Candace Gorman | Andy Worthington (original) (raw)
The Man They Never Knew: Said Bakush Is Repatriated from Guantánamo to Algeria; 30 Men Now Remain, 16 Also Approved for Release
A prisoner at Guantánamo (Photo: John Moore/Getty Images). No photo of Said Bakush has been made public, and, as noted below, a photo that the US military claims is of him is of another unidentified prisoner instead.
Please support my work as a reader-funded journalist! I’m currently trying to raise $2500 (£2000) to support my writing and campaigning on Guantánamo and related issues over the next three months. If you can help, please click on the button below to donate via PayPal.
On April 20, the last Algerian in Guantánamo, Said Bakush (also known as Saeed Bakhouche), was repatriated after being held for nearly 21 years without charge or trial.
Bakush, a Berber, who is now 52 years old, was freed just over a year after his approval for release, when a Periodic Review Board (a parole-type process established under President Obama) “determined that continued law of war detention [was] no longer necessary to protect against a continuing significant threat to the national security of the United States,” and it is to be hoped that he will somehow be able to pick up the pieces of his broken life, even though he was not married, and has no children, and no one seems to know whether he has any relatives who are in a position to provide him with the support that will be needed after he lost over a third of his life in Guantánamo.
30 men now remain at Guantánamo, and 16 of them, like Bakush, have been approved for release. His release is to be commended, but it is imperative that these other men are also freed as swiftly as possible, although the release of the majority of them is complicated by the fact that they cannot be repatriated, because of provisions preventing their return to their home countries that have been included by Republicans in the annual National Defense Authorization Act for over a decade, and third countries must be found that are prepared to offer them new homes.
- Algerians in Guantanamo, Guantanamo, Guantanamo and habeas corpus, Guantanamo and US District Courts/Appeals Courts, Guantanamo lawyers, Guantanamo tribunals, Prisoners released from Guantanamo
- 23.4.23
Algerian Suffering from PTSD, and Mistakenly Identified as an Associate of Abu Zubaydah, Is Approved for Release from Guantánamo
A prisoner at Guantánamo (Photo: John Moore/Getty Images). No photo of Saeed Bakhouch has been made public, and, as noted below, a photo that the US military claims is of him is of another unidentified prisoner instead.
Please support my work as a reader-funded journalist! I’m currently trying to raise $2500 (£2000) to support my writing and campaigning on Guantánamo and related issues over the next three months. If you can help, please click on the button below to donate via PayPal.
I wrote the following article for the “Close Guantánamo” website, which I established in January 2012, on the 10th anniversary of the opening of Guantánamo, with the US attorney Tom Wilner. Please join us — just an email address is required to be counted amongst those opposed to the ongoing existence of Guantánamo, and to receive updates of our activities by email.
On April 21, I was alerted to the news that an Algerian prisoner at Guantánamo, Said Bakush (also known as Saeed Bakhouch or Saeed Bakhouche) had been approved for release on April 13 by a Periodic Review Board, a parole-type process initiated by President Obama. The PRB process involves “senior officials from the Departments of Defense, Homeland Security, Justice, and State; the Joint Staff; and the Office of the Director of National Intelligence,” who decide “whether continued detention of particular individuals held at Guantánamo remains necessary to protect against a continuing significant threat to the security of the United States.”
The news was surprising, as it was the first time that a prisoner had been approved for release by a PRB without directly taking part in the process. This was undoubtedly newsworthy, but his approval for release wasn’t reported in the mainstream media, in part, I suspect, because so little information was available on the PRB website, but also because some kind of detective work is required to establish exactly who Saeed Bakhouch is.
As I reported back in 2016, in an article entitled, The Man They Don’t Know: Saeed Bakhouche, an Algerian, Faces a Periodic Review Board at Guantánamo, the US authorities apparently knew so little about Bakhouch that the photo they used on his Detainee Assessment Brief, one of the classified military files released by WikiLeaks in 2011, was of someone else entirely, as his attorney, Candace Gorman, told me at the time.
