Thursday, 15 July 2004
Freed Swede Speaks Out About Gitmo Torture
The upcoming trials of Guantanamo prisoners are not going to be pretty:
Mehdi Ghezali, the son of an Algerian-born immigrant, told Swedish media in interviews published or aired Wednesday that he was interrogated almost every day at the U.S. naval base on Cuban soil.
The 25-year-old man, who was arrested in Pakistan where he says he was studying Islam, was released on July 8 after pressure from Sweden.
Ghezali told Dagens Nyheter daily and Swedish public radio he had cooperated for the first six months but stopped talking when his interrogators kept asking the same questions.
In April the military changed their tactics, he said.
"They put me in the interrogation room and used it as a refrigerator. They set the temperature to minus degrees so it was terribly cold and one had to freeze there for many hours -- 12 to 14 hours one had to sit there, chained," he said, adding that he had partially lost the feeling in one foot since then.
Ghezali said he was also deprived of sleep, chained for long periods in painful positions, and exposed to bright flashes of light in a darkened room and loud music and noise.
"They forced me down with chained feet. Then they took away the chains from the hands, pulled the arms under the legs and chained them hard again. I could not move," he said. "
As far as I'm concerned, the most striking thing in the article is not the torture. It's how Ghezali got to Guantanamo in the first place:
He said he was visiting a friend in the Afghan town of Jalalabad near the Pakistani border when the U.S. invasion started. He decided to return to Pakistan when he heard that villagers were selling foreigners to U.S. forces.
Pakistani villagers seized him as crossed the border from Afghanistan and sold him to Pakistani police, who turned him over to the U.S. military. He was flown from Pakistan to Afghanistan and arrived in Guantanamo in January 2002, he said.
There have been numerous reports that US forces were paying bounties for "terrorists" in Afghanistan. I'm willing to bet that when the trials start, we'll find that the vast majority of prisoners in Guantanamo aren't related to Al Qaeda in any way, but are merely villagers who were in the wrong place and got rounded up by greedy warlords and traded for money.
Posted by flow Frazao on July 15, 2004 at 11:38 AM in War on Terra | Permalink
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