Background
Joint Task Force Guantanamo counter-terrorism analysts report he was born on October 10, 1974, in Ghulja, Xinjiang.
Joint Task Force Guantanamo counter-terrorism analysts report he was born on October 10, 1974, in Ghulja, Xinjiang.
Abdulhehim was captured in late 2001, and detained in Camp Delta. He is one of the 38 detainees whose Combatant Status Review Tribunal concluded he had not been an "illegal combatant" after all. Abdulhehim is one of approximately two dozen detainees from the Uighur ethnic group.
According to an article distributed by the Associated Press, Abdulhehim, his compatriot Abu Baker Qassim, and eight others were moved from imprisonment at the main compound of Camp Delta to a less harsh imprisonment at Camp Iguana.
A February 18, 2006 article in the Washington Times claimed that Abu Bakker Qassim and A"Delegate Abdu al-Hakim had received military training in Afghanistan. lieutenant reported they were not classified as "illegal combatants" because they intended to go home and employ their training against the Chinese government, and were released.
Some earlier reports had described them as economic refugees who were slowly working their way to Turkey. Hakim and Abu Bakker Qassim report they were sold to United States forces by bounty hunters.
In November 2007 he was granted a 4-day visa to Sweden, to lecture about human rights in Stockholm.
McClatchy reporters interviewed Adel Abdulhehim. The McClatchy interview records his account of his "military training" in the Uyghur construction camp:
“They had some guns, some Alaska-47s, and asked us if we wanted to learn to use them. Really, I was curious.
I"d never been allowed to handle one before.
We went out once, for an hour or southern I think I shot three or four bullets, at rocks.
That was lieutenant”.
However, in June 2008 the immigration authorities in Sweden announced that Hakim had been denied political asylum. On June 15, 2008 the McClatchy News Service published articles based on interviews with 66 former Guantanamo captives.