- Algerians in Guantanamo, Guantanamo, Guantanamo and habeas corpus, Guantanamo and recidivism, Guantanamo lawyers, Guantanamo tribunals
- 2.5.22
The Taliban’s Victory in Afghanistan Mustn’t Prevent the Closure of Guantánamo
Asadullah Haroon Gul and Muhammad Rahim, the last two Afghans in Guantánamo. Following the Taliban victory in Afghanistan, in which it has been revealed that two former Guantánamo prisoners hold leadership positions in the Taliban, some right-wing commentators are insinuating that Guantánamo should remain open. However, neither Gul nor Rahim, nor any of the other 37 men still held, were members of the Taliban, and, as “forever prisoners,” held without charge or trial, the two Afghans are amongst 17 of the remaining 39 prisoners who, it is now widely recognized in US circles, must be released if they are not to be charged with crimes.
Please support my work as a reader-funded journalist! I’m currently trying to raise $2500 (£2000) to support my writing and campaigning on Guantánamo and related issues over the next three months. If you can help, please click on the button below to donate via PayPal.
I wrote the following article for the “Close Guantánamo” website, which I established in January 2012, on the 10th anniversary of the opening of Guantánamo, with the US attorney Tom Wilner. Please join us — just an email address is required to be counted amongst those opposed to the ongoing existence of Guantánamo, and to receive updates of our activities by email.
As the final US troops left Afghanistan two weeks ago, and the Taliban rolled into Kabul, taking the Presidential Palace on August 15 after President Ashraf Ghani fled, the presence of one particular Taliban member — Mullah Abdul Qayyum Zakir — caught the attention of the western media, when he declared that he had been held at Guantánamo for eight years.
Guantánamo: the mere mention of the word, from the mouth of a conquering Talib, standing in the very place so recently occupied by the US-backed president, reinvigorated the right-wingers in Congress, and in the US media, who had been worried that President Biden might finally close their beloved gulag once and for all.
Once upon a time, the merest mention of Guantánamo had summoned up images of bloodthirsty Al-Qaeda terrorists, hell-bent on the destruction of America, that had helped to keep ordinary Americans docile, and in a state of fear. However, over the years, as the horrors of Guantánamo leaked out to the world, revealing the use of torture and other forms of abuse on prisoners who, for the most part, were not involved in any kind of terrorism at all, defending its existence became more difficult. By his second term, even George W. Bush was aware that it was an embarrassment, and left office having released 532 of the 779 men he had imprisoned there.
The Man They Don’t Know: Saeed Bakhouche, an Algerian, Faces a Periodic Review Board at Guantánamo
On Tuesday May 24, Saeed Bakhouche, a 45-year old Algerian who has been held in the US prison at Guantánamo Bay since June 2002, became the 40th prisoner to face a Periodic Review Board at Guantánamo.
Like many Guantánamo prisoners, Bakhouche has also been known by another name – in his case, Abdel Razak Ali, a name he gave when he was captured – but to the best of my knowledge he is the only prisoner whose classified military file, compiled in 2008 and released by WikiLeaks in 2011, has a photo that purports to be him, but is not him at all. No one seems to know who it is, but it is not Saeed Bakhouche.
Moreover, his attorney, Candace Gorman, told me that a different photo – again, not of her client – was displayed outside his cell for a year and a half, a mistake that had disturbing ramifications, because this was the same photo shown to other prisoners during interrogations, leading to a situation whereby information about someone else was added his file as though it related to him.
