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International News Updates |
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25 May 2009 Tirana, Albania - While President
Barack Obama made his case Thursday for the transfer
of Guantánamo Bay detainees, one of the terror camp's
former prisoners was studying recipes in a restaurant
kitchen here, doing his best to learn the chef skills
that will support his new life in this new land.
Abu Bakker Qassim is one of five Chinese Uighurs
released to Albania in 2005, after US authorities
feared that repatriating them to China would expose
them to persecution and human rights violations.
Seventeen of Mr. Qassim's Uighur compatriots remain in
Guantánamo, even though they have been found innocent
of wrongdoing and have been cleared for release.
Although an increasingly heated debate in the US
focuses on how to handle dozens of remaining suspected
terrorists held at Guantánamo, the Obama
administration faces an equally sticky dilemma over
releasing the innocent Uighurs.
The president has gotten resistance from Congress,
with some arguing that the Uighurs – guilty or not –
could pose a security threat. Other countries are
skittish of taking the men, worried of angering China,
which wants them returned for trial.
A detour in his path
When Qassim left his home in China's Xingjian
Province in 2000, his dream was to reach Turkey, or,
preferably, Western Europe.
After setting up a shop in Kyrgyzstan for a year with
little success, he joined a larger group of 17
would-be migrants as they set off through the
neighboring Central Asian republics.
In 2001, just days before the start of a US bombing
campaign aimed at overthrowing the Taliban regime in
Afghanistan, the Uighurs arrived in the Afghan city of
Jalalabad.
Four days after their arrival, Jalalabad was bombed.
The Uighurs left to seek sanctuary in neighboring
Pakistan. They could not know that, after an arduous
march through the mountains of Tora Bora, the
villagers who would greet them warmly on the other
side of the border had, only a few days earlier, been
blanketed by fliers from US aircraft, promising that
whoever "hunts an Arab becomes a rich man."
Though they had no knowledge of the Sept. 11 attacks,
the men were handed over to the Pakistan authorities
for the promised reward of $5,000. They would spend
the next four months in jail in Kandahar, Afghanistan,
before being sent to Guantánamo Bay.
"In Kandahar, the Americans realized we had nothing to
do with Al Qaeda, but they still shipped us to
Guantánamo," Qassim contends.
"At that point, we understood that we were flying
into hell."
Qassim spent the next five years behind steel bars.
From Cuba to Albania
Qassim and four other Uighurs were not released until
May 5, 2006, after a US federal court ruled that their
detention was illegal. The release came only hours
before an appeals court was expected to order that
they be freed.
The Bush administration worked intensely to find a
host country for the five men in order to prevent the
appeals court from freeing them on American soil.
After more than 100 countries refused, the US found a
host in Albania, its small ally in the Balkans, says
Sabin Willet, a Boston lawyer who defended the Uighurs.
Qassim and the four other Uighurs were flown to Tirana
on a Friday. The federal appeals court "was scheduled
to hear their case on the following Monday," Mr.
Willet says. "They were absolutely sent to Tirana to
avoid that hearing."
Not safe to go home
Of the 241 inmates still in Guantánamo, the US says
that roughly 60 – including the 17 remaining Uighurs,
as well as detainees from Libya, Uzbekistan, and
Algeria – cannot be returned to their home country
because they risk persecution at the hands of local
authorities.
"The remaining Uighurs would pose a threat to no one,
and Abu Baker is an example," Willet says, referring
to Qassim. "He has lived peacefully in Tirana for more
than three years, while the other Uighur men in Gitmo
have essentially the same background as Abu Bakker and
are as peaceful as he."
Human rights campaigners say that when the US has
returned former detainees to countries with poor human
rights records, they have faced threats, torture, and
persecution.
"If I was sent to China I would most likely end up in
jail or executed," Qassim says.
Still trapped
Although overwhelmingly Muslim, Albanian society is
strongly secular, and conservative Islam is often
frowned upon. When Qassim and the other Uighurs
arrived, they wore long beards, prompting concern from
locals.
"At the beginning, people looked on us as terrorists,
but I think the Albanians have come to understand that
we were no such thing," Qassim says. "They were
suspicious of our long beards, but now the beards have
gone and so have their doubts."
One of the Uighurs relocated to Albania has since been
granted political asylum in Sweden but the other four,
including Qassim, are doing their best to move forward
with life in Albania.
They have worked as volunteers for a local
nongovernmental organization, planted trees in the
city, and taken cooking lessons at local restaurants.
One of the men received a scholarship to study
computer science at American University in Tirana.
Qassim hopes to open his own restaurant soon. Although
he is settling into calmer times, he says that being
separated from his family for a decade has not been
easy.
"My wife was pregnant with twins when I left 10 years
ago," he says. "I speak to them on the phone, but
hardly have any hope left of being reunited."
Qassim has been working to push for the release of the
Uighurs still imprisoned in Cuba. He has written
President Obama to urge him to release the men. He
says he has faith that they will be freed soon.
Their release will be "good news for us, but also for
the American people," he says, "because it will lift
the doubts that Guantánamo has created about American
democracy."
EsinIslam.Com
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