US flies three final Chinese ethnic Uighurs from Guantanamo to Slovakia

Three Chinese Gitmo detainees have been transferred to Slovakia in what the US termed a milestone in the mission to finally close down Guantanamo bay prison. One hundred and fifty five prisoners, however, still remain at the prison.
  The ethnic Uighurs Muslim detainees were flown to Bratislava from
  the US military prison on the island of Cuba, according to an
  announcement made by Pentagon and State department officials on
  Tuesday. Yusef Abbas, Saidullah Khalik, and Hajiakbar Abdul
  Ghuper volunteered to resettle in Slovakia. The country accepted
  three former inmates in 2010.
  
  Twenty-two Chinese Uighurs had been imprisoned at Guantanamo
  after being captured by US forces in Afghanistan, according to a
  Wikileaks-published prisoner list. Six have already been sent to
  Palau, a pacific island, and 11 others have been dispersed
  between Bermuda, Albania and Switzerland.
  
  While none of the detainees were deemed terror suspects, the US
  was unable to repatriate the Uighurs as the Chinese government
  has a history of mistreating the group as the central Asian
  border region of Xinjiang has been home to some ethnic unrest.
  Some were believed to have had weapons training at an Afghan
  camp, according to the US.
  
  A judge ordered the release of the remaining three in 2008, they
  were held at the prison camp because of problems in finding
  somewhere that would actually take them. The US government
  expressed its gratitude to Slovakia for its ‘humanitarian
  gesture’, Rear Adm. John Kirby, the Pentagon press secretary,
  told the New York Times.
  
  Nine detainees have left Guantanamo in December, and 11 since
  last summer. In April US President Barack Obama expressed his
  wish to renew efforts to close the prison, which has held
  prisoners since 2001, starting out with some 750.
  
  In February, many of the men being held at the Guantanamo Bay
  detention facility launched a hunger strike against camp
  conditions. It was sparked by disrespectful treatment of the
  Quran. One month into the strike, attorneys for the men, many
  housed at the facilities infamous Camp 6, said the number
  refusing food had reached 100.
  
  Following intense efforts to break detainees’ spirits, the number
  of strikers dwindled to 15 by December. That month, the US
  military announced it would no longer disclose information about
  the hunger strikes, saying its release “serves no operational
  purpose”.