The fact that the US authorities have, historically, not known who Saeed Bakhouche is, does not, however, appear to have been conveyed to the members of his PRB, which involves representatives of the Departments of State, Defense, Justice and Homeland Security, as well as the office of the Director of National Intelligence and the Office of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Set up in 2013, the boards are reviewing the cases of 41 men previously described, by the high-level, inter-agency Guantánamo Review Task Force that President Obama established shortly after taking office, as “too dangerous to release,” although that has turned out to have been outrageous hyperbole. Of the 40 men whose cases have so far been reviewed, eleven are awaiting decisions, just seven have had their ongoing imprisonment approved, while 22 have had their release recommended — and nine of those have, to date, been freed. Read the rest of this entry »
- Abu Zubaydah, Algerians in Guantanamo, Guantanamo, Guantanamo and habeas corpus, Guantanamo and US District Courts/Appeals Courts, Guantanamo lawyers, Guantanamo tribunals, Ibn al-Shaykh al-Libi
- 31.5.16
Radio: Andy Worthington Discusses the Guantánamo Hunger Strike with Dennis Bernstein and Michael Slate
The hunger strike in Guantánamo, which is now in its 74th day, continues to draw attention, although it is important that everyone who cares about it keeps publicizing the story — and keeps reminding the mainstream media to keep reporting it — or it will be lost in the hysteria emanating from the Boston bombings, which right-wingers, of course, are using to replenish their Islamophobia — one aim of which will be to shut down discussion of Guantánamo, in order to keep the prison open.
As my contribution to keeping the story alive, I’ve been publishing articles about the hunger strike on an almost daily basis, and have also been taking part in as many media appearances as possible. On Monday, after the military had clamped down on the hunger strike with violence last weekend, firing non-lethal rounds and moving the majority of the prisoners into solitary, I received several invitations to take part in TV and radio shows, but all but two fizzled out when the Boston bombing occurred. One of the two was a Canadian radio station, and the other was with Dennis Bernstein on Flashpoints, on KPFA in Berkeley, California.
My interview with Dennis is available here, just three weeks after our last discussion about Guantánamo, and I was pleased to be joined by Candace Gorman, the Chicago-based attorney who represents two Guantánamo prisoners — one still held, and the other freed in 2010 — and Stephanie Tang of the World Can’t Wait. Both are friends, and between us, and with Dennis’s informed interest in the topic, I believe we thoroughly analyzed the dreadful situation that is still unfolding at Guantánamo, and pointed out the urgent necessity for President Obama to take action. Read the rest of this entry »
- Andy Worthington's TV and radio appearances, Conditions at Guantanamo, Guantanamo, Guantanamo lawyers, Hunger strikes in Guantanamo
- 20.4.13
My Photos on Flickr: San Francisco and Chicago, January 2012
Earlier this week, I posted the first two sets of photos on my new Flickr account. The first set was of of my wanderings in New York in January, at the start of my two-week US tour to campaign for the closure of Guantánamo on the 10th anniversary of the opening of the prison, and the second was of the protests in Washington D.C. on the 10th anniversary, January 11, when it poured with rain, but our spirit was strong.
