called him, "hatim! his eyes. i said, "what's wrong with you?" he said, "we are not allowed to see you in that way." even the icrc at guantánamo, you know, we asked them to leave many, many years. we boycott them. we give them official letters. we signed many letters asking them to leave guantánamo because being at guantánamo as icrc, it just give legitimacy to whatever americans do here. amy: we're talking to mansoor adayfi. he was detainee 441 at guantánamo, imprisoned without charge for 14 years and has written a memoir about his life, "don't forget us here: lost and found at guantanamo." so i then want to ask you about what happened in 2016. why, after 14 years without charge, in at 19 years old, now in your 30's, you were released. and how you ended up, a yemeni man, in serbia. >> i was sent to serbia. i refused to come to serbia. i was forced. they told me, "you have no choice. eith leave or rot in here." then, the icrc, when i protest -- i went on hunger strike protesting going to serbia. the icrc