Thursday, January 01, 2009

Britain: 'U.S. Needs Help to Shut Guantanamo'

Guantanamo-2 LONDON – Britain said on Thursday that the United States would need help to close down the Guantanamo Bay prison camp for terrorism suspects but refused to say if it would agree to resettle inmates with no links to Britain. The Times newspaper said Britain was preparing to receive foreign suspects from the U.S. prison on Cuba so President-elect Barack Obama could fulfill his pledge to close it down.

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The report, quoting government sources, said Britain now supported moves to rehouse the detainees, despite previous refusals to help President George W. Bush. It said interior minister Jacqui Smith would decide on a case-by-case basis.

About 255 men are still held at the naval base in Cuba, including 50 the United States has cleared for release but cannot repatriate for fear they will be tortured or persecuted in their home countries.

"We've made it clear we think Guantanamo should be closed," a Foreign Office spokeswoman said when asked for comment. "We recognize the legal, technical and other difficulties and that the U.S. will require assistance from allies and partners to make that happen."

She noted that Britain had already accepted several Guantanamo inmates who were not British nationals but had only lived in Britain. "We have been pushing for our partners to follow our lead," she said.

However, she declined to comment on whether Britain would go further and accept Guantanamo inmates with no previous links to Britain, saying: "We haven't been asked."

The Conservatives' foreign policy spokesman William Hague called on Foreign Secretary David Miliband to clarify the issue.

"The Foreign Secretary must explain urgently whether this is true, how many Guantanamo inmates would be admitted to Britain, by what criteria they would be selected, and what assurances would be given about their behavior in the future," Hague said in a statement.

Portugal wrote to its European Union partners in December urging them to resettle Guantanamo detainees.

After securing the release of all nine British citizens held at Guantanamo, Britain asked Washington in 2007 to free five men who were legally resident in Britain before their detention but were not British nationals. That marked a shift from London's previous stance that it was not responsible for such detainees.

Three British residents came to Britain in December 2007 after being freed from Guantanamo. The Foreign Office spokeswoman said Britain continued to press for the release of two remaining British former residents held there -- Ethiopian-born Binyam Mohamed and Saudi-born Shaker Aamer.

In October, the Pentagon official overseeing the Guantanamo war crimes court dismissed all charges against Mohamed, who says he falsely confessed to a radioactive "dirty bomb" plot while being tortured in a Moroccan prison.


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