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Swedish former Guantánamo prisoner arrested in Pakistan

National News | 2009-09-10 | 5 comments
One of the three Swedish citizens who last week where arrested in Pakistan is, according to public broadcaster SVT, Mehdi Ghezali, who for several years was imprisoned at the U.S. military base at Guantánamo Bay on Cuba.

According to reports in Pakistani media, the three Swedes were arrested together with seven Turks and one Russian, suspected for collaboration with the jihadist terror network al Qaida.

According to SVT the three arrested Swedes have been taken to the Pakistan capital Islamabad.

In December 2001 the 30-year-old Ghezali was arrested in Pakistan, close to the border near the Tora Bora Mountains in Afghanistan and was shortly thereafter handed over to U.S. military.

Ghezali was released from the Guántanamo base in July 2004, without having been brought to justice. The United States never told what crimes he was a suspect of.

After returning to Sweden, Ghezali claimed to have been subjected to torture, but refused to answer any questions about why he had been in Pakistan and Afghanistan.

Pakistani authorities also have suspected Ghezali to have been involved in a prison uprising where 17 people were killed, this he has denied.

David Jonasson
david.jonasson@stockholmnews.com

 

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Readers' comments

2009-09-22 06:47 Christian wrote:
Last Thursday morning on Swedish public radio the husband of Safia Benaouda, Munir Awad, could be heard in an old interview talking about his reasons for going to Somalia in 2007 to experience “a real Muslim country”. He had no idea of why people would think this was anything other than a vacation to a real Muslim country: “We just want to be Muslims. Why is everyone against that?” “We want to see Islam”.
2009-09-22 06:46 Christian wrote:
Connecting the Swedish Dots in Pakistan. “Crazy Inga”, a.k.a. Safia Benaouda, and her terrorist comrades who were recently arrested in Pakistan on suspicion of being Al Qaeda conspirators.According to sources on Swedish public radio, Safia Benaouda claims that she and her 2-year-old son were forced by her husband to accompany the group to Pakistan, and as a wife she had to comply. The Pakistani authorities think she might have been brought along to divert suspicions about the group.
2009-09-16 17:06 David wrote:
We all, Christians, Jews, Muslims, Bhuddist, etc MUST remain vigil to the task at hand. Like the 13th century church in europe we have to learn to be tolerant of others choices of faith BUT NEVER allow men who claim to know God´s will to come to power! Hope for the best is akin to putting our head in the sand.
2009-09-12 08:14 Rasmussen wrote:
How easy it is to obtain na swedish passport and to use it for terrorism. No one would suspect a true Swede of terrorism so the bearer of such a passpoprt can escape controls and profiling. Sweden´s naive contribution to world terrorism.
2009-09-11 07:14 Janna wrote:
Muslims often complain of the popular "misconceptions" about their religion in the West. We took a hard look, however, and found that the most deeply held myths of Islam are the ones generated by Muslims and Western apologists. The only glaring exception to this is the misconception that all Muslims are alike (they aren´t), but even Muslims fall into this trap as well, as evidenced by the various contrary factions insisting that they are the true Muslims, while those who disagree with them


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