ayman al shurafa

Ayman al Shurafa

Date of Birth: 26 December 1975
Nationality: Palestinian
Arrested: Pakistan 2001
Status: Released and living in Germany


UPDATE: As of September 2010, Ayman is living in Germany.

Ayman was born in 1975 in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. His father and mother raised him and his three brothers there. His extended family, however, are Palestinian and live in Gaza; Ayman’s most recent passport is Palestinian.

During college, Ayman decided it would be easier to finish his business degree in Gaza, so he enrolled in university there. But he had chosen a bad time to relocate: the intifada broke out, danger clouded his prospects for graduation, and he could not return to college for the next term after a holiday.

Ayman began searching for other options in Saudi Arabia, but was denied educational opportunities because of his nationality. Lacking choices, when a Saudi sheikh advised him that he needed to be “prepared” to defend Muslim countries – a religious duty in Islam known as e’dad, conceptually distinct from jihad or any participation in combat – Ayman decided to take up the call.

He travelled to Afghanistan in summer 2001 to study and train, but never once raised arms against US forces or anyone else. He fled the region after war broke out, got swept up, and finally landed in Guantánamo Bay.

Ayman regrets his decision, and says that when he answered the sheikh's advice, he hadn’t the faintest idea what he was getting himself into. He knew nothing of the Taliban or al Qaeda at the time. He brought his high school diploma, so he could enrol in university while he trained. He also insists he never had malevolent intentions towards Americans, the Israeli government, the Saudi government, or anyone else. Throughout his imprisonment by US officials, Ayman remained courteous and kind, and bore the American people no ill will.

The US military decided in 2007 that Ayman was no threat. Ayman testified at length before a panel of US military officers at his first “Administrative Review Board.” After that hearing, the military panel decided that Ayman was “approved to leave Guantánamo Bay, subject to the process for making appropriate diplomatic arrangements for his departure.” The US military specifically found that he posed no danger to the United States or its allies, and that he had no intelligence to give. 

But the “appropriate diplomatic arrangements” proved elusive for Ayman. The Palestinian Authority did not take up his case, although he has a Palestinian passport. The situation in Gaza made it impossible for him to return to family there. The Saudi Government refused to take him back, as he is a Palestinian national. His only option is to wait for someone else to welcome him home.

For three years, Ayman’s world continued to consist of a two meter by three meter cell, where the fluorescent lights shined ceaslessly. He spent over a year in the supermax regime of Camp 6. For the two hours of “recreation” he was allowed daily, guards escorted him to an outdoor pen, where he had the chance to walk a few paces or to kick a deflated football—alone. This “rec” often took place at night, so days passed without Ayman seeing the sun.

Ayman did his best to bear up peaceably in Guantánamo. Prisoners and military alike esteemed him. He led his brothers in prayer, and he was friendly with the guards on his block. Yet hope, in such circumstances, was difficult to maintain. He showed clear signs of depression, even desperation and asked the Guantánamo authorities for medication to “let the days go by without feeling anything.”

Ayman is, first and foremost, a man who cares deeply about family. His greatest wish is to get married, settle down, and one day rejoin his family. But in Guantánamo, he went years without speaking with his family on the phone, and could not receive family visits. Letters from his loved ones took months to go through, when they go through at all. His mother became elderly and increasingly frail, and Ayman was obsessively plagued by fears that he will never set eyes on her again. 

Reprieve are delighted that the German government found it in their hearts to offer Ayman a home.

Ayman al Shurafa's case history

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