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Bin Laden's ex-driver to be sent to Yemen: report

WASHINGTON
Tue Nov 25, 2008 3:29am EST
Salim Hamdan, who has spent nearly four years at the U.S. military prison in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, is seen in this file photograph taken in Yemen in 2000. REUTERS/Neal Katyal/Handout

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. military is transferring Osama bin Laden's former driver, Salim Hamdan, from the U.S. naval base in Guantanamo Bay to his home country of Yemen, The Washington Post reported in Tuesday's editions, citing two government officials.

World  |  Cuba

Hamdan, who won a landmark U.S. Supreme Court ruling in 2006 that struck down U.S. President George W. Bush's first military tribunal system, was expected to arrive within 48 hours in Yemen's capital, Sanaa. He is to serve out the remaining month of his military commission sentence in a Yemeni prison, the newspaper said.

A military commission in August convicted Hamdan of supporting terrorism but acquitted him on more serious charges of conspiring with al Qaeda to wage murderous attacks, in the first U.S. war crimes trial since World War Two.

Military prosecutors and Hamdan's attorneys on Monday said they could not confirm his impending release, the Post said.

A Pentagon spokesman declined comment. "It is our policy not to talk about detainee transfers until they are complete," spokesman Mark Ballesteros told Reuters on Monday.

The trial of Hamdan at the Guantanamo Bay prison camp in Cuba was the first full test of the controversial military tribunal system authorized by the Bush administration to try foreign captives on terrorism charges outside the regular U.S. court system.

Hamdan was convicted of providing personal services in support of terrorism, specifically driving, guarding and ferrying weapons for a man he knew to be the leader of al Qaeda, an international terrorist organization.

Hamdan was captured in November 2001 at a roadblock in Afghanistan, not long after the U.S. invasion that followed the September 11 attacks.

Held as a suspected terrorist at Guantanamo, he won a Supreme Court case in June 2006 that struck down the Bush administration's first trial system there and prompted Congress to rewrite the rules.

Hamdan's attorneys said the ruling made clear the detainees are entitled to fundamental constitutional rights.

The Guantanamo tribunals were set up to try non-American captives whom the Bush administration considers "enemy combatants" and not entitled to the legal protections granted to soldiers and civilians.

Human rights groups have criticized the Guantanamo prison and trial system as inherently unfair.

Charles Swift, one of Hamdan's attorneys, told The Washington Post that if U.S. officials do send Hamdan home before his sentence expires, "they're absolutely doing the right thing."

(Writing by Joanne Allen; Editing by Vicki Allen)



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