Ex-cellmate says al-Zarqawi was tortured Updated: 2005-11-21 14:40
A man once imprisoned with Iraq's most feared terror leader said Sunday that
Abu Musab al-Zarqawi was tortured regularly by Jordanian prison officials in the
late 1990s and was held for six months in solitary confinement.
Offering possible partial clues as to why the Jordanian-born al-Qaida leader
chose Amman for triple hotel bombings earlier this month, the former cellmate,
Yousef Rababaa, said: "He hated the intelligence services intensely, and the
authorities didn't know how to deal with his new ideology."
Al-Zarqawi, whose real name is Ahmed Fadheel Nazzal al-Khalayleh, has claimed
responsibility for the Nov. 9 suicide attacks in the Jordanian capital that
killed 60 people, mostly Muslims.
Reacting with outrage to al-Zarqawi's latest threat — to kill Jordan's king —
members of his own family, including a brother and cousin, disavowed him
publicly on Sunday.
Rababaa, who spent three years in jail with al-Zarqawi until both were freed
under a royal amnesty in 1999, recalled his cellmate's inflexible, radical
Islamic ideology.
"He divided the world between Muslim and infidels," Rababaa said, adding that
al-Zarqawi was quiet at the time and did not show a violent nature.
"I didn't see that side of him, although he had very strong opinions. I am
very surprised at where he is today," said Rababaa, suggesting that maybe
someone helps al-Zarqawi plan his terror operations.
"He had very little education, only medium intelligence. But he was very
brave," Rababaa said.
He did not specify how he knew al-Zarqawi had been tortured or offer specific
evidence to back the claim.
Jordanian officials were not immediately available for comment but have
strongly refuted several other recent claims of torture by other Islamic
militants on trial in Jordan's military courts. In its latest worldwide human
rights report, the U.S. government also cited what it called "allegations of
torture" in Jordan's prisons.
Jordanians, including some who had supported the insurgency against American
"occupiers" in Iraq, turned fiercely against the 39-year-old terror leader after
the Amman suicide attacks.
Even al-Zarqawi's tribe rejected him, announcing in a statement published in
major newspapers on Sunday that they would "sever links with him until
doomsday."
"A Jordanian doesn't stab himself with his own spear," the 57 family members
wrote.
The statement was a blow to al-Zarqawi, who will no longer enjoy the
protection of his tribe and whose family members may seek to kill him.
Al-Khalayleh is a branch of the Bani Hassan, one of the area's largest and
most prominent Bedouin tribes, which along with several other tribes form the
bedrock of support for the royal family's Hashemite dynasty. Relatives hold
senior posts in the army and other government departments.
Al-Zarqawi, who took his name from the city of Zarqa, 17 miles northeast of
Amman, often boasted of his family's influence when he was jailed in his native
Jordan, Rababaa said.
Rababaa said he debated regularly with al-Zarqawi in prison. Rababaa led a
group that advocated purging Muslim lands of foreign occupiers and setting up
Islamic states. Al-Zarqawi's group was more fanatical, believing that Islam was
worth killing for.
"His way of thinking, in general, is restricted, and he understands Islam
with restrictions," Rababaa said. "We had vastly different ideologies."
Rababaa, 36, was serving a life sentence for plotting terrorism against
Israeli targets in Jordan when he met al-Zarqawi, who was doing jail time for
militant activities aimed at toppling the monarchy.
Rababaa, who has renounced violence but still advocates an Islamic state, is
now a professor of Arabic language at the University of Jordan.
Rababaa said he believes al-Zarqawi will follow through on his threats — made
in an audiotape released Friday — to continue attacks on Jordan.
"The problem with this group is that it wants to target any location. It's
very hard to control him when he's declared all of Jordan a battlefield."
But he dismissed al-Zarqawi's threat to kill Jordan's King Abdullah II.
"It's words without deeds," he said. "He doesn't seek to topple regimes
altogether, but to basically create trouble for the existing regime."
Jordan sentenced al-Zarqawi to death in absentia for planning a terror plot
that led to the 2002 killing of U.S. aid worker Laurence Foley. He has claimed
responsibility for several other plots in Jordan, including a foiled April 2004
chemical attack.
He also leads a campaign of bombings and kidnappings in Iraq, and the United
States has offered $25 million for information leading to his
capture.
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