The 14-year nightmare of the last British prisoner at Guantánamo Bay could soon be coming to an end. The U.S. announced last month it will release Shaker Aamer, imprisoned without charge at Guantánamo since February 2002. Aamer says he was working as a charity worker in Afghanistan when he was kidnapped and handed over to U.S. forces. During his time in captivity, he claims he was subjected to abuses including torture, beatings, sleep deprivation and being held in solitary confinement for nearly a year. At one point, he lost half his body weight while on a hunger strike.
Shaker Aamer has been cleared for release since 2007, but the Pentagon has refused to set him free. The U.S. announced last month he’ll finally be released, but only after a 30-day notification period required by Congress. If the U.S. follows through, Aamer will likely be released on Sunday and flown back to Britain to join his wife and four children. Even as he’s set for freedom, Aamer has remained on hunger strike to protest his treatment.
Clive Stafford Smith talking:
there are two questions there. One is how he ended up getting there. And unfortunately, that story is chillingly familiar, that we, as Americans and notwithstanding my accent, I am American we were dropping bounty leaflets so that if you, in Pakistan or Afghanistan, would turn in someone like Shaker, you got $5,000, which for us in New York would translate to about a quarter of a million dollars. And Shaker was part of that, and he got turned in through that. Now, the second question is much.
He was originally turned in by the Northern Alliance. He was trying to get out of the country and was seized by them and sold to the U.S. And Shaker was really happy when he was sold to the U.S. because he thought, you know, justice, because he had lived here in America for a while, and he believed in American justice.
Sadly, that turned out to be a false belief, because your second question, which is “Why is he still there eight years after being cleared?” is a very difficult one for the government to answer. I think I know the response, which is that he has seen things, he’s been a witness to things, that are just really, really embarrassing to us, the most important of all being our worst of all the many dreadful things we did in torturing people, the worst result of that, which is when we had Ibn Shaykh al-Libi tortured with cattle prods in Egypt until he said that Saddam Hussein and al-Qaeda were in league on WMD. President Bush quoted that on October the 7th, 2002, and so did Colin Powell as a reason to go to war, and we know what happened.
Sstatement Shaker Aamer made to London’s Met Police detectives who were investigating British involvement in torture. The 2013 statement was only recently released. In it, Aamer said, “I was a witness to the torture of Ibn al-Shaykh al-Libi in Bagram. His case seems to me to be particularly important, and my witnessing of it particularly relevant to my ongoing detention. He was there being abused at the same time I was. He was there being abused when the British came there. Clearly the fact that I was a witness to all this does not make the U.S. want to let me free, for fear that I may be a witness to one of the most colossal mistakes of all those made in the last 11 years.” So could you talk about this, when this happened, his witnessing of this torture, and how much you think that’s been responsible for his ongoing detention?
And when you look at the dates, Shaykh al-Libi was one of the very early people who was detained. He was detained in November 2001. And the U.S. thought he was a big-time al-Qaeda person at the time, thought he was number three. And gosh, how many number threes have we had? He was actually not a member of al-Qaeda. He quite opposed it. And indeed, bin Laden tried to close down, successfully, the camp that he was running to try to combat—Shaykh al-Libi was trying to combat Gaddafi. Anyway, the U.S. had the wrong end of the stick. And there was a big old fight over how quickly we could get intelligence out of these people. And unfortunately, the CIA won that battle.
And what is crucial about Shaker is he was in one of those cages in Bagram Air Force Base. He had been taken in to see Ibn Shaykh al-Libi, but Shaker was one of the first five prisoners in Bagram. And so the two of them had seen each other. Shaker saw him. And then Shaker witnessed the incredibly notorious moment when a coffin was brought in by the—apparently by the CIA people, to get al-Libi, who they put in the coffin, took him out, took him to a ship, then took him over to Egypt and had him tortured.
Now, when you think about it, if I torture you, which I’m not going to do, even though I haven’t had enough coffee this morning, if I torture you and I get you to confess that you’re a wicked, evil person, that’s too bad for you. But if I torture you and I get you to say something that changes the international affairs and results in 100,000 and more people being killed in Iraq, and then results in the Middle East being tipped into chaos, that is a massive story. And when you look at the Senate torture report, that story appears in footnote 868 in one sentence, and there’s no real reference to that. And these are the things that if we’re going to learn the lessons of history, we kind of have to know what that history is.
