FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
February 3, 2009
3:08 PM

CONTACT: Witness Against Torture
Matt Daloisio, 201-264-4424, daloisio@earthlink.net
Tanya Theriault, 718-419-7619, tanyatheriault@yahoo.com

Citizens Urge New Attorney General Holder & President Obama to Release 17 Uighur Guantanamo Prisoners Into the US

Procession to Justice Department Today

WASHINGTON - February 3 - Key human rights groups are urging President Barack Obama and Attorney General Eric Holder to take a simple step that will right a seven-year wrong: they want him to lift the Bush administration's appeal of Judge Ricardo Urbina's order to release the 17 Uighurs imprisoned in Guantanamo. This act would let stand Judge Urbina's order to bring the men into the United States immediately. Part of a Muslim ethnic minority in China, the Uighurs would likely face persecution by the Chinese government if returned to China.

Witness Against Torture is coordinating national call-in days for concerned people to plead with Attorney General Holder and President Obama to withdraw the Bush administration's appeal. Over 20 organizations are urging their members to contact The White House and the Justice Department. The call-in is part of the 100 Days Campaign to Close Guantanamo and End Torture, which maintains a daily vigil from 11am to 1pm in front of the White House. This week the vigil banner reads "Free the Uighurs."

Today's vigil will include a procession to the Justice Department at 11:15 am to welcome Attorney General Eric Holder and ask him to make his first official act as Attorney General the dropping of the appeal in the Uighur case.

"Every new day of imprisonment without charge is another cruel injustice for all the men held at Guantanamo, but especially for the Uighurs, who have already been exonerated and ordered released by a U.S. court of law," said Carmen Trotta of Witness Against Torture. "At our daily vigil, when we tell bystanders about the hopeless political limbo these men are in, they are outraged too. We're only asking for the change President Obama promised: restore the rule of law."

The government admits that the Uighurs were never "enemy combatants" against the U.S. – they were sold to U.S. forces by bounty hunters. In October 2008 U.S. District Court Judge Ricardo M. Urbina held that their continued detention is unlawful. In a dramatic decision, he ordered the men brought into the United States within 72 hours and delivered into his courtroom so that details of their settlement could be discussed. The Justice Department under the Bush administration immediately appealed, however, and the Uighurs have remained imprisoned under maximum security conditions.

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