(Reuters) - Six men held for more than a decade at the U.S. military prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba,
were flown to Uruguay for resettlement on Sunday, the latest step in a
slow-moving push by President Barack Obama's administration to close the
facility. The release of four
Syrians, a Tunisian and a Palestinian, who arrived in South America
aboard a U.S. military transport plane, represented the largest single
group to leave the internationally condemned U.S. detention camp since
2009, U.S. officials said. Obama
promised to shut the prison when he took office nearly six years ago,
citing the damage it inflicted on America's image around the world. But
he has been unable to do so, partly because of obstacles posed by the
U.S. Congress. The latest
transfer of prisoners to Uruguay had been delayed for months. A move
initially planned earlier this year was apparently held up by the
Defense Department. Differences
over the pace of such transfers, said one U.S. official, added to
friction between Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel and Obama's inner circle
that culminated in Hagel's resignation last month. The
release of the six was put off again in August when Uruguay became
concerned about political risks in the run-up to its October
presidential election. But outgoing President Jose Mujica then pressed
ahead with the transfer. Mujica,
who has called Guantanamo a "disgrace," reiterated in an interview
aired on Friday that he had rejected a U.S. proposal to ban the
detainees from traveling for two years after their release from
Guantanamo. "They are
coming as refugees and the first day that they want to leave, they can
leave," he said in an interview with state television that was posted on
YouTube. A U.S. official
said Uruguay agreed to "security arrangements" and that the six would
be "free men." He declined to say whether they would be allowed to
travel abroad. Uruguay's
president elect, the ruling party's Tabare Vazquez, who assumes power on
March 1, has said he also supports hosting the men as a humanitarian
gesture. The Uruguayan foreign ministry said in a statement on Sunday
that it would adhere to international rules on humanitarian protection. Guantanamo
was opened by Obama's predecessor, George W. Bush, after the Sept. 11,
2001, attacks on the United States, to house terrorism suspects rounded
up overseas. Most of the detainees have been held for a decade or more
without being charged or tried. 'GRATEFUL TO URUGUAY' After arriving in Montevideo, the six men were taken to a hospital for medical examinations, the U.S. official said. "We
are very grateful to Uruguay for this important humanitarian action,"
said Clifford Sloan, Obama's State Department envoy on Guantanamo, who
negotiated the resettlement deal in January. "The
support we are receiving from our friends and allies is critical to
achieving our shared goal of closing Guantanamo, and this transfer is a
major milestone." Seven
other prisoners have been transferred from Guantanamo since early
November, including three to Georgia, two to Slovakia, one to Saudi
Arabia and one to Kuwait. With Sunday's release, the prisoner population
has been whittled down to 136. The
detainees released on Sunday were cleared for release long ago and are
not regarded as security threats. But U.S. authorities did not want to
send them home, saying countries such as Syria, where a civil war is
raging, were too risky. Among
the Syrians sent to Uruguay was Jihad Diyab, who recently mounted a
legal challenge against the U.S. military's force-feeding of hunger
strikers at Guantanamo. A lawyer for Diyab, Cori Crider, said on Sunday
the case to release video tapes of the force-feeding would continue
despite the transfer. The
Pentagon identified the other Syrians as Ahmed Adnan Ahjam, Ali Hussain
Shaabaan and Omar Mahmoud Faraj. Also released were a Tunisian, Abdul
Bin Mohammed Abis Ourgy, and a Palestinian, Mohammed Tahanmatan. Mujica,
a former leftist guerrilla who was jailed during a 1973-1985 military
dictatorship, had urged Washington to free three imprisoned Cuban spies
as a reciprocal gesture, but U.S. authorities said this was never part
of the negotiations for accepting the Guantanamo detainees. Human rights activists praised Uruguay's willingness to take in Guantanamo detainees. More are expected to be repatriated or sent to countries other than their homelands by year-end, the U.S. official said. But
Obama still faces major obstacles in trying to shut down the prison,
among the biggest being the Yemeni detainees who make up more than half
of the inmate population. Most have been cleared for transfer but are
unable to return home due to the chaotic security situation in Yemen. There
are concerns in Washington that some might return to the battlefield.
Yemen is the base for an al Qaeda affiliate that was the target on
Saturday of a U.S. hostage rescue attempt, which ended with an American
journalist and a South African teacher being killed by their captors.
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