So al-Libi, when he’s being stuck with electric cattle prods, says, “Yeah, Saddam Hussein’s been working with al-Qaeda on weapons of mass destruction,
And as a result, even though I think there were people in the intelligence services at the time who said, “Ah, you know, this is just kind of silly,” unfortunately, there was such a pressure to come up with a reason to go attack Saddam that the president himself relied on that. Now, when you think about the terrible things that are so embarrassing to our political leaders, the idea that you would rely on a torture statement that is now proven to be categorically false in persuading the world to go to war, you know, that’s about as bad as it gets, isn’t it?
when you look at all the people in Guantánamo, it’s easy to talk about statistics and how there are 779 people who have been there. But, of course, each of them is a human being, an individual. And Shaker—you know, I’m a parent. I’ve got a seven-year-old son. And the idea of not seeing my son all the time, it would be dreadful. Shaker has four children now. He and his wife had three very small children when he was detained. His fourth child, Faris, was born on Valentine’s Day 2002, the very day that Shaker got to Guantánamo Bay. Shaker, in 14 years, has never met his child. He’s never hugged him, never nothing.
Now a teenager. And all the other children, he’s never seen them, either. And his wife, Zinnira, he hasn’t seen her. And she’s gone through dreadful traumas herself, being left alone with these folk. And, you know, it’s been very difficult for her and her life. And all of this has gone on. And now Shaker, you know, even today that was 2006, right? But we’re still talking about it. The reason Shaker won’t even go to the phone call to talk to his family at the moment—because we finally got them phone calls. He’s had two or three over the last 14 years with his family.
They didn’t do them at all until about 2010. But now they’ve come up with what they call it’s not me saying this scrotum searches and you may have heard that before which is this absurd thing where they humiliate the Muslim prisoners down there in Guantánamo Bay by groping them in order—with the pretext being that you have to be searched this way before you have a phone call with your children, as if there’s anything that, you know, your children are going to smuggle to you over the international telephone lines. And so, you know, Shaker finds this so humiliating, that I’ve had to apologize to his family that he can’t go through that humiliation even to have this conversation with his kids these days. So we need to get him out, so he can actually give them a hug.
But the last chap they released from Guantánamo, who could have been released after 30 days, it took 89 days, so three months. Now, one of the reasons we’re trying to keep the pressure up is that we need to get him out soon. Shaker had gone on hunger strike again, because he had been mistreated again. So we persuaded him that we would take it on. I spent five days last week without eating—which is a great new diet system, if you want to advertise it—in order for him to drop his hunger strike. But we need to keep the political pressure on to make sure they do actually bring him home this Sunday, or soon thereafter.
Dhiab. He is now out, I’m glad to say. But we’ve been litigating this whole force-feeding business, where, you know, it’s one thing—it’s an interesting philosophical issue: If someone is going to die from starvation, should you go against their will and force-feed them or not? And, you know, when the British did that to the IRA, we let them die. But in here, they don’t do that. And that would be an interesting debate—if it weren’t for one thing, which is we do that force-feeding in a gratuitously painful way, where we take this big tube, stick it up your nose, 110 centimeters long, and instead of just leaving it there, we pull it out after each feeding and stuff it back in after each feeding. And it was the general in charge of SOUTHCOM who said that they were doing this to make it “less convenient” to go on hunger strike.
So, we had litigated this whole issue, and, you know, we had got—we’ve got to see these videos, but they’re classified. And what we’re trying to do is let you see them, because if you see what the government is doing in our name, I think there will be some serious disagreement with the government. That’s still being argued over. And so, since we couldn’t do it that way, we got Mos Def, Yasiin Bey, to go through it himself. It was very nice of him. And that’s on YouTube, and you can see it. And you can see generally what we do to the prisoners. You know, I don’t advise you to try it at home, but Yasiin Bey was kind enough to let us do it to him.
Shaker, when I see him, he always responds to his prison number. He’s number 239. And no one ever calls him his name in Guantánamo Bay. He’s 239. And he said things to me, and this is just one example that I think is quite illustrative. He says one of the things he’s afraid of when he gets home is one of his kids will say “Daddy” and he won’t respond, because his kids are not calling him 239. Now, you know, when you look at that and you look at the post-traumatic stress disorder, PTSD, that Shaker has gone through as a result of the torture we’ve done to him, you know, we’ve got a lot of work to do. And the first thing we’ll do when we get him back to Britain is take him straight to a medical clinic and get him some help.
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Clive Stafford Smith
founder and director of the international legal charity Reprieve. He has been Shaker Aamer’s attorney for 10 years.
— source democracynow.org