Bali bomb plotters moved from Guantánamo to Malaysia after guilty plea

Bali bomb plotters moved from Guantánamo to Malaysia after guilty plea

The US has transferred two Malaysian detainees from the Guantánamo Bay military prison to their home country, after they pleaded guilty to charges related to deadly 2002 Bali bombings and agreed to testify against the alleged ringleader of that and other attacks.

The transfers, and the repatriation of a Kenyan man who’d been held at Guantanamo for 17 years without charge, come as rights groups and others push the Biden administration to end the detention of more than a dozen other men held there without charge, and amid uncertainty over the incoming Trump administration’s plans for Guantanamo.

Prosecutors say Mohammed Farik bin Amin and Mohammed Nazir bin Lep worked for years with Encep Nurjaman, known as Hambali, an Indonesian leader of al-Qaida affiliate Jemaah Islamiyah. The two men helped Nurjaman escape capture after the 12 October 2002 bombings that killed 202 people at two nightspots in Bali, US officials said.

The two men entered guilty pleas to conspiracy and other charges in January. Their transfer comes after they provided testimony that prosecutors plan to use in the future against Nurjaman, the alleged mastermind, the Pentagon said in a statement on Wednesday.

Nurjaman is in custody in Guantánamo awaiting resumption of pre-trial hearings in January involving the Bali bombings and other attacks.

The two Malaysian men’s transfers leave 27 detainees in custody at the US naval base in Guantánamo Bay. President George W Bush set up a military tribunal and prison after the 11 September 2001 al-Qaida attacks on the US.

At peak, Guantánamo detained hundreds of men, most Muslim, in the US military’s “war on terror” after the September 11 attacks.

Just two of the men at Guantánamo are serving sentences. The US prosecution of seven others currently facing charges has been slowed by legal obstacles – including those presented by the torture of the men in their first years under CIA custody – and logistical difficulties.

On Tuesday, US authorities repatriated a Kenyan man, Mohammed Abdul Malik Bajabu, after 17 years at Guantánamo without charge.

His release leaves 15 other never-charged men awaiting release. The US is searching for suitable and stable countries willing to take them. Many are from Yemen, a country split by war and dominated by an Iranian-allied militant group.

Amnesty International urged Joe Biden to end the detention of those never-charged men before he leaves office. If not, the rights group said in a statement, “he will continue to bear responsibility for the abhorrent practice of indefinite detention without charge or trial by the US government”.

Source: theguardian.com