Miami Herald

Sent from Guantánamo to UAE, detainees fear final stop: Yemen

- BY MAGGIE MICHAEL

IN SHORT, SPORADIC PHONE CALLS FROM UNDISCLOSE­D UAE LOCATIONS — INCLUDING A NOTORIOUS

PRISON RIFE WITH TORTURE — SEVERAL WHISPERED TO THEIR FAMILIES THAT AS BAD AS LIFE IN GUANTÁNAMO WAS, THEY WISH THEY COULD RETURN THERE.

The Guantánamo detainees were promised they were being sent to a Muslim country for rehabilita­tion that would help integrate them into society, opening the way to jobs, money, and marriage, according to their lawyers and families.

It was a lie.

Instead, the detainees — 18 Yemenis and one Russian, swept up from Afghanista­n and Pakistan after the Sept. 11 attacks — have languished in custody in the United Arab Emirates for as long as five years, their families and lawyers tell The Associated Press.

In short, sporadic phone calls from undisclose­d UAE locations — including a notorious prison rife with torture — several whispered to their families that as bad as life in Guantánamo was, they wish they could return there.

When one complained of “pressures” three years ago, the call was cut off; he has not been heard from since. When the Russian staged a hunger strike, he was dumped in solitary confinemen­t and roughed up.

Now there are plans to send them to Yemen, where their families fear their treatment will be even worse.

A senior Yemeni government official confirmed the plans, pending security arrangemen­ts; a State Department official indicated the U.S. government was aware that it was happening. Both officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the press. The UAE didn’t respond to AP questions.

United Nations rights experts described the men’s upcoming repatriati­on as a “forced return,” warning that it violates internatio­nal laws.

Their destinatio­n is a poor Arab country wracked by a grinding civil war for the past six years. Torture and arbitrary detention are widespread in networks of secret and formal prisons run by various factions controllin­g different parts of the country.

“Here the legitimate government itself is not safe. Who will be in charge of them?” said Hussien, a brother of Bir, one of the detainees.

The family of a second detainee, Salem, said: “We fear they will be gunned down or rounded up as soon as they put a foot in Yemen.”

And if they survive, they may be prime recruits for terrorists in Yemen. Ibrahim al-Qosi, is a former Guantánamo detainee who was transferre­d to Sudan in 2012 before surfacing as an al-Qaida group leader in Yemen two years later.

BROKEN PROMISES

The lingering confinemen­t of these men violates promises made by U.S. officials when they were sent to the UAE in 2015-17. It underscore­s flaws in the transfer program and the failure of President Donald Trump’s administra­tion to ensure their humane treatment.

President Barack Obama pressed to close the Guantánamo facility amid opposition from Congress. The plan was to prosecute some detainees and to continue to hold others without charges while their cases were evaluated by review boards Those no longer deemed dangerous were to be transferre­d to their homelands or third countries.

Trump had other plans. Before taking office, he declared on Twitter that there would be “no further releases from GITMO.” His administra­tion dismantled an entire office tasked with closing the Guantánamo facility, overseeing transfers, and following up on the resettled detainees.

Terms of the agreements the U.S. struck with the UAE and dozens of other countries that received Guantánamo detainees weren’t made public. But

Ian Moss, a former chief of staff for the State Department’s Guantánamo envoy, insisted that, “We wanted these individual­s after they were released to have a fresh start in life. It wasn’t part of the deal that they be incarcerat­ed. That was never part of the deal.”

Moss blamed the current administra­tion for lack of engagement, saying that “the Emiratis knew that the Trump administra­tion didn’t care about what they did with these people or how they treated them.

This is disgracefu­l.”

Lee Wolosky was the special envoy for Guantánamo closure from 2015 to 2017, the period when the Yemenis were transferre­d to the UAE. “I can categorica­lly deny that there was a plan to keep the men in detention following their transfer from U.S. custody,” he said in an email.

Under Trump, only one prisoner, a Saudi, was transferre­d to Saudi Arabia to serve the remainder of his sentence after he agreed to a plea bargain.

Under Obama, a total of 197 were transferre­d to other countries, while 500 were transferre­d by George W. Bush. The U.S. base now has 40 detainees; most are being held without charges and a third are Yemenis.

Katie Taylor is deputy director of the United Kingdom-based group Reprieve and coordinato­r of the group’s Life After Guantánamo project. She told the AP that after documentin­g the lives of nearly 60 former detainees in 25 countries, “I have to say that the situation facing the men resettled in the UAE is among the worst and most troubling.”

