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Gambia: Freed from Guantanamo: Camp Delta inmate arrested from The Gambia to be released
A British resident held for nearly five years at Guantanamo Bay is
to be set free aftera breakthrough in negotiations between the US and
Britain.
Bisher al-Rawi, 39, whose family escaped persecution in Iraq to live in
London, was on a business trip when he was arrested in the Gambia after
a tip-off by the Security Service, MI5.
In a statement to MPs, the Foreign Secretary, Margaret Beckett, said
Mr Rawi would be "returned to the UK shortly as soon as practical
arrangements have been made".
It is believed that the Americans only agreed to Mr Rawi's release
because ministers gave personal assurances that they would take full
responsibility for his security.
For many years the British Government had refused to help Mr Rawi
and the eight other British residents still held by the Americans at
the US naval base in Cuba because they did not have the same legal
status as UK nationals.
Mr Rawi's lawyers and other human rights groups have now called for the release of all the remaining British resident detainees.
Zachary Katznelson, a lawyer for the UK-based charity Reprieve, who
has represented the residents during their detention, said the decision
to free his client showed there was no "justification or excuse" for
not negotiating the freedom of the other men.
He said he thought the decision to help Mr Rawi was only taken
because the Government did not want an embarrassing court case in which
Britain's involvement in his capture would have been made public.
The High Court in London has already permitted the disclosure of classified documents linking MI5 to Mr Rawi's arrest.
Mr Katznelson said: "Mr Rawi helped MI5 as an interpreter and acted
as a go-between with Abu Qatada [a terror suspect later arrested and
detained by the British authorities]. All this would have... been very
embarrassing for the government and... MI5."
Mr Rawi's lived with his mother, brother and sister in south London
for 16 years. He was arrested in the Gambia, along with his brother,
Wahab, and business partners, Jamil el-Banna and Abdullah el-Ganudi.
Wahab and Mr Ganudi were both released because they were British
citizens. Bisher and Mr Banna, who could only claim British residency,
were taken by the Americans to Bagram airbase and then Guantanamo Bay.
Bisher and Wahab, 41, moved to Britain in the 1980s after their
father fell under the suspicion of Saddam Hussein. They first lived in
Cambridge, where they took their O-levels, before continuing their
schooling at Millfield School, Somerset, and Concord College,
Shropshire. They later attended separate universities.
In 1992 Wahab took British nationality while his brother decided to
retain his Iraqi citizenship as he did not want to damage his ties with
his home country.
But it was Wahab's business interests that took the two brothers to the Gambia in November 2002.
He told The Independent last year: "I had this business idea for a
mobile peanut-oil processing factory. I had done the feasibility study;
it was all ready to go. I had my team and we brought Bisher in on the
deal towards the end."
Four days after his arrival in Gambia, Wahab went to Banjul airport to meet his brother and the other two men.
As Wahab approached his brother he became aware of a problem with
immigration. Gambian officials had confiscated their passports and they
were being taken to an interview room.
For the next three to four days the four men were moved around the
Gambian National Intelligence Agency (NIA), alternately questioned by
Americans and Gambians.
Four days after Wahab had met Bisher at the airport, they were taken
from the NIA headquarters to a secret location in the Banjul suburbs.
It was here that Bisher begged his brother to co-operate with the
Americans because "we have nothing to hide".
Mr Ganudi and Wahab were separated from the other two and taken back
to interrogation suites in the NIA building where the Americans began
repeating the questions. A few days later they were told they could fly
back to Britain. The other two were transferred to Guantanamo Bay.
Their lawyers allege that they have been tortured by guards and deprived of basic necessities during their five-year ordeal.
Last night Mr Rawi's family issued a short statement: "We are
obviously delighted Bisher is coming home but until he is actually back
with us we don't want to say anything else."
Ed Davey, Mr Rawi's Liberal Democrat MP in Kingston & Surbiton, welcomed the news.
"I am relieved that after nearly five years in prison without charge
or trial my constituent is now being released from Guantanamo Bay," he
said. "Everything I've learnt from his family, his lawyers, UK
Government officials, journalists and even the US authorities tells me
Bisher al-Rawi is not and has never been a threat to national or
international security. "His case should be a lesson to us all that when you ignore natural
justice, injustice follows. Bisher's family have suffered hugely and I
am utterly delighted for them that their loved one will soon be
returning."
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