News January 12 2026

UK agrees to pay ‘substantial sum’ to settle lawsuit by Guantanamo detainee over torture claims

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This undated file photo provided by US Central Command shows Abu Zubaydah, date and location unknown.

LONDON (AP) — The British government has agreed to pay a “substantial sum” to settle a lawsuit by a Guantanamo Bay detainee who said United Kingdom intelligence agencies were complicit in his torture at secret US interrogation sites, his lawyer said Monday.

Abu Zubaydah was thought to be a high-ranking member of al-Qaida, the terrorist group that carried out the September 11, 2001, when he was captured in Pakistan in 2002.

Zubaydah, a Palestinian born in Saudi Arabia, was tortured at so-called CIA black sites abroad before being transferred to Guantanamo Bay in 2006.

Attorney Helen Duffy said the confidential settlement was symbolically and practically significant for the “intolerable suffering” Zubaydah endured.

She urged the UK to press for the immediate release of Zubaydah and others held without charge more than 25 years after the terror attacks.

“This case is deeply relevant today, as some states ride roughshod over international law, and the world looks to others to respond,” Duffy said.

“There are critical lessons about the cost of cooperating with the US or other allies flouting international norms. It is more important than ever that human rights and states international obligations are respected, and violations are met with reparation and accountability.”

The UK Foreign Office declined comment, saying it would neither confirm nor deny intelligence matters.

Zubaydah was the first person in the CIA’s detention and interrogation program following 9/11 and subjected to what is now widely viewed as torture. He was held at CIA black sites in Poland and Lithuania, according to the European Court of Human Rights.

Zubaydah was waterboarded more than 80 times in a month at one point and confined over 11 days in a coffin-size box, among a raft of other mistreatment, a US Senate report found.

UK security and intelligence services were aware Zubaydah was being tortured but they continued to provide questions for the CIA to ask him without seeking assurances of his condition, a parliamentary committee found in 2018.

Dominic Grieve, a lawyer and former member of the House of Commons who chaired the parliamentary inquiry into detainee abuse, said the payout was very unusual but that Zubaydah was clearly wronged.

“Americans were behaving in a way that should have given us cause for real concern,” Grieve told the BBC. “We should have raised it with the United States and, if necessary, closed down cooperation, but we failed to do that for a considerable period of time.”

Zubaydah remains in a legal limbo, held at Guantanamo as a security risk but without charges or conviction.

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