Lawyer for Guantanamo Bay Uyghurs Vows To Fight
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WASHINGTON-The lead lawyer for 17 ethnic Uyghurs held for years at
Guantanamo Bay in Cuba is vowing to fight a new legal order keeping the
men in U.S. military custody and is calling on U.S. President Barack
Obama to free them quickly, Radio Free Asia (RFA) reports.
"We are bloodied but unbowed. We will fight this," Sabin Willet, who
represents the 17 Uyghurs-Muslims from China's northwestern Xinjiang
region-said in a telephone interview on his way back from visiting the
men at Guantanamo Bay.
"Precisely what our next legal filing will be we have not decided, but
the courts have not heard the last from us," said Willet, who spent all
day Thursday with the detainees and translator Rushan Abbas at
Guantanamo.
"There is a mechanism for seeking further review in the Court of
Appeals, and the Supreme Court is a second option."
On Wednesday, a three-judge panel from the U.S. Court of Appeals
reversed an earlier ruling that the Uyghurs-who have been cleared of the
terrorism charges on which they were initially detained-must be released
in the United States.
The panel said a federal judge who ordered the men released into the
United States in October 2008 lacks the authority to make such a ruling,
and that only the executive branch can make such a determination.
The Uyghurs have remained at Guantanamo because the United States has
been unable to find a country willing to take them and won't return them
to China because they would face persecution there.
Albania, which took in five other Uyghurs in 2006 after they were
released from Guantanamo, has balked at welcoming the others-apparently
fearing reprisals from Beijing.
The 17 detainees "are deeply disappointed and frustrated," Willet said.
"They were a few hours from freedom on Oct. 9... This is a long time to
be in a military prison. There is deep disappointment and frustration
among these men."
"At the same time we mean to remind President Obama every day that this
is his problem. The court concluded that the courts can't solve this
problem, and that's wrong, but that's what they concluded," Willet said.
Obama "can solve this problem, and he should do it, and he should do it
tomorrow morning," he said.
Willet said his clients were being held in better conditions recently,
with military officials "working hard in the last two weeks to arrange
calls" between the detainees and their families.
The Uyghur detainees resettled in Albania have tried to send letters to
the Uyghurs still held at Guantanamo, he said, although whether they
reached Guantanamo was unclear. He also said his request for a phone
call to his clients from the Uyghurs in Albania hasn't been met.
Previous order
The Obama administration has vowed to close Guantanamo within a year but
hasn't decided what to do with the 245 detainees still held in custody
there.
U.S. District Judge Ricardo Urbina ruled in October that there was no
evidence the detainees were "enemy combatants" or a security risk and
ordered them freed to live with Uyghur families in the United States.
The Chinese government says the men are members of the outlawed East
Turkestan Islamic Movement (ETIM), which Beijing and Washington regard
as a terrorist organization. Beijing blames ETIM for a series of violent
attacks inside China in recent years.
Uyghurs twice enjoyed short-lived independence after declaring the state
of East Turkestan during the 1930s and 40s, and many oppose Beijing's
rule in the region. Chinese officials have said Uyghur extremists
plotted terrorist strikes during the Beijing Olympics.
Original reporting by Sarah Jackson-Han in Washington.
Radio Free Asia is a private, nonprofit corporation broadcasting and
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