Detainee Tells Guantanamo Review Board He Plans 'Milk And Honey' Farm If Released

Detainee Tells Guantanamo Review Board He Plans 'Milk And Honey' Farm
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ARLINGTON, Va. -- An alleged former bodyguard to Osama bin Laden hopes to start an agricultural enterprise called Yemen Milk and Honey Farms Limited if he is released from the Guantanamo Bay prison camp, the detainee's representatives told an administrative review board on Tuesday. The idea was apparently developed in a business class offered at the camp.

Nearly three years after President Barack Obama ordered the military to hold hearings on the status of some Guantanamo detainees -- and more than five years after Obama signed an executive order to "promptly" close the prison camp -- the review process is just getting off the ground. The Periodic Review Board hearing on Tuesday marked just the second time the panel of six unnamed representatives of six government agencies heard from a detainee who has not and will not be charged under the military commissions. It was the first time there was any degree of public access.

The hearing for Abdel Malik Ahmed Abdel Wahab Al Rahabi, the alleged former bodyguard, was piped by video link from Guantanamo to a military office building in Arlington, Va.'s Crystal City neighborhood. Journalists and human rights observers arrived at 7:30 a.m. to watch the proceeding, which was supposed to start at 8:30, then 9, and finally got underway at 9:16 a.m. Nineteen minutes later, the unclassified portion was done, after one of Al Rahabi's personal military representatives read a prepared statement that had been posted on the Periodic Review Secretariat website the night before.

In the low-quality video stream, shown on a 40-second delay, observers could see five figures: Al Rahabi, a 34-year-old Yemen citizen who was captured in January 2002; his lawyer, David Remes; two unnamed personal military representatives in uniform (one Air Force, one Army); and a government translator. Al Rahabi, who reportedly participated in the hunger strike embraced by much of the detainee population last year, looked slim but healthy. He did not speak during the public portion of the hearing.

Instead, he listened from his chair, sometimes rocking lightly back and forth, as an unnamed, disembodied female voice, perhaps a member of the six-member panel, led the proceedings. According to a military spokesman, the panel members were themselves participating in the Guantanamo hearing via video from a location in the Washington metropolitan area.

A 2008 detainee assessment, made available by WikiLeaks, indicates that Al Rahabi had sometimes tossed "cocktails" of bodily fluids at guards, but according to his lawyer, he has been compliant since around 2009. A military profile prepared for the review board said that Al Rahabi in his pre-Gitmo days may have been selected to participate in a hijacking plot and that he would have "ample opportunities to join AQAP [Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula] if he decided to reengage." It concluded, however, that he "probably would seek to return to his family in Ibb, Yemen."

During the hearing, Remes, his lawyer, portrayed Al Rahabi as one of the most compliant detainees at Guantanamo. Remes said his client developed a "love of watercolors" during an art class and receives frequent updates from his 13-year-old daughter, Ayesha. He wants to return to his wife and family and start a business called Yemen Milk and Honey Farms Limited; he developed a plan for the business that Remes called "detailed, thorough and comprehensive."

The Miami Herald, which obtained a copy of the plan, said it envisions a "windmill-run farm with cows, sheep, chickens and '10 Honey Bee farming fruit trees, vegetables and flowers.'"

A military spokesman said that Al Rahabi was allowed to speak during the classified portion of the hearing, and a transcript of those parts of the proceeding that military officials determine can be released will be posted on the review board's website at a future date.

More than one dozen journalists who applied to attend the video session in Arlington were denied access on the basis that the room was too small, the military spokesman said -- though there were several empty seats Tuesday morning and plenty of room for additional seats to be placed against the wall. Altogether, nine journalists and four human rights organizations were approved to observe the review board proceeding from Arlington.

It's unclear how detainees are selected to appear before the review board or how exactly the process works. The Periodic Review Board serves as a pseudo-parole board (though military officials don't like that comparison) and is supposed to review the detention of dozens of detainees, out of some 155 remaining at Guantanamo. In the one case it has completed, the board decided that Mahmud Abd Al Aziz Al Mujahid would be approved for release. In addition to Al Rahabi, two other detainees, Ali Ahmad al-Rahizi and Ghaleb Nassar Al Bihani, have hearings pending.

Reporters were given more access to a similar detainee review process during the Bush administration, and the restrictions on the Obama-era version have come under fire. Daphne Eviatar of Human Rights First, who was in attendance in Arlington Tuesday, questioned whether these hearings can really be considered public "if the only part observers are permitted to hear has all been written, government-screened and published beforehand."

