July 13, 2012

GUANTANAMO BAY CUBA: Osama bin Laden's Driver Released From Guantanamo After Serving 10 Years For Aiding Terrorism; Is Sent To Sudan To Participate In Reintegration Program Worked Out With The US!

The Daily Mail UK
written by AP staff
Wednesday July 11, 2012

Osama bin Laden's former driver and bodyguard has been released from Guantanamo Bay Naval Base after spending ten years in the military detention camp.

Ibrahim al-Qosi will be sent back to his native Sudan, where he participate in a government reintegration program.

He was released after pleading guilty in 2010 to providing material support for terrorism and cooperating with the government by providing intelligence on al-Qaeda. His 14 year sentence, already a reduced term, was lowered to two years plus the eight he had already served.

Al-Qosi is getting reacquainted with his wife and two daughters and other family members, whom he has not seen since his capture in early 2002, said his lawyer Paul Reichler.

Al-Qosi, who recently turned 52, was one of the first prisoners kept at the base in Cuba. His release brings the prison population down to 168.

'I guess you call this probably the best birthday present he ever received,' Mr Reichler, a Washington-based specialist in international law, said in a phone interview from Greece, where he was speaking at a legal conference.

The Pentagon and state-run media in Sudan confirmed al-Qosi's release.

Al-Qosi admitted serving food and providing other services at a militant camp. He was among the first prisoners taken to the Guantanamo, the hastily arranged detention center to hold men suspected of ties to al-Qaida and the Taliban after the invasion of Afghanistan.

From a high of nearly 700, the population is now down to less than 170. President Barack Obama vowed to close the prison but has been prevented from doing so by Congress.

Al-Qosi, who moved to Afghanistan in 1996 to work with Islamic militants, struck a deal with US military prosecutors in July 2010, pleading guilty to providing material support to terrorism and conspiracy in exchange for a 14-year sentence that would be shortened to two years from his conviction. It spared him the possibility of a much longer sentence, perhaps even life.

He was never accused of any specific acts of violence. He worked as a cook and helped gather supplies for a militant camp. His lawyer said he may have accompanied Osama bin Laden as part of an entourage but was never a member of the terrorist leader's inner circle. Bin-Laden, founder of al-Qaida, was killed in a US raid in Pakistan last year.

Prosecutors at his military tribunal argued that al-Qaida could not have operated without the support of people like al-Qosi and that such assistance amounted to war crimes.

In Sudan, he will not face additional confinement, though he will be monitored as part of the reintegration program. Later, he will move back to his hometown of Atbara, where his family has a farm and a store, he said.

Mr Reichler said about nine former Guantanamo detainees have gone through the program, and there have been no cases of recidivism.

'One of the main reasons the United States was willing to return him to Sudan was the US confidence in the government of Sudan's program and its confidence that Mr al-Qosi would not represent any kind of threat to the United States,' he said.

'If they had considered him a threat, they would not have released him.'

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