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GUANTANAMO BAY INNOCENTS RELEASED AFTER A YEAR 
AND SEVEN MONTHS
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/2886245.stm
Afghan prisoners released from 
US 
detention in 
Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, have 
told of being kept in small cages and 
interrogated dozens of times to try to 
prove links to al-Qaeda or the Taleban.
The 18 men returned to Afghanistan last week.
Most did not complain about conditions at the US 
base, but were angry at the 
way they were arrested and at what they said was 
brutal treatment by Afghan 
jailers before they left.
They also condemned how long it took to prove 
their innocence.
The men are only the second batch to leave 
Guantanamo Bay since October, when 
three men were freed.
'Beatings and torture'
One man, Salaiman Shah, said he was a used-car 
salesman accused by troops of 
fighting with the Taleban.
He said he was held at the notorious Sherberghan 
prison in northern 
Afghanistan by troops loyal to warlord General 
Abdul Rashid Dostam.
"At Sherberghan life was inhuman, all the 
prisoners had diarrhoea, some had 
tuberculosis, there was no food for days at a 
time and we were subjected to 
beatings and torture."
Mr Shah said the treatment at Guantanamo Bay was 
harsh but better.
A second returnee, Murtaza, said prisoners were 
sometimes hooded and 
handcuffed in their two-metre by two-metre cages 
in Cuba.
"Some of us were interrogated 20 times, others 50 
times, others 60. But the 
food was good and they did not beat us," he said.
"Initially they told us it would take one month 
for the investigation and we 
would be released immediately if we were proven 
innocent.
"We spent two months in Sherberghan, five months 
in Kandahar, and more than 
one year in Guantanamo and finally now they 
release us because we are 
innocent."
Mr Murtaza said he had been forced to fight with 
the Taleban.
Deaf
 
Sher Gulab, from Jalalabad, said he did not have 
a hard time in Cuba "because 
God was with me".
He was caught while working as a labourer in 
Pakistan.
"I am not angry at the Americans, but I am angry 
at the Pakistanis because 
they arrested me," he said.
A fourth man, Bismillah, said he was arrested as 
an al-Qaeda suspect because 
he was deaf and could not understand the 
Americans' questions.
Guantanamo Bay still holds 660 detainees, many 
arrested in Afghanistan.
Washington describes them as unlawful combatants 
who can be held indefinitely 
without trial.
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2003-03-27 Thu 15:11ct