Guantánamo

In China’s shadow, Guantánamo’s former Uighur captives languish on Palau

 

Associated Press

Ahmat Abdulahad can’t help but laugh at the irony of his predicament.

He and five other Chinese Muslims released from America’s Guantánamo military prison in 2009 thought they would be living on this remote island for a few months, maybe a year.

But more than three years later, they are still in Palau, and the patience – and funding of this poor nation – is running out. The government has cut Abdulahad’s monthly stipend, so he can’t pay his bills, not even those from the Palau Power Utility Corp., where he works as a night watchman. So he and his family, inadvertent inhabitants of one of the most beautiful islands in the Pacific, are learning to make do without electricity.

Palau has become a prolonged stopover in what is now a 12-year odyssey for a half dozen men from China’s ethnic Uighur minority. They were swept up in Afghanistan as suspected terrorists, held without trial in Guantánamo for more than eight years, then became a rallying point for Guantánamo opponents in the U.S., who saw them as hapless victims of the anti-terrorism effort and the circumvention of due process in the name of national security.

Now, all but one of them – who quietly managed to make his way to Turkey to join his wife a few months ago – remain stuck on Palau because no one else will take them.

“We are like the pieces in a chess game,” Abdulahad, who is 42, said at a small, drab apartment building by the sea where three of the men live with their wives and children. He wears a prosthetic limb because he lost part of his left leg in the air raid when he was captured. “They have played us like that all these years.”

Both the men and Palau’s president say pressure from China, which says they are terrorists despite their release, is making it impossible for them to find refuge anywhere else. And having met a U.S. federal court order to release them from Guantánamo, U.S. government interest in finding them a permanent home appears to have dried up – though officials say they are doing all they can.

“It’s no secret China is very angry with Palau because of the resettlement,” President Tommy Remengesau said in a recent interview with The Associated Press, one of his first since taking office in January. “It doesn’t take a blind man not to notice that nobody wanted to take these men. The pressure was there from the beginning and the pressure continues to be there. Nobody will be open enough to say that they welcome the Uighurs because of that pressure.”

China’s Foreign Ministry and national police ministry did not respond to faxed requests for comment about Beijing pressuring other governments not to accept the Uighurs.

The Uighurs come from Xinjiang, an isolated region of western China that borders Afghanistan, Pakistan and six Central Asian nations. They are Turkic-speaking Muslims who say they have long been repressed by the Chinese government. Many want Xinjiang to become independent, and in recent years, some have staged bombings and other attacks, mostly against police, government and military targets.

China considers Uighurs held in Guantánamo to be terrorists and has demanded they be repatriated. But since they would almost certainly face imprisonment or even torture if sent back to China, other countries had to be found. The U.S. refused to grant them asylum. Nearly a dozen now live in Albania, Bermuda, El Salvador and Switzerland. Three remain in custody at the U.S. Navy prison in Cuba.

Read more Guantánamo stories from the Miami Herald

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