Prisoner Reviews - and 800 Days of the Gitmo
Clock
Dear friends and supporters,
We're sorry to report that progress towards the closure of Guantánamo remains
painfully slow. Of the 116 men still held at the prison, 52
have been approved for release, but are still held because of a lack of
urgency of the part of the administration, and, in many cases, because third
countries must be found that will offer them new homes. Most of the 52 are
Yemenis, and the entire U.S. establishment is unwilling to repatriate Yemenis
because of the security situation in their homeland.
However, we have been hearing since April that a Mauritanian and a Moroccan could be released soon, and, in addition, we
remain appalled that Shaker Aamer, the last British resident in the prison,
has not been freed despite calls for his release from Prime Minister David
Cameron, from the government and the House of Commons, which supported a motion calling for his release in
March, from MPs in the Shaker Aamer Parliamentary Group, who visited Washington D.C. in May, and from the many prominent figures who have stood with the
giant inflatable figure of Shaker Aamer that is at the heart of
the We Stand With Shaker campaign, launched by
"Close Guantánamo" co-founder Andy Worthington, with activist
Joanne MacInnes, last November.
One way out of Guantánamo is through Periodic Review Boards, established in
2013 to review the cases of all the prisoners not facing trials, and not
already approved for release by the Guantánamo Review Task Force that
President Obama established in 2009 to review all the prisoners' cases. 17
PRBs have now taken place, with ten men approved for release, and two of
those ten have subsequently been freed. Last week, Andy wrote about the 16th
prisoners to face a PRB, Salman Rabei'i, a Yemeni, in an article entitled,
"16th Guantánamo Prisoner Seeks Release Via Periodic
Review Board."
This week the last Kuwaiti in Guantánamo, Fayiz al-Kandari, had a second PRB
after the board approved his ongoing imprisonment last year. Andy wrote about that decision here, and for
a report on Fayiz's second PRB we recommend Jenifer Fenton's article for
Al-Jazeera, "Last Kuwaiti in Guantanamo seeks to return home."
Further PRBs will be taking place in August, as can be seen on the PRB website.
800 days of the Gitmo
Clock
Tomorrow, July 31, also marks 800 days since President Obama's promise to
resume releasing prisoners from Guantánamo, after a three-year
period in which releases had almost ground to a halt because of Congressional
obstruction, and the president's unwillingness to expend political capital
overcoming those obstacles. The spur for the promise was widespread shock at
a prison-wide hunger strike, launched by men who, rightly, feared that they
would never be released or granted anything resembling justice, and the
promise was made in a major speech on national security in the National
Archives on May 23, 2013.
In the summer of 2013, "Close Guantánamo" launched the Gitmo Clock to mark the time
since that promise, and the number of prisoners released. We are pleased to
note the 50 men released since that promise, but, as mentioned above, the
continuing imprisonment of 52 others is a disgrace.
Please visit, like, share and tweet the Gitmo Clock
if, like us, you want to see action soon to release the 52 men who, for the
most part, have been awaiting release since 2009. It is bad enough that
Guantánamo is still open, without men being held who were told six years ago
that the U.S. no longer wanted to hold them.
With thanks, as ever, for your support.
The "Close Guantánamo" team
P.S. Please, if you will, also ask your friends and family to join us --
just an email address is required to be counted amongst those opposed to the
ongoing existence of Guantánamo, and to receive updates of our activities by
email. Please also note that we can be found on Twitter here and on Facebook here.
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