Judge orders
17 Chinese
Muslims
released
from
Guantanamo
Bay
U.S.
District
Judge
Ricardo
Urbina is to
decide where
in the U.S.
the men can
be released.
The Pentagon
cleared most
of them of
wrongdoing
four years
ago.
By David
G. Savage,
Los Angeles
Times Staff
Writer
08/10/08
"LATimes"
-- -For
the first
time, a
federal
judge has
ordered the
Bush
administration
to release
prisoners
held at the
U.S.
military
facility at
Guantanamo
Bay, Cuba,
ruling
Tuesday that
17 Chinese
Muslims must
be brought
to his
courtroom by
the end of
the week so
that they
can be set
free.
U.S.
District
Judge
Ricardo M.
Urbina said
that the
government's
authority to
hold the men
had "ceased"
and that
they were
entitled to
be released.
He said he
would hold a
hearing to
decide on
the
conditions
for
releasing
the men.
Several
religious
and social
groups,
including 20
church
leaders from
Tallahassee,
Fla., said
they would
help the men
resettle in
their
community.
The 17 are
Uighurs who
fled
persecution
in the far
western
reaches of
China. U.S.
authorities,
fearing what
Chinese
officials
would do,
have refused
to send them
back to
China, and
no other
country has
been willing
to take
them.
The judge's
order came
more than
six years
after the
men were
sent to
Guantanamo
and more
than four
years after
the Pentagon
cleared most
of them to
be released.
The Supreme
Court ruled
four months
ago that
judges can
order the
release of
prisoners
wrongly held
at
Guantanamo.
Soon
thereafter,
a federal
appeals
court
reviewed the
case of one
of the
Uighurs,
Huzaifa
Parhat, and
ruled that
the
government
had no basis
for
believing he
was an
"enemy
combatant."
That
decision set
the stage
for Urbina's
ruling
Tuesday.
Civil
liberties
advocates
hailed the
order.
"This is a
historic day
for the
United
States,"
said Emi
MacLean, a
lawyer for
the Center
for
Constitutional
Rights.
"Finally, we
are
beginning
the process
of taking
responsibility
for our
mistakes and
fixing
them."
But Bush
administration
lawyers have
insisted
that judges
have no
authority to
interfere
with the
handling of
foreign
military
prisoners.
On Tuesday,
they also
argued that
immigration
laws
prohibit the
release into
the United
States of
individuals
alleged to
have
terrorist
ties and
asked for an
emergency
order to
block the
release.
Administration
officials
"are deeply
concerned by
and strongly
disagreed
with" the
decision to
release the
men, White
House Press
Secretary
Dana Perino
said in a
statement.
Human rights
lawyers have
described
the 17
Uighurs as
among the
most
egregious
examples of
wrongful
imprisonment
at
Guantanamo.
Natives of
an area they
call East
Turkistan,
the Uighurs
fled from
oppression
by the
Chinese
government,
including
its policy
of forced
abortions,
and settled
in
Afghanistan
in 2001.
But after
U.S. bombing
raids hit
their camps,
they fled to
Pakistan,
where they
were taken
into custody
by locals,
who turned
them over to
U.S. troops
offering
$5,000
bounties for
suspected
foreign
fighters.
The U.S.
military
alleged that
the Uighurs
had received
military
training,
and they
were
suspected of
ties to the
East
Turkistan
Islamic
Movement,
which the
State
Department
had
designated a
terrorist
group.
But the
Uighurs
strongly
denied any
ties to the
Taliban, Al
Qaeda or
other
enemies of
the United
States;
their only
enemy, they
said, was
the
government
of China.
They said
they had
initially
welcomed
being in
U.S.
custody,
hoping they
would be
safe and
treated
humanely.
Instead, 22
Uighurs were
imprisoned
at
Guantanamo
Bay in 2002.
Five were
released and
sent to
Albania two
years ago,
but the rest
remained in
custody
because no
country was
willing to
accept them.
Lawyers
spent years
in court
arguing for
their
release.
"The U.S.
government
has long
recognized
these men
did not
pose, and
really never
posed, a
threat to
the United
States,"
said
Jennifer
Daskal, a
lawyer for
Human Rights
Watch.
Tuesday's
ruling was
significant,
she said,
because a
judge
"rejected
the Bush
administration's
theory that
its own
determination
can trump
judicial
review and
constitutional
rights."
Neil
McGaraghan,
a Boston
lawyer who
worked on
the Uighurs'
case, said
the men
would be
released
from
military
custody
Friday,
barring a
last-minute
order from
the
appellate
court.
Since 2002,
the Pentagon
has approved
the release
of more than
500
prisoners
from
Guantanamo,
including
the five
Uighurs sent
to Albania.
More than
250 are
still being
held,
including
about 60 who
would be
freed if the
U.S.
government
could find
countries
willing to
take them.
david.savage@latimes.com