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Portrait Of A Guantanamo Bay 'Terrorist' Suspect

President Obama has instructed military prosecutors to seek a suspension to trials of terror suspects held at Guantanamo.

January 21, 2009
By Jeffrey Donovan
Nearly two years ago, the Pentagon cleared Oybek Jabbarov to leave Guantanamo Bay. Yet the 30-year-old father of two from Uzbekistan, who suffers from serious health problems, is still languishing in U.S. captivity in Cuba.

But Jabbarov, accused of terrorism but never charged, professes no rancor.

In a hand-written letter in October (click here to read, along with the rejection letter), in English he taught himself in Cuba, Jabbarov repeated his claim of innocence. "But I do not blame the American people for their government's mistake," he told Michael Mone, his American attorney. "Even though I am still here in this prison, I have no hate in my heart."

As Obama on January 22 signed an order to close Guantanamo within a year, and gave instructions for military prosecutors to seek the suspension of legal proceedings involving Guantanamo inmates, Jabbarov and some of the camp's 248 detainees finally see light at the end of the tunnel.

But the road may still be long for the Namangan Province native, whose eight-year extrajudicial ordeal raises questions about the U.S. war on terror, amid a legal morass and the political complexities of Central Asia.

Cleared, But Still Locked Up

Jabbarov is among some 50 Guantanamo detainees who, though cleared for release, remain locked up because their home countries do not want them -- or might subject them to abuse, or worse, if they return. No third country has agreed to resettle them, even after the Bush administration asked some 100 countries to grant asylum to cleared Guantanamo detainees.

There are various reasons for this.

Many of those countries opposed the Guantanamo facility from the beginning, and the issue of taking detainees off Washington's hands at this late date was politically sensitive domestically.

There have also been debates within these states about whether providing safe harbor to exonerated Guantanamo inmates could be a security issue. A report issued this month by the Pentagon claimed that 61 former detainees have returned to the battlefield.

But with a new U.S. president in office, Portugal and some other European states have signaled a new willingness to take detainees.

Mone, Jabbarov's Boston-based lawyer, says he must not return to Uzbekistan, whose notorious intelligence service was invited in late 2002 to interrogate him at Guantanamo Bay.
I do not blame the American people for their government's mistake


"They at one point showed him a photo array and asked him if he could identify any of the individuals who are pictured in the photo array," Mone says.

"And when he couldn't identify any of them, one of the Uzbeks banged his fist on the table and said, 'When you get back to Uzbekistan, you will know these things.' And Oybek took that to mean that when he got back to Uzbekistan, they would torture him until he told them what they wanted to hear."

Captured In Afghanistan

Jabbarov's story is not black and white.

He was among a group of Tajikistan-based Uzbek noncombatants and fighters of the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU) who in late 1999 were transferred into Afghanistan. There, prior to the U.S.-led invasion in late 2001, Jabbarov says his family lived in Mazar-e Sharif while he worked as a traveling trader of farm animals.

The timing and location of his movements correspond to those of the IMU groups, says Marcus Bensmann, a German journalist and expert on the alleged terrorist organization who at that time was based in Central Asia.

But among the fighters, Bensmann says, were also many ordinary Uzbeks from Jabbarov's native Ferghana Valley who fled to Tajikistan to avoid Uzbek President Islam Karimov's broad crackdown against devout Muslims, who were widely accused of antigovernment sympathies.
A guard tower overlooks Camp Delta at Guantanamo Bay


"For example, I found in Kunduz [Afghanistan] an archive of the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan. And among the things I found books and publishing about how people escaped from the Ferghana Valley to Tajikistan," Bensmann said.

"And they started to live there; that means some of them were also not armed. You had armed people, but also normal people living in Hoyit, Tajikibad, and the other part of this valley to the east of Dushanbe."

Jabbarov, who lived in Hoyit, says he first went to Tajikistan at the instigation of his brother, Ulugbek, a devout Muslim once briefly detained by Uzbek police. Their plan was to trade at outdoor markets.

But once there, Jabbarov says his passport was lost, perhaps stolen by his brother to ensure he did not return home, where police could blackmail him and force Ulugbek back to Uzbekistan.

While Jabbarov may have crossed into Afghanistan in the company of IMU members, experts say most of those fighters returned to Tajikistan within weeks to launch a raid on Uzbek territory. Jabbarov stayed in Afghanistan.

