294:
In
January 2002, shortly after the Taleban had fled Kandahar after the US-led invasion of Afghanistan, I arrived in the city. Amid the chaos and confusion there was a bizarre scene playing out in the jail. The entire prison had been emptied, except for five men who had chosen to stay there because
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He professed hatred for al Qaeda and the
Taliban -- groups he said tortured him in prison -- and offered to help the United States. Intelligence officials and U.N. representatives told Turkistani they would seek to find him refuge, possibly in Pakistan, according to accounts he later gave his
166:; when he was thrown into prison because the Taliban suspected he was a Russian spy. Repatriated in February 2004, he lives in Tatarstan, Russia and works as a freelance writer under a pseudonym. He has been intermittently detained and harassed by authorities.
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Claims he paid a driver to take him from
Pakistan to Iran, without realizing that his driver would take a shortcut that would take him through Afghanistan, where the Taliban seized him as an American spy, based on his British
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Next it was on to a backpacking trek through
Afghanistan, where he was jailed by the Taliban as a suspected spy. Finally, he was rescued by American troops, only to be promptly packed off to a cage in Guantanamo
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Several of the men were interviewed by international reporters during a brief period of partial freedom when they were held in a refugee camp following the liberation of the prison by
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they had nowhere else to go. There was a man from
Manchester called Jamal Udeen, two Saudis, a student from Tartarstan - and Mr al-Ginco. They became known as the "Kandahar Five".
98:, who says, he "provided valuable testimony to U.S. investigators on Taliban abuses and should have received protection." Suffering from PTSD, he is being treated with medication.
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Said he was jailed by the
Taleban as he was suspected of being a spy after admitting admiration for anti-Taleban warlord Ahmed Shah Massood.
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lawyers. Instead, Turkistani was taken to a U.S. military base in
Afghanistan, where he was stripped, bound and thrown behind bars.
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Turkistani was imprisoned by the
Taliban for four and a half years, because he was alleged to have been involved in a plot to kill
139:. Turkistani admits being opposed to the Taliban, Al Qaeda and Osama bin Laden, but he denies that he was involved in any plots.
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308:"The most hapless tourist in the world: It's no holiday when the Taliban deem you a spy and the US labels you a terrorist"
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forces, who freed 1500 men. They men say they ended up being traded or sold to the
Americans in return for a bounty.
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Went directly from custody in a
Taliban jail to US custody. Repatriated in March 2004 and immediately released.
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was captured, to include during initial detention overseas to lengthy procedures at Guantanamo,
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Imprisoned by the Taliban on suspicion of spying. He is being defended by Steve Sady of
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Group of five prisoners of the Taliban detained at Guantanamo Bay detention camp
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370:"Thumbnails of the 9 men at Guantanamo Bay who were once Taliban prisoners"
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229:"From Taliban jail to Gitmo – hard-luck prisoners tell of unending ordeal"
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is a term used to refer to five men who had been held, for years, in a
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Multiple reviews and designations have been conducted since each
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spokesman defended some of the men's continued detention:
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342:"Detainee Cleared for Release Is in Limbo at Guantanamo"
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60:According to the Associated Press, in June 2007
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453:Extrajudicial prisoners of the United States
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192:leader assassinated on September 9, 2001.
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284:from the original on December 18, 2011
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448:Lists of Guantanamo Bay detainees
429:Combatant Status Review Tribunal
314:. March 13, 2004. Archived from
463:Quantified groups of defendants
402:. March 4, 2006. Archived from
396:"Guantanamo Bay: The testimony"
87:Abd Al Rahim Abdul Rassak Janko
160:Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan
44:Guantanamo Bay detention camps
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420:Summarized transcripts (.pdf)
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374:International Herald Tribune
7:
10:
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458:Prisoners of the Taliban
77:unlawful enemy combatant
354:on September 19, 2012.
234:San Diego Union Tribune
37:extrajudicial detention
125:Sadik Ahmad Turkistani
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406:on November 4, 2012.
340:(December 14, 2005).
106:Jamal Udeen Al-Harith
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69:Department of Defense
318:on August 12, 2012.
266:(January 16, 2009).
35:, only to end up in
424:Abdul Hakim Bukhary
174:Abdul Hakim Bukhary
186:Ahmad Shah Massoud
227:(June 30, 2007).
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190:Northern Alliance
180:According to the
55:Northern Alliance
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41:United States
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21:Kandahar Five
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404:the original
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378:. Retrieved
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352:the original
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338:Robin Wright
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316:the original
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286:. Retrieved
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243:. Retrieved
239:the original
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288:January 16,
164:Afghanistan
33:Afghanistan
442:Categories
334:Josh White
225:Paul Haven
201:References
156:Tajikistan
27:prison in
273:The Times
114:passport.
62:Commander
400:BBC News
282:Archived
264:Tim Reid
149:(Russia)
133:al Qaeda
29:Kandahar
422:, from
380:July 2,
312:The Age
245:July 1,
135:leader
39:in the
25:Taliban
278:London
46:, in
382:2007
321:Bay.
290:2009
247:2007
188:, a
108:(UK)
67:, a
48:Cuba
19:The
182:BBC
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