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US plans closure of Guantanamo

Imran Khan

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US plans closure of Guantanamo



The Post Monitoring

WASHINGTON: The aides of President-elect Barack Obama have started planning to shut the Guantanamo prison camps and war court and to transfer them to the United States.

Some of the inmates of hundreds imprisoned at the Guantanamo prison will be released, while the cases of others will be transferred to the US court.

Obama had promised during his election campaign that the infamous detention facility at the Guantanamo Bay will be closed.

this is real abama :victory::yahoo::victory:
 
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US plans closure of Guantanamo



The Post Monitoring

WASHINGTON: The aides of President-elect Barack Obama have started planning to shut the Guantanamo prison camps and war court and to transfer them to the United States.

Some of the inmates of hundreds imprisoned at the Guantanamo prison will be released, while the cases of others will be transferred to the US court.

Obama had promised during his election campaign that the infamous detention facility at the Guantanamo Bay will be closed.

this is real abama :victory::yahoo::victory:

I HOPE THEY CLOSE IT. ITS THE BIGGEST GIT IN THE WORLD.

REGARDS

:yahoo:
 
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Good news indeed! I hope for early implementation of this plan.
 
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November 11, 2008

Barack Obama will move swiftly to close Guantanamo Bay as soon as he takes office, his aides said yesterday, in a clear and early sign of how determined he is to break with President Bush.

Mr Obama is planning to ship dozens of terrorist suspects from the camp to face criminal trial in the US. It is a controversial move but one that demonstrates how abruptly he plans to change Washington in terms of policy, personnel and tone the moment he enters the Oval Office.

Mr Obama has said that he wants to hit the ground running, and, already, details of his ambitious agenda are becoming clear as he seeks to turn his back on the Bush era. He has vowed to start removing combat troops from Iraq immediately, although in recent weeks he has become more opaque about the speed of withdrawal.

Rahm Emanuel, Mr Obama’s choice for White House chief of staff, said on Sunday that the President-elect would also waste no time in pushing ahead with a tax cut for the middle classes, and a tax increase for the wealthiest Americans – a sharp break with Mr Bush.

Mr Emanuel added that Mr Obama would act quickly to expand health insurance coverage and reverse Mr Bush’s energy policy, although such an agenda is hugely expensive and could be imperilled by the worsening economy and a rapidly increasing budget deficit.

One of Mr Obama’s first acts could be to use the power of executive authority – which enables presidents to take action without an Act of Congress – to block the expansion of oil drilling in the Utah wilderness authorised by Mr Bush. He is also looking to use the same power to lift the limits on stem cell research imposed by the current Administration.

Yet it is the closure of Guantanamo Bay that Mr Obama believes would provide one of the starkest demonstrations of how he intends to effect immediate change.

He is looking at creating a new “terrorism court” on the US mainland to try up to 80 terror suspects, including Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the self-confessed September 11 master-mind. Mr Obama said last week that he would close the camp “as quickly as we can do prudently”.

The move will face stiff opposition from many Republicans on Capitol Hill and a substantial number of Americans who strongly oppose bringing terror suspects to US soil with traditional rules of evidence that give those being prosecuted the presumption of innocence.

Mr Bush refused to countenance trials on the mainland and was finally forced by the US Supreme Court this year to allow prisoners the right to have the legality of their detention adjudicated in a federal court.

Closing the detention camp on the US naval base in Cuba could also create myriad other problems. Of the 255 detainees still being held there, experts believe that more than 100 will probably never be charged, because there is little or no evidence linking them to terrorism.

Yet a number of their home countries have said that they would refuse to take them back, leaving Mr Obama with the problem of what to do with them if they were released. Housing them in the US, or giving them asylum, would prove to be highly controversial.

The legal team advising Mr Obama on Guantanamo believes that prosecuting the “high-value” terror suspects such as Mr Mohammed – a group of about 30 – will require the creation of a court designed to handle highly sensitive intelligence material, a cross between a military tribunal and a federal court.

After meeting Mr Bush yesterday, Mr Obama was due to return home to Chicago, where he is putting together his administration.
 
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Obama moving to shut Guantanamosubmitted 1 hour 59 minutes ago
U.S. President-elect Barack Obama's advisers are working on a proposal to shift dozens of terrorism suspects from the Guantanamo Bay prison to the U.S. as part of his promise to close the Cuban Navy base prison, media reports said. Obama had described the prison as a "sad chapter in American history" and insisted that the U.S. legal system could deal with the detainees. Now his aides are putting together proposals to release some detainees while many others would be prosecuted in U.S. criminal courts. A third group of high-risk cases may go before yet-to-be-established special terrorist courts designed to handle sensitive national security cases, according to advisers and Democrats involved in the talks.
 
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