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Doctors by Last Name (A): Ahmed - Ahmed vitals.com | Dr. Wendy Rashidi, MD :: Women's View Medical Group womensviewmedical.com | Mahmoud Rashidi, MD cans1.org |
Ahmed Rashidi is a citizen of Morocco who was held in extrajudicial detention in the United States Guantanamo Bay detainment camps, in Cuba.[1] Rashidi's Guantanamo ID number is 590. The Department of Defense reports that he was born on March 16, 1966, in Tangiers, Morocco. Rashidi's lawyer, Clive Stafford Smith, wrote an article in The Guardian on June 14, 2006, commenting on the American reaction to the three Guantanamo detainees who committed suicide on June 10, 2006.[2] Smith comments focussed on what he characterized as the camp authority's leaders plans to prevent future suicides by increasing their brutality. Main article: Guantanamo suicide attempts In particular he commented on Colonel Michael Bumgarner's announcement that he would send a five-man riot squad in to conduct a Forcible Cell Entry to forcibly strip Rashidi of his brown coveralls.[3] Smith said that Rashidi had already had mental and emotional problems prior to being sent to the camp. Rashidi did not attend either his Combatant Status Review Tribunal or his Administrative Review Board hearing.
[edit] Boston Globe investigationsOn July 14, 2006 the Boston Globe reported on investigations they made to test the credibility of the allegations against Guantanamo detainees.[4] Rashidi was one of the detainees who they profiled.[5] The Globe reported that Rashidi was alleged to have been attended the al Farouq training camp in Afghanistan.[5] According to the Globe:
[edit] Reported to have been cleared for releaseLieutenant-Colonel David Cooper, of the Office for the Administrative Review of the Detention of Enemy Combatants, wrote Rashidi's lawyers on February 22, 2007.[6] He wrote that Rashidi and another man, Ahmed Belbacha, had: "...been approved to leave Guantanamo, after diplomatic arrangements for their departure had been made." British officials continued to decline to make efforts on behalf of the Guantanamo captives who were British residents, but not British citizens.[6] A close friend back in the United Kingdom, Abderrazzak Sakim, and Clive Stafford Smith, told the Islington Gazette, his local paper, that they were concerned that if he were repatriated to Morocco, he would be promptly subjected to abusive detention in a Moroccan prison.[7] The paper reports that Rashidi spent three years in solitary confinement, and has been subjected to beatings and pepper spraying. The paper quotes Emily Thornberry, his local Member of Parliament:[7]
[edit] Repatriation and releaseThe Department of Defense reported, on April 26, 2007, that two further captives had been repatriated, one to Morocco, one to Afghanistan.[8][9] Initially the DoD declined to release the two men's names. But it soon became known that Ahmed Rashidi was the Moroccan man, that he hadn't been released to a third country.[10] Rashidi was not charged, but he was detained by Moroccan authorities, when he was repatriated.[10][11] Rashidi was released on Thursday, May 3, 2007.[12] Reuters reports that Rashidi had traveled to Pakistan, where he was captured in late 2001, to try to raise funds for a heart operation for his young son.[13] Reuters reports that Rashidi described hearing his Pakistani captors negotatiate, with US officials, the size of the bounty they would received for turning him over. [edit] Experienced the "frequent flyer" programOn August 7, 2008 the Washington Post reported that the Guantanamo guards defied their orders to discontinue the illegal practice of arbitrarily moving captives multiples times a day to deprive them of sleep.[14] The report stated that Ahmed Rashidi was routinely having six hour interrogations in the middle of the night, followed by a series of cell relocations. Guards called this practice the "frequent flyer program". [edit] References
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