Souce: Aljazeera
http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/68168BCC-608B-4593-91A4-637656C20625.
htm

Ex-detainee: US soldiers defiled Quran

Wednesday 07 July 2004, 0:42 Makka Time, 21:42 GMT

There are more than 600 Muslim detainees at Guantanamo
Bay

In excerpts from an exclusive interview with
Aljazeera, a former 
Guantanamo
detainee reveals details of torture, abuse, and
religious persecution.

Wisam Abd al-Rahman Ahmad said he was captured in
Iran, transferred to 
a
Kandahar detention facility in Afghanistan, and
finally imprisoned at
Guantanamo Bay.

Claiming he was beaten and routinely insulted with
profanities while in
Afghanistan, Ahmad said that US soldiers tried to
"break" him using
psychological warfare.

"They stripped me naked with a bag over my head. One
of the soldiers 
turned
me around, removed the bag and I saw a female soldier
looking at me," 
he
said.

"They knew that it is an insult to our religion to
appear thus before
women," he said.

But Ahmad claimed that although he had been beaten and
abused, he was 
asked
only one question - his relationship to al-Qaida and
Usama bin Ladin.

"I told the interrogator, who spoke with an Egyptian
accent, that I had 
no
involvement with al-Qaida or anyone, but the man
proceeded to insult me 
and
threaten that he would perform profanities on my
mother," Ahmad told
Aljazeera.

The former Guantanamo detainee - now in Jordan - had
told his 
interrogators
that Pakistani intelligence knew of his whereabouts
the whole time and 
could
corroborate his story.

Stomping on Quran

However, nothing compared to the agony of seeing the
Quran defiled, 
Ahmad
told Aljazeera. 

"I could bear all the obscene abuse and all the
beatings but I was 
agonised
to see one US soldier stomp on the Holy Quran, while
another soldier in
Kandahar threw it into the toilet," he said.

While in detention at Bagram air base, Ahmad recounted
how a female 
soldier
entered his cell to search him.

She had brought a dog with her and she proceeded to
give the dog the 
Quran
to sniff through.

The full interview is to be broadcast in a special
segment on Aljazeera
later in the week.

Legal controversy

The detention of several hundred prisoners in
Afghanistan and 
Guantanamo is
proving to be a political and legal battleground for
the Bush
administration.

Last week, the US Supreme Court ruled that "foreign
terrorism" suspects 
at a
US military base at Guantanamo Bay in Cuba can use the
United States 
legal
system to challenge their detention.

By a six-three vote, the justices ruled on Monday that
US courts do 
have
jurisdiction to consider the claims of the prisoners
who say in their
lawsuits they are being held illegally in violation of
their rights. 

The ruling did not address the merits of the claims,
but allowed the
prisoners to pursue their lawsuits, which lower courts
had dismissed. 

Justice John Paul Stevens said for the majority that
US courts have
jurisdiction to consider challenges to the legality of
the detention of
foreign nationals captured abroad in connection with
hostilities and
incarcerated at Guantanamo Bay. 

The justices overturned a US court appeal ruling that
lawsuits should 
be
dismissed on the grounds that the military base was
outside US 
sovereign
territory and that rights of habeas corpus were
unavailable to foreign
nationals outside US territory. 

C.. 2003 Aljazeera.Net
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