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Recent Appearances... Rantburg
Hambali Riduan Isamuddin al-Qaeda Fifth Column 20030116  
  Riduan Isamuddin Rabitatul Mujahideen Southeast Asia Indonesian Captured Big Shot 20021120  
  Hambali Jemaah Islamiyah Southeast Asia Indonesian Arrested Second in Command 20031006  
  Hambali al-Qaeda Southeast Asia 20031016  
  Riduan bin Isamuddin Jemaah Islamiyah Terror Networks 20030110  
  Hambali Jemaah Islamiah Southeast Asia 20051002 Link
  Riduan Isamuddin Jemaah Islamiah Southeast Asia Indonesian Captured Big Shot 20030618  
  Riduan Isamuddin al Qaeda Southeast Asia Indonesian Captured Big Shot 20021205  
  Riduan Isamuddin Jemaah Islamiyah Southeast Asia Indonesian In Jug Big Shot 20031119  
    Real name of Hambali
  Hambali al Qaeda Southeast Asia 20021205  
Muhammad Hambali Muhammad Hambali Hamas Middle East 20030905  

Southeast Asia
Malaysian defendants in Bali bombings to serve about 5 more years
2024-01-28
[BenarNews] A U.S. military judge ruled Friday that two Malaysians linked to the 2002 Bali bombings are to serve about five more years in prison in addition to the two decades they have been detained. The announcement at the military court in Guantanamo Bay came shortly after a panel of military officers recommended 23-year sentences for the pair, who last week pleaded guilty to supporting roles in Indonesia’s worst-ever terror attack that left 202 people dead. The lighter punishment reflects terms of a plea deal struck late last year, details of which were revealed in Judge Wesley Braun’s announcement Friday.

The five-member panel deliberated for about two hours after hearing final statements, .

On Friday night, it remained unclear whether Mohammed Farik Bin Amin and Mohammed Nazir Bin Lep would complete their sentences at the U.S. Navy base in Cuba or elsewhere. chief prosecutor Col. George C. Kraehe did not immediately respond to a question about this from BenarNews.

The two defendants and the relatives of their victims showed no emotion as the panel issued its recommendation inside the nondescript building that houses the military court, or moments later when the judge handed down his ruling.

The two men have been incarcerated at Guantanamo since they were flown here 17 years ago from a CIA black site overseas, and it was only in August 2021 that they finally got their first day in court here.

Bin Lep and bin Amin made statements on Thursday that their hearts had changed during more than 20 years in jug — first in Thailand following their 2003 arrests, then at a CIA black site before arriving at the base in Cuba in 2006.

The two wore Islamic garb earlier in the week but appeared in court on Friday in blazers and button-down shirts. Their sentences take effect from last week, when Braun, a U.S. Air Force officer, accepted their guilty pleas.

Delivering the prosecution’s closing arguments Friday, Kraehe said he spoke for the victims’ families — those watching in the hearing room and thousands of others who could not attend.

Addressing the defendants’ claims that they were tortured under the American government’s Rendition, Detention and Interrogation (RDI) policy, Kraehe said that occurred years ago. They have been treated humanely at Guantanamo, he said, telling the panel members that they were not tasked with judging the RDI policy.

"Our task is to give the victims justice," he said. "The accused are not the victims here."

Kraehe told of how bin Amin and bin Lep had "heeded the late Osama bin Laden
...... who doesn't live anywhere anymore......
’s call" in the 1990s. They headed to Afghanistan in 2000, trained to participate in violent mostly peaceful jihad and swore an oath to bin Laden after the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks.

"This is what they wanted, what they trained for," Kraehe said.

During that time, the pair met Indonesian Encep Nurjaman (also known as Hambali
...real name Riduan Isamuddin, close personal friend of Osama bin Laden, one of the founders of Jemaah Islamiyah and the planner of the 2002 Bali bombings. He was captured with the help of a mid-Eastern intel service, shipped to Guantanamo to rot but he'll likely be released eventually because that was a long time ago and we were all so much younger then...
), the suspected main planner of the 2002 Bali bombings. Their cases were separated in 2023, with Hambali’s lawyer saying that his client did not expect to be given a similar plea deal.

Last week, bin Amin and bin Lep pleaded guilty to murder, conspiracy and three other charges.

Christine Funk, the lead attorney for bin Amin, said the worst thing he ever did was take money in December 2002 — two months after the Oct. 12 bombings — to hide conspirators. That conspiracy led to the pleas on murder and four other charges.

"You become responsible for everyone’s actions," she said.

She acknowledged the victims’ suffering while pleading her case for bin Amin.

"Because we believe the pain of the victims can co-exist with the rights of the defendant," she told the panel.

Funk, who wears a headscarf in court in deference to her Moslem client, discussed the torture he claims he was subjected to following his arrest in Thailand and during his time at the CIA black site. She used a few of his sketches presented in court on Thursday to show torture, including waterboarding.

She also released details from a report by expert Hawthorne Smith, who has worked with survivors of torture and human rights
One man's rights are another man's existential threat.
abuses for nearly three decades. He found bin Amin suffered from complex PTSD.

"[H]e indicates that Mr. bin Amin has endured symptoms of re-experiencing, such as trauma-related nightmares, sometimes three to four times a week; insomnia and other sleep disturbances; and intrusive thoughts," Funk said.

