http://english.aljazeera.net/news/middleeast/2010/06/201062013047249951.html


Sunday, June 20, 2010 
17:33 Mecca time, 14:33 GMT 

Ex-Guantanamo inmates 'fail rehab'  
            The US is still holding 13 Saudis at its prison facility in 
Guantanamo Bay, Cuba [EPA] 
     


About 25 former Guantanamo Bay detainees have returned to violence after going 
through a rehabilitation programme in Saudi Arabia, a senior Saudi official has 
said.

Abdulrahman al-Hadlaq, the director of the interior ministry's ideological 
security administration, said on Saturday that about 20 per cent of the 120 
repatriated former prisoners have returned to radical activity after graduation 
from a rehab centre in Riyadh, the Saudi capital.

"It's about a 9.5-per cent relapse" for all 300 Saudi men, including fighters 
arrested by Saudi authorities, who have undergone a programme at what is known 
as the "Care Centre," al-Hadlaq said.

"But it's more than 20 [per cent] among Guantanamo guys."

General Mansour al-Turki, the interior ministry spokesman, said that 10 or 11 
of those released are believed to have re-joined al-Qaeda in Yemen.

Another four have been killed in operations against al-Qaeda and the remainder 
have been rearrested, al-Turki said.

Religious re-education

The men were held at the US detention centre in Guantanamo Bay, Cubaafter 
Washington launched its so-called "War on Terror" following the September 11, 
2001 attacks on the US.

     
     
Most of the September 11 suicide hijackers were of Saudi nationality.

Three former Guantanamo detainees currently remain in the Saudi programme, 
which uses religious re-education by clerics and financial assistance to help 
detainees start a new life.

About 300 people have gone through the programme, which was established in 
response to attacks by al-Qaeda in Saudi Arabia from 2003 to 2006.

Al-Hadlaq cited strong personal ties among former Guantanamo prisonersand tough 
US tactics as the reason why some of the former detainees relapsed into 
violence.

"Those guys from other groups didn't suffer torture before the non-Guantanamo 
[participants]," al-Hadlaq told reporters in a rare briefing about Saudi 
anti-terrorism efforts.

"Torturing is the most dangerous thing in radicalisation. You have more 
extremist people if you have more torture."

However, al-Hadlaq said that the programme had been a success so far and that 
the government was still planning to expand it with new facilities in five 
cities.

Another 13 Saudis are still held in Guantanamo Bay.


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Kirim email ke