Charges dropped, but six remain in Guantanamo Bay

August 24, 2006 @ Michael Hampton4 Comments

Six men suspected of plotting to blow up the U.S. Embassy in Sarajevo, Bosnia, were brought to Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, in 2002. They remain imprisoned there even though the charges against them were dropped.

The detainees and their lawyers claim that they are still being held because releasing them would mean the U.S. having to admit an embarrassing error, while the Pentagon says it has classified information indicating the men are dangerous.

In 2004, Bosnian prosecutors and police formally exonerated the six men after a lengthy criminal investigation. Last year, the Bosnian prime minister asked the Bush administration to release them, calling the case a miscarriage of justice. . . .

Senior Bosnian officials said they have been told by U.S. diplomats that the six Algerians will never be allowed to return to Bosnia, which had granted dual citizenship to most of the men before their seizure. Instead, U.S. officials have pressed Algeria to take back the prisoners on the condition that they be confined or kept under surveillance there. So far, the Algerian government has balked. . . .

“The Americans did not want to return me to Bosnia. Why? Because the Americans claimed to have evidence against me. I can’t be returned and found innocent,” Mustafa Ait Idr, one of the six Algerians, told a military tribunal at Guantanamo in October 2004, according to a transcript of the hearing.

“So now I am sitting here in Cuba and I do not know why. I do not know what is happening outside; I do not know. But what I do know is that this is a game.” — Washington Post

ThePost has much more, including documents from Bosnia’s official investigations and transcripts of military tribunals held at Guantanamo Bay.

The Pentagon, for its part, says it has information which links the men to al-Qaeda, but the evidence which is known is flimsy at best, and they of course will not present the evidence to the detainees, even in the tribunals, saying it’s classified.

Sounds like a fair trial to me.

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4 Comments → “Charges dropped, but six remain in Guantanamo Bay”


  1. Nanomid

    Aug 25, 2006

    Political activist spam. Like everything in the real world, rights are in gradation. Besides, foreign suspects do not get rights of a U.S. citizen.

    Reply

  2. Michael Hampton

    Aug 25, 2006

    You seem to have missed something important in the Constitution. It doesn’t guarantee those rights to a fair trial, free speech, etc., to U.S. citizens. It guarantees them to the people. That’s everyone, citizen or not.

    I see no good reason for the U.S. to sink to the level of other countries when dealing with terrorism suspects.

    Reply
  3. Sep 30, 2006

    Reply

  4. Ed Hands

    Nov 03, 2006

    Regarding “America Deceived” It was NEVER available via Amazon or B&N. It was published via “Fast Track” at iUniverse.com (a subsidiary of B&N, btw) IT WAS NEVER BANNED FROM ANYWHERE

    The author choose not to have it released via B&N or Amazon per iUniverse. Political
    motivation or just a cheapskate? You decide. Regardless, it is a lie.

    If you would like, you can call them yourself and ask. The phone number for iUniverse is 1-800-AUTHORS. No, really, call them and ask if it was ever distributed by Amazon or B&N and
    they will tell you it wasn’t, as it was a “fast Track” publication.

    It is the speculation of this commenter that the author of the previous comment is actually the author of the book looking for some easy publicity via blogs. A google search on “America Decieved” will bring up hundreds of very similary comments, but all have the link to iUniverse in them and usually the tag line “Final link (before Google Books bends to gov’t will and drops the title)”.

    Coincidence?

    Disinformation and lies..all in the name of selling a book and spreading fear.

    Whatever happened to intergrity?

    Reply

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