Video below provided by RT News:
Human Rights Attorneys and Activists Hold Rally, March and Briefing
to Demand Closure of Base and Oppose Preventive Detention in U.S.
January 11, 2010, Washington, D.C. – To mark the beginning of the
ninth year of detention without charge or trial at Guantánamo today,
activists and lawyers of detained men held a rally, a march, and a
public briefing to outline current issues related to President Obama’s
Guantanamo, demand that the president make good on his pledge to close
the prison, and declare their opposition to any plan for holding
prisoners without charge or trial in the U.S. Formerly detained men and
detainee families addressed President Obama via a combination of video,
audio, and written letters.
Lakhdar Boumediene called in to the briefing at the National Press
Club from his home in France, and Omar Deghayes joined the briefing
from his home in the United Kingdom. Mr. Boumediene was the lead
plaintiff in the landmark Supreme Court case of 2008, Boumediene v.
Bush, in which the Court affirmed that Guantànamo detainees have the
right to file writs of habeas corpus in U.S. federal courts. He was
released on May 15, 2009. As a child, Omar Deghayes settled with his
family in the U.K. as a refugee from Lybia. Picked up in Pakistan and
sent to Bagram and Guantánamo, he was blinded in one eye at the base in
2004. Mr. Deghayes was released from Guantanamo to the U.K. on December
19, 2007.
The Center for Constitutional Rights (CCR) briefing also featured a
recorded statement from Mohammed Sulaymon Barre from his home in
Somaliland and other detainee voices addressing the president. Said Mr.
Barre, who was released on December 20, 2009, “Hurry up and close this
prison that has become a blot of shame upon all of America. Do it fast.
Do it quickly.”
Detainee lawyers and human rights activists spoke on “Obama’s
Guantánamo,” addressing issues including the continued and worsening
lack of transparency, resettlement for men who cannot return to their
home countries, the threat of indefinite detention schemes in the U.S.,
the halt of transfers to Yemen and related responses to the recent
terrorism attempt, and more.
Vincent Warren, CCR Executive Director, Pardiss Kebriaei, CCR
attorney for detainees, Frida Berrigan of Witness Against Torture, and
Stacy Sullivan, Counterterrorism Advisor at Human Rights Watch spoke
about the current situation and the challenges and dangers ahead.
Said CCR Executive Director Vincent Warren, “This is Obama’s
Guantánamo now. He has failed in his pledge to close the island prison
from a lack of leadership, bowing to the pressures of partisan
grandstanding, and vigorous attempts to keep all cases out of the
courts. The transparency we were promised has been discarded. This is
an anniversary that should not have come.”
“The Obama administration should commemorate Guantanamo's eighth
anniversary by renewing its pledge to close the detention center
swiftly and responsibly,” said Stacy Sullivan, counterterrorism advisor
at Human Rights Watch. “Thus far, the Obama administration has been
very careful about not sending detainees back to countries where they
are likely to face torture, abuse, or further indefinite detention
without charge. That said, we are very concerned that several detainees
may be facing involuntary repatriation to countries such as Algeria and
Tajikistan. We urge the administration not to follow through with these
plans.”
Said Frida Berrigan, a Brooklyn, NY, organizer with Witness Against
Torture, "I do not relish the idea of fasting. But President Obama’s
promises of change have atrophied into empty rhetoric. And, now I watch
in horror as my country rises up in fear and vengeance once again. I
watch in horror as the debased torture policies of the Bush
administration are defended, described once more as necessary. Our Fast
and Vigil for Justice is a small attempt to answer the ultimate
question Guantanamo poses: how do we conquer fear and remain human?"
Earlier, members of Witness Against Torture (WAT) held a rally in
front of the White House to protest the lack of progress toward justice
for detainees since Obama took office and demanded true change from the
administration. Speakers announced a 12-Day Fast for Justice in
Washington D.C., ending on January 22 – the Obama administration’s
self-declared, and now-voided, deadline for closing Guantánamo.
Following the demonstration, activists staged a Guantánamo prisoner
procession to the National Press Club where they joined the briefing.
To learn more and see a video of Mr. Barre's statement and other resources, visit http://ccrjustice.org/obamas-guantanamo.
CCR has led the legal battle over Guantanamo for the last eight
years – sending the first ever habeas attorney to the base and sending
the first attorney to meet with a former CIA “ghost detainee” there.
CCR has been responsible for organizing and coordinating more than 500
pro bono lawyers across the country in order to represent the men at
Guantanamo, ensuring that nearly all have had the option of legal
representation. In addition, CCR has been working to resettle the
approximately 50 men who remain at Guantánamo because they cannot
return to their country of origin for fear of persecution and torture.
Witness Against Torture