Ex-Guantanamo inmate finds distracted audience at US Congress

[Quote:]

A handful of US lawmakers gave only half an ear to the testimony on Tuesday of a former detainee at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba who spent nearly five years in prison before being released without charge.

[..]

The first to speak after Kurnaz was finished was ranking member on the committee, Republican Congressman Dana Rohrabacher, who expressed doubts about the testimony and recalled that the United States was “at war” and needed to protect itself even at the price of making some errors.

And when it came to the question of where ex-inmates should go when their home country refuses them, Rohrabacher said: “I would suggest that any of our allies who have criticized the US should take some of them themselves.”

It was past 10:00 pm in Germany by the time Democrat Jerrold Nadler spoke.

“The people who tortured you were committing crimes under American law,” Nadler said. “I hope in the next few years these people will be held accountable.

Forget American law - if congress is this disinterested in hearing about this, I’d invite them all over to here.

2 Responses to “Ex-Guantanamo inmate finds distracted audience at US Congress”

  1. peter Says:

    The International Criminal Court (ICC) seems more appropiate as it is an independent, permanent court that tries persons accused of the most serious crimes of international concern, namely genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes.

  2. John Sinteur Says:

    I’d be more than happy with either…


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