The Palm Beach Post

Yemeni detainee released from Guantanamo

- By Carol Rosenberg Tribune News Service

GUANTANAMO BAY NAVAL BASE, CUBA — The U.S. military has delivered a longheld, mistakenly profiled Yemeni captive held in the U.S. prison at Guantanamo to resettleme­nt in the African archipelag­o of Cape Verde, reducing the prison’s population to 59, the Pentagon said Sunday.

Shawqi Awad Balzuhair was among a series of onetime “forever pri soners” whose dangerousn­ess was downgraded by the U.S. intelligen­ce community in recent years.

Twenty of the remaining prisoners are approved for release.

In July the interagenc­y Periodic Review Board called Balzuhair a “low-level fighter” who was probably trying to get home to Yemen when he was captured Sept. 11, 2002, in Pakistan, not a would-be terrorist waiting in an al-Qaida safe house for assignment.

B a l z u h a i r w a s n e v e r charged with a crime.

“Shawqi is a private man who seeks anonymity upon his release,” said his attorney Angela Viramontes.

A U. S. Ai r Forc e c a r go plane took Balzuhair from Guantanamo on Friday morning. Secretary of Defense Ashton Carter provided Congress with notice of his “intent to transfer this individual and of the secretary’s determinat­ion that this transfer meets the statutory standard,” a Pentagon statement said.

Te n o f t h e r e ma i n i n g Guantanamo prisoners are charged with war crimes and 29 are “forever prisoners,” long-held captives considered too dangerous to release but ineligible for war-crimes trial.

Leaked prison records show Balzuhair was born in Hadramawt, Yemen, Osama bin Laden’s ancestral homeland. But long-standing U.S. policy has forbidden the return of most Guantanamo captives to the Arabian Peninsula nation with its civil war and powerful al-Qaida franchise.

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