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Somali Held By CIA Denies Al-Qaida Link

ISSUE 268
Front Page
Index
Headlines

Unknown airplanes circle over Hargeysa and Burao

EU: Presidency Ponders Special Envoy To War-Torn Somalia

Somalia asked us to save them from this brutal sub-clan

US Ethiopia Human Rights Africa
Revealed: Abuses of the War on Terror in the Horn of Africa

Only Somaliland Has An Identifiable National Armed Force

Ethiopian Army Kills Thousands In Somalia

Puntland approves controversial livestock export deal

Adal: History Of Islamic State Of Eastern Africa

The flawed Chatham House Report on Somalia

Regional Affairs

French Palace Denies Djibouti Crime Investigators

Human Rights Rapporteurs Denounce Deadly Conflict In Mogadishu

Editorial
Special Report

International News

Somalia: The Other (Hidden) War for Oil

Somali Held By CIA Denies Al-Qaida Link

Bush and the Generals

Global Terrorist Threat Seen Undergoing Change

German Foreign Policy On Somalia

Inside Africa's Guantanamo

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

Fear Factor: Press Plays 9/11 Card to Justify Somalia Slaughter

The Global Citizen Project

The Answer is Worse than the Problem

The Pentagon’s New Africa Command

''Somalia Falls into Political Collapse''

Time Foreign Forces Quit Somalia

Food for thought

Opinions

Response to Berhanu Kebede

Borama Mayor should do something about the poor hygiene of the city!

Human Rights Violation

Somaliland Is Hargeisa Only And Hargeisa Is Somaliland

"War On Terror:" A Misleading Rhetoric For Ethiopia's Domination On Somalia

It is not yet a defeated fact

Women And Political Power


WASHINGTON, May 4, 2007 - A Somali accused by U.S. officials of belonging to a terrorist group affiliated with al-Qaida acknowledged to a U.S. military tribunal that he trained in Afghanistan for holy war in his homeland but denied any link to al-Qaida.

Gouled Hassan Dourad, allegedly a member of al-Ittihad al-Islami, an organization listed by the United States as a terrorist group linked to al-Qaida, is one of 14 so-called high-value detainees transferred to the U.S. prison at Guantanamo Bay last September after being held by the CIA in secret prisons abroad.

All 14 have had military hearings, called Combatant Status Review Tribunals, at Guantanamo to determine whether they are correctly classified as an enemy combatant eligible to be tried for war crimes by a military commission. Reporters were not allowed access to any of the hearings; censored transcripts of 13 of the hearings have been released by the Pentagon.

Late last month the Pentagon announced that a 15th such high-value detainee -- Abdul Hadi al-Iraqi, captured late last year and formerly held by the CIA -- had arrived at Guantanamo. He has not yet had his hearing.

In his hearing on April 28, Dourad declined to appear but had a statement read on his behalf by a representative assigned to him.

"I am not a member of any al-Ittihad al-Islami jihadist faction," he said in the statement. "However, I did fight jihad alongside al-Ittihad against Ethiopians, which is my right to do."

In a summary of unclassified evidence against him, the U.S. military said Dourad had been recruited by an unidentified senior al-Qaida operative who participated in the 1998 bombing of the U.S. Embassy in Kenya.

Dourad denied the U.S. allegation that he was an al-Qaida Djibouti cell leader and "senior facilitator."

"My training was solely for the purpose of fighting in Somalia, but not against Americans," he said. "I never had training in Lugh, Somalia. Why would I need training there if I already had training in Afghanistan?"

He said he was arrested in 2004 but offered no other details on his capture or detention.

Source: AP


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