Suleiman Abdullah Salim is a citizen of Tanzania who was held in extrajudicial detention, for five years, in secret CIAblack sites.[1][2] Salim was one of the individuals the United States SenateIntelligence Committee's inquiry into the CIA's use of torture identified as having been subjected to the most brutal torture. According to James Risen, in the New York Times CIA interrogators tortured him, even though he was a black African man, and the Suleiman Abdullah Salim they had intended to capture was an ethnically Arab man from Yemen.
Life prior to capture
Salim was born in Stone Town, Tanzania.[1]
He took his first job, as a fisherman, when he was a young teenager. He worked in a clothing store, in Dar es Salaam. He later worked in Mombasa, as a water porter. He had to leave a job as a harbor pilot, in Kismayu, Somalia, due to resentment from the local warlord's militiamen. In 2003 he was working as a driver for an employee of Mohammed Dheere, a Somali warlord. Dheere's men accused him of owing Dheere money, and when he refused to be shaken down, they handed him over the CIA.
CIA custody
When the CIA first reported his apprehension they said he was a Yemeni, named "Suleiman Abdalla Salim Hemed".[3][4] Salim said that, when he was first turned over to the Americans they accused him of finding a way to alter his appearance.[1]
^ abcJames Risen (2016-10-12). "After Torture, Ex-Detainee Is Still Captive of 'The Darkness'". New York Times. Dubai, United Arab Emirates. Retrieved 2016-10-12. Mr. Salim was one of 39 men subjected to some of the C.I.A.'s most brutal techniques — beatings, hanging in chains, sleep deprivation and water dousing, which creates a sensation of drowning, even though interrogators had been denied permission to use that last tactic on him, according to a Senate Intelligence Committee investigation into the agency's classified interrogation program.
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Desmond Butler (2003-06-14). "5-Year Hunt Fails to Net Qaeda Suspect in Africa". New York Times. Retrieved 2016-10-12. The man, who Kenyan officials say was wanted for involvement in the embassy bombings and is now in American custody, is Suleiman Abdalla Salim Hemed, known as Issa. Said to be a Yemeni in his mid-20s, Mr. Hemed is one of a number of suspected Qaeda members whose faces appear on illustrated playing cards being distributed by the American agents in Somalia.