UPDATE: The bail application for Detainee U - due to be held on Friday 8th October - has been adjourned due to critical evidence which has yet to materialise. There will be no hearing for him at SIAC tomorrow.
Detainee U is an Algerian national who has been held in Britain’s Secret Guantanamo without trial for over nine years. He has never been charged, questioned or tried in the UK. He faces the threat of deportation to Algeria where there are grave fears that he may be tortured or killed. He is currently held in the detainee unit at HMP Long Lartin. He has made several bail applications which have all been rejected since his return to prison in March 2009 after some time under virtual house arrest, akin to a control order but with more stringent conditions. U has no family in the UK.
‘U’ said:
“I had learned that Britain was a democratic country, a defender of human rights, in which the rule of law, freedom and justice are upheld. Britain for me was the land in which no man was wronged. Nelson Mandela said that, ‘the values of a nation are measured by the manner in which it treats its prisoners’. I had heard that Britain was a civilised land that treated prisoners with dignity so it must be a safe place for refugees. How wrong I was to be. I remain in prison to this day, as a political prisoner, held without charge for over nine years. I have spent over nine – nine precious years of my life, in a prison. These years will never come back.
I have been treated in prison in ways that even Algerian authorities would be ashamed to consider. In Algeria, they kill you physically [along] with verbal insults. In Britain, they kill you psychologically, with a smile. I am only seeking the same rights as [afforded to] the worst rapists, paedophiles and offenders in British prisons: and that is the right to a fair, open trial. If I have done something wrong, I should be put on trial and punished. If not, then I should be released and allowed to get on with my life. Is this too much to ask?”
His next bail hearing will be on 8th October at SIAC (NB: This has now been adjourned). We are asking individuals of conscience to attend to show our support for one of Britain’s forgotten prisoners.
Case No.: SC/32/2005
Venue:
SIAC (Special Immigration Appeals Commission)
15 Bream’s Buildings
Off Fetter Lane
London
EC4A 1DZ
The impact of such support should not be underestimated. Faraj Hassan - who experienced a similar predicament to Detainee U and who was tragically killed in an accident this August, wrote prior to one of his bail hearings - "I have asked a few Muslims to come and sit in the public gallery. I just want them to know that I have the support from the Muslim community in this country." After the hearing he wrote, "I would like to thank you very much for coming to court on Friday. It was very nice to see you and the others. I am so glad to know how you look like. My brother was also so happy and really appreciated that. Seeing you made me very happy and the refusal of my bail didn't leave any impact on me, I was 100% satisfied." Many may not have had the opportunity to support Faraj whilst he was alive and in the same situation; the least we can do is to show our solidarity with those enduring the same tests, before we will be asked about them and be unable to present any excuse for why we failed them.