正文
President Faces Difficulties Closing Guantanamo Prison
In 2014, the United States removed 28 detainees from its military prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. It marks the largest number of prisoners moved out of Guantanamo since 2009, the year Barack Obama was sworn-in as president.
On December 30, the Obama administration announced that five Guantanamo prisoners were sent to Kazakhstan. Presidential spokesman Josh Earnest says getting all the detainees out of Guantanamo remains a goal for President Obama.
"I can tell you that it continues to be an important priority of this administration to ultimately transfer all of the detainees out of Guantanamo. "
The president has long said he wants to close down the detention center. He spoke about this goal in a May 2013 speech at the National Defense University. Mr. Obama said there is "no justification" for the prison.
"Given my administration's relentless pursuit of al-Qaida's leadership, there is no justification beyond politics for Congress to prevent us from closing a facility that should have never have been opened."
Nearly half of the more than 120 prisoners still held at Guantanamo have been approved for release. But, a 2010 law that bans the transfer of prisoners to the United States makes the center's closure more difficult.
Mathew Levitt is an expert on terrorism at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy. He says politics is one reason why Guantanamo prisoners are not being tried in U.S. courts.
"I think the court system is capable. I think that our prison system is capable. I don't think it would put Americans at any more risk than we are now. It has become a political football."
Right now, the cost of keeping the detention center open is rising. With the number of prisoners decreasing, it now costs the United States nearly $3 million a year per prisoner.
But Matthew Levitt says lawmakers should not use cost as the reason for closing the prison. They should close Guantanamo, he says, because it is the right thing to do.
I'm Christopher Cruise.
VOA White House Correspondent Aru Pande reported this story. Ashley Thompson wrote it for VOA Learning English. Christopher Cruise read and produced the program. George Grow edited the story.
相关文章
- Brazilian Drug Gangs Lead Huge Prisoner Escape in ‘Paraguay’s City of Blood’
- Drug Lord ‘El Chapo’ Likely to Be Sent to ‘Supermax’ Prison
- Venezuelan President Claims Victory, Opponents Call Election a Fraud
- Poland’s President Vetoes Changes to Judicial System
- West Faces Long War with Islamic State Group
- Honored Vietnamese Activist Sentenced to 10 Years in Prison
- African Development Bank President Wins World Food Prize
- Prisoners Learn to Make Pizza in Chicago
- Brazil Faces Problems Attracting Tourists
- Iranian President Faces Difficult Election Competition