Imad Kanouni: Difference between revisions

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He told the court that he traveled to [[Afghanistan]] to pursue religious education, and that he didn't agree with [[Osama Bin Laden]], and never attended any military training camps.  He did acknowledge: "''I was ready to die for a good cause, defend people who were attacked in their countries''"
He told the court that he traveled to [[Afghanistan]] to pursue religious education, and that he didn't agree with [[Osama Bin Laden]], and never attended any military training camps.  He did acknowledge: "''I was ready to die for a good cause, defend people who were attacked in their countries''"


Kanouni's trial, and that of the other five men, were suspended when a leaked document was published confirming that French intelligence officials had secretly participated in the coercive interrogations of the six men when they were in US custody.<ref name=Miami Herald20071203>
Kanouni's trial, and that of the other five men, were suspended when a leaked document was published confirming that French intelligence officials had secretly participated in the coercive interrogations of the six men when they were in US custody.<ref name=MiamiHerald20071203>
{{cite news
{{cite news
| url=http://www.miamiherald.com/news/americas/guantanamo/globe/story/350100.html
| url=http://www.miamiherald.com/news/americas/guantanamo/globe/story/350100.html

Revision as of 12:08, 22 July 2008

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Imad Kanouni is a French citizen who was held in extrajudicial detention in the United States Guantanamo Bay detention camps, in Cuba.[1]

Kanouni, and three other French citizens were transferred from US custody to French custody, on July 27 2004.

Under French law, security detainees like Kanouni can be held, without charge, for up to three years. [2]

Kanouni was released from custody, and put on a kind of parole, on July 9 2005. [3]

Kanouni, and five other French former Guantanamo detainees, Brahim Yadel, Khaled ben Mustafa, Nizar Sassi, Mourad Benchellali, Ridouane Khalid, were charged on April 26 2006.[4]

Kanouni testified, in his own defense, before a French court, on July 3 2006. [5] He told the court that he traveled to Afghanistan to pursue religious education, and that he didn't agree with Osama Bin Laden, and never attended any military training camps. He did acknowledge: "I was ready to die for a good cause, defend people who were attacked in their countries"

Kanouni's trial, and that of the other five men, were suspended when a leaked document was published confirming that French intelligence officials had secretly participated in the coercive interrogations of the six men when they were in US custody.[6][7] Prosecutor Sonya Djemni-Wagner, the Prosecutor, described the men's stay in Guantanamo as "abnormal detention", and stated:

None of them should have been held on that base, in defiance of international law, and have had to go through what they went through.

Imad Kanouni was acquitted.[7] The other men, who acknowledged receiving military training, but not engaging in hostilities, received sentences of up to four years.

See also

References

  1. Guantanamo inmates back in France, BBC, July 27 2004
  2. French Push Limits in Fight On Terrorism: Wide Prosecutorial Powers Draw Scant Public Dissent, Washington Post, November 2 2004
  3. French court frees former Guantanamo detainee, The Jurist, July 9 2005
  4. Former French Guantanamo detainees to face Paris trial, The Jurist, April 26 2006
  5. 6 Ex-Guantanamo Inmates on Trial in France, Washington Post, July 3 2006
  6. Pierre-Antoine Souchard. Trial of French ex-Gitmo inmates resumes, Miami Herald, 2007-12-03. Retrieved on 2008-07-22. “The verdict had been expected in September 2006, but was postponed. At the time, the court asked for more information to determine under what conditions the suspects were interrogated by French intelligence officers at the American base.” mirror
  7. 7.0 7.1 Pierre-Antoine Souchard. France convicts, frees 5 ex-Guantánamo inmates, Miami Herald, 2007-12-19. Retrieved on 2008-07-22. “The ruling in France capped proceedings that seemed at times like a trial of the U.S. prison camp itself, with the prosecutor lashing out at the Guantánamo system and saying the prison violates international law.” mirror