Guantanamo Has Been Open Longer Under President Obama Than President Bush

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As of January 30th, 2016, Guantanamo will be open under President Obama longer than it was open under President Bush. Here is one detainee’s story—and he is not alone:

“When I used to go for interrogations, I was unable to walk because of the restraints on my legs and tightness on my feet. I would fall down to the ground and scream that I cannot walk. They would pick me up from the ground and I would walk with them while they are hitting me on the way to the interrogation until I would bleed from my feet. When I would fall to the ground, they would drag me while I am on the ground. … Sometimes they would put a weapon on my head threatening to kill me….”

This is how Guantánamo detainee Toffiq al-Bihani described the treatment he suffered at the hands of the CIA before coming to Guantánamo. Starting in early 2002 the U.S. government detained and interrogated Toffiq for about a year. After being subjected to the infamous CIA torture program, he was transferred to Guantánamo in early 2003. That’s where he remains to this day.

As of January 30, 2016, the detention camp has been open under President Obama longer than it was open under President Bush. Despite multiple promises to close Guantánamo, President Obama oversees the continued detention of 91 individuals including Toffiq.

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Toffiq’s story is heartbreaking, and is all too similar to the plight of these other 90 other men.

Here are four ways that Toffiq’s story is like that dozens of other detainees stuck at Guantánamo:

Toffiq is one of the 91 individuals still in Guantánamo—individuals with unique lives, personal histories, hopes and dreams. Toffiq is now 43 years old, and nearly 13 years of his life have been spent in Guantánamo. Despite the unfathomable circumstances he has faced over the years, Toffiq’s attorneys say he remains good-humored and friendly. They say he has a colorful personality, likes to joke around, and is an avid fan of European soccer. While in detention at Guantánamo Bay, he has taken it upon himself to learn English and Spanish.

Toffiq is one of the 34 detainees who have been cleared to leave Guantánamo. These detainees have been cleared to be transferred out of the detention camp, but are still there. They have been told they can leave, but they are still waiting. Toffiq himself was cleared in 2010, after a joint task force consisting of representatives of the Departments of Justice, Defense, State, and Homeland Security, as well as the Office of the Director of National Intelligence and the Joint Chiefs of Staff determined that Toffiq did not pose a national security risk. These same national security agencies approved each and every detainee who, like Toffiq, has been cleared for transfer. Yet they are still waiting to leave. It’s been nearly six years since Toffiq was cleared.

Enduring Freedom

Toffiq is one of the 81 detainees being held without charge. Of the 91 people still in Guantánamo, 81 are being held without charge. Only 10 individuals in Guantánamo are facing (or have been convicted by) the unfair military commissions system, which does not meet international fair trial standards. The others – the vast majority – are facing detention without charge or trial. Toffiq has never been charged with a crime in his nearly 13 years spent in Guantánamo.

Toffiq is one of more than two dozen current Guantanamo detainees who were subjected to human rights violations in the CIA’s secret detention and torture program. Toffiq al-Bihani’s case was specifically mentioned in last year’s Senate “torture report.” We learned from that report that the CIA used unlawful tactics on Toffiq that went beyond what was authorized by Justice Department lawyers who themselves rejected human rights law. We learned that other detainees were subjected to forced nudity, sexual abuse, beatings, waterboarding and more. No one has been held accountable for the torture and ill-treatment of these detainees.

The Obama administration must either charge the Guantánamo detainees and give them a fair trial, or release them. There also must be full investigations and redress for the torture and other ill-treatment that Toffiq and other detainees have suffered.

10 years of Guantanamo - Close Guantanamo Now

Time is running out for President Obama to make these changes before he leaves office.

Take action: sign and share the global petition urging him to spend the remaining months in his presidency prioritizing closing Guantánamo, ending indefinite detention, and bringing accountability for torture.

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