A report has been published on a Muslim Qatari citizen, Ali al-Marri, documenting torture in the United States during his 13-year military captivity. He was subjected to systematic torture by the FBI, and US Department of Defense officials, who were allegedly involved in the Sept. 11 attacks, which were designed for occupations.
A 51-page rapporteur published by London-based NGO CAGE has included work peddles that were exposed during the 13-year slavery that followed al-Marri's detention by the FBI for alleged involvement in one of the factions of September 11, 2001.
El-Marri was officially declared an ''enemy warrior'' by US President George W. Bush and was transferred to a military prison in South Carolina after being held for about 18 months in a torture house in New York with hundreds of Muslim prisoners . It was alleged that al-Marri, who was held for 14 months in the military torture center, was subjected to systematic torture by FBI and US Department of Defense officials here. According to the report, al-Marri was subjected to a series of torture during his military detention, including long-term cell death, physical and mental violence, religious and cultural abuse and threats to family members.
UNDERSTANDING CRIME
At the end of the torture that El-Marri had suffered, in 2009, there were documents about the 14-month section of the torture seen by Qatari citizens, which he said had to accept the accusations against him. The al-Marri, who was sentenced to five years in prison after his conviction, was released in 2014.
The report, which included the names of the six officers in the interrogations of El-Marri, was also called for the prosecution of these people on charges of torture in countries they were accused of under international law.
The report also included Ali Soufan, a Lebanese agent who resigned from the FBI in 2005 and established the Soufan Group "security" consulting firm among the names accused of torture. Soufan was on the verge of avoiding September 11 attacks, suggesting that the CIA's lack of information with the FBI was effective.
CAGE DIRECTOR DID NOT SHARED DOCUMENTS
CAGE Director Muhammad Rabbani was taken into custody in 2016 because he did not share some of the documents in the al-Marri report with the British authorities. Rabbani was convicted of "blocking the authorities and disrupting the search" for refusing to give the security forces the passwords of the mobile phone and the computer, but was convicted only to pay court costs for another 12 months of crime.
He said that he had information on the mobile phone and on his computer for sensitive torture and that the reason for refusing to give the passwords was to protect the victim's privacy and privacy.