Fifteen prisoners at the Guantanamo Bay detention center were sent to the United Arab Emirates in the single largest release of detainees during the administration of US President Barack Obama, the Pentagon announced on Monday.
The transfer of 12 Yemeni nationals and three Afghans to the UAE comes amid a renewed push to whittle down the number of detainees held at the US prison in Cuba that Obama aims to close.
The Pentagon said that 61 detainees now remain at Guantanamo, which was opened in January 2002 to hold foreign fighters suspected of links to the Taliban or the al-Qaeda terrorist organization.
The latest batch of released prisoners had been held without charge at Guantanamo, some for more than 14 years. They were cleared for release by the Periodic Review Board, comprised of representatives from six US government agencies.
The UAE resettled five detainees transferred there last year, the Pentagon said.
Lee Wolosky, the US Department of State’s special envoy for Guantanamo’s closure, said that the US was grateful to the United Arab Emirates for accepting the latest group of 15 men and helping pave the way for the detention center’s closure.
“The continued operation of the detention facility weakens our national security by draining resources, damaging our relationships with key allies and partners and emboldening violent extremists,” Wolosky said.
Obama has been seeking to close the detention center amid opposition from the US Congress, which has prohibited transferring detainees to the US for any reason. The administration has been working with other countries to resettle detainees who have been cleared for transfer.
Naureen Shah, Amnesty International USA’s director of national security and human rights, said the transfers are a “powerful sign that President Obama is serious about closing Guantanamo before he leaves office.”
US Representative Ed Royce, a Republican from California who is chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, criticized the Obama administration for recent releases, saying that the freed detainees are “hardened terrorists.”
The Office of the Director of National Intelligence said that 5 percent of Guantanamo prisoners released since Obama took office have re-engaged in militant activities and an additional 8 percent are suspected of doing so.
According to Amnesty, one of the Afghans released to the UAE alleged that he was “tortured and subjected to other cruel treatment” while in US military custody.
The man, identified only as Obaidullah, was captured by US special forces in July 2002 and allegedly admitted to acquiring and planting anti-tank mines to target US and other coalition forces in eastern Afghanistan.
In clearing him for transfer, the Periodic Review Board said he had not expressed any anti-US sentiment or intent to re-engage in militant activities.
However, a Pentagon profile from last year also said he provided little information and they had little “insight into his current mindset.”
One of the Yemeni men sent to the UAE was identified as Zahir Umar Hamis bin Hamdun, who the Pentagon alleged traveled to Afghanistan in 1999 and after training at a camp acted as a weapons and explosives trainer.
A Pentagon profile from September last year said he expressed dislike of the US, which they identified as “an emotion that probably is motivated more by frustration over his continuing detention than by a commitment to global jihad.”
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