Washington refuses to release Uighurs

Published October 19, 2008

WASHINGTON, Oct 18: The Bush administration believes the 17 Chinese Muslim Uighurs detained at the Guantanamo Bay prison camp should not be released into the United States because they pose a “risk distinct to this nation”, according to court documents obtained on Friday.

The potential risks, said the US Justice Department, were compounded by the fact “that petitioners were detained for six years by the country to which the district court has ordered them brought”. A federal judge last week ordered that the group be released and brought before him in Washington an historic ruling where, for the first time, a court ordered that “war on terror” prisoners detained at the US Navy-run prison in Cuba should be released onto US soil.

The US Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia halted the process a day after the ruling, to give the US Justice Department time to prepare an appeal.

“Most of these aliens were detained after attending or travelling to, terrorist training camps,” read the US government’s appeal, filed late on Thursday.

“The district court’s order could also make it more difficult for the government to negotiate with third countries over resettlement.” The group has been held in limbo at Guantanamo despite being cleared of ‘enemy combatant” status in 2003 and cleared for release in 2004 by the US government because officials cannot find a country willing to take them.

The men cannot be returned to China due to concerns they would be tortured there as political dissidents.

The Center for Constitutional Rights (CCR), which has defended many of the Uighurs in court, said Friday it was a “baseless assertion” that the prisoners were too dangerous to release into the United States.

“It would be ironic if this were true, since the government exonerated these men as long ago as 2003 and has been trying to resettle them with our closest allies since then,” the CCR said in a statement.

On Wednesday the New York Times reported that the Uighur case had become a focus of many Guantanamo critics.

“The true fear is not that they will pose a security threat,” Jennifer Daskal, a counterterrorism specialist at Human Rights Watch, told the newspaper. Rather, if the group was released, they would “serve as living reminders of the administration’s mistakes in setting up Guantanamo,” she said.

The Uighurs were living in a self-contained camp in Afghanistan when the US-led coalition bombing campaign began in October 2001.

They fled to the mountains, but were turned over to Pakistani authorities, who then handed them to the United States.—AFP

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