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| Blame Won't Close Guantánamo |
| By huffingtonpost.com |
| Published: 01/22/2010 |
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It's January 22, the anniversary of President Obama's executive order to close Guantánamo Bay prison within a year, and Guantánamo is still open for business. Whom can we blame? Hmm... Let's see... It's easy to blame the president, but his promise turned out to be 'mission impossible,' coming just days after the departure of the administration that took terrorism to the bank, ignored U.S. and international laws protecting the rights of detainees, and painted every single Guantánamo prisoner as a blood-thirsty brother of KSM. The members of Congress who supported the Bush administration's gutting of the Constitution are still in office, opposing the prison's closure, banning the release of any former detainees to the U.S. except for prosecution, arguing for trials by military commission rather than federal court trials, and calling a halt to resettling Yemeni prisoners in their native country. They've even voted not to allocate one dime for closing the prison. Considering all that, and an American public that fears the prison's closure, it's admirable to see the administration's Guantánamo team plodding along, begging allied governments to take the problem off their hands by offering homes to cleared detainees. Of course many of us want our government to do much more. For example:
I'm sure Guantánamo Bay prison will close eventually, possibly when the moving van transports the whole mess to Thomson, Illinois. But that's not the change we've been waiting for -- if it's change at all. If we want justice for all detainees in U.S. custody, we have to first correct our neighbors' misperceptions fostered by eight years of scare mongering. That is already starting to happen. Last November, Amherst (MA) Town Meeting overwhelmingly approved the nation's first municipal resolution (1) urging Congress to repeal its ban on releasing cleared detainees into the U.S. and (2) welcoming a few cleared detainees into the community. Other communities are 'adopting' detainees, telling their stories locally, and advocating for their rights to be charged and tried in federal court or released promptly. Where people's fears and prejudices block their support for justice and human rights, stories of human beings in trouble offer a means to reawaken their humanity. Read More. |
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