Guantanamo inmate sent to Saudi Arabia
Al Darbi’s repatriation marks the first time Trump administration has authorised release of prisoner from facility
The Trump administration has repatriated a longtime prisoner of the Guantanamo Bay military prison to Saudi Arabia, where he will serve out the remainder of his 13-year sentence in connection to a 2002 attack on a French ship, the Pentagon said Wednesday.
The transfer of Ahmad Al Darbi to Saudi custody marks the first time the Trump administration has authorised the departure of an inmate from the facility at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, which President Donald Trump has promised to keep open and said could even house new detainees.
The move is unlikely to mark a shift in administration policy regarding prisoner transfers, which Trump has suggested threaten US security. Al Darbi pleaded guilty in 2014 to war crimes in relation to what military prosecutors characterised as plots to attack international ships in the Middle East.
While he had already been captured by the time the French oil tanker, the MV Limburg, was attacked in October 2002, he was charged in connection to that assault.
Since his plea deal, Al Darbi has cooperated with US authorities, according to his lawyer, Ramzi Kassem.
“Although his American captors tortured him cruelly and imprisoned him without charge for many years, my client provided unprecedented cooperation to the US government and accepted responsibility for his own actions. The result for Mr. Al Darbi will be a total of 25 years in prison,” Kassem, who has served as Al Darbi’s lead defence counsel since 2008, said in a statement.
“This is what passes for justice at Guantanamo.”
Kassem said that Al Darbi had taken part in more than 600 interviews and given eight days of sworn testimony as a cooperating witness.
Al Darbi has been at Guantanamo since August 2002, according to military documents made public by WikiLeaks. Kassem welcomed the transfer, which he said would reunite his client with his family.
He said Darbi would serve out the remainder of his sentence — about nine years — in Saudi custody.
In a statement provided through Kassem, Al Darbi said: “To leave Guantanamo is to be born again ... I am deeply grateful to my country, Saudi Arabia, for welcoming back its son.”
Two fellow Saudis
He called on Saudi authorities to concern themselves with the plight of two fellow Saudis at Guanatanamo, Mohammad Al Qahtani and Ghassan Al Sharbi. The outlook is much more bleak for the 40 other inmates remaining at Guantanamo Bay.
While the Obama administration sought to reduce the prison population through overseas transfers — it resettled 196 prisoners overall — Trump has said that “no further releases” should take place.
“These are extremely dangerous people and should not be allowed back onto the battlefield,” Trump tweeted shortly before taking office.
In January, Trump signed an executive order keeping the prison open and asking the Defence Department and other agencies to draft recommendations for how the United States should handle terrorism suspects captured overseas, including the question of whether and how they might be sent to Guantanamo.