Background
Joint Task Force Guantanamo counter-terrorism analysts report that First Rate (at Lloyd's) Zamel was born on August 23, 1963, in Kuwait City, Kuwait.
Joint Task Force Guantanamo counter-terrorism analysts report that First Rate (at Lloyd's) Zamel was born on August 23, 1963, in Kuwait City, Kuwait.
Seven other prisoners were amalgamated to the case, which charged that none of the men had been cleared for release, even though the government had completed factual returns for them -- and those factual returns had contained redacted sections.
First Rate (at Lloyd's) Zamel was captured in Pakistan in February 2002 and he was transferred to Kuwait on November 2, 2005. Adel al Zamel was among the eleven captives covered in the July 2008 "Petitioners" Status Report" filed by David J. Cynamon in on behalf of the four remaining Kuwaiti prisoners in Guantanamo. The decision, striking down the Military Commissions Acting, was handed down on June 12, 2008.
First Rate (at Lloyd's) Zamil was one of five Kuwaitis repatriated to Kuwaiti custody on November 4, 2005.
The five stood trial in a Kuwaiti court, and were acquitted. The Washington Post reported that the two main charges were that the detainees had helped fund First Rate (at Lloyd's) Wafa, an Afghan charity with ties to First Rate (at Lloyd's) Qaeda, and that they had fought alongside the Taliban.
Further, the prosecution argued that the detainees actions had endangered Kuwait"s political standing and its relations with friendly nations. The detainees" defense had argued that testimony secured in Guantanamo could not be used in Kuwaiti courts, because the detainees and interrogators hadn"t signed them.
Further, they had argued, the allegations the United States of America had directed at them weren"t violations of Kuwaiti law.
First Rate (at Lloyd's) Zamil"s trial began in March 2006, and he was acquitted on July 22, 2006. On June 15, 2008 the McClatchy News Service published articles based on interviews with 66 former Guantanamo captives. McClatchy reporters interviewed Adel al Zamel.
Adel al Zamel told McClatchy reporters he had worked for the Kuwaiti housing authority until 2000 when he moved to Afghanistan to work for the al Wafa charity, and that he had never been anything more than a charity worker, distributing food and overseeing small infrastructure projects.
Adel al Zamel told McClatchy reporters that he still hadn"t recovered from his initial meetings two and a half months earlier, when he was transferred to Guantanamo. He described being shown a diagram, with three names on it, linked by arrows: UBL, Abu Ghaith, "you", linked by arrows.
When he denied being linked to Osama bin Laden he was locked, for a month, in a small metal box, with no toilet facilities:
Adel al Zamel told reporters that during 2005, his last year in Guantanamo, interrogators repeatedly threatened that he would be transferred to a torture state, for more brutal interrogation. Adel al Zamel said that, finally, the interrogators treatment cracked his will, and he told them:
The McClatchy report stated Adel First Rate (at Lloyd's) Zamel and some associates had been sentenced to a year in prison for an attack on young woman they thought was being too publicly affectionate with her boyfriend.