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Rights and Liberties

Life After Guantanamo: Why the Media's Happy-Ending Narrative Is Totally Bankrupt

By Liliana Segura, AlterNet. Posted June 20, 2009.


The transfer of four Uighur prisoners to Bermuda has been treated like a happy human-interest story, but the truth is far darker.
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"From Gitmo to Paradise!"

So came the news via MSNBC last week, echoing the upbeat tone of so many covering the sudden transfer of four Uighur prisoners from Guantanamo Bay to Bermuda. Broadcasting images of beaming bearded men in bucolic surroundings, the happy-ending narrative offered by the media was perfectly captured in a June 14 New York Times story: "Out of Guantanamo, Uighurs Bask in Bermuda."

"Almost exactly seven years after arriving at Guantánamo in chains as accused enemy combatants, and four days after their surprise predawn flight to Bermuda," the Times reported, "four Uighur Muslim men basked in their newfound freedom here, grateful for the handshakes many residents had offered and marveling at the serene beauty of this tidy, postcard island."

The Times followed the Uighurs as they went about "smelling hibiscus flowers" and "luxuriating in the freedom to drift through scenic streets and harbors," painting a portrait of wide-eyed disbelief.

"I went swimming in the ocean for the first time ever yesterday," Salahidin Abdulahat, age 32, said. "It was the happiest day of my life."

We're supposed to love these stories, tales of epic injustice overturned. Sweeter still if the aggrieved parties -- in this case, four men who for the most part spent the better part of their 20s wrongfully imprisoned by the United States -- have nothing but peace in their hearts.

"Before, we were asking, 'Why are the Americans doing this to us?' " Abdulahat recalled. "Now, he said, with others nodding in agreement, 'We have ended up in such a beautiful place. We don't want to look back, and we don't have any hard feelings toward the United States.' "

It should come as no surprise that the newly freed Uighurs -- Abdul Nasser, Huzaifa Parhat, Abdul Semet (also known as Salahidin Abdulahat) and Jalal Jalaladin (also known as Abdullah Abdulquadirakhun) -- have been treated as a heartwarming human interest story. (The next step would seem to be their own reality TV show.)

But once the reporters are gone and the euphoria wears off, where, exactly, will the Uighurs be? How will they make a living? Will they be allowed to travel? Will they ever see their families again?

None of these questions have clear answers. Bermudan authorities say the men will have guest-worker status and may be able to apply for citizenship, at which point they will be able to travel. (Although not necessarily to the United States.)

This might come off as a ridiculously sweet deal to such craven politicians as Newt Gingrich -- who wrote last month that the Uighurs are "trained mass killers" who want to "establish a separate Sharia state" -- or the ignorant pundits at Fox News (who have balked at the fact that the Uighurs are under "basically no surveillance" in Bermuda -- "They don't have any ankle bracelets!"). But for those who understand that the Uighurs were never "enemy combatants" to begin with -- the Bush administration acknowledged this as early as 2003 -- packing them off to a tropical island with little more than what they had on them when they were arrested seven years ago sounds a lot like exile.

Granted, the men appear to be resilient: "The four men want to open up the island's first Uighur restaurant," MSNBC's Contessa Brewer reported this week. "They say they will serve noodles and lamb."

But, she added, wryly, "It might be tough without any money. When they were sent to Bermuda, they got to keep their watches and copies of the Quran -- that's it."

Locked Up in Limbo

The sudden release of the four men was not an act of political altruism. More like desperation.

The Obama administration has spent much of the past few weeks stepping up talks with foreign governments, trying to persuade them to take in prisoners from Guantanamo. In the past week alone, press reports have revealed that Italy, Spain, and Hungary are stepping up to take a handful of prisoners.

But the Uighurs have posed a particularly complicated challenge since the days of the Bush administration. As a persecuted Muslim minority from China's western Xinjiang province, they have been denied asylum by virtually every nation the U.S. has approached to take them in, due to an unwillingness to anger the Chinese government.

(How the Uighurs ended up at Guantanamo in the first place is a winding, rather unbelievable story.) Handed over to the U.S. military in 2002 by Pakistani bounty hunters, they have been accused of training with al-Qaida in order to take up arms against China. Not true, the Uighurs have insisted.