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Before You Go

Inside Guantanamo's Prison Facility
Guantanamo Guard Tower(01 of23)
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Located between Guantanamo's Camp Five and Camp Six. (credit:Ryan J. Reilly / Huffington Post)
Guantanamo detainee received physical therapy(02 of23)
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A skinny Guantanamo detainee receives physical therapy on Tuesday, April 16, 2013. (credit:Ryan J. Reilly / Huffington Post)
Empty cell block(03 of23)
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A cell block at Guantanamo's Camp VI that had been occupied until a raid on April 13, 2013. One detainee had written "stop tortur us. stop desclate our relgion" on the wall of his cell. The officer in charge of the facility said that detainees had hoarded all types of materials in the communal area. (credit:Ryan J. Reilly / Huffington Post)
Guantanamo Camp VI video feeds(04 of23)
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A Guantanamo guard looks over a video screen at Camp VI at Guantanamo in April. Detainees had blocked 147 of the prison's 160 cameras, according to a military official. (credit:Ryan J. Reilly / Huffington Post)
Weapons(05 of23)
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Water bottles filled with gravel were amongst the weapons officials said they confiscated from detainees after the raid in April. (credit:Ryan J. Reilly / Huffington Post)
Weapons(06 of23)
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Other weapons included broom sticks and shanks. (credit:Ryan J. Reilly / Huffington Post)
Occupied block(07 of23)
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A guard checks on detainees in a sparsely populated block of Guantanamo's Camp Six in April. (credit:Ryan J. Reilly / Huffington Post)
Guantanamo Medical Facility(08 of23)
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Military officials show journalists the room where some detainees were being force fed during the ongoing hunger strike at the facility. (credit:Ryan J. Reilly / Huffington Post)
Force Feeding chair(09 of23)
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A restraining chair used to feed detainees at Guantanamo. (credit:Ryan J. Reilly / Huffington Post)
Cans of Ensure at Guantanamo(10 of23)
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A guard displays cans of Ensure used to force feed detainees at Guantanamo. (credit:Ryan J. Reilly / Huffington Post)
Detainee handprint(11 of23)
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A handprint is shown on a Camp VI cell block that was occupied by a detainee until a raid in mid-April. (credit:Ryan J. Reilly)
Detainee shoe(12 of23)
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A shoe from a detainee left on the now-empty cell block. (credit:Ryan J. Reilly / Huffington Post)
Shower camera(13 of23)
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Cameras are everywhere in Guantanamo's Camp VI, even inside the shower. (credit:Ryan J. Reilly / Huffington Post)
Cell block(14 of23)
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The second level of an empty cell block in Camp VI as seen from below. (credit:Ryan J. Reilly)
Camp VI Sign(15 of23)
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A sign outside Guantanamo's Camp VI. (credit:Ryan J. Reilly / Huffington Post)
Guantanamo Flag At Half Staff(16 of23)
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A flag flying over Guantanamo's Camp Six flys at half staff in honor of victims of Boston Marathon massacre. (credit:Ryan J. Reilly / Huffington Post)
Camp Five Guards(17 of23)
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Guards at Camp Five stand watch during morning prayers. (credit:Ryan J. Reilly / Huffington Post)
Camp Five Cell Block(18 of23)
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An empty cell block in Guantanamo's Camp Five. (credit:Ryan J. Reilly / Huffington Post)
"Splash" Shields(19 of23)
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Face shields intended to prevent guards from being hit in the face by "cocktails" of urine, feces and semen. (credit:Ryan J. Reilly / Huffington Post)
Water handoff(20 of23)
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A guard hands water to a detainee on the Bravo block of Guantanamo's Camp Five. (credit:Ryan J. Reilly / Huffington Post)
Dead Banana Rat(21 of23)
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A dead banana rat on the road to Guantanamo's prison facilities. (credit:Ryan J. Reilly / Huffington Post)
Sunrise By Guantanamo's Camp Five(22 of23)
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(credit:Ryan J. Reilly / Huffington Post)
Obama, Hagel On Joint Detention Group Board(23 of23)
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President Barack Obama and Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel pictured at the headquarters of Joint Task Force Guantanamo's Joint Detention Group headquarters. (credit:Ryan J. Reilly / Huffington Post)