IT would be better if the US detention camp at Guantanamo Bay was closed, British Prime Minister Tony Blair said.
Mr Blair's comments came as he was challenged at his regular monthly press conference at 10 Downing Street over fresh claims by British residents that they were handed over to the CIA by the British security service MI5, then taken to Guantanamo for torture.
Bisher al-Rawi and Jamil el-Banna are among eight foreign nationals who have recently lived in the UK who are still in the detention camp in Cuba after more than three years. Their lawyer said they were arrested in the African state of Gambia in November 2002, then flown to the US airbase at Bagram in Afghanistan before being transferred to Guantanamo.
He said they had been beaten, kicked and hit with blunt objects, held in solitary confinement, and kept in freezing conditions to induce hypothermia. Blair today said that some of the claims made by Guantanamo inmates were disputed. He stressed that their incarceration occurred in the context of the US authorities' reaction to the September 11 terror attacks in New York and Washington, in which almost 3000 people died.
"I can't comment on individual cases. I think they are the subject of a court action," he said. "I have said that I think it would be better if it (Guantanamo) was closed for all the reasons that we have given over a long period of time.
"The only thing I always do to balance it out is remind people that it arose out of the circumstances of 9/11. "In fairness to the Americans, they dispute many of these claims that are made. "And there are things, certainly, that I have read about the circumstances of some of the British who were in Guantanamo that are strongly disputed in certain quarters."
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