She spoke about bin Amin’s effort to change and the possibility that he be rehabilitated.

Bin Lep attorney Brian Bouffard told the court that his client did provide support to bombing conspirators and has taken responsibility for his actions.

"He is not here to call himself a victim," Bouffard said, adding bin Lep is not asking for mercy,

He said bin Lep offered prayers as he listened to the survivors’ testimony on Wednesday while adding that those efforts changed nothing in terms of the crime.

Bouffard also said that bin Lep had moved past the torture he suffered while in jug and has cooperated with Sherlocks.

Brig. Gen. Jackie Thompson, chief counsel for the Military Commissions Defense Council, expressed hope that guilty pleas and subsequent sentencings of bin Amin and bin Lep would bring closure to the victims and their families. Thompson, who watched the proceedings from the hearing room at the rear of the court, delivered a statement to BenarNews where he noted that the 20-year delay in bringing the men to justice was "extremely distressing and frustrated the desire of everyone for accountability and justice."

Thompson, who is in charge of the military’s defense attorneys, noted that 30 prisoners remain detained at the Guantanamo Bay prison, including 16 who have been cleared for release or transfer.

"The time for repatriating or transferring the cleared men is now," he said in the statement.

"A country that respects the rule of law can and should do better than this."

More can be read about the trial in this Benar News article from a few days ago.
Link


Home Front: WoT
2 Malaysian inmates at Guantanamo to be sentenced, possibly released
2024-01-24
[BenarNews] A judge at a U.S. military court in Guantanamo Bay has recommended that two Malaysians who pleaded guilty to the 2002 Bali bombings serve 20 to 25 years in prison and be repatriated or released to a third country. The fate of Mohammad bin Lep,
...in our archives as Mohammed Nazir bin Lep and Mohammad Nazir Lep, he’s one of the two Malaysians arrested with Hambali back in 2003...
47, and Mohammad bin Amin,
... a.k.a. Mohammed Farik bin Amin and elsewhere abbreviated as Mohd Farik Bin Amin, the other of the Hambali’s Malaysian henchmen...
48 — who have been incarcerated at the U.S. Naval Base in Cuba for 17 years — will be determined during a sentencing hearing scheduled to begin there next week. Their sentencing will mark only the second military trial to be completed at the controversial prison set up by the United States at Guantanamo in the wake of the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks.

Judge Wesley Braun, a U.S. Air Force officer hearing the case, noted on Wednesday that their plea agreements include a provision allowing live testimony or written statements from victims and relatives or people who were killed in the deadliest terror attack ever to hit Indonesia, which claimed 202 lives.
Link


Home Front: WoT
Guantanamo judge sets January schedule for guilty pleas in Indonesian bombings
2023-10-24
[BenarNews] A U.S. military judge on Monday announced plans to accept guilty pleas early next year from two Malaysians who have been imprisoned at Guantanamo Bay for 17 years over their alleged roles in deadly bombings in Bali and Jakarta two decades ago.

Judge Wesley Braun announced that a court session would be held during the week of Jan. 15, where he expects to receive guilty pleas from Mohammed Farik bin Amin and Mohammed Nazir bin Lep, and to hold sentencing hearings about a week later.

"The timeline we are working with here is aggressive," Braun told military prosecutors and lawyers representing the Malaysians.

The courtroom proceedings from the U.S. naval base in Cuba were broadcast via a video link to news hounds covering the session from Fort Meade, a base in Maryland.

"We are going to hit that deadline in January very quickly," Braun said.

The judge’s announcement of plea discussions showed that the prosecution and defense teams for bin Amin and bin Lep had been working to reach an outcome that would not require a trial.

Bin Amin and bin Lep have been charged with conspiracy, murder, attempted murder, intentionally causing serious bodily injury, terrorism, attacking civilians, attacking civilian objects and destruction of property linked to the bombings that took place in Indonesia in 2002 and 2003.

The 2002 twin blasts in Bali killed 202 people — Indonesia’s worst-ever terrorist attack.

The court did not release details about what charges would be included in the guilty pleas.

Braun and the lawyers spent a portion of Monday’s two-hour hearing setting a schedule to present evidence and other preparations needed before the January court action — including what questions to ask bin Amin and bin Lep regarding their pleas.

A recent court document pointed to the likelihood that bin Amin was prepared to enter a plea, potentially as soon as Monday’s hearing. A subsequent document in the chain added bin Lep.

Christine Funk, bin Amin’s lead attorney, told Braun she was concerned that her team would not have enough time to examine all evidence from the prosecutors in less than two months.

In a document prior to the hearing, the court allowed bin Lep’s lead attorney, Brian Bouffard, and two others assigned to the case to be absent because they were "engaged in mission-related work in Southeast Asia."

Bin Amin and bin Lep were charged, along with Indonesian national Encep Nurjaman (also known as Hambali
...real name Riduan Isamuddin, close personal friend of Osama bin Laden, one of the founders of Jemaah Islamiyah and the planner of the 2002 Bali bombings. He was captured with the help of a mid-Eastern intel service, shipped to Guantanamo to rot but he'll likely be released eventually because that was a long time ago and we were all so much younger then...
) following their arrests in Thailand in 2003. The three were sent to secret CIA prisons overseas — so-called black sites — where they were tortured before being sent to the U.S. military prison camp in Cuba, according to a 2014 U.S. Senate report.