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See more stories tagged with: china, new york times, jim webb, guantanamo, albania, huzaifa parhat, uighurs, bermuda, abdul nasser, abdul semet, salahidin abdulahat, abdullah abdulquadirakhun, jalal jalaladin

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That's All?
Posted by: DrBrian on Jun 20, 2009 2:07 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Surely we owe these people something more than a one-way ticket to a tiny, opportunity-poor island whose leaders we arm-twisted or bribed to take them off our hands. Enough money to start their dreamed-of restaurant, perhaps. Setting them up to fail isn't in anyone's interest.

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» RE: That's All? there's more Posted by: VZEQICVA
Liliana, this is another story based on the lies of 911.
Posted by: pfgetty on Jun 20, 2009 3:25 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
These poor victims are just one more part of the lies we have been told about 911.
We grabbed people like these men off the streets of countries on the other side of the planet, in revenge for the attacks of 911.

All of these people in all of these prisons, all of the uniformed "combatants", should be immediately freed because none of them had anything to do with 911 or with any group that took part in 911.
911 was planned, executed, and covered up by our government.
We have the overwhelming evidence.
We have proof.

For instance, he buildings at the WTC did not collapse because of fire and/or plane crashes. They fell because of controlled demolition. 700 architects and engineers have signed on to a site that calls for a new investigation of the collapse because they feel the evidence is clear that we were told a lie. Go to www.ae911truth.org. Hundreds of other distinguished people of achievement also have signed similar petitions: www.patriotsquestion911.com.
And yet all of these people and their concerns are ignored by Alternet and the rest of the press.
Recently a peer reviewed paper appeared in a physics journal, showing that nanothermite, and explosive, was found in several samples of dust from the collapse at the WTC. Nanothermite is a material not commercially available and only made at a few research facilities mostly connected with the US military. Each type has its own signature and can be traced to a few researchers. It could only have been found if it had been placed in the WTC buildings before the collapse. We could find out who made it if the government would do the investigation. We have not heard from the government. We have not seen any of this in Alternet. It has been censored from all of the press.

And there is so much more: molten metal found, free fall collapse which is impossible without controlled demolition, pyroclastic dust, the explosions, symmetric collapse, etc, all proving controlled demolition was used.

Why does our government and press and Alternet cover up this information?

So many people, like those prisoners, like the hundreds of thousands dead because of 911, the maimed, the homeless.........they are all a consequence of this great crime. This is the biggest story of all time: 911 was an inside job.
And yet it is completely ignored by our media.

What in the world is going on?

Liliana, why don't you go to the real heart of the story of the imprisonment of these four men: the real story of 911?

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I'm sorry too Liliana
Posted by: weathered on Jun 20, 2009 3:48 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Its not easy for us to have the courage to confront the truth about the template of Lies & Crimes that are framed from a stolen election in 2000 to a tortured soul set free like a 'manchurian candidate' - who wrote this script? Why is Wolfowitz writing for wa po, once one of the great papers?

Nothing good can come from living a Lie.

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morgan1
Posted by: morgan1 on Jun 20, 2009 5:21 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Excellent report on the fate of this small group. If they are not bitter now, they will be when reality sinks in. This conduct is so typical of the US--They were sold into captivity; they were tortured by us and China; they were emotionally raped. Ultimately they were declared innocent, no terrorist, not a threat to anyone but the Chinese and now they are tossed like garbage to the side of the road (Bribes and promises to any country that will take them--And threats which the US uses). And then we have the nerve to state they are not our problem. It is not wonder we are not liked or trusted even by our allies (Always temporary). These people deserve compensation and should have been allowed to be released into decent and new lives here in the US with their community. Obama has proven himself not to be a humanitarian or concerned with Human Rights: We owe them. We are not setting an example for the rest of the world--No, we are, but not the correct one.

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» RE: morgan1 Posted by: luzmejor
» RE: morgan1 Posted by: Zeugitai
» Jeckle & Hyde Government necrosis Posted by: Aposterioriperception
AND THEY LIVED HAPPILY EVER AFTER
Posted by: VZEQICVA on Jun 20, 2009 9:36 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We'll see. I don't believe for a minute that these men can function in the real world given the last seven years of their lives. If you had a pet canary for seven years and decided to set it 'free' from its cage out into the world it wouldn't last an hour. This is nothing more than a way to get rid of these men without being conspicuous about it. They'll either get killed or be recruited to kill others. Their present state of mind it not concerned with finding employment. They are floundering and have no direction, for very good reasons. Somebody here is just plain nuts, and it's not the former prisoners. ANNA

