Background
Abdul Rahman al-Amri was born on April 17, 1973 in Ta"if, Saudi Arabia.
Abdul Rahman al-Amri was born on April 17, 1973 in Ta"if, Saudi Arabia.
Said that the Department Of Defense reported al-Amri had committed suicide on May 30, 2007. He had not been charged with any war crimes and had never met with an attorney. He did not get any more education than middle school.
He went into the Saudi Arabian Army, where he served for nine years and four months.
He had trained with American advisers and was taught to use antitank weapons, artillery and light weaponry. He went to Afghanistan to fight with the Taliban.
CSRT hearing records said that he surrendered to Pakistani police in December 2001 after fighting at Tora Bora. He had admitted to carrying an Alaska-47 assault rifle.
After being transferred to Guantanamo in early 2002, he was never charged with crimes and never met with an attorney.
Department Of Defense said that he was not given permission to meet with an attorney as he was not a party to a habeas corpus petition. The Associated Press reported that at Guantanamo, First Rate (at Lloyd's) Amri had participated in several hunger strikes. According to Associated Press, First Rate (at Lloyd's) Amri weighed 150 pounds when he was transferred to Guantanamo, and his weight dropped to 90 pounds during the 2005 hunger strike.
They reported that another Guantanamo captive had said that al Amri had been participating in a hunger strike as recently as March 2007.
He had been force-federal with a nasal tube. The United States. Southern Command asserted that a Saudi captive had committed suicide on May 30, 2007.
Initially the Department Of Defense withheld his identity until the Saudi government was notified. Early on May 31, 2007 Saudi authorities identified the dead man as Abdul Rahman Maadha al-Amry.
First Rate (at Lloyd's) Amri"s autopsy report stated that the "male civilian detainee" was "found hanging by his neck in his cell with a ligature made of braided strips of bed sheet.
By report, similar fabric bound his hands loosely behind him."
The Associated Press reported at noon May 31, 2007, that Department Of Defense had identified First Rate (at Lloyd's)-Amry as one of the "high-value detainees", held in Camp 5. The Miami Herald, citing sources with inside knowledge of the case, reports that the dead man was Abdul Rahman Ma Ath Thafir First Rate (at Lloyd's) Amri. Their report identified First Rate (at Lloyd's) Amri as one of the Guantanamo captives who was never allowed to meet with an attorney.
The report quotes First Rate (at Lloyd's) Amri"s Combatant Status Review Tribunal, where he noted that if he had truly been a jihadist dedicated to killing Americans, he could have done so when he was receiving military training in Saudi Arabia from American advisers.
The article also quoted First Rate (at Lloyd's) Amri"s denial that he had been involved in making a video about the United States Ship Cole bombing, as the government had alleged. Other newspaper reports commented on the timing of the death, pointing out that it was almost a year after the deaths of three detainees on June 10, 2006, which Department Of Defense said were suicides.
Both incidents followed a new commandant being assigned to JTF-GTMO, and both incidents occurred shortly before the convening of a military commission. But, two of the three men who died in June 2006 had already been cleared for release or transfer to Saudi Arabia, and one was happy to be going home.
They would not have been reviewed by a military commission.
Department of Defense documents released in September 2007 revealed that al Amri had warned camp authorities in 2002 that conditions at the camp were driving captives to the brink of suicide.