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Britain refuses Guantanamo detainee offer from US
By UPI
Published: October 04, 2006
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Britain has refused to accept eight men now in detention at Guantanamo because of a US condition that they be kept under 24-hour surveillance after release.

The men were all residents of Britain but are not British citizens, the Guardian reported.

The United States reportedly offered to return nine men from the US base in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, in June. The conditions included that the men would not be allowed to leave Britain, would be monitored and would be banned from participating in any advocacy of violent or extremist activity.

The head of counter-terrorism at the Home Office said he could not justify the intelligence resources that would have been required for detainees who are not British citizens, the report said. "They do not pose a sufficient threat," he said.

The only one in the group the government is considering accepting is Bisher Al Rawi, a native of Iraq who first came to Britain in 1985. A businessman, Rawi had reportedly been cooperating with British intelligence before he was arrested in Gambia.

The families of the detainees have appealed the government's decision.



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