The Great Debate UK

May 21, 2009 07:57 EDT

No we can’t: Obama’s Guantanamo

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- Cori Crider represents 30 Guantánamo prisoners as an attorney with legal charity Reprieve. The opinions expressed are her own. -

You would be hard-pressed to find a kid more thrilled on Barack Obama’s first day in office than Mohammed el Gharani. On January 21, had you been standing at the right corner of Guantanamo Bay, you could have heard him whoop for joy when the U.S. President made history—so we thought—by closing the prison where el Gharani grew up.

It is four months since that decision. The president gave a speech, “clarifying” his plans for Guantanamo on Thursday. But I fear we will all look back on May 21, 2009, as the day real history was made—The Day President Obama Un-Closed Guantanamo.

In many ways the die seems already cast. The President revived the military commissions last week, a move that risks stretching the prison’s life out for months. Just two prisoners have left Guantanamo since January. One, Binyam Mohamed, had humiliated the U.S. and the UK over his torture; the other, Lakhdar Boumediene, had been ordered released by a federal judge.

It is unclear what the administration is waiting for in Mohammed el Gharani’s case. He was found innocent in court, just like Boumediene, and he has a country to go to. He could climb on a plane to Chad tomorrow, were the administration simply to wake up and do what it has been ordered to do.

In this, el Gharani is luckier than many—namely, Guantanamo’s sixty refugees, who require the U.S. or a goodwilled third country to save them from torture at home. For these men, the administration’s dithering spells disaster. For while the government frittered away the global goodwill that would have helped them house refugees in January, the right regrouped.

COMMENT

Youth expects change to happen – now! Cori – I know you want it all to change and cannot see, maybe the youthful exuberence once again, why it isn’t.

We could open the doors and send everyone home – but as you said, many would be tortured… basically change requires calming fears and making plans, much of which does not happen instantly.

President Obama is the leader of the nation, but he is not the law maker, that branch has to be convinced – and unfortunately the military will need to have those laws and plans before they will act on good confidence.

At least trials will happen now – assuming Congress and/or a group a lawyers does not stall the process once again.

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