- William Sampson (author)
William Sampson (born in
Nova Scotia , April 1959), is a dual British andCanadian national who was arrested inSaudi Arabia onDecember 17 ,2000 on a variety of charges includingterrorism ,espionage andmurder . He was imprisoned andtorture d for two years and seven months, and finally released and permitted to leave Saudi Arabia, along with several of his co-accused, on August 8, 2003.In 2005 Sampson published a book about his experience entitled "Confessions of an Innocent Man: Torture and Survival in a Saudi Prison".
Early life
The son of a British father and a Canadian mother, Sampson spent periods in
Canada ,England ,Scotland andSingapore . He holds an MBA fromEdinburgh University and aPhD inbiochemistry .He worked in biochemical research and pharmaceutical marketing prior to moving to
Riyadh in 1998 to work as a marketing consultant with theSaudi Industrial Development Fund , a government development bank.Arrest
On the morning of December 17, Sampson was snatched at gunpoint by police as he left his home in Riyadh on his way to work. He was taken to
Al-Hair Prison where regular sessions of physical and psychological torture began immediately. Among other things, Sampson says he was severely and repeatedly beaten, foot whipped, deprived of sleep, andrape d.After six initial days of torture largely conducted by three men, Ibrahim al-Dali (officer of the Mabaheth, the Saudi Arabian general intelligence service), Khaled al-Saleh (officer of the Mabaheth) and a third unnamed man Sampson nicknamed "the Spiv," Sampson confessed and subsequently provided both written and videotaped confessions; he was sentenced to death by "al-haad", a form of execution in which the victim is restrained and decapitated. The torture continued in various forms until his release.
A Saudi official has denied that Sampson was tortured. [http://www.saudiembassy.net/2003News/Press/PressDetail.asp?cYear=2003&cIndex=127 ]
Alleged crimes
Sampson was one of eight foreign nationals arrested on allegations of involvement in a series of
car bomb ings targeting Western expatriates in Riyadh. British engineerChristopher Rodway was killed and his wife injured in one explosion, and a second bomb injured Britons Mark Paine and Steve Coughlan. The Saudi authorities claimed that the bombings were part of a turf war within a Western liquor trafficking ring, though the men were further forced to confess to being spies for the British government.In his videotaped confession, broadcast internationally on February 5, 2001, Sampson said:
Release
After thirty-one months' incarceration in
solitary confinement , Sampson and the others were suddenly released, and immediately deported toLondon, England .Charles, Prince of Wales ,Rubin Carter , Justin Rodway, and Canadian MP's Stéphane Bergeron and Dan McTeague were part of the diplomatic effort to obtain the release. In July 2004, it was revealed that the final release was part of a prisoner exchange for the release of five Saudis from the U.S. prison camp in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. Officials of both the Foreign and Commonwealth Office (UK) and the State Department (USA) have "anonymously" confirmed this information. A memorandum between officials of the Belgian Ministry of Foreign Affairs referring to the prisoner exchange adds further evidence of its occurrence. The Belgian government has confirmed both the authenticity of the memo and its knowledge of the exchange, but has denied any direct involvement in the negotiations. The Canadian government refuses to comment on the matter.Legal case
On
October 28 ,2004 , Sampson, along with BritonsSandy Mitchell andLes Walker , won a legal battle inLondon , UK that allows them to sue the men inSaudi Arabia they say tortured them into making the false confessions. In February 2005, a coroner's inquest into the death of Christopher Rodway, held in Trowbridge, concluded that there was no evidence to indicate that Sampson and Mitchell had any involvement in the death, and thus were not involved in the incident for which the Saudi Arabian government had arrested them. In June 2006, a decision handed down at the Law Lords overturned the earlier ruling of the Court of Appeal. Sampson, along with Mitchell and Walker are now appealing to the European Court of Human Rights claiming that the law in Britain, as interpreted in the Lords decision, is a violation of their rights under Article 6 (right to a fair trial) of the European Convention on Human Rights.In June
2006 the group's appeal was overturned by theLaw Lords on the grounds that Saudi officials are protected in Britain by theState Immunity Act 1978 . In 2007, Sampson was the subject of aNational Film Board of Canada -co-produced documentary, "Confessions of an Innocent Man". [http://www.nfb.ca/webextension/confessions-of-an-innocent-man/]Criticism of the Canadian government
Sampson has repeatedly criticised the
Canadian government for its actions during his incarceration. Sampson states that his torturers were present at every meeting he had with Canadian diplomats and government representatives, who never insisted they leave and indeed accepted the Saudis' claims of Sampson's guilt, despite the lack of evidence, inconsistencies, and the statements to the contrary by Sampson and his supporters. He also alleges that he repeatedly informed embassy officials and Canadian medical professionals that he was being tortured, but to no avail.In 2003,
Amnesty International wrote:External links
* [http://www.democracynow.org/article.pl?sid=05/11/28/1455257 Torture and Survival in a Saudi Prison: William Sampson Recounts his 2 1/2 Year Ordeal, A 2005 interview by Democracy Now radio in New York]
* [http://www.cbc.ca/news/background/sampson/interview1.html Death Sentence: The William Sampson Story, An interview with Peter Mansbridge (CBC)]
* [http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0771079036 "Confessions" at Amazon]References
* Interview with Sampson at [http://www.democracynow.org/2005/11/28/torture_and_survival_in_a_saudi Democracy Now]
* Statement on case of Canadian citizen William Sampson at [http://www.saudiembassy.net/2003News/Press/PressDetail.asp?cYear=2003&cIndex=127 Royal Saudi Embassy, Washington D.C.]
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