A South American airline is asking its employees to be on the lookout for a former Guantanamo Bay detainee who was resettled in Uruguay after being freed by US authorities.
The alert about Syrian Abu Wa’el Dhiab adds to a growing mystery about his whereabouts. Uruguayan authorities have insisted for weeks that he is visiting neighboring Brazil and that as a refugee he is entitled to leave Uruguay, but the Brazilian government has said there is no record of Dhiab entering the nation.
Danilo Alves, a spokesman for Colombia-based Avianca Airlines in Sao Paulo, said on Monday that the alert was issued internally to employees, but declined to give any more details.
The alert, published by the Argentine Web news portal Infobae, warns employees that Dhiab might be using a fake passport. The image of the alert posted by Infobae says the information came from the Brazilian anti-terrorism police.
Belela Herrera, a former Uruguayan deputy foreign minister who is a human rights activist, said “this is crazy” to use the word terrorism in relation to Dhiab, who was never charged by US officials and cleared for release. She also questioned media interest in his whereabouts.
She said Dhiab had told friends in Uruguay’s capital that he planned to keep to himself while spending the about-to-end Muslim holy month of Ramadan in the Uruguay-Brazil border region, where there is a Muslim community and mosques.
“He has a valid identity card, issued by the Uruguayan government, that allows him to go to other countries. He is not a fugitive from justice,” Herrera said at the weekend.
Dhiab is one of six former Guantanamo detainees resettled in Uruguay in late 2014. Then-Uruguayan president Jose Mujica invited them as a humanitarian gesture, but for several of the men, their time in Uruguay has been fraught with problems.
They initially complained the government was not helping them enough and they also refused to get jobs, drawing criticism from Uruguayans.
Dhiab, who suffers several health problems related to hunger strikes he undertook while held at the US military’s Guantanamo Bay base on Cuba, has been particularly vocal about his unhappiness in Uruguay.
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