Journalist released from Gitmo calls it 'most heinous place mankind has ever known'!
SUDAN - May 6, 2008 - An Al Jazeera
cameraman who returned yesterday to his home of Sudan from Guantánamo Bay and
delivered a speech broadcast live on Sudanese television described the U.S.
facility as "heinous."
His speech was broadcast live on
Sudanese television. He was held at Guantanamo for seven years, and was never
charged.
"After 2,340 days spent in the
most heinous prison mankind has ever known, we are honored to be here. Thank
you, and thank all those who defended us and our right to freedom," said
Sami al Hajj, who spoke at an event organized by his family.
Hajj is the only major mainstream
news journalist ever to be held at the prison. His supporters claimed that he
was being held in retaliation for U.S. anger over the Arabic television
network.
The cameraman was never prosecuted.
The U.S. never published its allegations, but said in a hearing that Hajj was
classified as an enemy combatant because he worked as executive secretary for a
beverage company whose director allegedly aided Muslim forces in Bosnia and
Chechnya. He was also suspected of transferring money to a charity the U.S.
labeled as terrorist, and had interviewed Osama bin Laden.
Released after a 16-month hunger
strike, Hajj was visibly weak upon his return, according to the Miami Herald.
Hajj said he was arrested because
of U.S. frustration with Al Jazeera and his reports of alleged U.S. human
rights violations in Afghanistan.
"I was subjected to 130 [interrogation] sessions,
more than 35 about Al Jazeera, and they wanted me to be a spy against Al
Jazeera," he said.