Shortly after the United States invaded in November 2001, Jabbarov says he hitched a ride outside Kabul with Northern Alliance forces who promised to take him to Mazar. Instead, they handed him over to U.S. forces for what Mone, his lawyer, says was likely a cash bounty.

Mone says Jabbarov was "in the wrong place at the wrong time." Like 95 percent of Guantanamo detainees, he says, Jabbarov was not armed and was handed over by locals, not apprehended by U.S. forces. He says his U.S. captors should have realized quickly Jabbarov was a "nobody." Instead, he was sent to Cuba in June 2002.

'Enemy Combatant'

The U.S. government still categorizes him as an "enemy combatant."

When his status was reviewed in 2007, the U.S. government, which never charged him with any crime, accused Jabbarov of supporting the Taliban and Al-Qaeda, admitting to being an IMU member and training in IMU camps, and taking part in military operations against the United States and its allies.

Jabbarov has always maintained his innocence.

"I have also seen the classified evidence that the government has against him. And while I can't tell him what is in those classified returns, I can tell you that in my opinion, it is a joke -- an absolute joke," Mone says. "A first-year law student taking trial practice would eviscerate the government's case."

Jabbarov's health is poor. Surgery for a ruptured disk in his back in May 2007 was unsuccessful and led to nerve damage. For months, he could urinate only through a catheter. He was also confined to a wheelchair or walker, but has improved somewhat recently.

His family's whereabouts are unclear. They were living at a UN refugee camp in Mashhad in Iran, but reportedly are no longer there. He has two young sons, one of whom he has never met.
 
Two years after his release order, Jabbarov remains locked up in a small cell. He rarely sees others and leaves for only two hours a day, at times chosen by Guantanamo Bay officials.

Yet he remains upbeat, says Mone, a personal-injury lawyer with no previous experience in human rights law. He is defending Jabbarov free of charge.

"I felt I could no longer stand on the sidelines and permit this gross executive power grab, which is how I view [Bush's] actions as they relate to torture, rendition, and the creation of Guantanamo as this [legal] black hole," Mone says.

In his letter last fall, Jabbarov said he hoped to study agricultural one day and open an "agri-business." He added, "My only wish is to get out of here and to be with my family -- to see my two sons, and to find a peaceful life."
     
Comments
by: Al from: US
February 24, 2009 00:39
I think that all of these potential killers should be locked up. We saw what happened on September !! and it can not happen again. If these people sucseed again how safe is our nation truly

by: Dan from: Indiana, USA
January 26, 2009 16:18
Sorry, but I feel no sympathy for detainees at Guantanamo. They are dangerous killers and they should be grateful they have such nice accommodations.

by: ahmad from: melbourne
January 26, 2009 02:10
it's only the responsibility of USA to accept all those innocents people along with their families as refugees in United States and compensates for all suffering years they've had in the bay. because it was the US who openned the bay. US has to accept the responsibility. in this way may the people like jabbarov could begin a new life with their family in a relatively peaceful place.

by: Mary Perez from: US
January 23, 2009 15:52
This man needs his freedom and a job. Not too many people in the US speak Uzbek. Perhaps he could be released to his lawyer's protection and custody and be given a job as a translator. There must ne a US government or commercial interest that needs help with translations!

by: secretslave from: usa
January 23, 2009 04:32
salaam,
USA foregin law policy is that if a garden is invaded as attacked it must not fight back lest it be guilty of a terrorist account,
Democracy says that be so true to torturous kinda folks as house values exposed that under torture makes it the TRUTH in claims as proof not required in democracys game upon LIFE.
For the names not founded upon any terroristic list before the arrest.
as 19 became 21 as passport must be in handy accounts in flying accounts,
how did USA gain hands upon what they claimed to have and some escaped HOW?
Was it seen walking or jumping or hopping or running?

by: John Cook from: US
January 22, 2009 17:03
Thanks a lot to Michael Mone for being a truly god loving person and may he bless him for trying to succeed to free an innocent person, he'll be rewarded by god his good deed. We have seen a lot of unjustice and hatred from the world towards the Bush administration, which really is the black chapters of our history, mistakes after mistakes, sinking economy, big burden of debt on shoulders of ordinary Americans, but the new hope is with Mr.Obama, hopefully he will change it for better.

by: MaGioZal from: São Paulo - SP - Brazil
January 22, 2009 00:26
Lamentable.
     
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