Hambali is scheduled to appear alone in court on Wednesday for what has been scheduled as a two-day hearing.

In September, BenarNews reported that Malaysian officials had met with counterparts in the U.S. to discuss allowing bin Amin and bin Lep to return home.

Home Minister Saifuddin Nasution Ismail said he discussed the matter with Tina Kaidanow, the U.S. special representative for Guantanamo affairs, while he wsa in New York to attend the United Nations
...the Oyster Bay money pit...
General Assembly. He also said he had traveled to Cuba to meet with the two defendants but did not say when that meeting occurred.
Related:
Guantanamo Bay: 2023-09-27 Malaysia seeking return of 2 Gitmo detainees: home minister
Guantanamo Bay: 2023-09-23 9/11 detainee ruled mentally unfit for trial after torture at Guantanamo
Guantanamo Bay: 2023-08-20 Guantanamo judge rejects torture-derived confession
Related:
Mohammed Farik bin Amin: 2023-09-27 Malaysia seeking return of 2 Gitmo detainees: home minister
Mohammed Farik bin Amin: 2021-09-02 Guantanamo Tribunal Finishes Arraigning Southeast Asian Terror Suspects
Mohammed Farik bin Amin: 2021-06-29 Indonesian, Malaysian Terror Suspects to Be Arraigned at Guantanamo Aug. 30
Link


Southeast Asia
Malaysia seeking return of 2 Gitmo detainees: home minister
2023-09-27
[BenarNews] Kuala Lumpur is working to bring home two Malaysian suspects in the 2002 Bali bombings who have been detained at the U.S. military prison in Guantanamo Bay for 17 years, the home minister said Monday after a trip to New York last week. In a Facebook post that has since been removed, Home Minister Saifuddin Nasution Ismail said he had discussed the matter while in New York with Tina Kaidanow, the U.S. special representative for Guantanamo affairs. He said he had traveled to the prison, located in Cuba, but did not say when.

Malaysians Mohammed Farik bin Amin and Mohammed Nazir bin Lep were arrested in Thailand in 2003, along with Indonesian Encep Nurjaman, also known as Hambali
"I have met with two Malaysians detained there. Their story really touched me. It’s a downward spiral about life, about repentance, about the chance to be a better person," Saifuddin said. "With God’s grace, we will try to expedite the process for them to return to Malaysia."

The home minister did not reply to BenarNews’ request for comment about why the social media post was removed about nine hours after it went live.

Saifuddin and Inspector General of Police Razarudin Husain were part of the Malaysian delegation led by Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim to the United Nations
...an organization which on balance has done more bad than good, with the good not done well and the bad done thoroughly...
General Assembly in New York. Contacted by BenarNews, Razarudin deferred to the home minister.

Malaysians Mohammed Farik bin Amin and Mohammed Nazir bin Lep, along with Indonesian Encep Nurjaman, also known as Hambali
...real name Riduan Isamuddin, close personal friend of Osama bin Laden, one of the founders of Jemaah Islamiyah and the planner of the 2002 Bali bombings. He was captured with the help of a mid-Eastern intel service, shipped to Guantanamo to rot but he'll likely be released eventually because that was a long time ago and we were all so much younger then...
, were expected to face trial in a U.S. military court for their alleged roles in bombings in Bali and Jakarta in 2002 and 2003 that killed hundreds of people.

Following their arrests in Thailand in 2003, the three were sent to secret CIA prisons, so-called black sites, before being moved to Guantanamo in 2006. A U.S. Senate report released in 2014 found that each was tortured during his time in the black sites.

A court document filed by the lead prosecutor in August indicated that bin Amin would no longer be tried along with the other two defendants.
Why?
Bin Amin’s lead attorney, Christine Funk, declined to comment when asked by BenarNews about the significance of the move and whether it might pave the way for his departure from Guantanamo.

Bin Lep’s lawyer, Brian Bouffard, could not be reached for comment. But Nurjaman’s attorney, James Hodes, said he expected bin Lep’s case would also be "severed" from his client’s.

"That’s merely my understanding," he told BenarNews on Monday, while adding he did not know for sure.

Hodes said he did not expect either Malaysian defendant to attend the next sessions, scheduled for Oct. 16 to 27 on the court calendar. A court administrator told BenarNews the sessions would likely be cut to one week..

Hodes said Hambali was "happy on the one hand" that it appeared his co-defendants could be returning to Malaysia.

"He’s hoping that will be the end result for him as well," Hodes said.

’READY TO TAKE THEM’
The three Southeast Asians appeared in court for the first time in 2021 for a two-day arraignment hearing, but there has been little progress since then, largely due to defense attorneys’ concerns over poor translation services, and a lack of evidence provided to them.

On Monday, counter terrorism analyst Ahmad El-Muhammady of the International Islamic University of Malaysia told BenarNews that he believed the Malaysian government was working on a potential deal for the return of both bin Amin and bin Lep.

"This is the way forward and to meet the humanitarian rights perspective. They have been under detention for 20 years," he told BenarNews.

Ahmad, who is an adviser to the Royal Malaysian Police on terrorist rehabilitation programs, said both would need to undergo psychological and ideological assessment should they return home.

