Audio:
Cageprisoners.com - serving the caged prisoners in Guantanamo Bay
Transcript (may be of different interview than the one in audio):
Moazzam Begg: When were you arrested? On what grounds were you held? Were there any charges made against you?
Anwar Al-Awlaki: Bismillahir-Rahmanir-Raheem[i]. I was arrested in mid-2006. Initially I was held because I entered as an arbitrator in a local issue here, a tribal issue. I was an arbitrator in that issue and I was arrested until that issue… because the government wanted to solve that issue rather than have it solved tribally.
MB: Right.
AA: After that, they began asking me questions about my local Islamic activities here, and later on it was becoming clear that I was being held due to the request of the US government. That was what they were telling me here, and that the Americans wanted to meet me.
MB: Subhan Allah[ii]. Well, that's something that we can share together. I've also been held at the request of the Americans for quite some time.
The other question is that the media reported that your incarceration was due to having some knowledge, or some people who were involved in 9/11 at your sermons. Could you clarify any of this at all?
AA: That was one of the issues that the Americans asked about but I don't know if I was held because of that, or because of the other issues that they presented. But it was one of the issues that they enquired about.
MB: Can you describe a little bit about what your prison conditions were like? What was your individual cell was like?
AA: For the first nine months, I was in solitary confinement in an underground cell. I would say that the cell was about 8 feet by 4. It was about 12 feet high. It was clean. No interaction with any other prisoner was allowed for the entire nine months. After that, they moved me to the upper floor. The same thing, it was solitary confinement, although the restrictions were less, and the room was larger, it was about, maybe three times the size of the initial room, the initial cell. I spent there the remainder of my period, which was one and a half a years.
I was allowed for the last month and a half… they moved another person into this room, for the last month and a half. So for a year and a half, minus this month and a half, I was in solitary confinement, with the exception of the last month and a half.
MB: Subhan Allah. Did they place any restrictions on you in terms of what you were allowed to have in your cell, how you were allowed to interact with other prisoners, or in any way, other than you have already stated?
AA: When I was in the underground cell, there were restrictions on family visits, restrictions on any food that my family would send me, there were restrictions on books. I was not allowed pen and paper, and no exercise whatsoever. I hadn't seen the sun for the entire period. What else… No interaction at all with any person except with the prison guards.
Later on, when I moved to the upper level, even though I was still in solitary confinement, but the restrictions were less. Visits from the family were more frequent. They would allow me food from home twice a week, and I was allowed more books. So things were better during the last period of the time I spent in detention… I don't want to say sentence, because there wasn't any sentence.
MB: That's one of the questions I was meant to ask you. You were never charged with a crime, is that correct, and you were never put through any legal system?
AA: I wasn't charged with anything. I was held for interrogation. When interrogation was over, I was released.
MB: Did any foreign interrogation take place? Did any Americans or any other foreign nationals interrogate you?
AA: Yes, the US did interrogate me. Officials from the US.
MB: And do you know if that was the FBI? Did they identify themselves as FBI, CIA, NSA or anything?
AA: Yes. They were FBI.
MB: Okay. And how was their attitude towards you… how did they deal with you as a person, how did they regard you?
AA: There was some pressure, which I refused to accept and that led to a conflict that occurred between me and them, because I felt that it was improper behaviour from their behalf. That led to an issue between me and them during the interrogation. That was solved however, later on, and they apologised.
MB: Al Hamdulillah[iii]. Were you able to have contact with your family at all, during the imprisonment, of course you've already said that they restricted from you letters, phone calls, and so forth, for the first nine months, I think you said. But afterwards, did they allow you this contact?
AA: Yes, towards the latter period of my imprisonment, I was allowed visits from my family, once a week.
MB: How often were you interrogated, by either local officials or foreign officials? Was it something regular, or was it something sporadic?
AA: The interrogation was on and off for a year.
MB: Is there any truth in the rumour that you were placed under house arrest prior to this and that you were banned from speaking in public?
AA: No, no that's not true. I haven't been placed under house arrest, nor have I been banned from speaking publicly.
MB: There was also something that said that you were being punished in prison because you were teaching some of the other prisoners. Is this true also, or could you elaborate on that?
AA: No, I didn't have a chance to deliver any lectures because I was in solitary confinement for the entire period except the last month, which was only me and another person, so I wasn't in touch with other prisoners.
MB: Are you allowed to travel outside the Yemen? Obviously, many people want you to come to the United Kingdom and elsewhere, to come and give lectures, and you've only been out a few days! I think this is based on a question from a lot of your supporters, subhan Allah. Are you allowed to travel outside the Yemen to give lectures?
AA: Well, I would like to travel. However, not until the US drops whatever unknown charges it has against me.
MB: Yes, and that would be my advice to anybody who would be in that sort of situation is to be aware of that.
Can you tell us any of the lessons that you've learnt from being incarcerated that you would like to share?
AA: In sha'Allah[iv] this is something that I plan to do in a lecture or more, and I would leave it to that point.
MB: In sha'Allah… and is that one of your plans for the future? Do you have any other plans for the future that you'd care to elaborate upon, or is it something that you'd wish to wait and see how time evolves?
AA: You mean, in terms of lectures?
MB: Lectures, and just life in general. Not just lectures but generally, in the future – what does the future hold?
AA: I have a few opportunities open at the moment and I haven't chosen yet among them. I'm still sort of studying the situation at the time being.