Almotamar Net - Sanaa: About 100 Yemenis might be sent home once the US government surrenders to public pressure and court decisions incriminating it for holding the men illegally and closes the Guantanamo detention, said lawyers returning from a visit to the detention centre in Cuba.

Tuesday, 28-August-2007
Almotamar.net & Gulf News - Sanaa: About 100 Yemenis might be sent home once the US government surrenders to public pressure and court decisions incriminating it for holding the men illegally and closes the Guantanamo detention, said lawyers returning from a visit to the detention centre in Cuba.
The American lawyer David Remes, who represents 15 Yemen detainees, said the Yemeni government needs to give top priority to the issue of having the Yemenis released even if the detention is closed.
"The Yemeni prisoners at Guantanamo will never be sent home unless President Saleh makes it a top priority to bring them home. Otherwise, there is no telling where the US will send the Yemenis when it closes Guantanamo," Remes said in exclusive statements sent to Gulf News at the end of his visit to the detention in Cuba early this week. He represents 15 Yemeni prisoners.
Out of 107, only 12 Yemenis have been released during the period from mid-2004 to mid-2007. The last four men who arrived in Yemen, among them one of the clients of Remes, were released last June, but security authorities are still holding them in prison until now.
The Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh said early this week that his government would spare no efforts to follow up the issue with the US government for sending the Yemenis home.
The lawyer made it clear that the Bush administration wants to close down the detention before the Supreme Court listens to the lawyers' arguments late this year.
"The government might even close Guantanamo before the Supreme Court hears argument from the lawyers in early December, and it will probably issue its decision between April and the end of June. That is the last thing the government wants, and I predict that the government will close the detention to avoid being required to do so," said Remes of the Covington and Burling law firm.
"We believe that the Supreme Court will declare that the government has acted unlawfully in holding the men in Guantanamo and order the government to give the men a fair judicial hearing," he added.
The US government, the lawyer added, is also facing a bad decision from a lower federal court, which will put more pressure on the officials to close the detention.

Remes said his two-day visit to Guantanamo allowed him to meet only two of the Yemeni detainees Yassin Qassim Mohammed Ismael and Abdulmalik Abdulwahab Al-Rahbi who he met him for the first time because he used to refuse meeting lawyers at all and looks at them with suspicion. Remes said he felt sad when he discovered that Yassin has spent almost quarter of his life in that gloomy prison. He said he met Yassin on Thursday 23 of this month for the first time and he appeared nice and that made him feel pleased and exchanged entertaining talk with him. He said Yassin was complaining of pains but his health in general was good.

This story was printed at: Monday, 25-November-2024 Time: 01:37 AM
Original story link: http://www.almotamar.net/en/3287.htm