ASSURANCES ‘WEREN’T LIVED UP TO’

It is not clear whether there are now 17 or 18 detainees in UAE hands; unconfirme­d reports suggest one Yemeni left prison because of medical complicati­ons.

One detainee is represente­d by lawyer Patricia

Bronte. (His name and the full names of all the Yemeni detainees are being withheld for fear that they might face retributio­n.) She recalled that State Department officials had told her and the detainees that they would be held from six to 12 months in a rehabilita­tion facility, and then they would be allowed to reunite with their families in the UAE.

“From early on, the assurances I have been given weren’t lived up to,” she said.

She has had no contact with her client since his arrival in the UAE in 2016. Families of the detainees say their communicat­ion with their loved ones has been infrequent, and troubling:

Abdo, 41, told his brother that he spent 70 days in solitary confinemen­t — blindfolde­d, handcuffed, and with hands and feet chained to the ground — upon his arrival. There was no rehabilita­tion or “de-radicaliza­tion sessions,” his brother Ahmed told the AP. Abdo and other detainees moved to a

“filthy and dark prison” for 16 months.

“It was just terrible there,” the brother quoted Abdo as saying. He was later moved to al-Razin prison, located nearly 200 kilometers (125 miles) from Dubai, where human rights groups have documented abuses and torture.

In the spring of 2019, Abdo was brought back to the “filthy” prison, where he remains.

The brother quoted Abdo as saying, “It’s not what I thought. I wish I return to Guantánamo … it’s 1,000 times worse here.” Then the phone call was cut off.

Bir, a 41-year-old nurse, was identified by Guantánamo’s Periodic Review Board in 2015 as a “lowlevel Yemeni militant” who was arrested in Pakistani raids in Sept 2002 and transferre­d to Guantánamo.

His brother, Hussein, told the AP that despite earlier promises of a new life, his brother ended up in “mysterious conditions. We know nothing.”

“He continues to live behind bars with other Yemeni detainees, they are facing the most brutal injustice in the history,” Hussein said. In phone calls every 10 days, he said, “He says nothing except for, ‘How are you?' He can’t speak. They are banned.”

Ravil Mingazov, a former ballet dancer and an ex-member of the military, was the only Russian left in Guantánamo when he was sent to the UAE. He was accused of fighting with the Taliban. A Pentagon profile also alleged he had links to an Islamic group in Uzbekistan with ties to al-Qaida, and said he was captured in Pakistan at a safe house associated with Abu Zubaydah, a “facilitato­r” for the terrorist organizati­on.

He has never physically met his 19-year-old son Yusuf, who lives in London. But they have talked: Yusuf said his father complained that he had been humiliated by his captors and had been deprived of food and medicine.

Mingazov’s mother, Zoria Valiullina, said her son wanted to return to Guantánamo. “It’s better there.”

The family of AbdelRab, 44, said he disappeare­d three years ago after two phone calls during which he complained about conditions, and nervously said, “I am under pressure … Guantánamo was much better. One billion times.”

The call was cut off; he never called again. His family members said they have no clue if he is alive.

According to records, Abdel-Rab had told interrogat­ors that he worked as a house painter in Yemen before he left for Afghanista­n in 2000 to study and teach Quran. He was captured in a crackdown on those suspected of links to al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden and landed in Guantánamo in 2002.

In June, a man pretending to be Abdel-Rab called the family. “It wasn’t his voice. He wasn’t the same,” said his brother.

‘MENTAL TORTURE’

Hamidullah, another detainee, lived to tell about the conditions of his imprisonme­nt in the UAE, though only barely. He spent 3 1⁄ years in UAE

2 prisons before he was returned to Afghanista­n in December.

Hamidullah’s private counsel wrote that his client was a “model detainee” a “peaceful man” who had never been a member of the Taliban, and “in fact, he was imprisoned by the Taliban in late 1990s.”

Surviving a decade in Guantánamo, pictures in official documents showed a cheerful man with saltand-pepper, curly hair.

He and the other Afghani detainees were sent to the UAE in 2015. His son Ahmed recalled in labored English the first time he visited his father there, how he was “brought with chains in hands and feet, covered eyes with black cloth, and was also tighten with chains in the seat.”

After his return to Afghanista­n, Hamidullah shared more details of his imprisonme­nt. Guards forced him to strip naked every time he went to the bathroom. They would harshly clutch his shoulders and put his head down while leading him out of the cell.

“It was mental torture,” he said.

Hamidullah died in May, having enjoyed just four months of freedom after nearly 20 years in detention. His family believes that the conditions he endured in UAE prisons contribute­d to his death.

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