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Peaceful Tomorrows Campaign to Close Guantanamo

November 19th, 2009

President Obama has admitted that his January 22, 2010 date for closing Guantanamo prison may slip, but reports indicate that it will be done, if not totally, at least in the main by then. Time Magazine (with CNN) reports that an announcement could come in weeks that prisoners are being moved out. Time said today:

“In the coming weeks, we do anticipate that we'll reach resolution on these issues," a White House official says, speaking on condition of anonymity. 205 detainees remain in the prison, and a 'goodly number' may be relocated before the end of the year, says another senior Administration official.”

We note this with relief, despite the troubling news that some detainees will be tried by the shaky military commissions, whose underlying law has been hacked away by the Supreme Court and Congress in the last few years. We are also troubled that some may remain in indefinite detention, despite Mr. Obama's pre-election statement that he does not condone it. We have issued statements to the press and the Congress announcing our whole-hearted approval of AG Eric Holder's decision to try Khalid Sheik Mohammed (KSM) and four others, also accused of plotting the 9/11 attacks, in New York federal courts: and we have urged Congress to not block this action through legislation.

We believe our federal courts are well up to the task of trying the worst of the worst, witnessed by their 90+% conviction rate in such trials, which has resulted in 195 terrorists behind secure walls of maximum security prisons in the United States. We will continue to fight for fairness and justice for all the detainees, whether they readily confess guilt, as have the KSM five, or have been innocently swept up in the chaos of the moment, as have a number of others.

Please read our statements, below.


More Guantanamo/Military Commissions Articles:


On Abandoning NYC as the Venue for the Trial of KSM and the Four Other 9/11 Defendants
February 2nd, 2010
September 11th Families for Peaceful Tomorrows has no interest in determining where federal trials are held. We will, however, support with vigor all efforts by the Obama administration to end military commissions, to convene federal trials, and to restore the rule of law in America.

The Place for Justice
by Barbara Fyfe & Jim Fyfe
November 25th, 2009
Op Ed in the News and Observer by Jim & Barb Fyfe - We have watched the cases of the accused become clouded by secrecy and tainted by the last administration's disregard for the law. We, and many other 9/11 family members, support the Obama administration's decision to move these cases to federal courts where they can finally move forward instead of being caught up in the legal obstacles of the Guantanamo fiasco...

An Open Letter to Congress
November 18th, 2009
We, who have most acutely felt the effects of the greatest terrorist attacks on US soil, ask our Congress to reject legislative language that will bar Guantanamo detainees accused of terrorism from traveling to and being incarcerated in this country.

On Trying Guantanamo Detainees in the Federal Courts.
November 17th, 2009
We, the members of September Eleventh Families for Peaceful Tomorrows, support the Attorney General's decision to bring the trials of the five individuals currently accused of plotting the attacks of Sept 11, 2001 to a New York federal court...

Report: GTMO Lobbying Effort in Washington DC July 14, 2009
by Valerie Lucznikowska
July 21st, 2009

Determination of Guantanamo Cases Referred for Presecution
July 20th, 2009
"Tab A", attachment to Preliminary Report of the Detention Policy Task Force.

Preliminary Report of the Detention Policy Task Force
July 20th, 2009
Memorandum for the Attorney General and the Secretary of Defense, by Brad Wiegmann and Colonel Mark Martins.

True Justice and the Rule of Law
by Colleen Kelly
June 26th, 2009
...Justice requires a system that is fair and factual; not based at all on emotion. 9-11 family members have every right to be emotional - angry, enraged, and grief stricken. I'm certain that staff who met with family members two weeks ago got a taste of that emotion. We lost people we loved dearly. But justice requires that our legal system turn a blind eye to that emotion, and try an accused individual based on evidence and factual account...

PT Member interviewed about meeting with President
February 6th, 2009
Valerie Lucznikowska of PT interviewed on Countdown with Keith Olbermann about meeting with Pres. Obama.

