Guantanamo man's plea for Johnston

A TV cameraman held prisoner for years at the US Navy base in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, has issued an impassioned plea for the release…

A TV cameraman held prisoner for years at the US Navy base in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, has issued an impassioned plea for the release of a BBC journalist kidnapped in Gaza.

"While the United States has kidnapped me and held me for years on end, this is not a lesson that Muslims should copy," said Guantanamo detainee Sami al-Hajj of the al-Jazeera satellite.

His comments came in an open letter to the kidnappers of BBC correspondent Alan Johnston, in which he stressed that Muslims should never be responsible for illegal detentions like the one he said he has endured at the hands of the United States.

"What the Americans are doing to me is very, very wrong," Mr al-Hajj, a native of Sudan, said in the letter, which was made public by his lawyer.

READ MORE

"Yet this can never mean that a Muslim should similarly hold a British journalist, and put him and his family through similar suffering," he said.

"Please, then, as brothers in one faith, consider this gift that I request of you: That you release Alan Johnston as soon as possible, without conditions."

Mr Al-Hajj, 38, has been held at Guantanamo for nearly five years on suspicion of having links to Islamic militant groups. He has been accused of making videos of Osama bin Laden.

Johnston, who disappeared on March 12th while driving his car in the Gaza Strip, has been held captive longer than any other foreign journalists who have been seized by gunmen in Gaza.

A little-known Islamist group claimed responsibility for the abduction in an audio recording earlier this month.