"But their return will be a lowkey affair due to the sensitivity of the issue. They also need to be put under rehabilitation programs like the former IS fighters and family who we brought home," he said.

Mohd Mizan Mohammad Aslam, security analyst at the National Defense University of Malaysia, said he would love for bin Amin and bin Lep to be repatriated.

"Let our judiciary system do its best for them. I believe our government is ready to take them and give them an opportunity to come back to our country because they are our people. If they already agree to any kind of consequences, that would be good for them," he told BenarNews.

"They might spend another few years in detention and then be released back into society."

In the past, when former Islamic State
...formerly ISIS or ISIL, depending on your preference. Before that they were al-Qaeda in Iraq, as shaped by Abu Musab Zarqawi. They're really very devout, committing every atrocity they can find in the Koran and inventing a few more. They fling Allah around with every other sentence, but to hear western pols talk they're not really Moslems....
fighters or their family members returned home, they were sent to prison or required to undergo rehabilitation and deradicalization programs, he said. Some had to wear electronic monitoring devices on their ankles for up to two years.
The poor darlings.
Related:
Mohammed Farik bin Amin: 2021-09-02 Guantanamo Tribunal Finishes Arraigning Southeast Asian Terror Suspects
Mohammed Farik bin Amin: 2021-06-29 Indonesian, Malaysian Terror Suspects to Be Arraigned at Guantanamo Aug. 30
Mohammed Farik bin Amin: 2006-02-11 How the US stopped Hambali
Link


Home Front: WoT
Pre-trial hearings resume for SEAsian suspects held at Guantanamo
2023-04-25
[BenarNews] Prosecutors preparing a case against three Southeast Asians incarcerated at Guantanamo Bay will finish sharing evidence with defense attorneys in January 2024, lawyers said Monday, illustrating the glacial pace of progress toward trial for men held at the controversial prison since 2006.

Indonesian Encep Nurjaman (also known as Hambali
...real name Riduan Isamuddin, close personal friend of Osama bin Laden, one of the founders of Jemaah Islamiyah and the planner of the 2002 Bali bombings. He was captured with the help of a mid-Eastern intel service, shipped to Guantanamo to rot but he'll likely be released eventually because that was a long time ago and we were all so much younger then...
) and Malaysians Nazir bin Lep
...more formally Mohammed Nazir Bin Lep, informally Lillie. He’s one of Hambali’s lieutenants — they were captured together in Thailand in 2003...
and Farik bin Amin
... another Hambali lieutenant, he’s known more formally as Mohd Farik Bin Amin, his nom de guerre was Zubair Zaid and while it’s uncertain whether he was captured with the other two, the three spent years with the same interrogators. His cousin was master bomb maker Zulkifli Abdhir, called Marwan, who provided senior management and work product for the Kumpulan Mujahidin Malaysia, Jemaah Islamiyah, and the Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters until he intersected a hail of Philippine bullets in 2015...
were present in the courtroom at the U.S. military facility in Cuba for proceedings witnessed by news hounds via video link to Fort Meade, a military base about an hour northeast of Washington. The men face charges linked to terrorist bombings in Indonesia in 2002 and 2003.

Lead prosecutor Col. George C. Kraehe said his team was seeking to "get this case tried on the merits by March 2025."

Earlier, Brian Bouffard, who represents bin Lep, questioned the government’s pace in presenting evidence to the defense teams. Lawyers for bin Amin and Nurjaman raised similar issues.

"We are trying to uncover the reasons for delay after delay after delay," Bouffard told the court.

Military Judge Hayes C. Larsen noted the defense concerns about late filings.

Kraehe said his team was working to gather evidence for the trial, adding that it was working on this even during the hearing.

"This is not unusual in a national security case," he said.

Kraehe said that about 90% of the evidence had been turned over to the defense, and the remaining 10% was highly classified. Because of that, steps need to be taken before it is turned over to defense, he said, adding that he expected to finish doing so by late January 2024.

Referred to as "alien unprivileged enemy belligerents" in some court documents, Nurjaman, bin Amin and bin Lep face charges related to twin bombings that killed 202 people in Bali in October 2002 — Indonesia’s deadliest terror attack to date — and a bombing at the J.W. Marriott hotel in Jakarta in 2003.

Following their 2003 arrests in Thailand, the three were sent to secret CIA black sites before being moved to the Guantanamo Bay prison in 2006. A U.S. Senate report released in 2014 found that each was tortured during his time in the black sites.

INTERPRETATION ISSUES
Monday’s hearing — the first of three days scheduled — began with prosecutors questioning Larsen, who will be leaving the bench in June to assume command of the Navy’s Defense Service Office West. He said he did not have any information about who would take over the trial.

Twenty minutes into the hearing, Bouffard and Christine Funk, who represents bin Amin, complained — as they have done throughout the legal process — of inadequate translation services, saying their clients were hearing Bahasa Indonesia interpretation instead of their national language, Bahasa Malaysia.

Later, the two lawyers told Larsen that English words were being intermixed with the translations.

"It’s a tired refrain," Larsen responded, dismissing the complaint.

During their two-day August 2021 arraignment, lawyers for the three men spent much of the time protesting before Larsen regarding the poor quality of interpreting.

