Above Photo: THOMAS WATKINS/GETTY IMAGES
President Barack Obama is running out of time to fulfill his 2008 promise to close the Guantanamo Bay detention center.
Sixty-One Prisoners Remain, Seven are Facing Charges Before Military Commissions
The move is part of the president’s expedited effort to shrink the prison population as much as possible before January.
WASHINGTON ― The Pentagon announced the transfer of 15 prisoners out of the Guantanamo Bay detention facility on Monday evening, marking the largest single exodus of detainees from the infamous prison in Barack Obama’s presidency.
The 15 men are being transferred to the United Arab Emirates, a country that accepted five Yemeni detainees last year because the U.S. ruled out repatriating them to their unstable home country. Because congressional restrictions currently outlaw transferring detainees to the U.S., the Obama administration has relied on other countries to take in prisoners who are cleared for release by an inter-agency review board.
There are now 61 prisoners at Guantanamo, including seven who are facing charges in the military commissions system, the war court at Guantanamo.
Large-scale detainee transfers were common under former President George W. Bush, but they slowed under Obama ― in part because of congressional limitations on releasing detainees. But 2016 has marked a renewed effort by the administration to shrink the prison population before Obama leaves office in January.
Even with help from allies, it’s unclear how Obama will be able to fulfill his campaign promise of closing Guantanamo without moving prisoners to another facility in the U.S. There is a group of detainees the White House refers to as an irreducible minimum ― meaning there is not enough evidence to charge them with a crime, but they are considered too dangerous to release.
Here are the 15 detainees who were released:
Abd al-Muhsin Abd al-Rab Salih al-Busi
Abd al-Rahman Sulayman
Mohammed Nasir Yahi Khussrof Kazaz
Abdul Muhammad Ahmad Nassar al-Muhajari
Muhammad Ahmad Said al-Adahi
Abdel Qadir al-Mudafari
Mahmud Abd Al Aziz al-Mujahid
Saeed Ahmed Mohammed Abdullah Sarem Jarabh
Mohammed Kamin
Zahar Omar Hamis bin Hamdoun
Hamid al-Razak (aka Haji Hamidullah)
Majid Mahmud Abdu Ahmed
Ayub Murshid Ali Salih
Obaidullah
Bashir Nasir Ali al-Marwalah