User:Geo Swan/The 119 captives known to have been held in the CIA's black sites

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Swati Shara of the Washington Post compiled a list of the 119 individuals the Senate report named in its torture report.[1]

list of the 119 individuals named in the Senate report on CIA torture[1]
isn name(s) notes
10016 Abu Zubaida
01466 Ridha Ahmad Najar aka Najjar
00892 Rafiq bin Bashir bin Halul al-Hami
00893 Tawfiq Nasir Awad al Bihani
01209 Lutfi al-Arabi al-Gharisi
  • Long term captive held in Bagram
Dr. Hikmat Shaukat
Gul Rahman
Ghulam Rabbani aka Abu Badr
10015 Abd al-Rahim al-Nashiri
Ghairat Bahir
10013 Ramzi bin al-Shibh
Muhammad Umar ‘Abd al-Rahman aka Asadallah
Abu Khalid
10024 Khalid Shaykh Mohammad
10011 Mustafa Ahmad al-Hawsawi
Abu Yasir al-Jaza’iri
Suleiman Abdullah
  • Provided with a certificate of innocence after five years of torture.[2]
Abu Hazim aka Abu Hazim al-Libi
AI-Shara’iya aka Abd al-Karim
10018 Ammar al-Baluchi
10014 Khallad bin Attash
Laid Ben Dohman Saidi aka Abu Hudhaifa
10020 Majid Khan
10021 Mohd Farik bin Amin aka Abu Zubair
Samr Mimi Abdul Latif al-Barq
10022 Bashir bin Lap aka Lillie
10019 Riduan bin Isomuddin aka Hambali
Majid Bin Muhammad Bin Sulayman Khayil aka Arsala Khan
Adnan al-Libi
Hassan Ghul
Muhammad Qurban Sayyid Ibrahim
Abu Bahar al-Turki
Abu Talha al-Magrebi
00953 Janat Gul
10012 Ahmed Khalfan Ghailani
Sharif al-Masri
10017 Abu Faraj al-Libi
Abu Ja’far al-Iraqi
10029 Muhammad Rahim
Zakariya
Jamal Eldin Boudraa
Abbar al-Hawari aka Abu Sufiyan
Hassan Muhammad Abu Bakr Qa’id
Ayub Marshid Ali Salih
00837 Bashir Nasir Ali al-Marwalah
Ha’il Aziz Ahmad al-Mithali
01456 Hassan bin Attash
00839 Musab Umar Ali al-Mudwani
Said Saleh Said aka Said Salih Said
Shawqi Awad
Umar Faruq aka Abu al-Faruq al-Kuwaiti
01463 Abd al-Salam al-Hilah
Karim aka Asat Sar Jan
Akbar Zakaria aka Zakaria Zeineddin
Yaqub al-Baluchi aka Abu Talha
Abd al-Rahim Ghulam Rabbani
Haji Ghalgi
Nazar Ali
Juma Gul
Wafti bin Ali aka Abdullah
Adel
Qari Mohib Ur Rehman
Shah Wali Khan
Hayatullah Haqqani
00906 Bisher al-Rawi
00905 Jamil el-Banna aka Abu Anas
Pacha Wazir
Muhammad Amein Al-Bakri
Abdullah Midhat Mursi
00212 Ibn Shaykh al-Libi
  • Believed to have been a "ghost prisoner" at Guantanamo.[3]
Hamid Aich
Sayed Habib
Muhammad Khan (son of Suhbat)
Ibrahim Haqqani
Mohammad Dinshah
01462 Muhammad Jafar Jamal al-Qahtani
  • One of five individuals who daringly escaped from Bagram.[3]
Abu Nasim al-Tunisi
Zarmein
Hiwa Abdul Rahman Rashul
01452 Adel Abu Redwan Ben Hamlili
Shaistah Habibullah Khan
Ali Jan
Muhammad Khan (son of Amir)
Modin Nik Muhammad
Abdullah Ashami
01453 Sanad ‘Ali Yislam al-Kazimi
Salah Nasir Salim Ali aka Muhsin
Abd Qudra Allah Mala Azrat al-Hadi
Bismullah
Sa’id Allam
Sa’ida Gul
Shah Khan Wali
Yahya aka Rugollah
Zakariya ‘abd al-Rauf
Zamarai Nur Muhammad Juma Khan
Abdullah Salim al-Qahtani
Awwad Sabhan al-Shammari
Noor Jalal
Aso Hawleri
Mohd al-Shomaila
Ali Saeed Awadh
Muhammad Abdullah Saleh
01457 Riyadh the Facilitator aka Abdu Ali al Haji Sharqawi
Abu Abdallah al-Zulaytini
01458 Binyam Ahmed Mohamed
Firas al-Yemeni
Khalid ‘Abd al-Razzaq al-Masri
Saud Memon
  • was in a coma when he was mysteriously dumped outside his house
Gul Rahman (2)
10023 Hassan Ahmed Guleed
Abu ‘Abdallah
Abd al-Bari al-Filistini
Ayyub al-Libi
Marwan al-Jabbur
Qattal al-Uzbeki
Abdi Rashid Samatar
Abu Munthir al-Magrebi
Ibrahim Jan
10026 Abd al-Hadi al-Iraqi

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Swati Shara (2014-12-09). "List of the 119 prisoners detained in CIA's secret prisons program". Boston Globe. Retrieved 2014-12-11.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  2. ^ Clara Gutteridge (2012-07-26). "How the US Rendered, Tortured and Discarded One Innocent Man". The Nation. Retrieved 2014-12-13. In fall 2009, I found myself in a Tanzanian hotel lobby, sitting across from Suleiman Abdallah, a lanky man with a goofy smile and a broken tooth. Over the next few days, he would describe in excruciating detail how he had been captured in Mogadishu in 2003 by a Somali warlord and handed over to American officials, who had him rendered via Kenya and Djibouti to Afghanistan for five years of detention and torture. Imprisoned in three different US facilities, Suleiman had been unceremoniously released from Bagram Air Force Base the year before, with a piece of paper confirming his detention as well as his innocence. By the time I met him, he was a free man, living with his mother and attempting to rebuild his life.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  3. ^ a b "Skipped Internment Serial Numbers". Center for the Study of Human Rights in the Americas. Retrieved 2014-12-11. ISN 1462: Muhammad Jafar Jamal al-Qahtani. He is "reported to be" a mid-level al-Qaida fighter. He was imprisoned at Bagram, from which he escaped on July 11, 2005, "resumed his ACM activities", but was recaptured on November 5, 2006 (Source: Wikieaked DOB for ISN 1052).{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
Cite error: A list-defined reference named "NationalJournal2014-12-10" is not used in the content (see the help page).