Larsen ordered military prosecutors to hire and assign qualified interpreters for any upcoming court action.
Related:
Guantanamo Bay: 2023-04-21 US releases Algerian from Guantanamo
Guantanamo Bay: 2023-04-14 'Special' service: Declassified Guantanamo court filing suggests some 9/11 hijackers were CIA agents
Guantanamo Bay: 2023-02-27 With the J6 footage release, the mainstream media begin to panic
Related:
Encep Nurjaman: 2022-08-23 Guantanamo court sets pre-trial hearing for suspects in Bali bombings
Encep Nurjaman: 2021-09-02 Guantanamo Tribunal Finishes Arraigning Southeast Asian Terror Suspects
Encep Nurjaman: 2021-06-29 Indonesian, Malaysian Terror Suspects to Be Arraigned at Guantanamo Aug. 30
Related:
Nazir bin Lep: 2021-09-02 Guantanamo Tribunal Finishes Arraigning Southeast Asian Terror Suspects
Nazir bin Lep: 2021-06-29 Indonesian, Malaysian Terror Suspects to Be Arraigned at Guantanamo Aug. 30
Nazir bin Lep: 2005-12-02 Human Rights Watch's list of "ghost prisoners"
Related:
Farik bin Amin: 2021-09-02 Guantanamo Tribunal Finishes Arraigning Southeast Asian Terror Suspects
Farik bin Amin: 2021-06-29 Indonesian, Malaysian Terror Suspects to Be Arraigned at Guantanamo Aug. 30
Farik bin Amin: 2006-02-11 How the US stopped Hambali
Link


India-Pakistan
US transfers two Guantanamo Bay detainees to Pakistan
2023-02-24
[GEO.TV] The United States has transferred two brothers from the Guantanamo Bay US detention facility in Cuba to Pakistain, bringing the total number of people held at Guantanamo down to 32, the Pentagon said on Thursday.

The Guantanamo camp was established by Republican President George W Bush in 2002 to house foreign terrorism suspects following the 2001 hijacked plane attacks on New York and the Pentagon that killed about 3,000 people.

It came to symbolise the excesses of the US "war on terror" because of harsh interrogation methods that critics have said amounted to torture.

There were 40 detainees when President Joe The Big Guy Biden
...46th president of the U.S. The nincompoop who dumped Afghanistan. The copier doesdn't exist that could reelect him....
, a Democrat, took office in 2021. Biden has said he hopes to close the facility. The federal government is barred by law from transferring Guantanamo detainees to US mainland prisons.

On Thursday, the Pentagon announced the repatriation of Abdul Rabbani and Mohammed Rabbani to Pakistain.

Both were arrested in 2002. Abdul Rabbani was an al-Qaeda controller while Mohammed Rabbani was a financial and travel controller for prominent al-Qaeda leaders, according to the Pentagon's website.

"The United States appreciates the willingness of the Government of Pakistain and other partners to support ongoing US efforts focused on responsibly reducing the detainee population and ultimately closing the Guantanamo Bay facility," the Pentagon said in a statement.

A total of 32 detainees remain, of whom 18 are eligible for transfer, the Pentagon said in its statement.

Reacting to the development, Senator Mushtaq Ahmed Khan of Jamat-e-Islami welcomed their transfer to Pakistain, saying the two brothers were detained without any case.
...no case except being Al Qaeda Big Turbans, but no one objects to that nowadays.
"Another good news. Ahmed Ghulam Rabbani and Abdul Rahim Ghulam Rabbani have reached Islamabad airport after being freed from Guantanamo Bay. They were imprisoned in Guantanamo Bay for 21 years despite being innocent. There was no trial, no court proceedings, no charges against them. Congratulations on their release. Thank you Senate of Pakistain."
Update from Al Monitor at 9:50 p.m. ET — late in the day, but not worth giving you an entire article to read tomorrow, dear Reader:
Abdul Rahim Ghulam Rabbani, 55, and Mohammed Ahmed Ghulam Rabbani, 53, were captured in Karachi, Pakistan, in 2002 and held in CIA custody in Afghanistan before they were transferred to the offshore US prison in Cuba in 2004.

The brothers were born in Saudi Arabia and are ethnically Burmese.
This makes their Pakistani citizenship puzzling, but I suppose if Pakistan wants them, they all deserve to enjoy the result.
Their departure brings the remaining number of detainees at Guantanamo Bay to 32. At its peak in 2003, the prison held nearly 680 prisoners.

Shortly after taking office, the Biden administration said it planned to close the controversial detention center, which opened in 2002 and has since been used to house more than 700 foreign inmates suspected of ties to al-Qaeda or the Taliban. Earlier this month, Pakistani detainee Majid Khan was transferred to Belize following the completion of his sentence.

Intense pushback from Congress prevented former President Barack Obama from making good on a 2008 campaign promise to close Guantanamo, despite an executive order issued on his second day in office.

