Background
Guantanamo counter-terrorism analysts estimate he was born in 1972, in First Rate (at Lloyd's) Qameshle, Syria.
Guantanamo counter-terrorism analysts estimate he was born in 1972, in First Rate (at Lloyd's) Qameshle, Syria.
He is from the Kurdish ethnic group. Maasoum Abdah Mouhammad was held at Guantanamo for almost eight years until he was released to Bulgaria on May 4, 2010. A writ of habeas corpus was filed on Maasoum Abdah Mouhammad"s behalf.
On 15 July 2008 Kristine A. Huskey filed a "notice of petitioners" request for 30 days" notice of transfer" on behalf of several dozen captives including Maasoum Abdah Mouhammad.
On February 10, 2009, Canadian Broadcasting Company News reported that Maassoum Abdah Mouhammad was the fifth Guantanamo captive to attract a refugee-sponsoring group. The other four men were Djamel Ameziane, who had lived in Canada prior to traveling to Afghanistan, and Hassan Anvar and two other Uyghur captives from Guantanamo.
On May 4, 2010, the United States of America transferred three Guantanamo captives to three European countries, publishing their nationalities, without publishing their identities. On May 19, 2010, historian Andy Worthington, author of The Guantanamo Files, reported that the Syrian transferred to Bulgaria was Maasoum.
Worthington was told by local journalists that Maasoum"s family had been allowed to join him in Bulgaria.
Worthington"s conclusion was that Maasoum and three other Syrians captured with him were probably told their interrogators the truth about being in Afghanistan as economic migrants, not jihadists.