France to take Gitmo inmate, says Sarkozy

France to take Gitmo inmate, says Sarkozy

Agence France-Presse
France to take Gitmo inmate, says Sarkozy

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"Yes we have spoken, yes we have agreed" to accept one detainee, Sarkozy told reporters in Strasbourg, northeastern France, after talks with U.S. President Barack Obama.

A U.S. official in Washington had said earlier that France was considering taking in an Algerian detainee "because there are historic links between France and Algeria." Algeria is a former French colony that secured its independence after a gruesome war that lasted from 1954 to 1962.

Two Algerian nationals - Lakhdar Boumediene, 42, and Saber Lahmar, 39 - have been detained at the controversial U.S. military prison camp for the past seven years. They were among five cleared for release last November by a U.S. judge who ruled they were illegally detained. Boumediene has been on a hunger strike for the past two years but rights group Amnesty International says he has been force-fed. Sarkozy said he thought that Guantanamo, which Obama has vowed to close, was an affront to U.S. values and expressed satisfaction that it would be shut.

"We don't combat terrorists with terrorist methods, we combat them with the methods of democracy," he said, ahead of a two-day NATO summit in Strasbourg and in the neighbouring German city of Kehl. More than 800 men and teens have passed through Guantanamo since former President George W. Bush opened it on Jan. 11, 2002 as a destination for "war on terror" suspects in the wake of the 9/11 attacks. Some 245 prisoners are still held there, with around 60 of them cleared for release.

The U.S. is expected to ask other EU nations to host some who can not be sent back to homelands where they may face re-arrest. But they have widely differing laws, and many are concerned at the prospect that some of their neighbors might allow dangerous people into the vast 25-nation border-free area.