Sami al-Hajj, an Al Jazeera cameraman released from
Al-Hajj will be accorded a public reception by the news network on arriving in
He spent six years in the
Reception
Al Jazeera has extended a public invitation to all citizens and residents of
The network will also host a similar ceremony for its staff and their families to honour al-Hajj at Al Jazeera's headquarters at 8pm (18:00 GMT).
Al-Hajj returned to
Al Jazeera and the Organisation of Sudanese Civil Aid held a ceremony at that time for him and two other freed Sudanese nationals entitled "Freedom Wedding".
The ceremony was attended among others by Mustafa Osman Ismail, adviser to Omar Hassan Bashir, the Sudanese president, and Khanfar.
Torture
Al-Hajj has said that during his long captivity, he was subjected to various kinds of psychological and physical torture.
This included
He said that soldiers forced detainees in the camp to break Islamic fasts and often assaulted them.
Al-Hajj said he was subjected to 130 interrogation sessions, 95 of them to probe the professional work he did for Al Jazeera.
He accused the
During his imprisonment, al-Hajj went on hunger strike for nearly 16 months to protest against his detention without trial and the treatment of the camp's detainees.
The
Although more than 500 prisoners have been released from the camp, about 250 people still remain at the detention facility.