Two Algerian detainees at Guantanamo Bay are fighting efforts by U.S. President Barack Obama's administration to transfer them to their homeland, fearing abuse, a lawyer said Friday.
Attorney Robert Kirsch said he had pressed the Pentagon and State Department, along with the Algerian Embassy in Washington, to avoid the men's "imminent" repatriation set to take place as early as this weekend.
Without confirming when and where a detainee transfer may take place, a Pentagon spokesman said: "We carefully ensure that every transfer we carry out is consistent with the U.S. government's humane treatment policy and standards."
"Consistent with the Convention Against Torture and our own commitment to human rights, the United States is firm in its commitment to not transfer detainees to countries where we believe they would face torture," spokesman Todd Breasseale told Agence France Presse.
"The United States takes seriously all credible claims of mistreatment and fears of persecution and carefully evaluates them in advance of any decision to transfer a detainee."
Belkacem Bensayah and Djamel Ameziane's protests over their pending transfer, however, is complicating Obama's efforts to meet his vow to shutter the U.S. detention center in Cuba, where 164 "war on terror" suspects still linger nearly 12 years after it was opened.
U.S. lawmakers are currently debating whether to lift restrictions on detainee transfers.
Bensayah and Ameziane have long been opposed to returning to their homeland, the only country authorized by U.S. law to accept its nationals detained at Guantanamo, according to Kirsch, who represents Bensayah.
Ameziane, who lived in Austria and Canada, has asked to return to America's northern neighbor since president George W. Bush's administration cleared him for release in 2007.
Bensayah is demanding to be returned to Bosnia, where he was arrested in 2002 and where his wife and daughters live.
"He fears for his personal safety," Bensayah's attorney wrote to the State Department.
"Mr. Bensayah believes Muslim extremists will expect him to sympathize with them, only because he was held at Guantanamo. He fears that they will attack or perhaps kill him when they learn he does not support them."
Kirsch warned that sending Bensayah to Algeria, where he no longer has relatives and has not lived for 20 years, would "condemn him to the permanent loss of his family."
Writing to Algerian Ambassador Abdallah Baali, Kirsch said: "We most respectfully urge the Algerian government to honor the promise it made to Mr Bensayah in 2006 and to respect his right not to be repatriated against his will."
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