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Bush says would like to close Guantanamo (Reuters) Updated: 2006-05-08 09:12
BERLIN - US President George W. Bush said he would like to close the US-run
prison at Guantanamo Bay -- a step urged by several US allies -- but was
awaiting a Supreme Court ruling on how suspects held there might be
tried.
"Of course Guantanamo is a delicate issue for people. I would like
to close the camp and put the prisoners on trial," Bush said in comments to
German television to be broadcast on Sunday night. The interview was recorded
last week.
In this photo,
reviewed by US military officials, the gate is closed to the maximum
security prison at Camp Delta 2 & 3, at the Guantanamo Bay U.S. Naval
Base, Cuba, April 5, 2006.
[Reuters] | Human-rights groups have accused
the United States of mistreating Guantanamo detainees through cruel
interrogation methods, a charge denied by the US government.
They also
criticize the indefinite detention of suspects captured since the military
prison was opened in 2002 at the US naval base in Cuba, as part of the Bush
administration's war on terrorism.
Bush was asked by the German public
television station ARD how the United States could restore its human-rights
image following reports of prisoner abuse.
"Our top court must still
rule on whether they should go before a civil or military court," he said.
"They will get their day in court. One can't say that of the people that
they killed. They didn't give these people the opportunity for a fair trial."
The quotes were translated by Reuters from a German transcript.
The US Supreme Court is expected to rule by the end of June on whether
military tribunals of foreign terrorist suspects can proceed.
Bush's
comments were a reiteration of long-standing US policy, Frederick Jones,
spokesman for the White House National Security Council, said in
Washington.
"The United States has no intention of permanently detaining
individuals, that is not our goal. We want to see all these individuals brought
to justice," he said, whether in their home countries or in the United States.
US Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, however, has dismissed calls for
the prison to be closed.
"Every once and a while someone pops up and
gets some press for saying 'Oh let's close Guantanamo Bay.' Well, if someone has
a better idea, I'd like to hear it," Rumsfeld said in a February speech to the
Council on Foreign Relations.
The United States has 480 detainees at
Guantanamo and has freed or handed over to their home governments a total of
272. The Pentagon has said it has no interest in holding anyone longer than
necessary but that it has been unable to arrange for some to return to their
home countries.
The Pentagon says the detainees come from 40 countries
and the West Bank, with the largest number from Saudi Arabia, Afghanistan and
Yemen.
In a report last week for the UN Committee against Torture,
Amnesty International said torture and inhumane treatment were "widespread" in
US-run detention centers, including Guantanamo Bay.
The United States
defended its treatment of foreign terrorism suspects in a hearing before the
committee in Geneva on Friday, saying it backed a ban on torture.
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