Longest-Held Guantánamo Detainee Released After Over 20 Years
Ridah Bin Saleh al-Yazidi, a Tunisian national and one of the longest-held detainees at Guantánamo Bay, has been released and returned to Tunisia, as confirmed by the Pentagon on Monday night. Al-Yazidi had been held without charge since the facility opened in January 2002. At 59 years old, he became widely recognized through a notable photograph that captured detainees kneeling in the open-air compound at Camp X-Ray.
His release marks a significant event amid recent transfers from the facility, with a total of four individuals, including al-Yazidi, being moved to various countries this month. The population of the detention center has decreased during President Joe Biden’s tenure, dropping from 40 to 26 detainees, with more than half now deemed eligible for transfer.
Al-Yazidi was reportedly captured near the Afghanistan border by Pakistani authorities in December 2001 and faced allegations of al-Qaida ties, claims that have been widely contested by human rights organizations. Despite being cleared for transfer as early as 2007 under both the Bush and Obama administrations, diplomatic hurdles and his reported reluctance to relocate elsewhere delayed his release.
Guantánamo Bay has been a focal point of controversy surrounding human rights abuses related to indefinite detention and interrogation practices without trial. Since its inception, an estimated 780 individuals have been detained at the facility. The Pentagon did not provide further information on the specifics of al-Yazidi's return to Tunisia.
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