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UK Pays 'Substantial' Sum Over Guantanamo Torture Allegations

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Picture courtesy of BBC

The UK government has reached a significant financial settlement with Abu Zubaydah, a detainee at Guantanamo Bay, following allegations of complicity in his torture. Zubaydah has been held without trial for nearly two decades after the CIA subjected him to "enhanced interrogation" techniques post-9/11. The compensation brings attention to ongoing debates over intelligence and human rights concerns.

Zubaydah was initially accused of being a senior al-Qaeda member, a claim later retracted by the US. Despite awareness of his mistreatment, MI5 and MI6 shared questions with the CIA for use in interrogations. Zubaydah's legal team argued that UK intelligence services were complicit in his torture, leading to the settlement, the amount of which remains confidential.

International legal counsel Prof Helen Duffy highlighted that while the compensation is significant, it falls short of resolving the broader injustice. She called for collective action from the UK and other nations for Zubaydah’s release, stating that "these violations of his rights are not historic; they are ongoing." Despite the settlement, the UK Foreign Office refrained from commenting on intelligence-related issues.

Zubaydah remains one of 15 detainees at Guantanamo with no formal charges. His case was part of a parliamentary inquiry chaired by Dominic Grieve, who acknowledged the grave nature of the allegations and expressed concern over the historical lack of action by the UK. The inquiry also addressed the role of UK intelligence regarding the alleged 9/11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, raising the potential for further claims.

Captured in Pakistan in 2002, Zubaydah was moved through various CIA "black sites," experiencing severe interrogation methods including waterboarding. Reports have criticised the CIA's handling of his case, labelling him a test subject for interrogation techniques, with these actions drawing widespread condemnation.

Looking forward, there is hope that the financial settlement may eventually aid Zubaydah in reintegration and self-support if he is ever released. Prof Duffy emphasised the need for collaboration to secure his freedom, as continued detention remains at the discretion of the US, reported the BBC.

Key Takeaways:

  • UK pays substantial compensation to Guantanamo detainee Abu Zubaydah.

  • Case highlights UK complicity allegations in CIA torture practices.

  • Calls for Zubaydah’s freedom persist amid ongoing detention concerns.

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Adapted by ASEAN Now from BBC 2026-01-12

 

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  • Popular Post

So the Americans knew he wasn't isis and tortured him anyway?

The Brits knew he wasn't isis and asked questions he presumably didn't know the answer to.

Did I get that right?

Why is Britain paying for American torture?

  • Popular Post
24 minutes ago, Geoff914 said:

Why is Britain paying for American torture?

Because they were and continue to be complicit..I expect there will be more cases related to the Gaza genocide in due course..not that it helps this poor individual who is still in captivity or any of the others that have been tortured up to the point of death..totally shocking and despicable actions from countries that portray themself as 'liberal democracies'

'shining beacons on the hill' and other total claptrap nonsense.

9 minutes ago, johng said:

not that it helps this poor individual who is still in captivity

Why would several US administrations continually hold this 'poor individual' in captivity? Wish we had a Guantanamo in the UK for these wronguns.

On 1/12/2026 at 11:20 AM, webfact said:

International legal counsel Prof Helen Duffy

Who is working pro-bono?

Does Mr. Zubaydah have a bank account in which to deposit the money?

8 minutes ago, CG1 Blue said:

Why would several US administrations continually hold this 'poor individual' in captivity? Wish we had a Guantanamo in the UK for these wronguns.

Because they are psychopathic maniacs ?

why does the US need Guantanamo ?

because there they can carry out barbaric torture in a base on occupied territory of another sovereign state with absolutely no oversight or consequence for their actions..the whole thing is wrong at every level and the UK is complicit..how would you feel about being tortured and imprisoned for 20 years on a trumped up charge ?

This makes the post office scandal seem trivial ( it's not)

42 minutes ago, CG1 Blue said:

Why would several US administrations continually hold this 'poor individual' in captivity? Wish we had a Guantanamo in the UK for these wronguns.

Because you support locking people up indefinitely without charge?

26 minutes ago, VocalNeal said:

Who is working pro-bono?

Does Mr. Zubaydah have a bank account in which to deposit the money?

Do you work for free?

The award can be held in trust, usually by the a court Funds Office, until the awardee or their heirs are able to receive payment.

Strange. The US don't seem to have paid anything and they're the ones who tortured him!

25 minutes ago, nexus7 said:

Strange. The US don't seem to have paid anything and they're the ones who tortured him!

Because Starmer and his government are mugs, giving away UK tax payers' money at will whenever Starmer's lawyer buddies are involved. The US are not so weak

1 hour ago, Chomper Higgot said:

Because you support locking people up indefinitely without charge?

No, but I dislike terrorists and violent criminals getting off charges by using clever lawyers who exploit loopholes in laws.

5 hours ago, johng said:

Because they were and continue to be complicit..I expect there will be more cases related to the Gaza genocide in due course..not that it helps this poor individual who is still in captivity or any of the others that have been tortured up to the point of death..totally shocking and despicable actions from countries that portray themself as 'liberal democracies'

'shining beacons on the hill' and other total claptrap nonsense.

Not saying Britain weren't involved, just that is wasn't Britain doing the torturing.

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