Chattanooga Times Free Press

Biden’s win means some Guantanamo prisoners may be released

- BY BEN FOX

WASHINGTON — The oldest prisoner at the Guantanamo Bay detention center went to his latest review board hearing with a degree of hope, something that has been scarce during his 16 years locked up without charges at the U.S. base in Cuba.

Saifullah Paracha, a 73-yearold Pakistani with diabetes and a heart condition, had two things going for him that he didn’t have at previous hearings: a favorable legal developmen­t and the election of Joe Biden.

President Donald Trump had effectivel­y ended the Obama administra­tion’s practice of reviewing the cases of men held at Guantanamo and releasing them if imprisonme­nt was no longer deemed necessary. Now there’s hope that will resume under Biden.

“I am more hopeful now simply because we have an administra­tion to look forward to that isn’t dead set on ignoring the existing review process,” Paracha’s attorney, Shelby Sullivan-Bennis, said by phone from the base on Nov. 19 after the hearing. “The simple existence of that on the horizon I think is hope for all of us.”

Guantanamo was once a source of global outrage and a symbol of U.S. excess in response to terrorism. But it largely faded from headlines after President Barack Obama failed to close it, even as 40 men continue to be detained there.

Those pushing for its closure now see a window of opportunit­y, hoping Biden’s administra­tion will find a way to prosecute those who can be prosecuted and release the rest, extricatin­g the U.S. from a detention center that costs more than $445 million per year.

Biden’s precise intentions for Guantanamo remain unclear. Transition spokesman Ned Price said the president-elect supports closing it, but it would be inappropri­ate to discuss his plans in detail before he’s in office.

His reticence is actually welcome to those who have pressed to close Guantanamo. Obama’s early pledge to close it is seen as a strategic mistake that undercut what had been a bipartisan issue.

“I think it’s more likely to close if it doesn’t become a huge press issue,” said Andrea Prasow, deputy Washington director at Human Rights Watch.

The detention center opened in 2002. President George W. Bush’s administra­tion transforme­d what had been a sleepy Navy outpost on Cuba’s southeaste­rn tip into a place to interrogat­e and imprison people suspected of links to al-Qaida and the Taliban after the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States