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Close Guantanamo and end 20 years of ‘lawlessness and cruelty’: US Muslim lawmaker

Members of the group Witness Against Torture protest against the Guantanamo Bay prison outside the White House, 2019.

Congresswoman Ilhan Omar says January 11 – which marks 20 years since the opening of Guantanamo Bay – should be "a day to reflect and to act," urging Americans to build pressure on President Joe Biden to finally put an end to the “lawlessness and cruelty” of the offshore military prison.

Twenty years ago today, the first prisoners – hooded, shackled, and clad in orange jumpsuits-- arrived at the newly-built Camp X-Ray prison at the US naval base in Guantanamo Bay, a desolate place near the eastern tip of Cuba.

The facility, which was supposed to be a temporary detention center and never meant to be permanent, was chosen because of its ambiguous legal status. It was under full control of the US military and relatively close to the mainland but beyond the reach of American courts, thus allowing detainees to be held indefinitely outside of normal laws or judicial oversight.

The Guantanamo prison, commonly known as “Gitmo,” became synonymous with prisoner abuse by the United States in the early years of the so-called war on terror, gaining global notoriety for the widespread use of torture and other violations of human rights that took place within its walls.

Many detainees were subject to psychological and physical abuse -- including waterboarding, beating, exposure to deafening noise, and sleep and food deprivation-- as part of their "enhanced interrogation," the accounts of which were gradually leaked to the outside world by the few lawyers who visited the prison and the inmates who have since been released.

"I reflect on what scores of men lost when the United States tortured them, systematically dismantling their identity and humanity,” Omar, a Democrat from Minnesota, wrote in an op-ed published in Teen Vogue on Tuesday.

“I reflect on what the families of victims of the September 11, 2001, attacks lost — any possibility of fair and impartial justice — when the United States decided to trade away decency and the rule of law for torture and indefinite detention. And I reflect on our refusal to hold anyone meaningfully accountable for these acts," the Muslim lawmaker said.

Opened in the wake of the September 11, 2011 attacks, Guantánamo has held almost 780 men over two decades.  Many had been abducted and tortured in secret US-run prisons before being transferred to Guantanamo to begin their indefinite detention there. Very few have ever been charged with a crime, and none given a fair trial.

Of the 39 detainees still being held at Guantanamo, 27 have not been charged with a crime-- the so-called forever prisoners. A total of 13 have been cleared to leave but proceedings for their release have been delayed in the pretrial stage for years.

Human rights organizations and advocates around the world have doggedly campaigned to close Guantanamo since its very inception.

Former President Barack Obama had made the closing of Guantanamo one of his top priorities and signed an executive order to do so soon after taking office in 2009. However, that goal proved increasingly elusive throughout his two terms in office as he faced stiff opposition in Congress.

Rep. Omar acknowledged that while “Congress has acted to frustrate rather than facilitate closing Guantánamo," she said the prison’s closure was ultimately the responsibility of the president.

“I was pleased when President Biden announced, shortly after taking office, that his administration would do just that. But I’m dismayed that in the 11 months since that announcement, the Biden administration has transferred only one man out of Guantánamo Bay,” she said.

Advocates for closing the Guantanamo prison were optimistic when Biden took office last January. They were further relieved when his administration took the step of releasing a prisoner for the first time in years. In the ensuing months, however, there have been few signs of progress in closing the detention facility in Cuba, leaving many campaigners frustrated.

Omar urged young Americans to mount pressure on President Biden to "dramatically pick up the pace."

“If the president is to make good on his promise to close the facility, he’ll need to dramatically pick up the pace. To that end, your voices are critical. Time and again, this country’s leaders — in the public and private sectors — have underestimated the power of younger generations to force change, particularly on social and racial justice issues,” she wrote.

The Minnesota Democrat also took issue with “the half a billion dollars each year” that the Pentagon spends to run Guantanamo. "The conversation about closing Guantánamo often centers on the national security costs the prison inflicts. Those costs are real and significant, but so is Guantánamo’s role in fueling social and racial injustice."

More than a dozen United Nations experts released a statement on Monday, voicing outrage that Guantanamo was still in operation two decades after opening its gates to its first inmates.

Calling the military prison “an ugly chapter of unrelenting human rights violations,” the UN experts called on the United States to close down the detention center, return detainees home or to safe third countries, provide reparation for those arbitrarily detained and tortured, and hold those who authorized and engaged in torture accountable in accordance with international law.

"Twenty years of practicing arbitrary detention without trial accompanied by torture or ill-treatment is simply unacceptable for any government, particularly a government which has a stated claim to protecting human rights," the UN experts said.


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