|
This is not a Wikipedia article: It is an individual user's rough notes page, and may be incomplete and/or unreliable. |
Sami Al Laithi is an Egyptian citizen. Al Laithi spent over three years detained
in Camp Delta at the American naval base in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
Prior to the Invasion of Afghanistan Al Laithi was teaching English and Arabic at Kabul University.
During his stay at Camp Delta Al Laithi was rendered a paraplegic. Al Laithi says shortly after his arrival in Cuba, during a beating administered in the prison hospital, a guard threw him on the floor, and stomped on his back. He says he has been in constant pain ever since.
Al Laithi says the beating crushed two of his vertebrae, confining him to a wheelchair. He says he believes that the prison authorities denied him medical care that would have prevented him being crippled.
Al Laithi is one of the small percentage of Guantanamo detainees who, during his Combatant Status Review Tribunal, was determined not to have been an "illegal combatant" after all.
Al Laithi has a long record of criticism of the Egyptian government. He does not wish the Americans to return him to Egypt, now that they have determined that he has no ties to terrorism. As of September 2005 he reamined confined to Camp Delta.
Al Laithi's lawyer, Clive Stafford Smith, has asked for Al Laithi to get medical care for his injuries, for the release of his prison medical records, and for him to be released from solitary confinement.
Repatriation to Egypt
editIn early October American authorities announced that they had repatriated an Egyptian national back to his home country. Press reports quoted American authorities as saying that the Egyptian had been determined to no longer pose a security threat through an "Administrative Review" -- the follow-on to the Combatant Status Review Tribunal.
But on October 5, 2005, a Washington Post article positively identified the Egyptian being repatriated as Al Laithi. The Post quoted Command Flex Plexico, who said:
- "Prior to returning this detainee to Egypt, the United States received appropriate assurances from the government of Egypt regarding this detainee's treatment upon his return to Egypt. This includes assurances that this individual will continue to be treated humanely, in accordance with Egyptian and international legal obligations, while he remains in Egypt," Plexico said.
According to the article Pentagon spokesmen claimed:
- "This individual's current health problems resulted from an injury sustained before our involvement with him. According to the detainee's statements to us, his injury was sustained in an automobile accident, and the damage has progressed over time," Plexico said.
- "There are no indications that his condition was adversely affected by his detention."
The Pentagon has consistently refused to release Al Laithi's medical records to his lawyers.
External links
edit- Guantanamo Detainee Says Beating Injured Spine, Washington Post, August 13, 2005
- US says Egypt vows to treat Guantanamo inmate well, Washington Post, October 3, 2005
- Guantanamo detainee says guards enjoyed torture, Daily Star, October 10, 2005
Category:U.S. detainees Category:Wrongly accused terrorism suspects