Former President Donald Trump signed a 2018 executive order to keep it open, citing the risk of recidivism among the prisoners. Just one detainee was released under his administration — a Saudi man who pleaded guilty to terrorism-related charges and was transferred to Saudi Arabian custody in 2018 to serve out the remainder of his sentence.
Related:
Abdul Rabbani: 2021-05-25 Biden administration to release Gitmo terrorist detainees but not January 6 trespassers
Abdul Rabbani: 2008-09-08 Aafia's husband in Guantanamo
Related:
Ahmed Ghulam Rabbani: 2015-09-23 IHC seeks reply on Gitmo inmate's plea
Ahmed Ghulam Rabbani: 2008-09-08 Aafia's husband in Guantanamo
Related:
Abdul Rahim Ghulam Rabbani: 2023-02-03 Pakistani Gitmo prisoner transferred to Belize
Related:
Majid Khan: 2023-02-03 Pakistani Gitmo prisoner transferred to Belize
Majid Khan: 2021-11-08 CIA Torture Finally Rebuked, By Military Jury
Majid Khan: 2021-11-07 Clemency Request for Guantanamo Inmate 'Enlightening,' Hambali's Lawyer Says
Link


Home Front: WoT
Pakistani Gitmo prisoner transferred to Belize
2023-02-03
[Dawn] The Biden administration, the guys that caused the debacle in Afghanistan
...knaves, footpads, and adjusters employed by the Biden Crime Family. They leave a trail of havoc everywhere they turn their attention, be it the nation's borders, the Keystone XL Pipeline, or epidemics, sometimes on purpose, most times through sheer arrogant ineptitude. They learnt this stuff in college, you know...
on Thursday transferred a detainee from its Guantanamo Bay prison facility in Cuba to Belize and is preparing to transfer at least two more in the coming weeks. All three are Pak citizens.

Majid Khan left Guantanamo early Thursday and arrived in Belize several hours later. He is the first detainee to be resettled by the Biden administration and one of the few to be sent to a location in the Western Hemisphere.

The other two expected to be released soon are Abdul Rahim Ghulam Rabbani and Mohammad Ahmad Ghulam Rabbani.
Possibly they are in the Rantburg archives under slight different spelling or a different configuration of their names.
"I have been given a second chance in life and I intend to make the most of it," said Khan in a statement issued through his legal team. "I promise all of you, especially the people of Belize, that I will be a productive, law-abiding member of society."
Hopefully he really did have a change of heart instead of spewing taqiyya like squid ink before returning to old habits.
The only known legal US resident at Guantanamo, Khan was born in Saudi Arabia
...a kingdom taking up the bulk of the Arabian peninsula. Its primary economic activity involves exporting oil and soaking Islamic rubes on the annual hajj pilgrimage. The country supports a large number of princes in whatcha might call princely splendor. Fifteen of the nineteen WTC hijackers were Saudis, and most major jihadi commanders were Saudis, to include Osama bin Laden. Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman quietly folded that tent in 2016, doing terrible things to the guys running it, and has since been dragging the kingdom into the current century...
. He was granted asylum in the US in 1998, while attending high school near Baltimore but remained a Pak citizen.

He returned to Pakistain in 2002 and, according to a US Defence Department detainee assessment, joined Al Qaeda and became a direct subordinate to Khalid Sheikh Mohammed (KSM), Al Qaeda’s senior operational planner and the principal architect of the 9/11 terrorist attacks.

Khan was arrested in Bloody Karachi
...formerly the capital of Pakistain, now merely its most important port and financial center. It is among the largest cities in the world, with a population of 18 million, most of whom hate each other and many of whom are armed and dangerous...
in March 2003 and taken to a CIA black site where he was subjected to sleep deprivation, an ice water bath, and forced rectal feeding and rehydration. The chairperson of the Senate Intelligence Committee, Dianne Feinstein
...Dem Senator-for-Life from Caliphornica. She has been a politician since about the time she was weaned. Feinstein was the author of the 1994 Federal Assault Weapons Ban, and tried it a second time in 2012. Feinstein has chaired the Select Committee on Intelligence since 2009. At age 89.53632, Feinstein is the oldest currently serving United States Senator...
, called the treatment torture. In September 2006, then-President George W. Bush announced that Khan was one of 14 "high value detainees" being transferred from CIA detention facilities to Guantanamo Bay to face the military tribunal system.

In 2012, Khan pled guilty to terrorism-related charges and was sentenced to 10 years detention. That sentence ended March 1, 2022. Khan still has family in the US, but US federal law does not allow Guantanamo detainees to be resettled in the country.

