Rear Admiral Thomas H. Copeman III, Commandant of the Guantanamo Bay detention camps, ordered the posting of the official list of Guantanamo captives cleared in 2009.[1][2]
During the last years of the Presidency of George W. Bush captives had annual reviews conducted by an Office for the Administrative Review of Detained Enemy Combatants.
On January 22, 2009, two days after President Barack Obama took office, he issued Executive Orders 13491, 13492 and 13493, all of which concerned how the United States should treat its captives.[3][4][5]
The new policies superseded the older reviews, and included new, inter-agency reviews. President Obama announced plans to close the camps before January 22, 2010. According to the Associated Press and Reuters Admiral Copeman ordered the lists of captives who had been cleared for release to be posted to prevent the spread of rumors.[1][2] Reuters reported the official list included 78 names.[2] A further 17 captives have been repatriated or transferred since President Obama took office.
Nationality of Guantanamo captives cleared for release in 2009
Captives known to have been released, transferred or repatriated in 2009
Six captives left Guantanamo on January 17, 2009, four days before Barack Obama took office.
As of September 29, 2009 17 captives have been released, transferred or repatriated sing Barack Obama took office and reversed some policies of the George W. Bush Presidency. Some of these men were released, after a habeas corpus petition ruled that the USA was holding them illegally.
Other captive were not cleared of suspicion of playing a role that had threatened the USA, but were repatriated to their home country, or transferred to the custody of a third country, because they were determined to no longer pose a significant threat.
In addition a captive died while in the camp's psychiatric wing, and another captive was transferred to the USA to stand trial in civilian court.
Captives known to have been released, transferred or repatriated in 2009
ISN |
transfer date |
transfer type |
nationality |
destination |
name |
notes
|
968 |
2009-01-17 |
release |
Greece |
Greece |
Alex Korakitis |
|
175 |
2009-01-17 |
repatriation |
Algeria |
Algeria |
Hassan Mujamma Rabai Said |
- Identity initially withheld following repatriation.[6][7][8]
|
111 |
2009-01-17 |
repatriation |
Iraq |
Iraq |
Ali Abdul Motalib Awayd Hassan al Tayeea |
- Identity initially withheld following repatriation.[6][9]
|
435 |
2009-01-17 |
repatriation |
Iraq |
Iraq |
Hassan Abdul Said |
- Identity initially withheld following repatriation.[6][10]
|
653 |
2009-01-17 |
repatriation |
Iraq |
Iraq |
Arkan Mohammad Ghafil al Karim |
- Identity initially withheld following repatriation.[6][11]
|
758 |
2009-01-17 |
repatriation |
Iraq |
Iraq |
Abbas Habid Rumi al Naely |
- Identity initially withheld following repatriation.[6][12]
|
1458 |
2009-02-23 |
transfer |
Ethiopia |
United Kingdom |
Binyam Mohamed |
- Binyam Mohamed had long-term permanent resident status in the United Kingdom prior to visiting Afghanistan.
- He was held for years in CIA custody, where he described horrific torture, and that all his confessions were triggered by coercive interrogation.
- Charges were laid against him before a military commission that he had plotted with Jose Padilla, Abu Zubaydah and Majid Khan to explode dirty bombs in the USA.
- When evidence emerged that he really had been tortured, and that UK security officials were complicit in the torture, the UK government negotiated for the charges to be dropped and for him to be transferred to the UK.
|
10005 |
2009-05-15 |
release |
Bosnia |
France |
Lakhdar Boumediene |
|
10012 |
2009-06-09 |
trial |
Tanzania |
US |
Ahmed Khalfan Ghailani |
- One of the captives who spent years in the CIA's black sites.
- The first Guantanamo captive transferred to the United States to stand trial in Civilian court on charges he helped plan attacks on American embassies in Africa.
|
433 |
2009-06-10 |
repatriation |
Iraq |
Iraq |
Jawad Jabber Sadkhan |
- Identity initially withheld following repatriation.[13]
|
269 |
2009-06-10 |
release |
Chad |
Chad |
Mohammed El Gharani |
- Captured in Pakistan, when he was still a child.[14]
- Although El Gharani is officially a citizen of Chad, he was born in Saudi Arabia to Chadian guest workers. He had never lived in Chad, and couldn't communicate with anyone there.[15][16]
|
278 |
2009-06-11 |
release |
Uyghur |
Bermuda |
Khaleel Mamut |
|
285 |
2009-06-11 |
release |
Uyghur |
Bermuda |
Abdullah Abdulqadirakhun |
|
295 |
2009-06-11 |
release |
Uyghur |
Bermuda |
Salahidin Abdulahat |
|
320 |
2009-06-11 |
release |
Uyghur |
Bermuda |
Ablikim Turahun |
|
335 |
2009-06-12 |
|
Saudi Arabia |
Saudi Arabia |
Khalid Saad Mohammed |
|
669 |
2009-06-12 |
|
Saudi Arabia |
Saudi Arabia |
Ahmed Zaid Salim Zuhair |
- A long term hunger striker, whose weight had dropped dangerously low, in spite of twice-daily force-feeding.
|
687 |
2009-06-12 |
|
Saudi Arabia |
Saudi Arabia |
Abdalaziz Kareem Salim al Noofayaee |
|
900 |
2009-08-24 |
release |
Afghanistan |
Afghanistan |
Mohammed Jawad |
- A child when captured, he faced charges before a Guantanamo military commission.[17][18][19][20]
- His Prosecutor resigned when he realized that the evidence against Jawad consisted largely of coerced confessions.
- Stephen Henley the Presiding officer ruled out the use coerced testimony.
- US District Court Judge Ellen S. Huvelle, the judge presiding over his habeas corpus petition, also ruled the confessions were coerced, and thus inadmissible, and orders his release.
- United States Attorney General Eric Holder orders a new criminal investigation.[18][21] The Justice Department claims they have new witnesses, which will justify laying new charges against Jawad in a civilian court in the USA.
- Jawad's lawyer's travel to Afghanistan, visit the site of the bombing, and interview the witnesses, who invite them to outbid the Prosecution. The Prosecution's case collapses.
|
312 |
2009-08-28 |
transfer |
Syria |
Portugal |
Muhammad Abd Al Nasir Muhammad Khantumani |
|
317 |
2009-08-28 |
transfer |
Syria |
Portugal |
Moammar Badawi Dokhan |
|
692 |
2009/09/26 |
release |
Yemen |
Yemen |
Alla Ali Bin Ali Ahmed |
|
22 |
2009-09-26 |
transfer |
Uzbekistan |
Ireland |
Shakrukh Hamiduva |
|
452 |
2009-09-26 |
transfer |
Uzbekistan |
Ireland |
Oybek Jamoldinivich Jabbarov |
|
213 |
2009-10-09 |
repatriation |
Kuwait |
Kuwait |
Khalid Mutairi |
ordered the immediate repatriation of Khaled Al Mutairi
on July 29, 2009.[27][28][29]
- transferred from Guantanamo on October 9, 2009.[30]
|
|
2009-10-09 |
transfer |
|
Belgium |
|
- His name and nationality were withheld.[30]
- Belgian officials said he was a free man, who would be aided into a rapid re-intregration into society, `after a particularly difficult time in Guantánamo.'.[30]
|
References