Yahoo – AFP, Thomas Watkins, August 16, 2016
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| The transfer of 15 prisoners to the United Arab Emirates reduces Guantanamo Bay's inmate population to 61 (AFP Photo/John Moore) |
Washington
(AFP) - Fifteen Guantanamo Bay detainees have been transferred to the United
Arab Emirates, the largest such release in years, the Pentagon announced.
The latest
transfers bring the remaining population of the detention center down to 61.
Since the September 11, 2001 attacks, about 780 inmates have been housed in the
US military-run facility.
According
to a State Department official, speaking on condition of anonymity, 12 of the
men are from Yemen and three are Afghans.
The
Pentagon has previously struggled to find a third country to take Yemeni
detainees, given that they can't go home because of the civil war in their
nation.
"The
United States is grateful to the government of the United Arab Emirates for its
humanitarian gesture and willingness to support ongoing US efforts to
close" Guantanamo, the Pentagon said in a statement.
Once
transferred, former inmates are usually freed subject to supervision and
undergoing rehabilitation programs.
Amnesty
International USA welcomed the announcement as a sign President Barack Obama is
serious about closing the controversial facility before he leaves office.
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Guantanamo
Bay (AFP Photo/AFP)
|
"It's
a significant repudiation of the idea that Guantanamo is going to be open for
business for the indefinite future," Naureen Shah, Amnesty International
USA's security and human rights program director, told AFP.
One of
those transferred is an Afghan called Obaidullah, who allegedly had hidden land
mines in 2001. He was detained for 14 years without trial.
Monday's
announcement represents the largest transfer of prisoners under the Democratic
Obama administration.
"The
continued operation of the detention facility weakens our national security by
draining resources, damaging our relationships with key allies and partners,
and emboldening violent extremists," Ambassador Lee Wolosky, the special
envoy for Guantanamo closure, said in a statement.
"The
support of our friends and allies -– like the UAE -- is critical to our
achieving this shared goal."
Obama
urgently wants to close the facility before he leaves office at the start of
next year but has been continually thwarted by Republican lawmakers.
Closure a
long shot
Still, the
United States has in recent months accelerated the rate at which detainees who
have been approved for transfer are released from the facility.
When Obama
took office, there were 242 detainees at Guantanamo.
Monday's
announcement means 19 inmates will remain who have been cleared for transfer.
Obama wants
to send the rest, deemed to be the most dangerous, for incarceration in the
United States -- but that is an extreme long shot given Republican opposition.
In
February, the president presented Congress with a new closure plan for
Guantanamo, which he says serves only to stoke anti-US resentment and fuel
jihadist recruitment.
Republican
Senator Kelly Ayotte recently renewed calls to keep Guantanamo open and
published an unclassified report on 107 current and former detainees that she
said highlighted their terrorist pasts.
November's
election will likely help determine the future of the notorious prison, as
Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump has vowed to fill Guantanamo
with "bad dudes" should he win the White House.
Trump has
said he would "bring back a hell of a lot worse than waterboarding."
To date,
just 10 of the detainees face criminal trial, including the "9/11
Five" -- led by Khalid Sheikh Mohammed -- who are accused of plotting the
September 11, 2001 attacks.
Shah said
it was important for Obama to push ahead with plans to shutter Guantanamo, or
the next administration could start filling its cells with suspected jihadists
captured in the campaign against the Islamic State group in Iraq and Syria.
"We
are at an extremely dangerous and pivotal point where if President Obama fails
to close Guantanamo then the next administration could bring more detainees
there," Shah said.
Guantanamo
is a US naval base carved out of a remote chunk of land on the tip of southeastern
Cuba.
The
administration of George W. Bush opened a prison there to hold terror suspects.


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