WORLD> America
Former British resident may soon leave Guantanamo
(Agencies)
Updated: 2009-01-19 10:14

GUANTANAMO BAY NAVAL BASE, Cuba – A former British resident imprisoned at Guantanamo Bay since 2002 claims he is about to be released, the man's attorney said Sunday.

Related readings:
 US official says Guantanamo detainee tortured
 Pentagon: 61 ex-Guantanamo inmates return to terrorism
 Shutting Guantanamo far from easy
 Guantanamo hunger strike grows to 42 prisoners

Binyam Mohamed said in a letter to his attorney that "several reliable sources" told him his release to Britain had recently been approved.

The US accused him of plotting a radioactive bomb attack on the United States, but the allegation was withdrawn in October.

Mohamed said he had been on hunger strike to protest his confinement.

"I should have been home a long time ago," he said in the letter, which was dated Dec. 29 but had to be reviewed by US authorities before it could be publicly released.

His attorney, Clive Stafford Smith of the British rights group Reprieve, said he has received no official confirmation of any pending release.

Britain's Foreign Office said Sunday it would continue to press for Mohamed's release but the US had so far declined to free him "due to security concerns."

The US holds about 245 men at Guantanamo, mostly on suspicion of terrorism or links to al-Qaida and the Taliban. President-elect Barack Obama has said he intends to close the offshore prison on a US Navy base in Cuba.

Mohamed was born in Ethiopia and moved to Britain as a teenager. He was captured in Pakistan in 2002 and sent to Guantanamo.

Four former British residents have been returned from Guantanamo since April 2007 — but Mohamed and another man who previously lived in the U.K., Saudi-born Shaker Aamer, remain despite a British request to take them back.

A spokeswoman for the detention center referred questions about the case to Pentagon officials, who did not immediately respond. US authorities typically refuse to confirm releases until after they have occurred for security reasons.