Since the opening of the U.S. military prison in Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, a well-orchestrated propaganda campaign has stoked our fears of those held in the prison.
But some towns are now shaking off the fear and fighting back against the fear-mongers with an unusual tactic: Town-hall resolutions that invite the Federal government to relocate a released Guantánamo detainee in their town.
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Since the opening of the U.S. military prison in Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, a
well-orchestrated propaganda campaign has stoked our fears of those
held in the prison, who have been routinely referred to as the "Worst of
the worst." After President Obama announced a plan to transfer
Guantánamo prisoners to a prison within the U.S., the fear-mongering
kicked into high gear and Congress capitulated, blocking funds for the
transfer, based on the irrational belief that no prison could be secure
enough to protect us from Guantánamo's super-terrorists.
But
some towns are now shaking off the fear and fighting back against the
fear-mongers with an unusual tactic: Town-hall resolutions that invite
the Federal government to relocate a released Guantánamo detainee in
their town.
The campaign, organized by
No More
Guantánamos, has been
helped by recent findings that the vast majority of those held in the
prison are in fact innocent victims who had nothing to do with
terrorism.
Just two weeks ago, a Federal judge, after finding
that
"there
is no persuasive evidence to justify his detention," ordered the
release of Mohammed Hassen, a 27-year old Yemeni imprisoned by the U.S.
without charges for 8 years. Hassen was the 36th detainee ordered
released when a
habeas corpus hearing found no evidence of ties
to
terrorism. As blogger
Glenn
Greenwald notes, 72% of the Guantánamo detainees offered a chance
to challenge their imprisonment have been found innocent.
No
More Guantánamos aims to tell the stories of Guantánamo's prisoners in
order to "Transform prisoners' images in the U.S. from faceless,
nameless 'terrorists' to human beings who deserve human rights and a
presumption of innocence until proven guilty." In two towns in
Massachusetts, Leverett and Amherst, these public education campaigns
have been so successful that resolutions calling for local resettlement
of released Guantánamo prisoners have won passage in town-hall
meetings. The Leverett resolution, noting that "many detainees at
Guantánamo have been cleared by our government of wrongdoing and have
been determined to pose no threat to the United States" and "many of
these detainees cannot be repatriated because they are either stateless
or fear the harm awaiting them if returned to their home country"
urges Congress to "repeal the ban on releasing cleared detainees into
the United States" and "Welcomes such cleared detainees into our
community as soon as the ban is lifted."
Who are the detainees
that the people of Leverett and Amherst hope to welcome into their
communities? Colonel Lawrence Wilkerson, a former top aide to Colin
Powell, President Bush's Secretary of State, recently answered this
question in
a
written statement in support of a lawsuit filed by one Guantánamo
detainee. Wilkerson says that the majority of detainees -- children as
young as 12 and men as old as 93 -- never saw a US soldier when they were
captured. He said that many were turned over by Afghans and Pakistanis
for up to $5,000. Little or no evidence was produced as to why they
had been taken.
No More Guantánamos (NMG) encourages activists
to
start
with a local "kickoff meeting" to discuss the plight of
Guantánamo's many innocent detainees and to introduce the idea of
resettlement. After that initial step, NMG assists local groups in
identifying a prisoner, finding information, telling his story, and
even writing to the prisoner about their efforts. After sufficient
public-education work, local activists may choose to move on to a
town-hall or city-council resolution requesting resettlement of a freed
Guantánamo prisoner.
What could life be like for a Guantánamo
detainee newly resettled in your town? The experience of Uyghur
detainees resettled to Palau and Bermuda offers one example. The
Uyghurs, a persecuted ethnic and religious minority in their home
country of China, came to Afghanistan in search of work, and were
rounded up and sold to U.S. military officials by Afghan warlords
working with the U.S. After eight years of imprisonment, the U.S.
government admitted that the Uyghurs had no ties to terrorism and were
no threat to the United States, but repatriation to their home country
of China was not possible, given the risk of persecution by Chinese
authorities. The Obama administration eventually worked out
arrangements with Palau, a tiny island republic in the south Pacific,
and Bermuda to relocate some of the Uyghur prisoners. Khalil Mamut, one
of four Uyghur prisoners relocated to Bermuda, says, of his first year
in his new home,
"It
has been a wonderful year. A year ago we were in Guantánamo Bay
but this year, praise be to God, we are here. We have a lot of friends --
some Muslims, some Christians -- and they treat us as if we are
Bermudian."
Get started on your own No More Guantánamos campaign
here...
Authors Website: www.wnpj.org
Authors Bio:Steve Burns is Program Director of Wisconsin Network of Peace a Justice, a coalition of more than 160 groups that work for peace, social justice and environmental sustainability.