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More Prisoners Transferred To Cuba, Saudis Say They Will Interrogate 

Saudi Arabia says it will interrogate Saudi detainees if Washington hands them over

GUANTANAMO BAY, Cuba, Feb. 10 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Another 34 Al-Qaeda and Taliban fighters captured in the U.S. campaign in Afghanistan landed in Cuba Saturday, bringing the total number of detainees held in Cuba to 220, as Saudi Arabia announced they would interrogate their own nationals if the U.S. hands them over.

CNN reported that a C-17 cargo plane carrying them left Kandhar, Afghanistan, on Friday evening under tight security. The detainees were led to the plane in groups of three and were handcuffed and shackled.

A group of 28 prisoners had arrived Thursday, the first transfer of prisoners after a two-week hiatus. Spain, Yemen, Britain and France, all of which reportedly have nationals among the fighters captured in the U.S.-led campaign in Afghanistan, have closely monitored the process.

International outcry over the prisoners' treatment in the open-air maximum security prison known as "Camp X-Ray" was thought by some to have been the reason the U.S. military suspended the transfers, though Pentagon officials insisted the need to build more makeshift cells was behind the delay.

The 34 new arrivals, each bound and shackled like their 186 predecessors, were dressed in standard-issue zippered orange jumpsuits and blue jackets - the latter cut off by scissor-wielding U.S. troops as the prisoners descended from the plane around 19:45 GMT.

A mobile reaction force of U.S. Marines deployed from North Carolina was also on hand to ensure things went smoothly, a camp spokesman told reporters, and watched the detainees board grey buses that would take them to the prison camp, where they are to stay for an indefinite period of time.

The White House on Thursday announced that Geneva Convention protection would be accorded to Taliban fighters, but not to the Al-Qaeda operatives held here, though neither group would achieve prisoner of war status, a decision much derided by human rights advocates.

The U.S. military, insisting that all prisoners, regardless of status, are being treated humanely, said it would be difficult to immediately implement the new White House directive as interrogators are still trying to determine the identities of the detainees, which is proving difficult.

Brig. Gen. Michael Lehnert, a Marine Task Force commander, commenting on the detainees’ status, said, "Keep in mind that though the president has made that distinction, many of the detainees here are not forthcoming…Many have been interviewed as many as four times, each time giving a different name and different information," CNN reported.

Lehnert said there is some degree of segregation between Al-Qaeda fighters and members of the Taliban.

Saudi Arabia, for its part, said Sunday that Riyadh would interrogate Saudi suspects being held by the United States if Washington hands them over.

Interior Minister Prince Nayef bin Abdel Aziz said in a joint press conference with his Kuwaiti counterpart Sheikh Mohammed Khaled Al-Sabah that the Americans "only have to hand them to us. We will interrogate them here."

Nayef said, that if allowed, Saudi Arabia would also send a commission of inquiry to the U.S. base in Guantanamo to question suspected Saudi members of the Al-Qaeda network captured in Afghanistan. He added that Riyadh would prefer to be able to try them in the kingdom. On January 28, Nayef said the number of Saudis detained in Cuba exceeded one hundred.

Asked Sunday about those Saudis still being held by Afghan authorities, the interior minister said his government wanted to see them extradited. "They are Saudi citizens. Whether they have made mistakes or not, we are asking for their return to their country to be questioned and [eventually] tried."

Nayef also said that some 30 suspected supporters of Saudi-born Al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden had been arrested in the kingdom, and some had been subsequently released. "Others are being sought," he said. "We hope to find them in order to complete our investigations."

In Afghanistan, interim Afghan leader Hamid Karzai announced Saturday the release of about 220 Taliban prisoners who had been in Afghan custody. "We decided some time back that we will begin to release everybody who were not found of any bad record or links with terrorists and all that, so that they are just common people and we just let them go home," he said.

 

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