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Arabia
Kuwaiti court clears ex-Guantánamo captives
2007-03-04
A criminal court on Saturday acquitted two former Guantánamo Bay prisoners of joining al Qaeda or the Taliban. Omar Rajab Amin and Abdullah Kamel al Kundari denied any terror connections at the start of their trial. Their lawyers argued there was no evidence against them and the case was ''political.'' Defense attorneys said the accused were in Afghanistan for charity work -- not to fight.

Details of the ruling, which was announced by a court clerk, were not immediately available. Their lawyer, Thikra al Majdali, said she expected them to be released from custody by tomorrow. The prosecution can appeal the ruling, but it was not clear Saturday if it would do so.

Amin, 41, and Kundari, 32, were held for nearly five years at the prison camps in remote southeast Cuba until their release in September. They were detained by authorities for questioning upon their return to Kuwait. The prosecution claimed the pair had harmed Kuwait's political image by becoming members of Osama bin Laden's terror network and joining the ranks of Afghanistan's ousted Taliban regime that hosted al Qaeda and fought U.S. forces.

The two had ties to charities which were linked to terror groups and their names had been found on the hard drive of a computer seized from a suspected al Qaeda member.
Six other Kuwaitis formerly held in Guantánamo have been acquitted here of terror charges. Another four are still imprisoned there. ''We call on the United States to either give our four sons a fair trial in America or any other place in the world, or to hand them to Kuwait so that they can be . . . given their legal right to defend themselves,'' said Khaled al Odah, who heads a private group that lobbies for the release of the Kuwaiti prisoners -- including his son -- from the U.S. Navy base in Cuba.

The U.S. military did not charge Amin or Kundari with any crimes. According to military documents and David Cynamon, their U.S. attorney, the two had ties to charities which were linked to terror groups and their names had been found on the hard drive of a computer seized from a suspected al Qaeda member.
Posted by:Fred

#4  No need for a stated policy that is black letter law.

It's called battlefield interdiction.
Posted by: badanov   2007-03-04 20:06  

#3  Can we at least have a policy of anyone released from our custody, if caught again, is immediately executed? Please?
Posted by: Jackal   2007-03-04 20:01  

#2  treo seen these guys woik before..
Posted by: RD   2007-03-04 17:02  

#1  We wuz charity woikers. Yeah, that's right, charity woikers.
Posted by: treo   2007-03-04 10:55  

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