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This Article is From Mar 24, 2015

Uruguay Says Won't Take More Guantanamo Inmates

Uruguay Says Won't Take More Guantanamo Inmates
File Photo of a US soldier keeps watch from a guard tower on Guantanamo Bay US Naval Base in Cuba. (Associated Press)
Montevideo:

Uruguay, the only South American country to take in detainees from the US military prison at Guantanamo, said Monday it will not accept any more.

"No more Guantanamo prisoners are going to come. That's final," Foreign Minister Rodolfo Nin Novoa told journalists.

Uruguay resettled six Guantanamo inmates as refugees in December in a bid to help US President Barack Obama fulfill his long-delayed promise to close the offshore prison set up to hold terror suspects in the wake of the September 11, 2001 attacks.

But former Uruguayan president Jose Mujica left office on March 1 and his successor, Tabare Vazquez, has voiced reservations about the controversial decision.

The former prisoners - four Syrians, a Palestinian and a Tunisian - arrived in Uruguay on December 6 after more than a decade in detention.

They were never charged or tried, and the United States had cleared them for release.

Since arriving in Uruguay, which promised they would have the same rights as any other resident, they have been taking Spanish classes and living in hotel rooms and a house provided by a local labor union.

But officials, including Mujica, have expressed concern that they are having trouble adapting.

Currently, 122 inmates remain at Guantanamo, of whom half have been cleared for release.

With the US Congress opposed to transferring them to the United States, the Obama administration must find third-party countries willing to take those who cannot be sent home.

Under Mujica, a colorful iconoclast known for legalizing marijuana and shunning the presidential mansion for his humble farmhouse, Uruguay also took in five families of Syrian refugees fleeing the conflict in their country.

It had promised to take in more, but Nin Novoa said that policy was also on hold.

Uruguay has "cultural and infrastructure shortcomings" that make it difficult to resettle the refugees, the foreign minister said, adding further resettlements had been postponed until "towards the end of the year."

Mujica and Vazquez both hail from the left-wing Broad Front (FA), but have clashed at times within the party.
 

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