(Tunis) – Human Rights Watch stated that Mauritanian authorities ought to issue a passport right away to a former Guantanamo Bay detainee or explain the prison grounds for denying his right to travel. The United States released Mohamedou Ould Slahi, the author of a famend jail memoir, after being detained for more than 14 years in Jordan, Afghanistan, and Guantanamo and returning him to his local Mauritania.
The government now seems to be arbitrarily limiting his rights. It isn’t sufficient that the US held Mohamedou Ould Slahi without expenses for 14 years,” stated Lama Fakih, acting Middle East and North Africa director at Human Rights Watch. “Now, his government deprives him of his rights without filing a single price against him.
Ould Slahi instructed Human Rights Watch that he suffers from returned pain and pain from an operation at Guantanamo to do away with his gall bladder. Without a passport, Ould Slahi, who holds no other nationality, can not tour overseas for medical treatment that he says is unavailable in Mauritania. In 2001, Ould Slahi surrendered to the Mauritanian government for questioning approximately terrorism-related topics.
They passed him to what appeared to be Jordanian intelligence forces, who held him in a Jordanian prison, then transferred him to US custody at Bagram Air Base in Afghanistan. In August 2002, US authorities moved him to Guantanamo Bay. 2015, while detained, he posted Guantanamo Diary, which the US government accepted after redacting numerous passages. The ebook describes bodily and mental abuse through the US government that Ould Slahi says he suffered and has been translated into many languages and posted in over 25 nations.
201,7 following his release, Slahi posted a new edition with the redacted passages reinstated. In July 2016, a US overview board accepted Ould Slahi for launch and flew him to Mauritania that October. By then, he did not possess a passport or Mauritanian ID documents. When he arrived, Mauritanian safety officers told him he might not be issued a ticket for two years based on a US request; he told Human Rights Watch.