Aliya Hussain, an advocacy program manager at the Center for Constitutional Rights, New York, who has worked on Khan’s case for more than a decade, said, "Today did not seem possible when we started. We wouldn’t be here if it weren’t for the unwavering commitment of everyone who has represented Majid."
Update from Wikipedia at 8:30 a.m. ET on the name Abdul Rahim Ghulam Rabbani: alternate names on Guantanamo Bay paperwork: Abdul Al-Rahim Ghulam Rabbani and Abu Rahim Moulana Gulam Rabbani, which are also not in the Rantburg archives. He was born in Mecca approximately 1969 to a Pakistani family that spent many years in Saudi Arabia, at some point joined Al Qaeda and trained in Afghanistan. He and his brother were captured and taken to the CIA black site called the salt pit, then turned over to GITMO in 2004. Under President Obama’s rules for GITMO, Mr. Rabbani was one of 71 prisoners deemed too innocent to charge but too dangerous to release, which makes no sense to me.
Wikipedia on brother Mohammad Ahmad Ghulam Rabbani: Mohammad Ahmad Ghulam Rabbani was born in Medina in 1970, went home to Karachi in the 1990s, where he claims he worked as a driver and guide for visiting Arabs, and claims that this association was the reason the authorities handed him over to the Americans... or possibly it was a case of mistaken identity. That jihadism is often a family affair he could be suspected of does not seem to have occurred to him, and his file accuses him of the same things as he elder brother. He spent two years with his brother at various CIA black sites before being sent with him to GITMO in 2004.
Related:
Guantanamo Bay: 2023-01-11 Dirty bomb fears as 'several kg of URANIUM' found in cargo at Heathrow: Package 'shipped from Pakistan to UK-based Iranians' at centre of Met Police anti-terror probe after being discovered when airport alarms triggered
Guantanamo Bay: 2022-10-06 Intelligence Agency of the Taliban administration said that the Taliban forces have arrested an ISIS Khorasan branch member
Guantanamo Bay: 2022-09-20 Biden swaps Taliban drug lord for US contractor held in Afghanistan
Related:
Belize: 2022-10-19 Jihad in Latin America: Illicit activities in the region fund Hezbollah
Belize: 2021-12-16 Biden nominates JFK's daughter Caroline Kennedy to be ambassador to Australia
Belize: 2021-10-06 The Pandora Papers Reveal How the Super-Rich Shaft the Rest of Us
Related:
Majid Khan: 2021-11-08 CIA Torture Finally Rebuked, By Military Jury
Majid Khan: 2021-11-07 Clemency Request for Guantanamo Inmate 'Enlightening,' Hambali's Lawyer Says
Majid Khan: 2021-11-06 Clemency Request for Guantanamo Inmate Could Affect Southeast Asian Suspects’ Trial
Link


Home Front: WoT
Guantanamo court sets pre-trial hearing for suspects in Bali bombings
2022-08-23
[BenarNews] An Indonesian and two Malaysians who have been incarcerated for more than 15 years at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, on terrorism charges linked to the 2002 Bali bombings are scheduled to appear in court for a pre-trial hearing in late October, U.S. defense officials announced Monday.

If all goes to schedule, Indonesian Encep Nurjaman (also known as Hambali
...real name Riduan Isamuddin, close personal friend of Osama bin Laden, one of the founders of Jemaah Islamiyah and the planner of the 2002 Bali bombings. He was captured with the help of a mid-Eastern intel service, shipped to Guantanamo to rot but he'll likely be released eventually because that was a long time ago and we were all so much younger then...
), and Malaysians Nazir Bin Lep
...more formally Mohammed Nazir Bin Lep, informally Lillie. He’s one of Hambali’s lieutenants — they were captured together in Thailand in 2003...
and Farik Bin Amin
... another Hambali lieutenant, he’s known more formally as Mohd Farik Bin Amin, his nom de guerre was Zubair Zaid and while it’s uncertain whether he was captured with the other two, the three spent years with the same interrogators. His cousin was master bomb maker Zulkifli Abdhir, called Marwan, who provided senior management and work product for the Kumpulan Mujahidin Malaysia, Jemaah Islamiyah, and the Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters until he intersected a hail of Philippine bullets in 2015...
will appear in a military court at Guantanamo from Oct. 31 to Nov. 4 — in what would be only their second court appearance since their arrests in Thailand in 2003. Their court hearing will take place a little more than two weeks after the 20th anniversary of the Bali bombings — the deadliest terrorist attack in Indonesia’s history.

When the three were arrested 19 years ago, they were sent to CIA black sites, where they were tortured, before being transferred to the U.S. military prison in Cuba in 2006, according to a 2014 U.S. Senate report.

The military court and the U.S. Department of Defense did not release details of the planned hearing for the three, "all of whom have been charged jointly in connection with their alleged roles in the 2002 and 2003 bombings in Indonesia," in a notice to media interested in covering the proceedings at the U.S. Naval Base in Guantanamo.

The trio first appeared at a military court there during their arraignment in August 2021. At the time, their lawyers lodged a protest before military Judge Hayes Larsen about the poor quality of the audio translations their clients were receiving.

Referred to as "alien unprivileged enemy belligerents" in some court documents, Nurjaman, bin Lep and bin Amin face charges related to twin bombings that killed 202 people in Bali in October 2002 and a bombing at the J.W. Marriott hotel in Jakarta in 2003. None of the men entered a plea to the charges against them following their arraignment last August.

In an effort to improve translations, Larsen ordered military prosecutors to hire and assign qualified interpreters for any upcoming court action.

"The defense teams all indicated they need assurances in order to be able to use their government-provided defense interpreters for attorney-client communications," Larsen wrote in a January court filing ahead of what was supposed to be a pre-trial hearing in late February.

Responding to the judge, prosecutors said in a Feb. 1 filing that they were seeking to hire four full-time interpreters, two for each language.

"Because of the uncertain timeline involved in obtaining clearances for new hires who do not have clearances, it is too speculative to estimate when fully cleared full-time interpreters will be available to assist the commission," they wrote.

James Hodes, who represents Hambali, blasted the prosecutors, noting they had 18 years to prepare their case against his client, which included hiring "qualified commission interpreters."