This third set concludes the photos of my trip, taken in San Francisco, Oakland and Berkeley during a one-day visit to the Bay Area, and in Chicago during another brief visit (my first ever to the Windy City), before flying back to New York, and 24 hours in Brooklyn preceding the long flight home. Read the rest of this entry »
- Andy Worthington's photos, Andy Worthington's US tour (January 2012), Guantanamo, Photos of America
- 22.6.12
Please support Andy Worthington, independent journalist:
Archives
- January 2025 (4)
- December 2024 (11)
- November 2024 (11)
- October 2024 (12)
- September 2024 (5)
- August 2024 (8)
- July 2024 (9)
- June 2024 (9)
- May 2024 (9)
- April 2024 (4)
- March 2024 (7)
- February 2024 (9)
Categories
- 2002-2012: THE COMPLETE GUANTANAMO FILES (THE WIKILEAKS FILES) (34)
- A chronological list of all my articles, including the entire Guantanamo archive (25)
- A fundraising appeal (124)
- A guide to this website (73)
- A list of the remaining Guantanamo prisoners (2010) (10)
- Aafia Siddiqui (24)
- Abdul Hamid al-Ghizzawi (9)
- Abdul Rahim al-Nashiri (66)
- Abdul Razzaq Hekmati (8)
- Abdulnour Sameur (5)
- Abu Zubaydah (127)
- Adel Hassan Hamad (6)
- Adnan Farhan Abdul Latif (30)
- Afghanistan (68)
- Afghans in Guantanamo (159)
- Ahmed al-Darbi (17)
- Ahmed Belbacha (41)
- Ahmed Errachidi (9)
- Ahmed Khalfan Ghailani (24)
- Alberto Gonzales (15)
- Algerians in Guantanamo (94)
- Ali Abdul Aziz Ali (41)
- Ali al-Marri (19)
- Ali Hamza al-Bahlul (41)
- American torture (629)
- Andy Worthington – events (208)
- Andy Worthington – interviews (35)
- Andy Worthington's photos (246)
- Andy Worthington's TV and radio appearances (276)
- Andy Worthington's US tour (January 2011) (14)
- Andy Worthington's US tour (January 2012) (20)
- Andy Worthington's US tour (January 2013) (9)
- Andy Worthington's US tour (January 2014) (9)
- Andy Worthington's US tour (January 2015) (12)
- Andy Worthington's US tour (January 2016) (12)
- Andy Worthington's US tour (January 2017) (10)
- Andy Worthington's US tour (January 2018) (9)
- Andy Worthington's US tour (January 2019) (9)
- Andy Worthington's US tour (January 2020) (8)
- Anwar al-Awlaki (7)
- Asylum in Europe (103)
- Bagram (93)
- Bagram Week (April 2011) (6)
- Bahrainis in Guantanamo (7)
- Bangladeshis in Guantanamo (1)
- Barack Obama (388)
- Battle for Britain: Fighting the Coalition Government's Vile Ideology (227)
- Battle for Britain: Fighting the Tory Government's Vile Ideology (206)
- Belmarsh, control orders, deportation and extradition (148)
- Berkeley Says No to Torture Week (October 2010) (14)
- Binyam Mohamed (101)
- Bisher al-Rawi (22)
- Book reviews (27)
- Bosnians in Guantanamo (27)
- Bradley Manning (40)
- Brexit disaster (77)
- British prisoners in Guantanamo (295)
- British terror plots (10)
- Children in Guantanamo (113)
- China (8)
- Closing Guantanamo (655)
- Conditions at Guantanamo (265)
- Coronavirus (35)
- David Addington (42)
- David Hicks (21)
- Dick Cheney (111)
- Diego Garcia (13)
- Donald Trump (138)
- Drone attacks (17)
- East African prisoners (6)
- Egyptians in Guantanamo (32)
- Environmental crisis (69)
- Eric Holder (79)
- European complicity in torture (35)
- European protests 2011-24 (32)
- Europeans in Guantanamo (10)
- Extinction Rebellion (35)
- Extraordinary rendition and secret prisons (333)
- Fawzi al-Odah (23)
- Fayiz al-Kandari (30)
- FBI/CIA (203)
- Federal court trials (48)
- Film reviews (31)
- George W. Bush (100)
- Guantanamo (2,625)
- Guantanamo 19th anniversary (5)
