Mr. Barhoumi’s lawyer, Shayana Kadidal of the Center for Constitutional Rights, described the prisoner as one of Guantánamo’s most cooperative captives, a man who helped calm tensions between unruly or frustrated prisoners and Army guards who would typically serve nine-month tours of duty.
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In 2017, at the start of the Trump freeze, Mr. Kadidal said, Mr. Barhoumi interrupted the lawyer’s explanation of the politics of his case, declaring: “It’s not you who decides when I leave this place, and it is not politicians. It’s God. He decides when I will go. So I am OK with his decision.”
U.S. officials had planned to transfer Mr. Barhoumi in March, but the mission was delayed by logistics and then by bad weather, which forced a cargo plane carrying the prisoner that was bound for Algeria to turn back.
Mr. Barhoumi’s father died while he was in detention. Once reunited with his family, he will become his ailing mother’s caretaker, Mr. Kadidal said. He should be home in plenty of time for his youngest brother’s wedding this year in Algiers.
Algeria has typically held men returning from Guantánamo for a brief period of questioning. Typical security arrangements with the United States restrict their travel for several years.