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popham.smith@gmail.com
Posted by: popham on Jun 20, 2009 11:19 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Indeed, the four Uihgar detainees have been
'resettled' on an island paradise. The people
of Bermuda are accepting of their residency;
however, they are up in arms as to the failure
of the Premier, Dr. Ewart Brown, to secure
permission for this transfer, not only from
Great Britain, but from his own Parliament.
He did not tell his Commissioner of Police of
the secret 3:00 A.M. arrival, June 11th,
until the new 'guests' had been greeted.
Two mass rallies this past week have forced
a vote of no confidence against the Premier.
There is speculation, by many Bermudians,
that the detainee transfer was in exchange for the freedom or lessening of charges against his son, a doctor in L.A., currently indicted on 33 charges of sexual misconduct with his female patients. Another son is currently incarcerated for 10 years for armed robbery in the U.S.
There is more to this story than just 4 guys
making a new life for themselves in Bermuda.

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» RE: popham.smith@gmail.com Posted by: Zeugitai
Meanwhile
Posted by: login@bugmenot.com on Jun 20, 2009 1:48 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The US is crying foul at the two arrested and tried journalists in North Korea. The US pressured Iran to "review" the case against the imprisoned Iranian/American journalist who has already been released.

Apparently, only OTHER countries hold sham trials and/or imprison their prisoners without evidence.

Meanwhile, those held at Guantanamo Bay are supposed to be "different" because they are "terrorist", even though they may very well be more innocent than all those journalists.

After all, the two journalists in N. Korea did break the law by crossing the border illegally.

Whereas the Uighurs and other at Guantanamo have done nothing wrong. Their only sin was to be in the "wrong place at the wrong time".

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the houses of shadow
Posted by: remo on Jun 20, 2009 2:13 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
there is no solace here, in this story. There is no honor in it, or to it. Just another stupid 'clean-up'., a drop-off of a problem, solved? does the administration of war think?? Well. The Caribbean knows of hunger and poverty well enough, and these four men, discarded flotsam of the mighty eagle war on terror-sorry., "overseas contingency operation" -These bewildered souls will doubtless find obscurity dodging street level violence once the moment wears off. Surely the mighty media machine will then righteously focus on the 'rights of man' discarded by the great republic getting them there. Time maybe? . The constitutional lawyers of the great heartland usa will be hunting down the perpetraitors of these henous abuses to individual rights and punishing them through the private prison systems they all seem to own shares in.
Yeah. Right. In terms of analogy, there is a fire on in the building of lies. In the building of catatonia where the great wheezing corporates pump the bellows to get us all 'back in the race'. To 'move on'. There is a fire on in the building just one or two little ones yet, but, remember this. Little fires bring down big buildings. 47 stories can come down in 6.5 seconds because of 'office furnishings fire' I know this because the organs of state have told me its true. I've timed it from the videos and its true, Whole structures can turn to jelly and dissapear in 6 seconds if the office furnishings burn under the right beam for the right amount of time with the right amount of lard sat in them.

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» RE: the houses of shadow Posted by: willymack
I loved the part of this sick saga
Posted by: BlueBerry PickN on Jun 24, 2009 2:34 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
where Obama 'gave the prisoners another 100 days'

supposedly they were supposed to be HAPPY about this...

should they have actually heard about it...

like they would be dancing in their cells at the thought of another 100 days IN THE SAME FUCKING PRISON with the SAME FUCKING SADISTS...


yeah, a real reprieve.


perspective, people.


Perspective.

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"... tolerance of intolerance is cowardice..." ~ Ayaan Hirsi Ali.

"We, two, form a Multitude" ~ Ovid.

"Violence can only be concealed by a Lie, & the Lie can only be maintained by Violence." ... "Any man, who has once proclaimed Violence as his Method, is inevitably forced to take the Lie as his Principle" – Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn.

"Those who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities." - Voltaire.

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This article is one more justification...
Posted by: ShrubtheWarcriminal on Jun 24, 2009 4:25 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...for war crimes trials for ALL involved in the Shrub administration.

It also demonstrates four more reasons not to proud of this pour excuse of a country, Amerikkka.

We destroyed a country for NOTHING. Killed over 1,000,000 innocent Iraqis, killed over 4000 of our own, not to mention the thousands wounded and crippled for life. For what? Revenge for 3,000 killed in the towers?

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