ADVERTISEMENT

US President vows to keep Guantanamo Bay prison open

Under president George W. Bush, the US military hastily constructed a prison camp on Guantanamo Bay, located on the US naval base on the eastern tip of Cuba, in the months following the US-led invasion of Afghanistan after the September 11, 2001 attacks.

"I just signed an order directing Secretary Mattis to reexamine our military detention policy and to keep open the detention facilities at Guantanamo Bay," Trump said, in his State of the Union address to Congress, in keeping with a campaign promise.

At first, inmates were held in cages and fenced in with razor wire, and conditions for the orange jumpsuit-clad detainees provoked a global outcry in 2002.

That early facility, known as Camp X-Ray, was soon replaced with more permanent structures and today, Guantanamo Bay consists of numerous high-security prison buildings.

ADVERTISEMENT

At the height of its operations after 9/11, the facility held 780 people, detained mostly for their alleged ties to Al-Qaeda and the Taliban.

Since then, hundreds have been transferred back to their home countries or other places.

Some of the most notorious inmates, including several alleged 9/11 co-conspirators, among them accused mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, are still awaiting trial.

Their cases have been beset by legal woes at Guantanamo, where a bespoke criminal justice system grants detainees -- who are considered "unprivileged enemy belligerents" -- only some of the legal rights that US federal courts guarantee.

Of the 41 inmates remaining at Guantanamo, about 26 are trapped in legal purgatory.

ADVERTISEMENT

These so-called "forever prisoners" have never been charged -- yet they have been deemed too dangerous to release.

Some were cleared for release under Obama, but have been stranded at Guantanamo under the Trump administration.

'Bad dudes'

On the campaign trail, Trump famously vowed he would load Guantanamo with "bad dudes," and said it would be "fine" if US terror suspects were sent there for trial.

In 2009, soon after he was sworn in, Obama ordered the prison to be closed within a year, and no new inmate has been sent there since early 2008.

ADVERTISEMENT

Political bickering, vehement Republican opposition and foreign allies' reluctance to take in the prisoners meant Obama could not close Guantanamo, though the population dropped from 242 to 41 under his watch.

Since becoming president, Trump has toyed with the idea of sending Americans to Guantanamo, though federal judges would likely bar any such attempt.

In October, he suggested that the man accused of carrying out a deadly truck attack along a bike path in New York could be sent to Guantanamo, but he later backed off the idea.

Another case that could potentially bring Guantanamo into legal focus is that of a US citizen who was captured in Syria and had allegedly been fighting for the Islamic State group.

The man, whose name has not been released, is apparently being held in Iraq.

ADVERTISEMENT

The American Civil Liberties Union has taken up his case and a federal judge has ruled that the US must give it advance notice before transferring the man overseas.

That would allow time for the ACLU to mount a legal challenge.

JOIN OUR PULSE COMMUNITY!

Unblock notifications in browser settings.
ADVERTISEMENT

Eyewitness? Submit your stories now via social or:

Email: eyewitness@pulse.ng

Recommended articles

3 dead, 2 injured in 3-storey building collapse in Kano - NEMA confirms

3 dead, 2 injured in 3-storey building collapse in Kano - NEMA confirms

Lagos NCS visits family of stampede victim, promises nonstop financial support

Lagos NCS visits family of stampede victim, promises nonstop financial support

Husband appeals to I-G to find missing Police wife who went on official duty

Husband appeals to I-G to find missing Police wife who went on official duty

ASUU Sokoto demands council reconfirmation, payment of allowances

ASUU Sokoto demands council reconfirmation, payment of allowances

Yahaya Bello: Charge, prosecute US school for money laundering - Sowore to EFCC

Yahaya Bello: Charge, prosecute US school for money laundering - Sowore to EFCC

Don't hide deformed kids, they can contribute to nation's growth - Expert

Don't hide deformed kids, they can contribute to nation's growth - Expert

Tragedy as suspected bandits ambush, kill army commander in Katsina

Tragedy as suspected bandits ambush, kill army commander in Katsina

Adeleke wants residents to fish out water pipeline vandals round the clock

Adeleke wants residents to fish out water pipeline vandals round the clock

APC uncover how Kano govt mobilises protest against Ganduje in Abuja

APC uncover how Kano govt mobilises protest against Ganduje in Abuja

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT