They were held for 12 years without charges, subject to torturous interrogation methods, and ordered to be released by a U.S. federal judge in 2008.
Yet, it was not until the final days of 2013 that the last three of 22 ethnic Uighurs from China were freed from the U.S. military’s notorious offshore prison in Guantánamo Bay, Cuba.
The Department of Defense announced Tuesday that the three men — Yusef Abbas, Hajiakbar Abdulghuper and Saidullah Khalik — have been “resettled” to Slovakia, making them “the last ethnic Uighur Chinese nationals to be transferred from the Guantánamo Bay detention facility.”
“These men have became a symbol of the tragedy of Guantánamo,” said Wells Dixon, senior attorney for the Center for Constitutional Rights, in an interview with Common Dreams.
The 22 men were erroneously detained in eastern Afghanistan in 2001, where they said they had come to escape persecution in China, where they are an ethnic minority.
“They were given to the U.S. for detention at a time when U.S. forces were heavily reliant on Afghan proxies who had their own agendas and who accepted bounties for captives,” writes Spencer Ackerman for The Guardian.
During the early period of their captivity, the men were subject to sleep deprivation, freezing temperatures, and isolation, according to a 2009 congressional testimony.
As early as 2003, the U.S. military determined that the three Uigher captives were “not affiliated with Al Qaeda or a Taliban leader” according to leaked dossiers reported by The New York Times.
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