Home
/
Isiam
/
Islamic World
/
Out of Guantanamo, into an Egyptian jail
Out of Guantanamo, into an Egyptian jail
Jul 1, 2025 10:25 PM

  As parliamentary elections begin in Egypt, Reprieve's Life After Guantanamo team is working against the clock for the luckless Egyptian ex-Guantanamo prisoner Adel al-Gazzar, now re-imprisoned in Cairo. Like that of most Egyptians, Adel's future hangs in the balance, as does his liberty, and everything depends on whether Egypt is indeed moving towards a civilian-led democracy or whether the events of this past spring were not so much a successful defeat by the people of Mubarak's regime as a military coup.

  In the new Egypt, as with all fledgling democracies, a major battlefield has been in the creation and administration of law. And so far - in sentencing an estimated 12,000 civilians in unfair military trials and sweeping aside months of constitutional debate to enforce its own Provisional Constitution - the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF) has not done much for rule of law in Egypt. The fate of Adel al-Gazzar may serve as a further bellwether, both of SCAF's attitude to rule of law and its illusory break with the Mubarak regime.

  Adel is currently awaiting the outcome of his latest legal challenge to arbitrary detention at Tora Prison, where Mubarak's sons were sent, and where a prisoner was allegedly tortured to death three weeks ago. Like many in Tora, Adel is being held on false, politically-motivated charges. His in absentia sentence was handed down in 2002 as Adel languished in Guantanamo, completely unaware that he was being charged and tried in Cairo.

  He had no legal representation and the so-called "evidence" against him consisted of false statements tortured out of his co-defendants. While many of those co-defendants were deemed innocent (after a judicial finding that their statements were fabrications), Adel was not so lucky. As a Guantanamo prisoner, Adel was an easy target for the military court, and with no legal defense, the charges against him stuck.

  Adel's predicament seems even crueler in the light of his disastrous 10-year ordeal. In 2001, shocked by television images of refugees fleeing US airstrikes, Adel travelled to Afghanistan to volunteer with the Red Crescent. After being injured in an airstrike, he was sold from his hospital bed in Pakistan to American security agents for a bounty.

  Beginning of a nightmare

  Adel was then transferred to a Kandahar prison, where he was tortured - and subjected to medical neglect so severe it resulted in the amputation of his injured leg - before being transferred to Guantánamo.

  Realizing that they had made a mistake, the US authorities cleared Adel for release almost immediately. But because he was considered a political dissident who could not safely return to Egypt, Adel was placed on the resettlement list and began an eight-year wait for a third country to offer him refuge. Yet even after his transfer to supposed liberty in Slovakia in January 2010, Adel was illegally imprisoned for more than six months and only released after a painful hunger strike.

  A few months later, Adel watched along with the rest of the world as revolution broke out in Egypt, and he was finally able to contemplate returning home to his wife and four children. Excited by the prospect of a new, democratic Egypt, Adel never dreamt that his patently unjust in absentia sentence would be upheld by a post-Mubarak court. Sadly, he was wrong. After his initial, joyful arrival home, he was allowed only a brief reunion with his wife and four children, whom he had not seen for a decade, before being arrested.

  Worryingly, Adel's story shows all too clearly the different paths the caretaker governments in Egypt and Tunisia have taken. Under the Ben Ali regime, Tunisian citizens held in Guantanamo were also given in absentia sentences on trumped up, politically-motivated charges. Yet one of the first decrees made by the interim government granted amnesty for political prisoners - including current or ex-Guantanamo detainees.

  As a result, a prisoner who had been serving his in absentia sentence in a Tunisian jail since being transferred from Guantanamo in 2007 was immediately released, while two former Guantanamo detainees have safely returned to freedom in Tunisia. The interim government then pledged to send a delegation to the US to negotiate for the release of the remaining Tunisians held in Guantanamo. This stance has received considerable support among political parties and civil society in Tunisia.

  If the military prosecutor does not acquit Adel, it will be yet one further indication that, unlike Tunisia, Egypt has not broken with its illegal detention policies. Just last week, SCAF officials went on state television to urge Egyptians to stop comparing SCAF's rule to the Mubarak regime. Clearly, the solution is for them to stop acting like the Mubarak regime.

  PHOTO CAPTION

  Adel Al-Gazzar

  By: Katie Taylor

  Katie Taylor works on Reprieve's Life after Guantanamo Project, helping to facilitate the resettlement of ex-Guantanamo prisoners in Europe.

  Source: Aljazeera.net

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Islamic World
Who is held to account for civilian deaths by drone in Yemen?
  There is a history of Yemeni officials lying to protect the US, and the Pentagon and CIA greeting queries with obfuscation.   When news flashed of an air strike on a vehicle in the Yemeni city of Radaa on Sunday afternoon, early claims that ‘al-Qaida militants had died’ soon gave way...
Evolving tactics of Syrian opposition fighters
  As violence appears to have escalated in Syria, the BBC's Ian Pannell reports on the situation in the north of the country, where he has just spent the last two weeks with some of the opposition fighting groups in Idlib province.   The commander had "gone to ground" and we sat...
Palestinian village faces demolition by Israel
  Palestinians in this hamlet have clung to their arid acres for decades, living without proper electricity or water while Israel provides both to Jewish settlers on nearby hills. But the end now seems near for Susiya: Demolition orders distributed last week by the Israelis aim to destroy virtually the entire...
The foot soldiers in Syria's war
  The food is piled high. Steaming pots of seasoned tomatoes and potatoes, yogurt and cucumber, cheese and piles of tortilla-like khubz, dipped in oil. A dozen or so young Syrian men crowd around, chattering excitedly about the day's events.   These men are foot soldiers in the public relations wing of...
Syria files reveal regime espionage
  In the ransacked and burnt-out remains of various security headquarters in al-Bab lie many clues to the means used by Bashar al-Assad's government to stay in power, revealing why life under the regime had become increasingly intolerable for its citizens.   In the widely-hated building of military security, the formerly locked...
Israel ex-soldiers say troops abused Palestinian kids
  Former Israeli soldiers who served in the occupied territories say that mistreatment of Palestinian children by troops is "routine" and occurs even at times of relative calm.   A collection of over 30 testimonies published on Sunday by Breaking the Silence, a group of ex-servicemen critical of army practices, says physical...
Amnesty: Syrian civilians suffer most in Aleppo
  Human rights group Amnesty International says artillery and mortar fire and airstrikes by regime forces in the northern city of Aleppo are killing mostly civilians, including children.   A new Amnesty report released Thursday said air and artillery strikes against residential neighborhoods are indiscriminate attacks that seriously endanger civilians.   Government troops...
Syria running '27 torture centers'
  A new report by Human Rights Watch (HRW) said that Syrian intelligence agencies are running torture centers across the country where detainees are beaten with batons and cables, burned with acid, sexually assaulted, and their fingernails torn out.   The report released on Tuesday by the New York-based group identified 27...
The battle for Area C
  Palestinians face severe restrictions in the more than 60 per cent of the West Bank under full Israeli control.   Dozens of tents, made of wooden planks, small boulders and plastic tarps, cling to the rocky hilltop. Tires, garbage, shoes, children's clothes and broken electronic equipment are strewn between the tents,...
Former Israeli Soldiers Confess Abuse of Palestinian Children
  Testimony by ex-Israeli Defense Force soldiers reveals a devastating portrayal of ill-treatment and abuse of Palestinian youth by members of Israel's occupying army in the West Bank and Gaza Strip.   The testimony by more than 30 soldiers, and fashioned into a booklet by Breaking the Silence, an organization of former...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved