil tanker, the Limburg, in Yemeni waters. The attack did not achieve its goal of upsetting global oil prices or shipping, but a Bulgarian crew member died in the attack, which occurred after Darbi was already a US prisoner. Last year he recorded testimony to be used as possible evidence against the alleged mastermind of the attack, Abd al Rahim al Nashiri.

He also separately testified about his life as a jihadist in al Qaeda, pointed to an Iraqi captive in court and identified him as a former al Qaeda commander named Abd al Hadi al Iraqi, to counter the Iraqi’s claim that his true name is Nashwan al Tamir.

At the weekend, Hadi’s attorneys questioned Darbi on the truthfulne­ss of his statements and memory for what could be used as time-capsule testimony if the Trump administra­tion releases him.

And the image he portrayed of his life in Guantanamo prison offered a stark contrast to a glimpse a weekend earlier of medium-security communal prison life – prepared food in plastic-foam containers, up to four hours in a new recreation cell block, a now hidden art programme for the indefinite detainees known as ‘‘forever prisoners’’.

Across the street, Darbi has a plethora of quality-of-life accommodat­ions provided by the prison, interrogat­ors or the prosecutio­n. Cilantro, cumin and cloves to cook with using a hot plate, blender and microwave oven in his kitchen; treats like Strawberri­es n’ Creme Oreos, baklava, Turkish delight and a pecan pie; a garden where he said he was growing what sounded like the ingredient­s for ratatouill­e – eggplant, tomatoes, zucchini and green pepper. Papaya too, he noted.

Co-operation also earned him monthly phone calls with his Yemeni wife and children, now living in Saudi Arabia.

Deposition questionin­g yesterday delved into what Darbi called ‘‘the torture times’’ – his 2002-03 interrogat­ions in Bagram, Afghanista­n, and Guantanamo.

Defence attorney Adam Thurschwel­l, in an apparent bid to discredit Darbi’s identifica­tion of the Iraqi Hadi, led Darbi through a lurid descriptio­n of his first year or more in US custody, drawn from sworn court documents. The Saudi was beaten, sleep deprived, hung by the wrists, threatened with rape in interrogat­ion, and then sent to unwanted rectal exams by US military doctors, kept nude and forced to empty other detainees’ faeces buckets with his fingers.

He said a focus of the interrogat­ions was: Where was Osama bin Laden?

Darbi got to Guantanamo 14 months after it opened. He testified yesterday that he was kept in solitary confinemen­t, deprived of sleep and subjected to midnight-todawn, no-bathroom-break questionin­g in an interrogat­ion room stinking of urine and vomit. Threats included rape, sending him to Israel or Camp X-Ray, which supposedly closed a year earlier. Interrogat­ors had photocopie­s of pages of the Koran, Darbi testified, and would throw them on the ground with sex photos and pictures of mutilated bodies.

Darbi has a battery-powered toothbrush, with replacemen­t heads, a Magic Bullet blender, free weights and a spin bike for exercising, and Under Armour T-shirts and athletic socks to wear when he works out in his compound. ‘‘Yes, Nike also,’’ he told Miller. ‘‘Don’t forget that.’’

Miller, Hadi’s defence attorney, framed the stuff as incentive items to show that life gets good for captives turned prosecutio­n witnesses at Guantanamo. Darbi confirmed under questionin­g that he would set a table and cook for his interrogat­ors during some visits, and that he had the makings for Arabic and Turkish coffee.

– Miami Herald

 ??  ?? Ahmed al Darbi
Ahmed al Darbi

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