How I see America, from a former Gitmo prisoner
How I see America, from a former Gitmo prisoner
http://worldnews.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/07/02/12524780-how-i-see-america-from-a-former-gitmo-prisoner?lite
Moazzam Begg gestures during an interview about his book "Enemy Combatant: A British Muslim's Journey to Guantanamo and Back," in a file photo from 2006.
By Tazeen Ahmad, NBC News
LONDON Moazzam Begg makes an unlikely former terrorism suspect. Soft-spoken, gentle-mannered and with a slight build, the British-born 43-year-old is open to tough questions and does not flinch when pushed on his alleged links to international terrorism.
The father of four is of Pakistani descent and is the U.K.s best-known former Guantanamo Bay prisoner. (The U.S. Department of Defense held a total of nine detainees of British descent at Guantanamo Bay at one time; all have been released from detention).
After he was freed from the U.S. base in Cuba in 2005, Begg wrote a book about his experiences, Enemy Combatant: The Terrifying True Story of a Briton in Guantanamo. The book details how he says he was treated by the Americans in one of the most notorious prisons in the world and how his love for his family kept him sane.
I didnt think I was going to get through it, I didnt think there was any light at the end of the tunnel, he said, but one becomes accustomed to the fear
and you resign yourself to your fate.