Former Guantanamo prisoners still struggling
By Jane Sutton – Wed Nov 12, 5:57 pm ET


 

MIAMI (Reuters) – Former Guantanamo prisoners released after years of detention 
without charge went home to find themselves stigmatized and shunned, viewed 
either as terrorists or U.S. spies, according to a report released on Wednesday.
 
The report by human rights advocates urged U.S. President-elect Barack Obama to 
form an independent, nonpartisan commission with subpoena powers to investigate 
the treatment of U.S. detainees in Afghanistan, Iraq and the Guantanamo Bay 
U.S. Navy base in Cuba.
 
"We cannot sweep this dark chapter in our nation's history under the rug by 
simply closing the Guantanamo prison camp," said study co-author Eric Stover, 
director of the University of California at Berkeley's Human Rights Center.
 
"The new administration must investigate what went wrong and who should be held 
accountable."
 
The authors at the center and at the Center for Constitutional Rights 
interviewed 50 U.S. government officials, military experts and former guards 
and interrogators, as well as 62 former Guantanamo prisoners in nine nations.
 
Two-thirds of the former captives said they had psychological and emotional 
problems, which the authors called consistent with being held in extreme 
isolation for extended periods.
 
Only six had regular jobs, with many saying employers would not hire anyone who 
had been held at Guantanamo.
 
"It doesn't matter that they cleared my name by releasing me. We still have 
this big hat on our heads that we were terrorists," said a Chinese Muslim 
former prisoner, one of eight who were settled in Albania in 2006.
 
That group was still struggling to learn Albanian and had abandoned hope of 
ever being reunited with their families, said the report titled "Guantanamo and 
Its Aftermath."
 
NO MISTAKES
 
The United States has released 520 men from Guantanamo since it opened the 
detention camp for suspected al Qaeda and Taliban captives after the September 
11 attacks. Currently about 250 are being held.
 
It has not publicly acknowledged that any were there by mistake, although 
intelligence reports and a former camp commander had said as early as September 
2002 that one-third to one-half of the 600 captives there at the time had no 
connection to terrorism, the report noted.
 
The most notorious prisoners who are accused of plotting the September 11 
attacks, the Bali nightclub bombings and attacks on U.S. embassies in Africa 
were not taken to Guantanamo until 2006, when they were transferred from secret 
CIA prisons.
 
Many of the former prisoners said they had lost their homes and businesses or 
that their families had piled up debts in their absence because there was no 
one to support them.
One returned to find his wife had divorced him and remarried, another to learn 
his father had been murdered and his estranged wife had taken their children 
and moved away.
 
"Two Afghan respondents said that rumors of sexual abuse at Guantanamo had 
stigmatized them and made it difficult to find a marriage partner. One of these 
was also accused of being an American spy and as a result was fearful of 
becoming a Taliban target," the report said.
 
'I AM NOT A BEAST'
 
Others said they had received death threats. 
 
Those who fared best seemed to be Afghans from tightly knit villages, where 
several said they were greeted when they came home with celebrations that even 
some local police attended. 
 
"When I'm walking on the streets and I meet some people, they usually say to 
me, 'We're sorry for you...' Everyone knows that I'm innocent, that I'm not 
involved in any political activities," the report quoted an Afghan shepherd as 
saying. 
 
Among the 55 freed captives who discussed their interrogations, 31 said they 
were abusive and 24 said they had no problems. The majority held "distinctly 
negative views of the United States" but many said that was directed at the 
U.S. government, not the American people. 
 
One-third said they ended up in U.S. custody after being sold for bounties. 
Many viewed their time at Guantanamo as a test of their Muslim faith. 
 
Others said they only wanted the American public to recognize that they were 
innocent. 
"I just want to tell them that I am not this savage beast, what they were told 
I am," one said. 
 
(Editing by Michael Christie and David Storey)
 
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20081112/ts_nm/us_usa_guantanamo


      

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