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Al Jazeera inmate's health worsens
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Global
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By Al Jazeera and Agencies
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 | | Al-Hajj was arrested while working for Al Jazeera during the US invasion of Afghanistan in 2001 | The health of an Al Jazeera cameraman being held in the US prison at Guantanamo Bay is deteriorating further as he remains on hunger strike, according to a Mauritanian inmate who was recently released.
Ould Sidi Mohammed said Sami al-Hajj had an infection and was not getting sufficient medical treatment. "The last time I talked to him [Sami al-Hajj] was on the same day when I left, on September 25, Mohammed said. "His health condition is extremely deteriorating. He is losing weight continuously. He suffers from kidney infection and he urinates blood. "Unfortunately, prisoners do not receive full medical treatment. Prisoners on hunger strike are isolated in special places designated to torture them to hold them back from their objectives." 'Physical pressure' Mohammed said that he and his fellow inmates had faced harassment by US soldiers while in the jail. "We have suffered a great deal as we have been under psychological and physical pressure," he said. "They have used all possible ways to impose psychological and physical pressure on us." Mohammed said he was attending an Islamic school in Pakistan when he was arrested by Pakistani police in 2002 and then handed over to the US authorities. He did not know why he was arrested and said he had never had any connection to al-Qaeda. He was returned to Mauritania on September 26 after being cleared for release by a US military review panel. Al-Hajj has never been charged. Hopes that he would be released at the end of August under the condition that he remain in his country of origin, Sudan proved unfounded.
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Tags: Sami al-Hajj Al Jazeera Guantanamo
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