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  • On the second day of his presidency, Barack Obama signed an executive order to close the

  • U.S. Detention Facility in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. But efforts to close the facility and

  • move terror suspects to prisons on US soil have since been hampered by Republican opposition.

  • When Obama announced that he was still determined to shut down the facility in February 2016,

  • concern over where Guantanamo prisoners would be relocated to, arose once again. So we wanted

  • to know what happens to prisoners after they leave Guantanamo?

  • Well, since Guantanamo Bay Prison opened on January 11, 2002, it has detained roughly

  • 780 prisoners, predominantly from the Middle East. The prison is home to enemy combatants

  • captured by the US during the War on Terror, including the suspected architect of the September

  • 11th attacks, Khalid Sheikh Mohammed. As of January 2016, 91 detainees remain. About

  • half are still facing criminal charges, 35 have been approved for transfer out of the

  • prison, and ten are consideredunreleasable”. According to the White House, these ten either

  • cannot yet be transferred to other countries or they pose a continuing significant threat.

  • If Guantanamo were to close, some could potentially be transferred to U.S. soil as per President

  • Obama’s most recent plan. This includes 13 potential supermax prisons and military

  • sites in states like South Carolina, Kansas and Colorado. Some republican leaders have

  • suggested that Obama’s plan could threaten the security of the United States.

  • So where have prisoner's been relocated to in the past? Well, many are returned to their home countries.

  • There are reportedly 57 countries to which detainees have been sent, with the majority going to Afghanistan.

  • Seven detainees were repatriated to Russia, where Human Rights

  • Watch alleged they were tortured, beaten, harassed, and given unfair trials. Others

  • have gone to countries like Canada, Sweden, El Salvador, and two detainees were sent to

  • the United States to stand trial in US court. Some detainees are transferred to terrorist

  • rehabilitation centers, in countries like Kuwait and Saudi Arabia, featuring psychological

  • evaluation, medical care, exercise, and religious counseling. These rehab centers are designed

  • to convert former jihadi terrorists, by using Islamic teachings to abolish their extremist

  • ideologies. Saudi officials claim that their center has an 80% success rate for reforming

  • prisoners. However, of those prisoners who were deported and not jailed, upon release,

  • it’s estimated that about one in six has returned to terrorism.

  • President Obama said in his 2015 State of the Union address that it costs $3 million

  • dollars a year, per prisoner to be held at Guantanamo. Aside from the cost, the detention

  • center has also been the focus of worldwide attention following years of allegedly inhumane

  • living conditions, government sanctioned torture, and a lack of legal standing for the prisoners.

  • With less than 100 detainees remaining, Obama may actually accomplish his goal of shutting

  • down the facility by the end of his term. But when the options on the outside are rehabilitation,

  • imprisonment, death, or recidivism, it is hard to say whether that’s truly a better

  • option than keeping it open.

  • The past decade and a half of war has contributed to some of the worst human rights violations

  • in recent years, with the United States committing its share of atrocities as well. Government

  • sanctioned torture has been a hot button issue, and the CIA’s release of the Torture Report

  • has outlined the extent of the US’s involvement. Find out why that really matters by watching

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On the second day of his presidency, Barack Obama signed an executive order to close the

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