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A member of the US military mans the guard post before sunrise at Camp Delta, part of the US Detention Center in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. Photo: AFP

White House ignores Trump’s demand to freeze prisoner releases from Guantanamo Bay

Barack Obama

The White House on Tuesday pledged to move ahead with the transfer of inmates out of the military prison at Guantanamo Bay, rejecting President-elect Donald Trump’s demand for a freeze.

With President Barack Obama set to leave office on January 20, White House spokesman Josh Earnest put Trump on notice that more inmates would be moved.

“I would expect, at this point, additional transfers,” he said.

Earnest’s comments come just hours after Trump tweeted that “there should be no further releases from Gitmo. These are extremely dangerous people and should not be allowed back onto the battlefield.”

US military guards at Campt VI move a detainee back to his cell after he attended a life skills class that included resume writing at the US Detention Center in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. Photo: AFP

There are 59 prisoners remaining at the controversial detention centre, only a handful of whom have started moving through the military tribunals, including the alleged plotters of the 9/11 attacks.

Many of the others are in legal limbo -- not charged but deemed too dangerous to release.

Trump has vowed to “load (Guantanamo) up with some bad dudes” once he is in the White House.

The White House pointedly responded when asked if Trump’s position would impact Obama’s thinking. “No, it will not,” Earnest said.

“He will have an opportunity to implement the policy that he believes is most effective when he takes office on January 20,” he added.

Saudi Mustafa al Hawsawi appears in this courtroom sketch during his arraignment as an accused 9/11 co-conspirator at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba in 2012. Photo: Miami Herald/TNS

Trump’s declaration is the latest in a series of public disputes between Obama and the outspoken Republican president-elect, who has jettisoned the notion that there is “one president at a time.”

Obama came to office vowing to shutter the facility, saying detention without trial did not reflect American values.

But he has run up against political and legal hurdles, Pentagon foot-dragging and stubborn Republican opposition in Congress.

With Guantanamo’s closure blocked, Obama’s White House has focused on whittling down the number of inmates.

Around 20 of the remaining prisoners have been cleared for transfer. But finding countries to take them has often proven time-consuming.

George W. Bush had released or transferred around 500 inmates before leaving office. Obama has released or transferred around 179.

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