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Release of Shaker Aamer, but UK authorities face difficult questions – the Round-up

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Following almost fourteen years of detention without trial, the last British resident to be held in Guantanamo Bay, Shaker Aamer, has been released. Amnesty International has described Aamer’s plight as “one of the worst of all the detainees at Guantanamo,” given the time involved, the lengthy spells in solitary confinement and the torture he was allegedly subjected to.

“The case against the US authorities that perpetrated this travesty of justice, and British ministers and security personnel who allegedly colluded with them, should now be vigorously pursued”, writes the Observer. Long-standing questions remain surrounding claims of UK complicity in human rights abuses: in the 2009 civil case of former Guantanamo detainee Binyam Mohamed, the High Court pointedly noted that the UK’s relationship with US authorities went “far beyond that of a bystander or witness to the alleged wrongdoing.”

An investigation by the Metropolitan Police into the extent of British involvement is already under way. However, as UK HRB’s Jim Duffy argues, “anything less than a judge-led inquiry would seem ill-equipped to press the UK’s security apparatus in the way that ensures Aamer’s allegations of torture, complicity and unlawful imprisonment are properly ventilated.”

For the present, Shaker Aamer is quietly adjusting to life with his wife and children, including a fourteen year-old son he has never met. With Aamer having been cleared for release in 2007, the reunion is long overdue.

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