Ghana,  home for Guantanamo Bay prison detainees

 
 
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Ghana, otherwise home for Guantanamo Bay prison (Gitmo) detainees


E. Ablorh-Odjidja
January 07, 2016


This transfer of Gitmo prisoners reminds me to write, "Obama gives Ghana the back hand" by returning two Yemeni Muslim terrorists to Ghana, a place they don't belong and where they should not even be tolerated.


This is not to say Ghana has no place for people of the Muslim faith.  There are people of this faith in abundance in Ghana.  They are a tolerant lot and are part of the religious fabric of a safe nation and not prone to causing mayhem like Boko Harem in Nigeria.

 

So, is it for safety and religious stability that these two detainees were sent to Ghana?

 

The decree that sent Atef and Al-Dhuby to Ghana read:


“As directed by the president’s Jan. 22, 2009, executive order, the interagency Guantanamo Review Task Force conducted a comprehensive review of these cases. As a result of those reviews, which examined a number of factors, including security issues, Atef and Al-Dhuby were unanimously approved for transfer by the six departments and agencies comprising the task force,” according to a US Department of Defense report picked up by
Ghanaweb.

 

Atef and Al-Dhuby are coming to Ghana. The two Yemini terrorists have been incarcerated at Gitmo for the past 14 years.

 

According to reports, they cannot be returned to Yemen, their country of origin and a place where they share a common religion with the overwhelming population, more so than they do in Ghana.


They are prisoners at Gitmo now because no American state wants them in a prison on the main land.  The need to dump them on Ghanaian soil has become the wise political choice.  Not accidental, but a deliberate one that was arrived at some six years ago.

 

I would have objected to the transfer were they Christian terrorists.   The objection here is not a matter of religion.  It is about security and risk.  Did Obama overlook this risk to our fragile country?


Some of us in Diaspora America identify with Obama. He is one of us, the historic first Black president of America and the inspiration for our generation and next.  And then he dumps Atef and Al-Dhuby on us.


Think about it. This gift is what Ghana gets from Obama. Bush gave us the MCA grant of over half a billion dollars and some of us have contempt for him.

 

Regardless, Atef and Al-Dhuby can be a gift that will keep on giving.  We hope that, in the end, the consequences are not bitter for our nation.


And even if the transfer is an experiment, we still have to wonder why Obama would want to choose Ghana for it.


First point, we know it is a political promise Obama made to his constituents - to close the Gitmo detention camp.  

 

Gitmo was George Bush's legacy and his approach to fighting terrorism. Obama found this approach unnecessary, thus his wish to repudiate.  He has been working at it despite the strong opposition from all sides.


Governors of states, leaders of America's political parties and even some officers within Obama’s administration will not accept his intent to close Gitmo.


On December 18, 2015,
Free Beacon reported that  "The chairman of Joint Chiefs of Staff did not approve the Oct. 30 release of a terrorist held at the Guantanamo Bay prison, contrary to a Pentagon announcement that the transfer was “unanimously” approved by senior Obama administration officials."


A special report from Reuters on December 29, 2015 said
"Pentagon thwarts Obama's effort to close Guantanamo." The report continued that "Since Obama took office in 2009, these people said, Pentagon officials have been throwing up bureaucratic obstacles to thwart the president's plan to close Guantanamo."


Whether Obama is right on any grounds, humanitarian or otherwise, is not the issue.  But note even his military brass is in opposition to his idea.


We read that "Tri-county sheriffs have written to U.S. Sen. Tim Scott urging him to keep up the fight to prevent terror detainees from being transferred to the Navy brig in Hanahan if President Barack Obama closes the prison at Guantanamo Bay in Cuba,"  wrote South Carolina,
Post and Courier, November 24, 2015.


A Gallup poll, on the favorability among Americans on closing down Gitmo, shows " two in three (66%) oppose the idea,” a feeling that has barely budged since 2009.


The opposition to the idea is because, " the relocation is nothing more than an open-door invitation for terrorists to launch attacks in the area;" in spite of the Obama administration to only “hold detainees at a maximum-security level.”

 

And we wonder why all these objections don’t matter for Ghana. 

 

We don’t have maximum security level prison that can hold hardened Gitmo detainees   The Obama administration knew. Yet, it was insensitive enough to approach poor Ghana for relief.   A relief they knew could easily be coerced or incentivized.


Obama, if you will recall came to Ghana in 2009, hard on the heels of Bush who had visited a year earlier.


It is interesting to remember why Bush was in Ghana.


Bush came to see the impact his foreign aid investment plan, the Millennium Challenge Account (MCA), offered under the Kufuor regime. This foreign aid plan was generous and huge in its intention and realization.


Obama, so far, has brought Ghana nothing, except the detainees.  But there are some interesting hypotheses as to why he came to Ghana.


Some believe Obama came to take off the shine Bush had made on Ghana with the generous MCA plan. Others think he went to identify with Africa, since Ghana was the first sub-Saharan African country to gain independence.


All the above views are interesting because they help to bring up another speculation.  Was Obama in Ghana to gain marks for this eventual Gitmo deal - to use the grace of the trip to grease the way for easy acceptance of Atef and Al-Dhuby?


Obama couldn't send Gitmo prisoners to Kenya. He was aware of the religious conflicts waging on in East Africa and how much this was impacting Kenya, just as he was aware of the many religious unrest and conflicts going on in other parts of Africa, except Ghana.


Obama in his address to Ghana's parliament in 2009 said:

 

Let me be clear: There are wars over land and wars over resources. And it is still far too easy for those without conscience to manipulate whole communities into fighting among faiths and tribes."


Security vulnerability was on Obama's mind as he spoke that day to the Ghanaian Parliament. It was absent in his transfer of the Gitmo detainees to Ghana.


Ghana in many ways is very vulnerable now as it has been historically.  If these terrorists were detained there, they would be housed with other inmates.  The exposure of their ideas and methods to other undesirable elements should be a concern here.


For the above reason states in America have opposed the idea of accepting and housing of these inmates on their main land.  They feared the ideological contamination of the worst virulent kind from these terrorists.


This virulent contamination is now Obama's gift to Ghana.  It is his gift, the gift that will continue giving.


E. Ablorh-Odjidja, Publisher www.ghanadot.com, Washington, DC, January 07, 2016.
Permission to publish: Please feel free to publish or reproduce, with credits, unedited. If posted at a website, email a copy of the web page to publisher@ghanadot.com. Or don't pu

 
   
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