Bali
bomber Hambali under review for release from Guantanamo Bay IF OBAMA Releases the
Bali Bomber then he has no respect for the 200 including 88 Australians killed
in the attack
More than 200 people, including 88 Australians, were killed and 240
people injured when a series of co-ordinated attacks by extremist group Jemaah
Islamiah rocked the popular tourist capital of Kuta in October 2002. The brutal
events changed Australia's view of the popular holiday destination forever
Hambali was captured in
Thailand in 2003 and is currently held in Guantanamo Bay. The Indonesian
government has made it clear that it is reluctant to take back Hambali if he is
repatriated.
Read the blurb
Indonesian terror suspect Hambali,
now held in Guantanamo Bay, appeared on Thursday before a board evaluating his
suitability for release, as the Obama administration continued its push to
close the controversial detention facility.
Wearing a white T-shirt and
glasses, the man who masterminded the 2002 Bali bombing sat calm and
expressionless throughout the portion of the Periodic Review Board hearing that
was beamed to the Pentagon for media and observers from non-governmental
organisations.
The 52-year-old, whose real
name is Riduan Isamuddin, looked healthy and was sporting a full beard.
He has rarely been seen by
members of the public since his capture in Thailand in 2003. However, no
photography or recordings were allowed while the case was being heard.
Hambali's Pentagon-appointed
representative read out a brief statement making the case for his release,
saying that the detainee has been cooperative and harboured no ill-will towards
the United States.
"He believes America has
diversity and sharing of power, which is much better than a dictatorship. He
states that he wants nothing more than to move on with his life and be
peaceful," said Hambali's representative. "He hopes to remarry and
have children to raise."
He most likely would look for ways to reconnect with his Indonesian and
Malaysian cohorts or attract a new set of followers if he were transferred from
Guantanamo Bay.
"He most likely would
look for ways to reconnect with his Indonesian and Malaysian cohorts or attract
a new set of followers if he were transferred from Guantanamo Bay," it
said, adding that Hambali's younger brother, Rusman Gunawan, was a member of
the Indonesia-based network of the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS)
group.
It is unclear when the
Periodic Review Board will render its decision on Hambali. The gap between
hearings and verdicts have varied from a few months to a few years.
The Indonesian government has
made it clear it is reluctant to accept his repatriation from the US. In March,
Indonesia's Coordinating Minister for Political, Legal and Security Affairs
Luhut Pandjaitan told reporters that the US would not deport Hambali to
Indonesia even if Guantanamo is shut down.
Hambali, once referred to by
the Central Intelligence Agency as South-east Asia's Osama bin Laden, is among
the highest-profile detainees to have come before the review board at a time
when President Barack Obama appears to be stepping up efforts to shut down
Guantanamo Bay.
As the former military leader
of Indonesian terrorist group Jemaah Islamiyah, he had ties with Al-Qaeda.
Earlier this week, the
Pentagon announced that 15 detainees had been transferred to the United Arab
Emirates. It was the largest such transfer under Mr Obama and brings the
remaining population of Guantanamo down to 61 from a high of 780.
A version of this article
appeared in the print edition of The Straits Times
Oh please. We release our own employees? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3jl1AWYtSac
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