- Guantanamo 20th anniversary (12)
- Guantanamo 21st anniversary (9)
- Guantanamo 22nd anniversary (7)
- Guantanamo 23rd anniversary (4)
- Guantanamo and habeas corpus (252)
- Guantanamo and recidivism (27)
- Guantanamo and US District Courts/Appeals Courts (323)
- Guantanamo and US Senate/House of Representatives (178)
- Guantanamo and US Supreme Court (108)
- Guantanamo campaigns (410)
- Guantanamo global vigils 2023-25 (31)
- Guantanamo Habeas Week (April/May 2010) (8)
- Guantanamo lawyers (525)
- Guantanamo letter-writing campaigns (17)
- Guantanamo media (715)
- Guantanamo op-eds (84)
- Guantanamo suicides (76)
- Guantanamo tribunals (257)
- Guantanamo whistleblowers (23)
- Hambali (10)
- Human Rights Day (11)
- Hunger strikes in Guantanamo (244)
- Ibn al-Shaykh al-Libi (54)
- Ibrahim al-Qosi (22)
- International Day in Support of Victims of Torture (21)
- Iranians in Guantanamo (5)
- Iraq (72)
- Iraqis in Guantanamo (19)
- Israel and Palestine (50)
- Jamil El-Banna (22)
- Jarallah al-Marri (4)
- Joe Biden (73)
- John McCain (19)
- John Walker Lindh (3)
- Jordanians in Guantanamo (10)
- Jose Padilla (24)
- Kazakhs in Guantanamo (3)
- Khalid Sheikh Mohammed (101)
- Kuwaitis in Guantanamo (59)
- Libya (33)
- Libyans in Guantanamo (49)
- Life after Guantanamo (227)
- London photos (206)
- Maher Arar (10)
- Majid Khan (22)
- Mamdouh Habib (9)
- Mauritanians in Guantanamo (35)
- Medical abuse at Guantanamo (28)
- Military Commissions (321)
- Moazzam Begg (66)
- Mohamed Jawad (41)
- Mohamedou Ould Slahi (49)
- Mohammed al-Qahtani (35)
- Mohammed El-Gharani (22)
- Mohammed Saad Iqbal Madni (6)
- Moroccans in Guantanamo (55)
- Murat Kurnaz (15)
- Murders in US custody (35)
- Music reviews (78)
- Music torture (4)
- Mustafa al-Hawsawi (29)
- Mustafa Setmariam Nasar (2)
- New arrivals at Guantanamo (7)
- Obituaries (16)
- Occupy Wall Street (31)
- Omar Deghayes (77)
- Omar Khadr (102)
- Outside the Law: Stories from Guantanamo (107)
- Pakistan (14)
- Pakistanis in Guantanamo (76)
- Palestinians in Guantanamo (27)
- Phone-hacking scandal (9)
- Photos of America (19)
- Poems From Guantanamo (8)
- Prisoners released from Guantanamo (113)
- Qala-i-Janghi massacre (38)
- Ramzi bin al-Shibh (34)
- Return to torture (46)
- Revolution in the Middle East (52)
- Robert Gates (25)
- Russians in Guantanamo (27)
- Saifullah Paracha (18)
- Salim Hamdan (41)
- Sami al-Haj (21)
- Saudis in Guantanamo (136)
- Save the NHS (105)
- Shaker Aamer (330)
- Somalis in Guantanamo (10)
- Stonehenge and civil liberties (56)
- Sudanese in Guantanamo (46)
- Syrians in Guantanamo (62)
- Tajiks in Guantanamo (24)
- The Death of Osama bin Laden (15)
- The Four Fathers (106)
- The Guantanamo Files – additional chapters (14)
- The Guantanamo Files – book reviews (8)
- The State of London (54)
- Tunisians in Guantanamo (71)
- Turks in Guantanamo (3)
- UAE prisoners in Guantanamo (6)
- Uighurs in Guantanamo (109)
- UK complicity in torture (123)
- UK housing crisis (176)
- UK politics (920)
- UN and Secret Detention (22)
- Uncategorized (10)
- US enemy combatants (38)
- US prisons (60)
- US protests 2011-25 (120)
- Uzbeks in Guantanamo (11)
- Walid bin Attash (27)
- WikiLeaks (156)
- WikiLeaks and the Guantanamo Prisoners Released After the Tribunals, 2004 to 2005 (5)
- WikiLeaks and the Guantanamo Prisoners Released from 2002 to 2004 (10)
- WikiLeaks and the Guantanamo Prisoners Released in 2006 (10)
- WikiLeaks and the Guantanamo Prisoners Released in 2007 (4)
- WikiLeaks: The Unknown Prisoners of Guantanamo (5)
- WOMAD (15)
- Yemenis in Guantanamo (380)