GUANTANAMO detainee and Reprieve client Nabil Hadjarab, who was cleared for release in 2007, was freed last Wednesday and transferred to Algeria, along with a second man.
Legal charity Reprieve hopes that this ‘positive step’ marks the beginning of further releases from the prison. 164 men remain in Guantanamo, over half of whom have been cleared for release.
According to the US military, 32 of the men on hunger strike are being force-fed, a practice denounced by the World Medical Association as amounting to torture.
Shaker Aamer, whose British wife and four British children all live in London, has been cleared for release since 2007.
The British government have repeatedly stated that they want him returned to the UK and Prime Minister Cameron has personally asked US President Obama for Shaker to come back to the UK, yet he remains imprisoned.
Shaker has been on hunger strike since February of this year.
On a recent call with his lawyer, he said: ‘In about the second month I was in Guantánamo the US asked me to cooperate and said I could be home in England in just one month if I did.
‘That was a little over eleven years ago.’
Detainee Younous Chekkouri, who has also been cleared for release, said in a recent call with his lawyer: ‘My wife told me something very sad last time we had a call.
‘She said “you know, with every Eid that comes, I feel very alone. I went to the mosque to pray, and when prayer finished, I came out. I saw the women sitting outside, being picked up by their husbands. I waited for you, and you didn’t come.” And she started to cry.’
l One year after a covert US drone strike killed a Yemeni preacher who opposed al Qaeda, his family are yet to receive any acknowledgement from the US government of what happened.
Salem Ahmed bin Ali Jaber was killed on 29 August 2012 by a strike in the Hadramout region of Yemen.
He was known for making speeches denouncing al Qaeda, and his brother-in-law, Faisal bin Ali Jaber, recently wrote to President Obama to ask why he – along with Faisal’s nephew, a local policeman – was hit in the strike.
However, one year later, neither Faisal nor any other member of the family has received an apology or even a response.
This week, Faisal bin Ali Jaber expressed disappointment over the lack of response.
He told human rights charity Reprieve, which represents civilian victims of covert drone strikes, ‘I do not understand why President Obama will not even apologise for killing my brother in law and nephew.
‘Salem was strongly opposed to al Qaeda – can the President explain how killing him made either the US or Yemen any safer?’
Yemen’s President Hadi, to whom Faisal’s letter of July 31 was also addressed, has similarly failed to reply.
Instead, he last week gave a speech in which he defended the US drone programme in Yemen, claiming that civilian casualties were exaggerated.
The full text of Faisal’s 31 July 2013 letter is as follows:
‘President Obama and President Hadi:
‘My name is Faisal bin Ali Jaber. I am a Yemeni engineer from Hadramout, employed by Yemen’s equivalent of the Environmental Protection Agency. I am writing today because I read in the news that you will be meeting in the White House on Thursday, August 1st, to discuss the “counter-terrorism partnership” between the US and Yemen.
‘My family has personally experienced this partnership. A year ago this August, a drone strike in my ancestral village killed my brother-in-law, Salem bin Ali Jaber, and my twenty-one-year-old nephew, Waleed.
‘President Obama, you said in a recent speech that the United States is “at war with an organisation that right now would kill as many Americans as they could if we did not stop them first.” This war against Al-Qaeda, you added, “is a just war – a war waged proportionally, in last resort, and in self-defence”.
‘President Hadi, on a trip to the United States last September, you claimed that “every operation (in Yemen), before taking place, (has) permission from the president.” You also asserted that “the drone technologically is more advanced than the human brain”.
‘Why, then, last August, did you both send drones to attack my innocent brother-in-law and nephew? Our family are not your enemy. In fact, the people you killed had strongly and publicly opposed Al-Qaeda. Salem was an imam. The Friday before his death, he gave a guest sermon in the Khashamir mosque denouncing Al-Qaeda’s hateful ideology. It was not the first of these sermons, but regrettably, it was his last.
‘In months of grieving, my family have received no acknowledgement or apology from the US or Yemen. We’ve struggled to square our tragedy with the words in your speeches.
‘How was this “self-defence”? My family worried that militants would target Salem for his sermons. We never anticipated his death would come from above, at the hands of the United States. In his death you lost a potential ally – in fact, because word of the killing spread immediately through the region, I fear you have lost thousands.
‘How was this “in last resort”? Our town was no battlefield. We had no warning – our local police were never asked to make any arrest. My young cousin Waleed was a policeman, before the strike cut short his life.
‘How was this “proportionate”? The strike devastated our community. The day before the strike, Khashamir buzzed with celebrations for my eldest son’s wedding. Our wedding videos show Salem and young Waleed in a crowd of dancing revellers, joining the celebration. Traditionally, this revelry would have gone on for days – but for the attack. Afterwards, it was days before I could persuade my eldest daughter to leave the house, such was her terror of fire from the skies.
‘The strike left a stark lesson in its wake – not just in my village, but across Hadramout and wider Yemen. The lesson, I am afraid, is that neither the current US or Yemeni administrations bother to distinguish friend from foe. In speech after speech after the attack, community leaders stood and said: if Salem was not safe, none of us are.
‘Your silence in the face of these injustices only makes matters worse. If the strike was a mistake, the family – like all wrongly bereaved families of this secret air war – deserve a formal apology.
‘To this day I wish no vengeance against the United States or Yemeni governments. But not everyone in Yemen feels the same. Every dead innocent swells the ranks of those you are fighting.
‘All Yemen has begun to take notice of drones – and they object. Only this month, Yemen’s National Dialogue Conference, a quasi-Constitutional Convention which I understand the US underwrites, almost unanimously voted to prohibit the unregulated use of drones in our country.
‘With respect, you cannot continue to behave as if innocent deaths like those in my family are irrelevant. If the Yemeni and American Presidents refuse to engage with overwhelming popular sentiment in Yemen, you will defeat your own counter-terrorism aims.
‘Thank you for your consideration. I would appreciate the courtesy of a reply.
‘Yours Sincerely,
‘Faisal bin Ali Jaber
Sana’a, Yemen.’