ABC News, New York: 9/11 families to meet with Obama.
February 6th, 2009
ABC-TV News, New York, reports on 9/11 families to meet with President Obama about closing Guantanamo and plans for trying terror suspects.

Peaceful Tomorrows Member Joins other 9/11 Relatives Meeting with President Obama
February 6th, 2009
Valerie Lucznikowska, a member of September 11th Families for Peaceful Tomorrows will Join other 9/11 Relatives In Meeting with President Obama at the White House to Discuss Closing Guantanamo. Ms. Lucznikowska will be delivering a letter signed by over 100 people who lost relatives on 9/11 who support the President's actions to shut down Guantanamo.

The War on What, Now?
by Eric Leinung
In her book, The Dark Side, Jane Mayer recounts how the so-called “War on Terror” quickly became a challenge to American values. Mayer states that when it came to “fighting to liberate the world from Communism, Fascism, and Nazism, and working to ameliorate global ignorance & poverty, America had done more than any nation on Earth in the name of human rights.” She claims that, in the past seven years, the country has moved further from that sentiment than it has during any point in history.

Three Peaceful Tomorrows Members Deliver Speeches Supporting Closing Guantanamo
January 20th, 2009
Peaceful Tomorrows members spoke at rallies in Washington, New York, and Boston, explaining why the Guantanamo Detentions and the Military Tribunals are incompatible with their search for justice.

New York Close Guantanamo Vigil
by Talat Hamdani
January 14th, 2009

Speech by Talat Hamdani at Amnesty International and ACLU Vigil in New York

"...America has lost all moral standing in the world because of the Bush administration's policies of detention and torture at GITMO, and Abu Ghraib. Thousands of Muslim males have been incarcerated since 9-11. The oldest detainee is 95 yrs old, and the youngest was 13 when arrested. This is racial and religious profiling and then the media ask me:

Why do the Muslims hate America?


Close Guantanamo Vigil, Boston, MA
by Terry Rockefeller
January 14th, 2009
Speech by Terry Rockefeller at Amnesty International and ACLU Vigil in Boston, MA "...After 7 years, we have a legacy of extraordinary renditions and torture that may make it impossible for those responsible for the 9/11 attacks to ever be brought to justice. And at the same time, many falsely accused, innocent people have been swept up in this corrupt and malignant system, detained without due process, denied fair trials, their lives ruined in ways from which they may never recover..."

Close Guantanamo in the First 100 Days
by Valerie Lucznikowska
January 11th, 2009
...After that happened I wanted two things – justice and safety. Guantanamo... and the use of torture itself, have not served to make us safer. These practices have disgusted people all over the world and turned them away from us. Worse, they have energized deep-seated resentments and created new dangers.

Change in America Gives Hope to One who has been Hurt by U.S. Policies
A letter from brother of Guantanamo detainee expresses hope and joy for America after presidential election.

In Pursuit of Justice: Prosecuting Terrorism Cases in the Federal Courts
by Valerie Lucznikowska
September 17th, 2008
Some critics have argued that federal criminal courts are simply not equipped to handle the challenges posed by international terrorism cases. Some endorse the use of the military commissions or creating “national security courts,” or detention without charges or trials.

Human Rights First holds that the federal criminal courts offer the best line of judicial defense against extremist terrorism.

9/11 Victims' Families Send Letter Decrying Politicization Of Guantánamo Military Commissions
Many of us learned for the first time this week that only one relative of a 9/11 victim was invited to attend the proceedings at Guantánamo Bay. The Defense Department’s belated disclosure that only a staunch supporter of this administration and the military commission system, was secretly invited to attend the arraignment of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed is but the latest example of a covert, politicized military commission system that has little hope of bringing any legitimate outcome.

9/11 Families and the Military Commission Trials
by John Leinung
June 4th, 2008
When the high-value prisoners at Guantanamo Bay are formally charged with planning the killing of nearly 3,000 people on 9/11, the only victim family member allowed to be present will be a secretly invited administration supporter...

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