Gitmo detainees blame arrest on 'political game'
A group of Algerians who were ordered released from Guantanamo Bay on Thursday have long denied being terrorists, saying they were swept up in Bosnia and handed over to the U.S. as political pawns.
A federal judge in Washington ruled that the five men cannot be held indefinitely as enemy combatants and should be released immediately from the U.S. military base in Cuba. A sixth, however, should still be held because of evidence against him, the judge said.
According to Guantanamo documents reviewed by The Associated Press, the men–who have been locked up at Guantanamo for almost seven years–challenged U.S. military panels to present proof of their alleged ties to al-Qaida.
"We don't approve of killing innocent people or killing anybody, so I can't belong to such an organization," Mohammed Nechle told one of the panels. "Even if you continue to investigate me for another 10 years, you will find out that I have no relations to them."
In his ruling on Thursday, U.S. District Judge Richard J. Leon said the U.S. government's evidence linking the men to al-Qaida was not credible because it came from a single, unidentified source. He said a sixth Algerian should not be freed because he apparently was close to an al-Qaida operative and had sought to help others travel to Afghanistan to fight the U.S. and its allies.
When they appeared separately before the panels over the years at Guantanamo, some of the men said they were victims of a political game that ensued after the attacks on the World Trade Center towers in New York and the Pentagon.
Every nation wanted to help the U.S. afterward, said detainee Boudella Al Hajj.
"I think that Bosnia didn't find anything to give to the United States, so they said 'OK, let's give them these six Algerians, they are Muslims,'" Al Hajj was quoted as saying in the transcripts of the panel proceedings. "We were sacrificed just to show they gave something."
Bosnian authorities arrested the six Algerians on suspicion they planned to bomb the U.S. Embassy in Sarajevo, Bosnia-Herzegovina, in October 2001, an accusation they denied.
Last month, the U.S. Justice Department backed off the embassy bomb-plot accusations.
Among the men who were transferred to Guantanamo in January 2002 is Lakhdar Boumediene, whose landmark Supreme Court case last summer gave detainees the right to challenge their imprisonment.
Sabir Mahfouz Lahmar told interrogators that he taught Arabic to children and had no ties to Osama bin Laden.
"I am not a soldier," Lahmar insisted. "My whole life has been related to books."
For his part, Nechle expressed horror at the Sept. 11 attacks.
"We were very, very upset at the events that happened in America," Nechle told a military panel four years ago. "I imagine that the people in these buildings could be my brother or my father or my sister or my son."
The U.S. Department of Justice said Thursday it would review the judge's decision and praised the judge for ordering that the sixth Algerian remain detained. The Justice Department has said the six men were detained before they could launch an international terrorist fight against the U.S. and its allies.
A Pentagon spokesman, Navy Cmdr. Jeffrey Gordon, said: "We are reviewing the ruling with respect to the other five petitioners."
The cases of more than 200 additional Guantanamo detainees are still pending, many in front of other judges in Washington's federal courthouse.
The Bosnian government has said it would welcome back the detainees, who had immigrated to Bosnia before they were arrested.