"This is what you are tasked with and this is what you have failed to provide," he told BenarNews earlier this year while calling the lack of interpreters a "huge obstacle for a fair trial."

Hodes could not immediately be reached on Monday for comment on the proposed court dates.
Related:
Hambali: 2022-02-13 Lack of Interpreters Impedes Guantanamo Trial for 3 Linked to Indonesia Bombings
Hambali: 2021-11-08 CIA Torture Finally Rebuked, By Military Jury
Hambali: 2021-09-02 Guantanamo Tribunal Finishes Arraigning Southeast Asian Terror Suspects
Related:
Nazir Bin Lep: 2022-02-13 Lack of Interpreters Impedes Guantanamo Trial for 3 Linked to Indonesia Bombings
Related:
Farik Bin Amin: 2022-02-13 Lack of Interpreters Impedes Guantanamo Trial for 3 Linked to Indonesia Bombings
Link


Home Front: WoT
Lack of Interpreters Impedes Guantanamo Trial for 3 Linked to Indonesia Bombings
2022-02-13
The notorious Hambali and his little friends Mohammed Nazir Bin Lep (Lillie) and Farik Bin Amin (Zubair Zaid). The article names them a couple of paragraphs down.
[BenarNews] Nearly 20 years after three high-profile Southeast Asian terror suspects were arrested and hauled off to CIA "black sites" and then to the infamous U.S. military prison at Guantanamo, their progress toward a trial faces potential delays over a lack of qualified translators.

The problem not only affects due process but illustrates yet another barrier the United States must clear to shut down the facility in Cuba, seen worldwide as a stain on America’s human rights
One man's rights are another man's existential threat.
record, two decades after the first prisoners in the post-9/11 war on terror arrived at Guantanamo Bay in January 2002.
Link


Home Front: WoT
CIA Torture Finally Rebuked, By Military Jury
2021-11-08
[Consotium News] The New York Times reported last week that a military jury at the U.S. prison at Guantanamo issued a sharp rebuke against the C.I.A.’s treatment of al-Qaeda prisoner Majid Khan, calling the Agency’s torture program "a stain on the moral fiber of America."

The jury recommended that Khan receive a 26-year sentence, the shortest possible under the court’s rules. Seven of the eight jurors—all U.S. military officers—then hand-wrote a letter to the military judge urging clemency for Khan.

The sentencing hearing, and Khan’s two hours of graphic testimony, marked the first time that details of the C.I.A. torture program were laid bare in public.

Khan testified that during the course of his interrogations, after he was captured in Pakistan in 2003, he told the C.I.A. "literally everything" he knew. He was truthful with the information, but "the more I told them, the more they tortured me." Khan said that his only alternative was to make up information about threats, anything to get his interrogators to stop torturing him. When the information then didn’t pan out, Khan was tortured yet again.
Related:
Majid Khan: 2021-11-07 Clemency Request for Guantanamo Inmate 'Enlightening,' Hambali's Lawyer Says
Majid Khan: 2021-11-06 Clemency Request for Guantanamo Inmate Could Affect Southeast Asian Suspects’ Trial
Majid Khan: 2013-04-19 Timeline of Islamicist attacks for New York, 2001 to date
Link


Home Front: WoT
Guantanamo Tribunal Finishes Arraigning Southeast Asian Terror Suspects
2021-09-02
BLUF: Hambali and two Indonesian associates, who have been in American custody since 2003, were arraigned in a court marshal at GITMO without entering a plea. At some point the next stage of the proceedings will be scheduled.
[BenarNews] The arraignment of three Southeast Asian terror suspects before a U.S. military tribunal at Guantanamo Bay wrapped up on Tuesday but without any of the defendants entering a plea and their lawyers expressing frustration and doubt about the fairness of the proceedings.

The two-day court appearance was the first for Indonesian Encep Nurjaman, who is more commonly known as Hambali
...real name Riduan Isamuddin, close personal friend of Osama bin Laden, one of the founders of Jemaah Islamiyah and the planner of the 2002 Bali bombings. He was captured with the help of a mid-Eastern intel service, shipped to Guantanamo to rot but he'll likely be released eventually because that was a long time ago and we were all so much younger then...
, and for Malaysians Mohammed Nazir bin Lep and Mohammed Farik bin Amin since they were locked up at the American navy base in Cuba 15 years ago. All three men were arrested in Thailand in 2003 and sent to secret CIA-operated "black sites" before being moved to the military prison at Guantanamo Bay in 2006.
Link


Home Front: WoT
After 15 Years at Gitmo, Bali Bombing Suspects to Get Day in Court
2021-08-29
[BenarNews] Three suspects in the 2002 Bali bombings, including "the Osama of Southeast Asia," will finally get their day in court on Monday, 15 years after being incarcerated at the U.S. military prison in Guantánamo Bay, Cuba.

Indonesian officials had indicated in 2016 that if Hambali were to be released, they would be reluctant to accept his repatriation for fear that his return could spark a revival among domestic terror cells.
By most accounts, this will be the first time that American media see the trio of detainees — two Malaysians and an Indonesian — since they were sent to the infamous lock-up. One analyst said their trial would only refresh allegations of the abuse and torture at Gitmo and reflect poorly on Washington, especially so soon after the Taliban
...Arabic for students...
took over again in Afghanistan.
Link



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