Maaddeey Posted December 19, 2009 HARGEISA, (Qarannews) – Two Somalilanders who were prisoners at Guantanamo Bay arrived Somaliland today. The prisoners who arrived in a private jet were handed over to Somaliland authorities by officials from ICRC. Although the media were not allowed to enter the VIP room at Hargeisa Airport, officials from Somaliland government have officially welcomed the prisoners and immediately handed over the to their relatives who were there at the airport. The two prisoners were Mohamed Suleiman Barre and Ismail Mohamed Arrale who spent years in Guantanamo Bay after they were caught by the American forces. The two were accused of having ties with Al-Qaeda network. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
isqarxis Posted December 19, 2009 they belong from burco.most chaotic people and city Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Xaaji Xunjuf Posted December 19, 2009 They will be going to koonfuria soon. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Maaddeey Posted December 19, 2009 ^^Mayee Hargeysaa loo xilsaaray. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Peace Action Posted December 19, 2009 Glad they are released, let us hope they have learned their lesson which is that extremism is not the way to advance your cause. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Suldaanka Posted December 19, 2009 You can read Mohamed Suleeban's ordeal here Wikipedia. The bogus accusations is just baffling. Alxamdulilah, mar hadii ilaahay cadawgii ka soo farabixiyay. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Hunguri Posted December 20, 2009 Glad that Mohamad Solayman and Ismail Arrale are both back home. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
N.O.R.F Posted December 20, 2009 Finally. Hope they haven't been left too disturbed by their ordeal. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Kamaavi Posted December 20, 2009 Good to hear they are released. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Mr. Somalia Posted December 20, 2009 I can imagine the police officer at the airport welcoming them back home, said... "Waardee in door ah ayaad ku xidhneedeyn meel baas tiiye, waar xoogaagaan qaata oo waar garkaan sida qaabka daran u baxay, waar gaalada idiinku soo raaceaysee, iska jara oo qayilaad taga!!" Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Suldaanka Posted December 20, 2009 ^Awoowe, carabku yaanu ku qaloocsamin intaa isleeday funny iska dhig. :mad: Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Mr. Somalia Posted December 20, 2009 ^ waardee dhiiga yuuna kugu karin...waardee is ilaali qurbaa lajoogayee. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Jacaylbaro Posted December 20, 2009 ha is qalqaloociyee iska daa ,,,,, Glad in labadaas nin la sii daayay and i hope inaanay shaqo ku lahayn any such stuff ... Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Jacaylbaro Posted December 20, 2009 Guantánamo detention census drops to 198 The United States freed a dozen men from Guantánamo this week -- including one of the last captives sent there by the Bush administration -- in a mission that dropped detainees off in Yemen, Afghanistan and the Horn of Africa. The dozen included six Yemenis, four Afghans and two Somali citizens. Their departure left the prison camp census at 198 on Saturday -- the first time the detention center dropped below 200 captives since February 2002. Defense and Justice Department officials Saturday refused to comment on the massive transfer, a portion of which was reported by The Washington Post on Friday as a potential ``prelude to the release of dozens more detainees to Yemen'' at a time of gathering Republican resistance to the White House plan to move other detainees to Thomson, Ill. Reports from Somaliland, a breakaway region in northern Somalia that has its own autonomous government, identified the freed Somalis as Ismael Arale, 45, and Mohamed Suleiman Barre, 44. Arale and Barre were processed by the Somaliland government and then released to rejoin their families in Hargeisa, the major city in Somaliland and capital of the region, according to a statement on the official Somaliland Web site. The United States does not recognize the government in Somaliland and there were no official statements on how Arale and Barre arrived there. A local newspaper, the Somaliland Press, said they arrived aboard a jet provided by the International Committee of the Red Cross, suggesting that the United States had released the men to the Red Cross in a third country. Arale, who's been described as a document forger and Islamic jurist, was captured in Somalia in 2006 was one of the last detainees ever taken to Guantánamo. The Pentagon said in a June 6, 2007, announcement that Arale ``exemplifies the genuine threat that the United States and other countries face throughout the world from dangerous extremists.'' It also noted, ``The detainees being held at Guantánamo have provided information essential to our ability to better understand how al Qaeda operates and thus to prevent future attacks.'' Arale and Barre had lawsuits seeking their release pending before federal courts in Washington, D.C., but judges had not ruled in either case. Virtually all of the allegations against Arale were blacked out by the government in his court filing. The few sentences made public said that he lived in Pakistan from 2000 to 2006, worked there as an airline ticket agent for three years and had also been a student. The document says he was captured after he returned to Somalia in 2006, but by whom and under what circumstances are not clear. The identities of the other 10 transferred detainees were not immediately known but Yemenis make up the largest single group of detainees at Guantánamo. Federal judges this week ordered three Yemenis released, saying they had been detained illegally. There are about 90 Yemenis at Guantánamo. The United States has attempted for years to negotiate an agreement with Yemen that would allow for the repatriation of Yemenis at Guantánamo, many of whom have been cleared for release. But U.S. officials have been reluctant to allow them simply to go free in their homeland, which has a burgeoning al Qaeda presence and is the ancestral home of Osama bin Laden, whose father was Yemeni. Based on the Pentagon's own documents, this week's transfer means there are no longer any Somali nationals at Guantánamo. The Pentagon says it brought its last captive to Guantánamo on March, 14, 2008. He was identified him as Muhammed Rahim al Afghani. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Sensei Posted December 20, 2009 Good news for both men and their families. Most Somalis that resided Pakistan would know Mohammed Suleiman and have known him to be a respectable man. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites